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- Author: K L Davies x
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ABSTRACT
Material with the immunochemical properties of the β-core of human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) can be found in the urine of normal postmenopausal women. However, we have been unable to detect intact hCG (using an assay which is specific for the α–β heterodimer of intact hCG) in serum of such subjects. The levels of serum LH and urinary β-core were compared in matched samples from 28 women (serum LH: median 27 U/l, range 4-70 U/l, urinary β-core: median 0·27 μg/l, range < 0·05–0·645 μg/l). Urine (4 litres) from three postmenopausal women was concentrated, dialysed and subjected to gel exclusion chromatography on Sephadex G-100. Fractions were analysed by specific assays for LH, intact hCG, total β-hCG (free β-subunit and intact hCG), free α-subunit and β-core. Material eluting at the expected position of the β-core fragment of hCG was detected in all three samples by the β-core, β-hCG and LH assays, despite the fact that the LH antibody does not recognize the authentic β-core of pregnancy. Electrophoresis and Western blotting of the concentrated urines revealed that material of the same molecular size as β-core was recognized by the antibody to LH but not by a monoclonal antibody raised to free β-hCG which also recognizes the β-core molecule of hCG. We conclude that the predominant core-like material identified in postmenopausal urine is probably derived from the β-subunit of LH.
Journal of Endocrinology (1992) 133, 459–466
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ABSTRACT
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) has actions on a variety of endocrine tissues. The cytokine is secreted by cells of the anterior pituitary and endocrine pancreas and has recently been shown to be produced by cultures of thyroid epithelial cells. In this study we have examined some of the factors which regulate IL-6 release from an immortalized human thyroid line (HTori3).
IL-6 release over 24 h was stimulated by TSH (5000 μU/ml), by forskolin (0·01 mmol/l), by fetal calf serum (1–20%) and by epidermal growth factor (20 ng/ml). Stimulation was also apparent with γ-interferon and with tumour necrosis factor at concentrations known to enhance class II major histocompatibility antigen expression by thyroid epithelium. The most potent factor tested was interleukin-1 (IL-1), which controls IL-6 release from other cell types. Threefold stimulation was found with 1 U/ml rising to 350-fold with 1000 U/ml. The effect of IL-1 took 2 h to develop and was blocked by cycloheximide (100 μmol/l). Stimulation was not markedly inhibited by pertussis toxin. Many of the actions of IL-1 are mediated by prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). At concentrations as low as 30 nmol/l, PGE2 stimulated IL-6 release but the maximum stimulation obtained with PGE2 was only threefold. The effect of IL-1 was not inhibited by indomethacin.
These data provide further evidence that IL-6 is produced by human thyrocytes. The effect of IL-1 has not been demonstrated previously. Stimulation of IL-6 release by IL-1 did not appear to be mediated by prostaglandin. IL-6 may influence hormone release from the thyroid as it does in other tissues. High concentrations of IL-6 in the thyroid may increase infiltration by, and activation of, lymphocytes in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease.
Journal of Endocrinology (1992) 133, 477–482
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The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Clayton, Australia
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Department of Biological and Medical Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
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Adverse environmental conditions before birth are known to programme adult metabolic and endocrine phenotypes in several species. However, whether increments in fetal cortisol concentrations of the magnitude commonly seen in these conditions can cause developmental programming remains unknown. Thus, this study investigated the outcome of physiological increases in fetal cortisol concentrations on glucose–insulin dynamics and pituitary–adrenal function in adult sheep. Compared with saline treatment, intravenous fetal cortisol infusion for 5 days in late gestation did not affect birthweight but increased lamb body weight at 1–2 weeks after birth. Adult glucose dynamics, insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion were unaffected by prenatal cortisol overexposure, assessed by glucose tolerance tests, hyperinsulinaemic–euglycaemic clamps and acute insulin administration. In contrast, prenatal cortisol infusion induced adrenal hypo-responsiveness in adulthood with significantly reduced cortisol responses to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia and exogenous adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) administration relative to saline treatment. The area of adrenal cortex expressed as a percentage of the total cross-sectional area of the adult adrenal gland was also lower after prenatal cortisol than saline infusion. In adulthood, basal circulating ACTH but not cortisol concentrations were significantly higher in the cortisol than saline-treated group. The results show that cortisol overexposure before birth programmes pituitary–adrenal development with consequences for adult stress responses. Physiological variations in cortisol concentrations before birth may, therefore, have an important role in determining adult phenotypical diversity and adaptability to environmental challenges.
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The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Clayton, Australia
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Institute for Women’s Health, University College London, London, UK
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Department of Biological and Medical Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
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In adults, glucocorticoids act to match the supply and demand for energy during physiological challenges, partly through actions on tissue mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) capacity. However, little is known about the role of the natural prepartum rise in fetal glucocorticoid concentrations in preparing tissues for the increased postnatal energy demands. This study examined the effect of manipulating cortisol concentrations in fetal sheep during late gestation on mitochondrial OXPHOS capacity of two skeletal muscles with different postnatal locomotive functions. Mitochondrial content, biogenesis markers, respiratory rates and expression of proteins and genes involved in the electron transfer system (ETS) and OXPHOS efficiency were measured in the biceps femoris (BF) and superficial digital flexor (SDF) of fetuses either infused with cortisol before the prepartum rise or adrenalectomised to prevent this increment. Cortisol infusion increased mitochondrial content, biogenesis markers, substrate-specific respiration rates and abundance of ETS complex I and adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT1) in a muscle-specific manner that was more pronounced in the SDF than BF. Adrenalectomy reduced mitochondrial content and expression of PGC1α and ANT1 in both muscles, and ETS complex IV abundance in the SDF near term. Uncoupling protein gene expression was unaffected by cortisol manipulations in both muscles. Gene expression of the myosin heavy chain isoform, MHCIIx, was increased by cortisol infusion and reduced by adrenalectomy in the BF alone. These findings show that cortisol has a muscle-specific role in prepartum maturation of mitochondrial OXPHOS capacity with important implications for the health of neonates born pre-term or after intrauterine glucocorticoid overexposure.