135 research outputs found

    Contribución de BLACPMA para el nuevo derecho de propiedad intelectual y de patentes farmacéuticas a los Pueblos Originarios y Ancestrales

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    Deseo felicitar a los Editores de Boletín Latino Americano y del Caribe de Plantas Medicinales y Aromáticas BLACPMA, revista científica ha ido mejorando en forma vertiginosa la calidad de los trabajos publicados en ella. Al ser una revista “open access” y permitir la rápida publicación de trabajos relacionados con el tema de las plantas medicinales y aromáticas, favorece su amplia difusión a nivel mundial

    Effect of Prenatal Exposure to Lead on Estrogen Action in the Prepubertal Rat Uterus

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    Lead is a widely spread environmental pollutant known to affect both male and female reproductive systems in humans and experimental animals and causes infertility and other adverse effects. The present paper investigated the effects of prenatal exposure to lead on different parameters of estrogen stimulation in the uterus of the prepubertal rat. In prenatally and perinatally exposed rats, estrogen-induced endometrial eosinophilia, endometrial stroma edema, and eosinophil migration towards the endometrium, and uterine luminal epithelial hypertrophy are enhanced while several other responses to estrogen appear unchanged. These effects may contribute to decrease in fertility following prenatal exposure to lead. The striking difference between most of these effects of prenatal exposure and the previously reported effects of chronic exposure to lead suggests that prenatal exposure to lead may neutralize the effects of chronic exposure to lead, providing partial protection of cell function against the adverse effects of chronic exposure to lead. We propose that the mechanism involved, named imprinting or cell programming, persisted through evolution as a nongenetic adaptive mechanism to provide protection against long-term environmental variations that otherwise may cause the extinction of species not displaying this kind of adaptation

    Возможности использования фитоэстрогенов для коррекции микробного ценоза влагалища

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    The article deals with the testing of phytoestrogens containing in plants endemic to Chile. This research confirms that phytoextract has the similar effect upon the target-tissues like estradiol. It was detected, that this substance inhibits the stimulating action of estradiol over the population of lactobacillus in vagina.Проведены испытания фитоэстрогенов, содержащихся в растениях, эндемичных для Чили. Установлено, что фитоэкстракт действует на ткани-мишени сходно с эстрадиолом. Показано, что препарат ингибирует стимулирующее действие эстрадиола на популяцию лактобактерий влагалища

    Equol y daidzeina disminuyen la migración, invasión y la expresión génica de metaloproteinasa de la matriz (MMPs) en las líneas celulares prostáticas cancerosas DU-145 y PC-3

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    Este trabajo se centra en el estudio de los compuestos de dieta que pueden tener potencial efecto quimiopreventivo contra el cáncer. Algunos de estos compuestos son los fitoestrógenos. Entre ellos encontramos la genisteína (1), el más estudiado, la daidzeína (2) y el equol (3) (figura 1). Para comparar el efecto de estos fitoestrogenos sobre las líneas celulares de cáncer de próstata, DU-145 y PC-3, se utilizó el ensayo de sulforodamina B para determinar la viabilidad celular tras los tratamientos con diferentes concentraciones de fitoestrógenos (0-12.5-25-50-100 μM) durante diferentes tiempos (24, 48, 72 h). Para analizar el efecto sobre la migración celular, las células DU-145 y PC-3 fueron tratadas previamente con una concentración de fitoestrógrno (50 μM) durante 24 horas y sembradas en una cámara Transwell sin recubrir. El estudio mostró que el equol, daidzeína y genisteína inhibió en MMP-2 y MMP-9 expresiones de genes en líneas celulares de cáncer de próstata, la PC-3 y DU-145. Los resultados indicaron que la daidzeína disminuyó la expresión de MMP- 2 y MMP-9 en DU-145 células. Nuestros datos sugieren que equol, daidzeína y genisteína inhiben la migración y la invasión de líneas celulares de cáncer de próstata

    Regulated expression of matrix metalloproteinases, inflammatory mediators, and endometrial matrix remodeling by 17beta-estradiol in the immature rat uterus

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Administration of a single physiological dose of 17beta-estradiol (E2:40 microg/kg) to the ovariectomized immature rat rapidly induces uterine growth and remodeling. The response is characterized by changes in endometrial stromal architecture during an inflammatory-like response that likely involves activated matrix-metalloproteinases (MMPs). While estrogen is known as an inducer of endometrial growth, its role in specific expression of MMP family members in vivo is poorly characterized. E2-induced changes in MMP-2, -3, -7, and -9 mRNA and protein expression were analyzed to survey regulation along an extended time course 0-72 hours post-treatment. Because E2 effects inflammatory-like changes that may alter MMP expression, we assessed changes in tissue levels of TNF-alpha and MCP-1, and we utilized dexamethasone (600 microg/kg) to better understand the role of inflammation on matrix remodeling.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Ovariectomized 21 day-old female Sprague-Dawley rats were administered E2 and uterine tissues were extracted and prepared for transmission electron microscopy (TEM), mRNA extraction and real-time RT-PCR, protein extraction and Western blot, or gelatin zymography. In inhibitor studies, pretreatment compounds were administered prior to E2 and tissues were harvested at 4 hours post-hormone challenge.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using a novel TEM method to quantitatively assess changes in stromal collagen density, we show that E2-induced matrix remodeling is rapid in onset (< 1 hour) and leads to a 70% reduction in collagen density by 4 hours. Matrix remodeling is MMP-dependent, as pretreatment with batimastat ablates the hormone effect. MMP-3, -7, and -9 and inflammatory markers (TNF-alpha and MCP-1) are transiently upregulated with peak expression at 4 hours post-E2 treatment. MMP-2 expression is increased by E2 but highest expression and activity occur later in the response (48 hours). Dexamethasone inhibits E2-modulated changes in collagen density and expression of MMPs although these effects are variable. Dexamethasone upregulates MMP-3 mRNA but not protein levels, inhibiting E2-induced upregulation of MMP-7, and -9, and MCP-1 mRNA and protein but not inhibiting the hormone-induced increase in TNF-alpha mRNA.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The data demonstrate that E2-regulated endometrial remodeling is rapid in onset (<1 hour) and peak expression of MMPs and inflammatory mediators correlates temporally with the period of lowest stromal collagen density during uterine tissue hypertrophy.</p

    The biological basis and clinical significance of hormonal imprinting, an epigenetic process

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    The biological phenomenon, hormonal imprinting, was named and defined by us (Biol Rev, 1980, 55, 47-63) 30 years ago, after many experimental works and observations. Later, similar phenomena were also named to epigenetic imprinting or metabolic imprinting. In the case of hormonal imprinting, the first encounter between a hormone and its developing target cell receptor—usually at the perinatal period—determines the normal receptor-hormone connection for life. However, in this period, molecules similar to the target hormone (members of the same hormone family, synthetic drugs, environmental pollutants, etc), which are also able to bind to the receptor, provoke faulty imprinting also with lifelong—receptorial, behavioral, etc.,—consequences. Faulty hormonal imprinting could also be provoked later in life in continuously dividing cells and in the brain. Faulty hormonal imprinting is a disturbance of gene methylation pattern, which is epigenenetically inherited to the further generations (transgenerational imprinting). The absence of the normal or the presence of false hormonal imprinting predispose to or manifested in different diseases (e.g., malignant tumors, metabolic syndrome) long after the time of imprinting or in the progenies
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