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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Vztah metabolismu kortikosteroidů a ontogeneze ke stresové odpovědi / Relationship between corticosteroid metabolism, ontogenesis and stress response

Makal, Jakub January 2013 (has links)
Stress is a widespread phenomenon in the western society of these days. It is a risky factor for health and well-being of the majority of people. Based on these facts, it is the main subject for the field of "stress physiology" research, which aims to study processes occurring during stress response and tries to elucidate mechanisms leading to stress-induced health impairment. The first aim of this thesis was to describe effects of psycho-social stress on organism. The second aim was to find out if can stress applied in juvenile age affect the stress response in adulthood. If so, how is the role of glucocorticoid-metabolism enzyme 11β-HSD1 in this influence? To answer these questions, two different animal models inducing stress response in the laboratory rat were used. The first one is the model of mild social stress based on the resident-intruder paradigm. Our results show efficancy of this model. Fisher 344 male rats treated under this model for seven consecutive days show highly elevated plasma corticosterone concentrations and elevated expression of the glucocorticoid receptor gene in the pituitary. Behavioral analysis demonstrates a decreased social behavioral profile of the intruders, suggesting submisive social position of these animals in the resident-intruder paradigm. The second model used is...
2

Prospěšný vliv inhibice enzymu 11β-HSD1 na kognitivní výkon u myšího modelu Alzheimerovy choroby / Beneficial Effects of 11β-HSD1 Inhibition on Cognitive Performance in a Mouse Model of Alzheimer's Disease

Červinková, Tereza January 2018 (has links)
Charles University Faculty of Pharmacy in Hradec Králové Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology Candidate: Tereza Červinková Supervisor: PharmDr. Lukáš Červený, Ph.D. Title: Beneficial Effects of 11β-HSD1 Inhibition on Cognitive Performance in a Mouse Model of Alzheimer's Disease The increased life expectancy goes hand in hand with ageing-related cognitive impairments. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia being an irreversible and progressive brain disorder with loss of cognitive functions. Recent studies suggest that excess of glucocorticoid (GC) action exerts deleterious effects on the hippocampus and causes impaired spatialmemory. In addition, it has been demonstrated that aged mice with cognitive deficits show increased gene expression of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1) in the hippocampus and parietal cortex. The Senescence-Accelerated Mouse Prone 8 (SAMP8) strain is a spontaneous animal model of accelerated ageing. Many studies indicate that SAMP8 harbour the behavioural and histopathological signatures of AD. In the present study, we evaluated the neuroprotective effects of 11β-HSD1 inhibition by a potent pyrrolidine-based compound RL-118 and/or effects of diet on cognitive performance in different groups of SAMP8 by conducting behavioural and...
3

Disturbed Islet Function and Alterations in Islet Protein Expression

Ortsäter, Henrik January 2005 (has links)
<p>Pancreatic β-cells sense the concentration of glucose in the systemic circulation through metabolism of the sugar molecule. Failure to correlate the blood sugar concentration to an appropriate metabolic signal disrupts the function of the β-cell as a controller of glucose homeostasis and may contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Release of insulin is pulsatile and this thesis presents data that support that metabolism drives such pulsatile release. It is also found that increase in insulin release in response to elevation of the glucose concentration is only seen when the rise in glucose induces a prompt and sustained increase in mitochondrial metabolism. Such activation of mitochondrial metabolism depended on the metabolic state of the β-cell prior to the glucose challenge. In this context, prolonged periods of elevated levels of fatty acids are harmful to the pancreatic β-cell. To study the protein expression changes induced by fatty acids a protocol for islet protein profiling and identification of differently expressed proteins were developed. By using this protocol it was discovered that oleate decreased the cellular level of the chaperone peptidyl-prolyl isomerase B. The protocol was also used to study protein expression in islets obtained from mice fed a high-fat and/or a high-sucrose diet. Excess of glucocorticoids in the systemic circulation also cause a diabetic phenotype. Tissue response to glucocorticoids is regulated by the intracellular concentration of the active form of glucocorticoids, which is formed from the inactive form by the enzyme 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1. It was found that pancreatic islets produce 11β-HSD1 protein in relation to substrate availability and that the amount of islet 11β-HSD1 protein was negatively correlated with insulin secretion.</p>
4

Disturbed Islet Function and Alterations in Islet Protein Expression

Ortsäter, Henrik January 2005 (has links)
Pancreatic β-cells sense the concentration of glucose in the systemic circulation through metabolism of the sugar molecule. Failure to correlate the blood sugar concentration to an appropriate metabolic signal disrupts the function of the β-cell as a controller of glucose homeostasis and may contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Release of insulin is pulsatile and this thesis presents data that support that metabolism drives such pulsatile release. It is also found that increase in insulin release in response to elevation of the glucose concentration is only seen when the rise in glucose induces a prompt and sustained increase in mitochondrial metabolism. Such activation of mitochondrial metabolism depended on the metabolic state of the β-cell prior to the glucose challenge. In this context, prolonged periods of elevated levels of fatty acids are harmful to the pancreatic β-cell. To study the protein expression changes induced by fatty acids a protocol for islet protein profiling and identification of differently expressed proteins were developed. By using this protocol it was discovered that oleate decreased the cellular level of the chaperone peptidyl-prolyl isomerase B. The protocol was also used to study protein expression in islets obtained from mice fed a high-fat and/or a high-sucrose diet. Excess of glucocorticoids in the systemic circulation also cause a diabetic phenotype. Tissue response to glucocorticoids is regulated by the intracellular concentration of the active form of glucocorticoids, which is formed from the inactive form by the enzyme 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1. It was found that pancreatic islets produce 11β-HSD1 protein in relation to substrate availability and that the amount of islet 11β-HSD1 protein was negatively correlated with insulin secretion.

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