More than 20 years after Chernobyl nuclear power plant explosion, radionuclides are still mainly bound to the organic soil layers. The radiation exposure is dominated by the external exposure to gamma-radiation following the decay of (137)Cs and by soil-to-plant-to-human transfer of (137)Cs into the food chain. Because of this persistence of contamination with (137)Cs, questions regarding public health for people living in contaminated areas were raised. We investigated the biological effects of chronic exposure to (137)Cs on testicular and adrenal steroidogenesis metabolisms in rat. Animals were exposed to radionuclide in their drinking water for 9 months at a dose of 6,500 Bq/l (610 Bq/kg/day). Cesium contamination decreases the level of circulating 17beta-estradiol, and increases corticosterone level. In testis, several nuclear receptors messenger expression is disrupted; levels of mRNA encoding Liver X receptor alpha (LXRalpha) and LXRbeta are increased, whereas farnesoid X receptor mRNA presents a lower level. Adrenal metabolism presents a paradoxical decrease in cyp11a1 gene expression. In conclusion, our results show for the first time molecular and hormonal modifications in testicular and adrenal steroidogenic metabolism, induced by chronic contamination with low doses of (137)Cs.
Using various molecular approaches, including reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), rapid amplification of cDNA ends-PCR, sequencing, northern and western blotting, we found that the mouse GPX5 gene gives rise to at least three different transcripts that are not expressed at the same levels in the mouse epididymis. In addition to the major GPX5 transcript, we show that minor GPX5 transcripts exist, arising either from precocious termination of transcription or an alternative splicing event within intron 4 of the 5 exon-encoding GPX5 single copy gene. Furthermore, we demonstrate that variants of the GPX5 protein that are correlated with the shorter GPX5 transcripts can be detected in caput epididymidis protein extracts and that the various GPX5 isoforms are subject to differential post-transcriptional maturation processes in the mouse epididymis that essentially involve the addition of O-glycosyl extensions. Using a sensitive poly-A+ mRNA tissue blot, as well as RT-PCR and northern assays, we further show that in addition to being expressed in the epididymis, the GPX5 gene is also expressed, albeit at lower levels, in other tissues of the male genital tract, including the testis and prostate. Finally, we present evidence suggesting that the GPX5 gene is expressed in a temporally regulated manner during mouse embryonic development.
The pharmaceutical development of new chemical entities can be hampered by their solubility and/or dissolution limitations. Currently, these properties are characterised mostly during in vivo pre-clinical studies. The development of appropriate in vitro methods to study the solubility and dissolution properties in preclinical species would lead to a significant reduction or replacement of the animal experiments at this stage of development. During clinical development, media simulating the human gastrointestinal tract fluids are commonly used and a similar approach mimicking laboratory animals' gastrointestinal tract fluids would impact on the preclinical stage of development. This review summarises the current knowledge regarding the gastrointestinal physiology of the most common laboratory animals, and animal simulated gastric and intestinal media are proposed.
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