Nervous system (NS) activity participates in metabolic homeostasis by detecting peripheral signal molecules derived from food intake and energy balance. High quality diets are thought to include fiber-rich foods like whole grain rice, breads, cereals, and grains. Several studies have associated high consumption of fiber-enriched diets with a reduced risk of diabetes, obesity, and gastrointestinal disorders. In the lower intestine, anaerobic fermentation of soluble fibers by microbiota produces short chain fatty acids (SCFAs), key energy molecules that have a recent identified leading role in the intestinal gluconeogenesis, promoting beneficial effects on glucose tolerance and insulin resistance. SCFAs are also signaling molecules that bind to specific G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) named Free Fatty Acid Receptor 3 (FFA3, GPR41) and 2 (FFA2, GPR43). However, how SCFAs impact NS activity through their GPCRs is poorly understood. Recently, studies have demonstrated the presence of FFA2 and FFA3 in the sympathetic NS of rat, mouse and human. Two studies have showed that FFA3 activation by SCFAs increases firing and norepinephrine (NE) release from sympathetic neurons. However, the recent study from the Ikeda Laboratory revealed that activation of FFA3 by SCFAs impairs N-type calcium channel (NTCC) activity, which contradicts the idea of FFA3 activation leading to increased action potential evoked NE release. Here we will discuss the scope of the latter study and the putative physiological role of SCFAs and FFAs in the sympathetic NS.
A micellar-stabilized room-temperature phosphorescence (MS-RTP) method for the determination of atenolol has been developed in micellar solutions of sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) in the presence of thallium(I) as a heavy atom and sodium sulphite as an oxygen scavenger. The effects of thallium(I) nitrate, SDS and sodium sulphite concentrations on atenolol MS-RTP intensity were studied. Optimized conditions to obtain maximum sensitivity were 0.015 mol/L thallium(I) nitrate, 0.1 mol/L SDS and 0.0075 mol/L sodium sulphite. The maximum phosphorescence signal was completely developed in 10 min and the intensity was measured at lambda(ex) = 272 nm and lambda(em) = 412 nm. The linear range of application obtained was 2.01-16.00 microg/mL. The detection limit estimated from the least-squares regression analysis was 0.86 microg/mL and the relative standard deviation of 10 replicates was 1.7%. The proposed method was applied to the determination of atenolol in a pharmaceutical formulation. The quantitation was carried out by means of standard calibration, standard-additions calibration and Youden calibration. These three experiments were necessary to evaluate the presence of constant and proportional errors due to the matrix.
The pituitary gland regulates key physiological functions, including growth, sexual maturation, reproduction, and lactation. Here, we present a paired single-nuclei (sn) transcriptome and chromatin accessibility characterization of six post-mortem human pituitaries. These samples were from juvenile, adult, and elderly male and female subjects. Well-correlated snRNAseq and snATACseq datasets facilitated robust identification of the major pituitary cell types in each sample. Using latent variable pathway analysis, we uncovered previously unreported coordinated gene expression modules and chromatin accessibility programs for each major cell type as well as an age-specific program across all the endocrine cell types. These largely appear to be congruent between human and mouse datasets. Given the importance of murine models in the study of human pituitary disorders and pituitary physiology, we next sought to compare expression profiles of pituitary cell types in mouse vs. human. Murine and human cell types were well correlated, exemplified by coordinated gene expression programs, especially for undifferentiated stem cells (SCs). In both species, we identified clusters corresponding to naive and committing SCs. All human SC clusters expressed the established SC markers SOX2 and SOX9, as well as genes involved in SC regulatory pathways (WWTR1, YAP1 andPITX2). Additional markers previously reported in murine pituitary SCs were also found in human SC, including WIF1, LGR5, FOS, CDH1, EGFR, LGR4, and WLS. Remarkably, in human, the main naive SC cluster was roughly divided into a high-JUN and a low-JUN expressing subgroup, whereas Jun expression was less pronounced in the murine SC cluster. In both species, committing SC clusters expressed the endocrine markers for POU1F1, TSHB, or POMC, while SCs committing to an intermediate lobe/melanotrope cell identity were distinguishable based on PAX7 expression. In addition, in the human datasets we identify a population of cells as originating from the pars tuberalis. We offer a range of markers that can be utilized for in vivo validation of these cells. Overall, the characterization of the murine and human pituitary SCs strongly suggests the co-existence of subpopulations with different lineage commitments in addition to a single uncommitted SC population. This sn atlas of the human pituitary is a valuable resource that will be made web-accessible.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.