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Endocrine Methodologies

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Structure will be determined and then synthesized and bioactivity compared ... Frog skin bioassay for MSH is an example, toad bladder bioassay for vasopressin. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Endocrine Methodologies


1
Endocrine Methodologies
  • Following discovery of a hormone, endocrine
    studies focus on the following
  • Source distribution of the hormone
  • Structure will be determined and then synthesized
    and bioactivity compared to purified extract.
  • Biosynthetic pathway should be determined by cDNA
    and mRNA analysis.

2
Endocrine Methodologies
  • Control of secretion is determined by what
    intrinsic and extrinsic factors regulate
    secretion.
  • Cellular mechanisms of secretion involving
    discovery of 1o and 2o messengers.
  • Circulation metabolism to determine ½ life.
  • Biological actions determined by
    ablation/replacement.
  • Mechanism of action to determine changes in
    biochemical processes and products after
    administration.

3
Histological Studies
  • Early endocrine studies were anatomical and
    descriptive.
  • Gross observations of endocrine tissue only
    provides general details of anatomical
    localization, size, vascularization and
    innervation.
  • Histological observations will show hypertropic
    or atrophic cells. Hypertrophic cells have
    abundant ER, Glogi. Atrophic cells lack these
    and have a diminished cytoplasm.

4
Histological Studies
  • Hypertropy is usually accompanied by hyperplasia.
  • Hematoxylin is a basic dye that interacts with
    acidic residues like DNA and RNA. These are
    termed basophilic. Eosin is an acidic dye that
    interacts with basic components. Hematoxylin
    stains the nucleus blue and eosin stains the
    cytoplasm pink

5
Immunocytochemistry
  • Antibodies to protein hormones or peptides are
    conjugated to a flourescent dye and used to
    identify hormone producing cells.
  • Tissue is put on a slide, AB-conjugate is added
    to tissue and xs washed away. Flourescence
    appears only in cells producing the hormone.

6
Immunocytochemistry
  • In immunoenzyme histochemistry and AB to a
    hormone is conjugated to an enzyme, like
    peroxidase. AB-enzyme conjugate interacts with
    tissue and then substrate is added and the
    conjugated enzyme catalyzes very localized
    reactions.
  • This allows visualization of secretory vesicle or
    granules of a cell.

7
Surgical Methods
  • Surgical removal of a putative endocrine organ is
    followed by assessment of physiological
    alterations.
  • Monitor things like changes in blood and/or
    urinary levels of metabolites or electrolytes.
  • Transplanting the organ back into the same or
    different animal also provides info on the
    functional role. This is usually done in inbred
    strains to prevent rejection.

8
Surgical Methods
  • Endocrine organs can be transplanted to an
    ectopic site such as the kidney capsule or eye
    where vascularization takes place.
  • Removal of both member of bilateral target organs
    leads to complete loss of dependent tissue/organ
    functions. If removed unilaterally, the
    remaining organ undergoes compensatory-hypertrophy
    , an increase in cell size and number in the
    remaining organ.

9
Surgical Methods
  • Animals can be sutured together and their
    vascular systems anastomosed. This is termed
    parabioses.
  • Other examples are pinelaectomy, adrenalectomy,
    thyroidectomy, thymectomy.
  • Pancreatic islets are impossible to remove but
    streptozotocin or alloxan can be used to kill the
    b cells. CoCl2 can be used to eliminate the
    glucagon secreting cells.

10
Hormone Replacement Therapy
  • Administration of a hormone or analog can be used
    following surgical removal.
  • AB can be used against most peptide hormones to
    immunoneutralize the biological effect of
    endogenous hormones.
  • Crude extracts of endocrine or other tissues were
    used early on to determine if these materials
    could replace the endocrine tissues.

11
Hormone Replacement Therapy
  • Replacement therapy with purified substances can
    fully restore target organ function or even lead
    to hypertrophy.
  • Insulin of bovine, ovine, porcine and equine
    origin used to be used but the species had to be
    changed because they were neutralized in the
    body.

12
Bioassays
  • The activity of a hormone is studied on living
    cells, tissues, or organs.
  • Usually the tissue or organ selected is naturally
    responsive to the hormone in the nM to pM range.
    Other hormones may affect these tissues, but at
    pharmacological doses (mM).
  • Frog skin bioassay for MSH is an example, toad
    bladder bioassay for vasopressin.
  • Steroid-primed rat uterus has been used to study
    mechanisms of oxytocin induced contraction of the
    organ.

13
Structure Activity Studies
  • Structure activity studies determine the amount
    of activity compared with some standard hormone.
  • MED and maximal activities within a particular
    assay are determined first. Then intermediate
    doses are used to generate a dose-response curve.
  • Potency can then be expressed as a ratio of the
    parent hormone to the analog.

14
Radioisotopes
  • The ½ life of a hormone can be determined by
    radiolabelling it and determining its
    distribution, excretion rate, and metabolism
    within the body.
  • 14C can be incorporated into glucose and its
    subsequent metabolism to 14CO2 is a measure of
    metabolic activity of the cell.
  • 3H can be used in autoradiography and enzyme
    assays. 3H is usually a component of an a.a. or
    nucleotide.
  • 23Na can be used to measure Na uptake by nerve
    or muscle cells.
  • 32P can be used to study phosphorylation.

15
Radioimmunoassays
  • RIAs have allowed detection of minute
    concentrations of hormones with a high degree of
    specificity.
  • AB against the antigenic principle are raised in
    rabbits or other animals, then hormone is
    iodinated or tritiated.
  • Radiolabeled ligand (hormone) can then be shown
    to combine with a given quantity of AB in a
    dose-related manner to provide a standard curve.
  • Samples containing native (unlabeled) hormone
    compete with labeled hormone for the AB, and the
    decreased binding of labeled hormone to AB is a
    reflection of the amount of native hormone bound
    to AB.

16
Radioreceptor Assays
  • Plasma membranes or intact cells are prepared and
    a dose-related binding of radiolabelled hormone
    to the membranes is then demonstrated.
  • Instead of AG-AB reaction, the assay employs
    interaction between hormone and natural membrane
    receptors (antigens).
  • Specificity of binding is determined by the
    ability of the cold native hormone to compete
    with radiolabelled hormone for its receptor.
    Other cold hormones can be used to determine
    specificity.

17
Enzyme Assays
  • Adenylate cyclase or guanylate cyclase can be
    measured by quantitation of the conversion of
    radiolabeled ATP or GTP to labeled nucleotides.
  • This is a true measure of the cyclizing activity
    of membrane fractions since measurements of
    cyclic nucleotide levels in cells fail to
    indicate how the nucleotide levels are altered.

18
Enzyme Assays
  • cAMP levels can be altered by increased or
    decreased phosphodiesterase activity which are
    unrelated to cyclase activity and cAMP formation.

19
Autoradiography
  • A radioisotope is injected into an animal or
    added to medium of cells.
  • A sample of tissue/organ is removed and put on a
    slide. The slide is immersed in a photographic
    emulsion in the dark.
  • Decay of the isotope leads to reduction of the
    silver bromide in the emulsion to silver
    crystals. Because b particles travel a short
    distance, the grains directly over the emulsion
    are exposed.

20
Autoradiography
  • After gonadectomy there is an increased
    incorporation of radiolabeled thymidine into DNA
    of gondaotrophs due to the loss of negative
    feedback of testosterone.
  • Actions of steroid hormones can be studied by
    autoradiography using 3H labeled steroids to see
    cellular site of hormone action.
  • Radiolabeled peptide hormones can be used to
    determine topographical localization of
    receptors.
  • Some hormones mediate effects through stimulation
    of RNA synthesis which can be studied using 3H
    uracil.

21
Hybridization Studies
  • Hybridization or annealing involves pairing of
    complementary strands of nucleic acids.
  • Hybrids can be DNA-DNA, DNA-RNA, RNA-RNA. DNA is
    analyzed on a solid support such as a membrane
    (Southern) and RNA in a similar manner
    (Northern).
  • Nucleotides can be localized within cells and
    tissues by in situ hybridization. In situ
    provides cellular resolution not seen with total
    RNA hybridization. It allows one to examine
    differential gene regulation within different
    nuclei.

22
Pharmacological Methods
  • Many exogenous drugs interact with molecular
    components of cells and can be used to study
    physiological activity of cells or mechanisms of
    chemical messengers that stimulate or inhibit.
  • Cardiac glycoside, oubain inhibits Na/K pump
    and certain hormone secretions are enhanced or
    inhibited by oubain suggesting active transport
    systems.
  • Methylxanthines such as theophylline, and
    caffeine are phosphodiesterase inhibitors. They
    elevate intracellular cAMP by preventing its
    breakdown.

23
Pharmacological Methods
  • Colchicine inhibits microtubule assembly by
    binding with tubulin.
  • Cytochlasin B is a fungal metabolite that
    interferes with microtubule function
  • Actinomycin D inhibits RNA production.
  • Puromycin cyclohexamide inhibit protein
    synthesis at the translational step.
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