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Gene Engineering in Endocrinology Margaret A. Shupnik

Gene Engineering in Endocrinology By Margaret A. Shupnik

Gene Engineering in Endocrinology by Margaret A. Shupnik


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Summary

In this volume, Margaret Shupnik and a team of leading investigators review breakthroughs in molecular endocrinology, emphasizing how studies of natural mutations and gene knockouts have illuminated endocrine processes.

Gene Engineering in Endocrinology Summary

Gene Engineering in Endocrinology by Margaret A. Shupnik

During the past five to ten years, a variety of tools has been developed in the disciplines of both gene engineering, and molecular and structural biology. Some of these advances have permitted scientists not only to identify and characterize genes, but also to target these genes by disruption, thus eliminating their function in living animals, and to det- mine the biological responses to altered gene products. This has particular significance in endocrine systems, in which feedback mechanisms between the hypothalamus, pi- itary, and end organs are critical in normal physiology. Interpretation of the physiological significance, or the site of action of specific molecules in this context, has been difficult prior to transgenic technology. Major advances have occurred specifically in the areas of growth and development, and of reproduction. Coupled with analysis of naturally occurring mutations in humans, the use of transgenic animals and in vitro systems has recently allowed endocrinologists to understand the importance of specific thyroid hormone receptor isoforms in vivo, the molecular basis for generalized resistance to thyroid hormones via mutations in the nuclear receptor, and mechanisms for suppressing gene transcription. Previously designated orphan rec- tors, such as steroidogenic factor-1, were demonstrated to have critical roles in dev- opment and reproduction. Other nuclear receptors-including those for thyroid hormone, estrogens, androgens, and progesterone-were shown to bind to coactivator and co- pressor proteins that modified their transcriptional activity, and contributed to the ce- specific effects of the hormones.

Gene Engineering in Endocrinology Reviews

The editor should be congratulated on bringing together some of the most respected researchers in this area to write state-of-the-art papers in the area of molecular endocrinology. . . Graduate students and fellows interested in basic endocrinology would find this book a worthwhile investment with good diagrams and well-written summaries of some of the more confusing areas of this field. . .I love the book and will keep it handy when I sit down and decipher the new papers in molecular biology.-Doody's Health Science Book Review Journal

Table of Contents

Part I. Growth, Development, And Metabolism. Differential Cell Signaling and Gene Activation by the Human Growth Hormone Receptor: From Cell Surface to Cell Nucleus, Corinne M. Silva. Insulin Action: Molecular Mechanisms and Determinants of Specificity, Michael J. Quon and Simeon I. Taylor. Ets Transcription Factors: Nuclear Integrators of Signaling Pathways Regulating Endocrine Gene Expression and Carcinogenesis, Andrew P. Bradford and Arthur Gutierrez-Hartmann. Pit-1 Expression, Regulation, and Modulation of Multiple Pituitary Genes, Bryan R. Haugen, David F. Gordon, and William M. Wood. Subnuclear Trafficking of Glucocorticoid Receptors: General Mechanisms and Specific Recruitment to a Unique Target Site by Tethering to a DNA-Bound POU Domain Protein, Uma R. Chandran and Donald B. DeFranco. Thyroid Hormone Receptors and Their Multiple Transcriptional Roles, Paul M. Yen. Models of Resistance to Thyroid Hormone, Jung-Hsin Hsu and Gregory A. Brent. Thyroid Hormone Receptor Family Members: Homodimers, Heterodimers, and Mechanisms of Transcriptional Repression, Ronald N. Cohen and Fredric E. Wondisford. SF-1 and DAX-1: A Dynamic Duo in Endocrine Development, Mark W. Nachtigal, Debra Enyeart-Van Houten, and Holly A. Ingraham. Part II. Reproductive System. Gene Knockout Models to Study the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis, T. Rajendra Kumar and Martin M. Matzuk. Transgenic Approaches to Study Developmental Expression and Regulation of the Gonadotropin Genes, Katherine E. Graham and Malcolm J. Low. Molecular Events Defining Follicular Developments and Steroidogenesis in the Ovary, Joseph Orly. Regulation of Inhibin Subunit Gene Expression by Gonadotropins and cAMP in Ovarian Granulosa Cells, Abir Mukherjee and Kelly E. Mayo. Placental Trophoblast Cells: Transcriptional Regulation and Differentiation, Veronica Soloveva, Jiandie Lin, Grace T. Ma, and Daniel I. H. Linzer. Alternative Splicing of mRNAs for cAMP-Responsive Transcriptional Factors and Modulation of Transcription in the Testis, Philip B. Daniel and Joel F. Habener. The Androgen Receptor, Androgen Insensitivity, and Prostate Cancer, Michael J. McPhaul. Genetic Determination of Androgen Responsiveness, Terry R. Brown. Steroid Receptor Regulation by Phosphorylation and Cell Signaling Pathways, Nancy L. Weigel. Steroid Receptor Actions: Agonists and Antagonists and the Role of Coactivators and Corepressors, Derek A. Schreihofer, Eileen M. Resnick, and Margaret A. Shupnik. Index.

Additional information

NPB9780896037182
9780896037182
0896037185
Gene Engineering in Endocrinology by Margaret A. Shupnik
New
Hardback
Humana Press Inc.
2000-04-01
428
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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