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Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum

The gp70 family of glycoproteins is distinguished by the role of these molecules as constituents of C-type viral envelopes and also as Mendelian cellular constituents expressed independently of virus production. The source of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum of 129 strain mice, which are not overt producers...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Obata, Y, Stockert, E, Yamaguchi, M, Boyse, EA
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1978
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2184997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/212505
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author Obata, Y
Stockert, E
Yamaguchi, M
Boyse, EA
author_facet Obata, Y
Stockert, E
Yamaguchi, M
Boyse, EA
author_sort Obata, Y
collection PubMed
description The gp70 family of glycoproteins is distinguished by the role of these molecules as constituents of C-type viral envelopes and also as Mendelian cellular constituents expressed independently of virus production. The source of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum of 129 strain mice, which are not overt producers of virus, could not be traced to any organ or tissue that is known to be G(IX)-positive by serological tests. Hematopoietic tissues were excluded as source of serum G(IX)-gp70 by tests with reciprocal radiation chimeras made from 129 and 129-G(IX)(-) donors and recipients. Thymus and spleen were excluded because excision of these organs did not affect levels of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum. The serum of young adult 129 males contains roughly four times as much G(IX)-gp70 as adult 129 females and the levels rise in both sexes with increasing age. Castration of 129 males reduced the level of serum G(IX)-gp70 to that of females, and the level was fully restored by testosterone. Thus the epididymis and seminal fluid, though rich in G(IX)-gp70, do not contribute significant amounts of G(IX)-gp70 to the serum. The level of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum of testosterone-treated females, though more than double that of untreated females, did not reach the level of normal males, under the conditions tested. This may signify that G(IX)-gp70 production by males is subject to imprinting by testosterone in early life. Evidently the main source of serum G(IX)-gp70 is a tissue or organ that is common to males and females, is directly or indirectly responsive to testosterone, and has not so far been identified serologically as G(IX)- positive.
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spelling pubmed-21849972008-04-17 Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum Obata, Y Stockert, E Yamaguchi, M Boyse, EA J Exp Med Articles The gp70 family of glycoproteins is distinguished by the role of these molecules as constituents of C-type viral envelopes and also as Mendelian cellular constituents expressed independently of virus production. The source of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum of 129 strain mice, which are not overt producers of virus, could not be traced to any organ or tissue that is known to be G(IX)-positive by serological tests. Hematopoietic tissues were excluded as source of serum G(IX)-gp70 by tests with reciprocal radiation chimeras made from 129 and 129-G(IX)(-) donors and recipients. Thymus and spleen were excluded because excision of these organs did not affect levels of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum. The serum of young adult 129 males contains roughly four times as much G(IX)-gp70 as adult 129 females and the levels rise in both sexes with increasing age. Castration of 129 males reduced the level of serum G(IX)-gp70 to that of females, and the level was fully restored by testosterone. Thus the epididymis and seminal fluid, though rich in G(IX)-gp70, do not contribute significant amounts of G(IX)-gp70 to the serum. The level of G(IX)-gp70 in the serum of testosterone-treated females, though more than double that of untreated females, did not reach the level of normal males, under the conditions tested. This may signify that G(IX)-gp70 production by males is subject to imprinting by testosterone in early life. Evidently the main source of serum G(IX)-gp70 is a tissue or organ that is common to males and females, is directly or indirectly responsive to testosterone, and has not so far been identified serologically as G(IX)- positive. The Rockefeller University Press 1978-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2184997/ /pubmed/212505 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Obata, Y
Stockert, E
Yamaguchi, M
Boyse, EA
Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title_full Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title_fullStr Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title_full_unstemmed Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title_short Source and hormone-dependence of GLx-gp70 in mouse serum
title_sort source and hormone-dependence of glx-gp70 in mouse serum
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2184997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/212505
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