Publications by authors named "John A Cidlowski"

Glucocorticoids are primary stress hormones necessary for life that function to maintain homeostasis. These hormones and their synthetic derivatives are widely used in the clinic to combat disease but are limited by development of resistance and by severe side effects. Understanding how glucocorticoids signal is crucial for developing safer and more effective glucocorticoids.

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  • The cornea acts as a barrier to protect the eye from harmful external agents, and glucocorticoids are commonly used to treat related infections and disorders.
  • This study explored the role of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in the cornea, finding that GR signaling significantly influences gene regulation associated with immune responses.
  • Mice lacking GRs in their corneal epithelium showed severe eye development issues and an increased inflammatory response, indicating that GR signaling is vital for eye health and development.
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Background: Ventricular arrhythmias (VAs) demonstrate a prominent day-night rhythm, commonly presenting in the morning. Transcriptional rhythms in cardiac ion channels accompany this phenomenon, but their role in the morning vulnerability to VAs and the underlying mechanisms are not understood. We investigated the recruitment of transcription factors that underpins transcriptional rhythms in ion channels and assessed whether this mechanism was pertinent to the heart's intrinsic diurnal susceptibility to VA.

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  • The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2023/24 offers streamlined, tabular overviews of around 1800 drug targets and 6000 interactions with 3900 ligands, emphasizing selective pharmacology.
  • The guide serves as a permanent, citable record, summarizing key properties found in a much larger open-access knowledgebase while focusing on six main areas: G protein-coupled receptors, ion channels, nuclear hormone receptors, catalytic receptors, enzymes, and transporters.
  • Produced in collaboration with the IUPHAR, it standardizes nomenclature and classification for human drug targets, building on information from previous editions.
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The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2023/24 is the sixth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews, mostly in tabular format, of the key properties of approximately 1800 drug targets, and nearly 6000 interactions with about 3900 ligands. There is an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus links to the open access knowledgebase source of drug targets and their ligands (https://www.

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  • - Sex differences in stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders, influenced by glucocorticoids (stress hormones), are not well understood, but research on glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors reveals important findings.
  • - Knockout mice studies show that loss of these receptors affects anxiety, behavior, and sociability differently in males and females, indicating sex-specific roles in stress adaptation and fear response.
  • - Global gene analysis highlights significant dysregulation in female mice lacking both receptors, suggesting that GR and MR imbalances lead to distinct molecular changes in the hippocampus, with implications for treating stress-related disorders across genders.
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A correlation exists between stress and increased episodes of human alpha-herpes virus 1 reactivation from latency. Stress increases corticosteroid levels; consequently, the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is activated. Recent studies concluded that a GR agonist, but not an antagonist, accelerates productive infection and reactivation from latency.

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Glucocorticoids acting via the glucocorticoid receptors (GR) are key regulators of metabolism and the stress response. However, uncontrolled or excessive GR signaling adversely affects adipose tissue, including endocrine, immune, and metabolic functions. Inflammation of the adipose tissue promotes systemic metabolic dysfunction; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of adipocyte GR in regulating genes associated with adipose tissue inflammation are poorly understood.

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The NR superfamily comprises 48 transcription factors in humans that control a plethora of gene network programs involved in a wide range of physiologic processes. This review will summarize and discuss recent progress in NR biology and drug development derived from integrating various approaches, including biophysical techniques, structural studies, and translational investigation. We also highlight how defective NR signaling results in various diseases and disorders and how NRs can be targeted for therapeutic intervention via modulation via binding to synthetic lipophilic ligands.

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Background: Glucocorticoids are widely known for their immunomodulatory action. Their synthetic analogs are used to treat several autoimmune diseases, including immune thrombocytopenia. However, their efficacy and mechanisms of action in immune thrombocytopenia are not fully understood.

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Corticosteroids act on the glucocorticoid receptor (GR; NR3C1) to resolve inflammation and are routinely prescribed to breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy treatment to alleviate side effects. Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) account for 15% to 20% of diagnoses and lack expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors as well as amplified HER2, but they often express high GR levels. GR is a mediator of TNBC progression to advanced metastatic disease; however, the mechanisms underpinning this transition to more aggressive behavior remain elusive.

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Apoptosis is a form of regulated cell death (RCD) that involves proteases of the caspase family. Pharmacological and genetic strategies that experimentally inhibit or delay apoptosis in mammalian systems have elucidated the key contribution of this process not only to (post-)embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis, but also to the etiology of multiple human disorders. Consistent with this notion, while defects in the molecular machinery for apoptotic cell death impair organismal development and promote oncogenesis, the unwarranted activation of apoptosis promotes cell loss and tissue damage in the context of various neurological, cardiovascular, renal, hepatic, infectious, neoplastic and inflammatory conditions.

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  • Bcl-2 is an anti-apoptotic protein that often overexpresses in various human cancers, contributing to evasion of cell death.
  • Synthetic glucocorticoids like dexamethasone are used in chemotherapy for lymphoid cancers but Bcl-2-expressing cells resist their effects, showing both pro- and anti-apoptotic responses.
  • Research indicates that manipulating intracellular potassium levels can enhance the lethality of glucocorticoids on these resistant cells by altering mitochondrial membrane potential, suggesting treatment duration with dexamethasone is vital for inducing cell death.
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Background: Takotsubo syndrome is an acute cardiac condition usually involving abnormal regional left ventricular wall motion and impaired left ventricular contractility. It is due mainly to hyper-stimulation of the sympathetic nerve system, inducing an excess of catecholamines, usually triggered by intense psychological or physiological stress. The relationship between Takotsubo syndrome and the circulating stress hormones cortisol and copeptin (a surrogate marker of arginine vasopressin) has not been well documented.

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Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and can be treated with glucocorticoids (GC), although some patients are unresponsive to this therapy. The transcription factor LRH-1/ is critical to intestinal cortisol production (intestinal steroidogenesis), being reduced in UC patients. However, the relationship between LRH-1 expression and distribution with altered corticosteroid responses is unknown.

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Stress-related disorders display differences at multiple levels according to sex. While most studies have been conducted in male rodents, less is known about comparable outcomes in females. In this study, we found that the chronic restraint stress model (2.

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Synthetic immunosuppressive glucocorticoids (GCs) are widely used to control inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, the impact of GC signaling on intestinal tumorigenesis remains controversial. Here, we report that intestinal epithelial GC receptor (GR), but not whole intestinal tissue GR, promoted chronic intestinal inflammation-associated colorectal cancer in both humans and mice.

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The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2021/22 is the fifth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews, mostly in tabular format, of the key properties of nearly 1900 human drug targets with an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus links to the open access knowledgebase source of drug targets and their ligands (www.guidetopharmacology.

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The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2021/22 is the fifth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews, mostly in tabular format, of the key properties of nearly 1900 human drug targets with an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus links to the open access knowledgebase source of drug targets and their ligands (www.guidetopharmacology.

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Background Stress has emerged as an important risk factor for heart disease in women. Stress levels have been shown to correlate with delayed recovery and increased mortality after a myocardial infarction. Therefore, we sought to investigate if the observed sex-specific effects of stress in myocardial infarction may be partly attributed to genomic interactions between the female sex hormones, estrogen (E2), and the primary stress hormones glucocorticoids.

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  • Chronic stress can lead to cognitive and psychiatric issues, with glucocorticoids being key hormones that affect the brain's hippocampus through two receptors, GR (glucocorticoid) and MR (mineralocorticoid).
  • Researchers used genetically modified mice to study the effects of these receptors when deleted individually or together in the hippocampus, finding that knockout of both GR and MR caused significant harm, including neurodegeneration and issues in neuronal health.
  • The study found that GR and MR work together in the brain to regulate important genes related to cell survival and proliferation, indicating that both receptors are crucial for keeping hippocampal neurons healthy and functional.
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Background & Aims: Aberrant immune activation is associated with numerous inflammatory and autoimmune diseases and contributes to cancer development and progression. Within the stomach, inflammation drives a well-established sequence from gastritis to metaplasia, eventually resulting in adenocarcinoma. Unfortunately, the processes that regulate gastric inflammation and prevent carcinogenesis remain unknown.

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We explored sex-biased effects of the primary stress glucocorticoid hormone corticosterone on the miRNA expression profile in the rat hippocampus. Adult adrenalectomized (ADX) female and male rats received a single corticosterone (10 mg/kg) or vehicle injection, and after 6 h, hippocampi were collected for miRNA, mRNA, and Western blot analyses. miRNA profiling microarrays showed a basal sex-biased miRNA profile in ADX rat hippocampi.

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Our immune system has evolved as a complex network of cells and tissues tasked with maintaining host homeostasis. This is evident during the inflammatory responses elicited during a microbial infection or traumatic tissue damage. These responses seek to eliminate foreign material or restore tissue integrity.

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Background & Aims: The immune compartment is critical for maintaining tissue homeostasis. A weak immune response increases susceptibility to infection, but immune hyperactivation causes tissue damage, and chronic inflammation may lead to cancer development. In the stomach, inflammation damages the gastric glands and drives the development of potentially preneoplastic metaplasia.

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