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Institution

Worcester Foundation for Biomedical Research

About: Worcester Foundation for Biomedical Research is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Estrone & Estrogen. The organization has 2195 authors who have published 2646 publications receiving 115809 citations. The organization is also known as: Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology.
Topics: Estrone, Estrogen, RNA, Sperm, Microtubule


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that pre-mRNA binds preferentially to nuclear Sm and SC-35 antibody-reactive sites in vivo and that the binding requires intron sequences.
Abstract: We have studied the nuclear localization of rhodamine-labeled pre-mRNA after microinjection into nuclei of cultured rat kidney epithelial cells. Intranuclear localization of the injected RNA was followed in the living cells by fluorescence microscopy and digital image processing. Injected human beta-globin pre-mRNA became localized in 30-60 discrete nuclear sites that were coincident with loci defined by monoclonal antibodies against small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (Sm) or another spliceosome component (SC-35) in parallel immunocytochemical studies on the same nuclei. Similar patterns of nuclear localization were observed with a rat proenkephalin pre-mRNA. Nuclear microinjection of an intronlacking beta-globin RNA, a splicing-defective beta-globin mutant pre-mRNA, or an antisense beta-globin pre-mRNA did not result in localization at discrete sites. These results indicate that pre-mRNA binds preferentially to nuclear Sm and SC-35 antibody-reactive sites in vivo and that the binding requires intron sequences.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Observations further support the importance of melatonin peak duration and also indicate other interesting temporal aspects ofmelatonin action in the Djungarian hamster.
Abstract: In confirmation of earlier work, daily melatonin infusions of 9- or 12-h duration inhibited testicular development in pinealectomized juvenile Djungarian hamsters, while daily infusions of 6-h duration did not prevent gonadal growth. Two other methoxyindoles (5-methoxytryptophol and 5-methoxytryptamine) had less than 4% of the activity shown by melatonin. When pinealectomized hamsters received two short duration (i.e. 3, 5, or 6 h) melatonin infusions each day, gonadal development was not inhibited if the two daily infusions were separated by a period of 2 or 3 h without melatonin treatment. Thus, the effects of separate pulses of melatonin were not additive in this paradigm. When single, short duration daily infusions of melatonin (5-h) or isoproterenol (6-h) were administered to pineal-intact hamsters, gonadal inhibition occurred only when the infusions were given at times that would lead to an expected overlap with and extension of the endogenous nocturnal melatonin peak. Significant inhibition of test...

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that both the afferent and efferent connections of pE with the MOB are topographically organized and provide a short synaptic pathway between homotopic sectors of the two main olfactory bulbs.
Abstract: The organization of connections between the main olfactory bulb (MOB) and pars externa (pE) of the anterior olfactory nucleus was studied in hamsters by using wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase as both an anterograde and a retrograde neuronal tracer. Bulbar efferents of pE project exclusively to the contralateral MOB. A topographic organization is evident in these efferents, such that distinct sectors of pE project predominantly to certain sectors of the contralateral MOB and lightly to other sectors. The predominant projection to any bulbar sector in the coronal plane is repeated at nearly all rostral-caudal levels, i.e., the pE efferents to the contralateral MOB terminate within long strips or wedges that show a sector-to-sector topographic organization with respect to the medial-lateral and dorsal-ventral axes but not the rostral-caudal axis of the MOB. Afferents to pE arising in the ipsilateral MOB also show a sector-to-sector topographic organization. Injections into restricted sectors along the circumference of pE label all classes of output neurons (mitral cells and internal, middle, and external tufted cells) in restricted sectors of the ipsilateral MOB, and the sectors that have retrograde neuronal labeling are homotopic to those in the contralateral MOB that have dense anterograde terminal labeling. External tufted cells are not labeled and the other classes of MOB output neurons do not have prominent topographic patterns of labeling in cases with injections caudal to pE. The somata of external tufted cell that project to pE are predominantly in the deep part of the glomerular layer; most of the external tufted cells that lie more superficially in the glomerular layer do not appear to have projections extrinsic to the MOB. These results indicate that both the afferent and efferent connections of pE with the MOB are topographically organized and provide a short synaptic pathway between homotopic sectors of the two main olfactory bulbs.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results concur with Dobbing and Sands that developmental timetables for the brain are not affected by undernutrition, though extent of development may be.

113 citations


Authors

Showing all 2195 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert A. Weinberg190477240903
Harvey F. Lodish165782101124
E. J. Corey136137784110
Peter Palese13252657882
Sten Orrenius13044757445
Aldons J. Lusis12767373786
Michel Goedert12533764671
Frederic D. Bushman11944284206
Robert H. Singer11339141493
Joel F. Habener11242743774
Ryuzo Yanagimachi10243840651
Jaak Panksepp9944640748
Hagan Bayley9734433575
John H. Hartwig9626030336
Joseph Avruch9419140946
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20191
20171
20091
20087
20063
20042