| Literature DB >> 11846890 |
Helen E Gruber1, Dean Yamaguchi, Jane Ingram, Kelly Leslie, Weibiao Huang, Timothy A Miller, Edward N Hanley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence suggests that estrogens exert effects in different tissues throughout the body, and that the estrogen receptor beta (ERbeta) may be important for the action of estrogen (17-beta-estradiol) on the skeleton. The cellular localization of ERbeta in the human intervertebral disc, however, has not yet been explored.Entities:
Year: 2002 PMID: 11846890 PMCID: PMC65546 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-3-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Fig. 1A Photomicrograph of disc tissue showing immunolocalization of ERβ in disc cells in the annulus of a cervical disc specimen from a 49 year old female patient. Localization is cytoplasmic. Fig. 1B, negative control. (original magnification × 640).
Figure 2Fig. 2A: Photomicrograph of immunolocalization of ERβ in cultured disc cells in monolayer culture. Localization is cytoplasmic. Fig. 2B, negative control. (original magnification × 295).
Figure 3Fig. 3A presents a positive control photomicrograph of a specimen of benign hyperplasia of the prostate; localization is cytoplasmic. Fig. 3B, negative control performed with omission of primary antibody.
Figure 4RT-PCR amplification of ERβ mRNA in cultured human disc cells from the annulus. Panel A is a photograph of an ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel electrophoresis showing gene expression of ERβ as a single band at the predicted 323 bp size. First lane, base pair controls; mRNA from lumbar disc cells from a 30 year old male (lane 1), mRNA from lumbar disc cells from a 28 year old female (lane 2), mRNA from lumbar disc cells from a 37 year old female (lane 3), mRNA from cells from a thoracic disc from a 35 year old male donor (lane 4). Panel B shows expression of the control HPRT gene in the lanes as described for Panel A (size markers as indicated in Panel A).