Background: Spontaneous tumors in dog have been demonstrated to share many features with their human counterparts, including relevant molecular targets, histological appearance, genetics, biological behavior and response to conventional treatments. Mammary tumors in dog therefore provide an attractive alternative to more classical mouse models, such as transgenics or xenografts, where the tumour is artificially induced. To assess the extent to which dog tumors represent clinically significant human phenotypes, we performed the first genome-wide comparative analysis of transcriptional changes occurring in mammary tumors of the two species, with particular focus on the molecular pathways involved.
Adrenalectomy has been shown to reverse most facets of the syndrome of the genetically obese fa/fa rat. However, a detailed analysis of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in these animals is lacking. In the present study, morning corticosteronemia was higher in obese rats of both sexes than in lean ones, whereas evening corticosteronemia was higher only in obese male rats. The HPA axis was further investigated using stressful stimuli. Immobilization, ether, and cold stresses resulted in greater corticosterone levels in obese than in lean animals. These abnormalities consisted in upward shifts of the corticosterone response in obese females and absolute increases in that of obese males, indicating that such alterations were more pronounced in obese male than obese female rats. Due to this, the putative origin of the increased corticosterone output of obese rats was studied in males. Greater levels of ACTH were reached in obese than in lean rats when submitted to a cold stress (6 C). Dexamethasone produced a complete suppression of corticosterone output in both lean and obese rats. During the recovery from such suppression, corticosterone levels rose to higher values in obese than in lean rats. This observation together with the greater cold-induced ACTH output in obese rats suggest that the increased activity of the HPA axis of these animals is of central origin. Whatever its precise etiology within the central nervous system, it is proposed that the increased HPA axis activity in obese rats and its resultant hypercorticism play a role in the establishment and maintenance of their syndrome.
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