Page last updated: 2024-12-05

corticosterone

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Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID5753
CHEMBL ID110739
CHEBI ID16827
SCHEMBL ID22612
MeSH IDM0005217

Synonyms (152)

Synonym
BIDD:PXR0063
BIDD:ER0495
MLS001074095
BRD-K73589401-001-04-6
gtpl2869
CHEBI:16827 ,
11beta,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
11beta,21-dihydroxyprogesterone
(11beta)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
corticosterone, brn 2339601
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11,21-dihydroxy-, (11-beta)- (9ci)
(8s,9s,10r,11s,13s,14s,17s)-11-hydroxy-17-(2-hydroxyacetyl)-10,13-dimethyl-1,2,6,7,8,9,11,12,14,15,16,17-dodecahydrocyclopenta[a]phenanthren-3-one
smr000058318
HSCI1_000383
SMP1_000079
PRESTWICK2_000432
brn 2339601
ccris 6753
nsc 9705
einecs 200-019-6
11-beta,21-dihydroxyprogesterone
11,12-dihydroxyprogesterone
EU-0100220
corticosterone, >=92%
PRESTWICK3_000432
wln: l e5 b666 ov mutj a1 cq e1 fv1q
11-hydroxycorticoaldosterone
compound b
11-.beta.,20-dione
pregn-4-ene-3, 11,21-dihydroxy-, (11.beta.)-
corticosteron
17-deoxycortisol
nsc-9705
11.beta.,21-dihydroxyprogesterone
4-pregnene-11.beta.,20-dione
reichstein's b
11,21-dihydroxyprogesterone
nsc9705
pregn-4-ene-3, 11.beta.,21-dihydroxy-
PRESTWICK_672
cas-50-22-6
BPBIO1_000490
LOPAC0_000220
BSPBIO_000444
4-pregnene-11beta,21-diol-3,20-dione
compd b
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11-beta,21-dihydroxy-
4-pregnene-11-beta,21-diol-3,20-dione
11b,21-dihydroxy-4-pregnene-3,20-dione
cortico
(11-beta)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
11-beta,21-dihydroxypregn-3,20-dione
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11beta,21-dihydroxy-
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11,21-dihydroxy-, (11beta)-
cmc_13412
NCGC00091029-01
kendall's compound b
corticosterone ,
50-22-6
reichstein's substance h
11beta,21-dihydroxy-4-pregnene-3,20-dione
C02140
DB04652
NCGC00022472-05
MLS000028536 ,
SPBIO_002383
PRESTWICK1_000432
PRESTWICK0_000432
NCGC00022472-06
corticosterone, >=98.5% (hplc)
HMS2052G21
4793EB71-D789-498E-B641-C5C1C377B9FF
kendall's compound b; 4-pregnene-11beta,21-diol-3,20-dione; reichstein's substance h
HMS2090A08
C 2505
NCGC00022472-07
preg-4-ene-3,20-dione,11-b,21-dihydroxy-
11-b,21-dihydroxypregn-3,20-dione
CHEMBL110739 ,
BMSE000669
bdbm50170653
HMS1569G06
LMST02030186
NCGC00022472-08
HMS2096G06
HMS3260L21
dtxsid6022474 ,
dtxcid702474
NCGC00256539-01
tox21_303642
tox21_201366
NCGC00258918-01
MLS001424305
tox21_110879
HMS2231F16
S4752
AKOS016008541
CCG-101146
unii-w980kj009p
substanz h nach reichstein
w980kj009p ,
compound b nach kendall
LP00220
EPITOPE ID:152207
NC00396
SCHEMBL22612
tox21_110879_1
NCGC00022472-10
4-pregnene-11.beta.,21-diol-3,20-dione
(11.beta.)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
corticosterone [mi]
CS-5105
NCGC00260905-01
tox21_500220
W-105977
(11?)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11,21-dihydroxy-, (11b)-
HB2808
(11beta)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,2 0-dione
4-pregnen-11.beta.,21-diol-3,20-dione
11.beta.,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, (11.beta.)- #
pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, 11.beta.,21-dihydroxy-
11-.beta.,21-dihydroxypregn-3,20-dione
HY-B1618
OPERA_ID_1519
11b,21-dihydroxyprogesterone
corticosterone, vetranal(tm), analytical standard
11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
4-pregnene-11 corticosteron
SR-01000000082-3
sr-01000000082
sr-01000075748
SR-01000075748-4
SR-01000075748-1
HMS3713G06
'(11-beta)-11,21-dihydroxy-pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione'
(9beta,11alpha)-11,21-dihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
Q422543
21-dihydroxyprogesterone
11|a
corticosterone 100 microg/ml in acetonitrile
AMY22288
SDCCGSBI-0050208.P002
HMS3885H22
NCGC00022472-17
STL564760
D94656
(8s,9s,10r,11s,13s,14s,17s)-11-hydroxy-17-(2-hydroxyacetyl)-10,13-dimethyl-1,2,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17-tetradecahydro-3h-cyclopenta[a]phenanthren-3-one
17-deoxycortisol;11,21-dihydroxyprogesterone;kendall's compound b
AS-75743
corticosterone, 1mg/ml in methanol

Research Excerpts

Overview

Corticosterone (CORT) is an important hormone in entraining the biological rhythms of many cells throughout the body and coordinating peripheral rhythms with the central master clock. It is a powerful regulator of energy metabolism, and chronically high CORT levels cause obesity and diabetes in mice.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Corticosterone (CORT) is an important hormone in entraining the biological rhythms of many cells throughout the body and coordinating peripheral rhythms with the central master clock."( Interaction between corticosterone and PER2 in regulating emotional behaviors in the rat.
Ionadi, A; Johnson, JD, 2022
)
1.77
"Corticosterone is a stress hormone, which is often associated with a variety of the central nervous system diseases. "( Chronic corticosterone exposure impairs emotional regulation and cognitive function through disturbing neural oscillations in mice.
Xie, G; Xu, X; Zhang, T; Zhao, S, 2022
)
2.6
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a primary modulator of the stress and metabolic axes of vertebrates; thus, it is important in meeting metabolic and other challenges of migration."( Interrelationships among feather mercury content, body condition and feather corticosterone in a Neotropical migratory bird, the Purple Martin (Progne subis subis).
Branco, JM; Buck, CL; Dillon, D; Fischer, JD; Hingst-Zaher, E; Jordan-Ward, R; Schiesari, L; Siegrist, J; von Hippel, FA, 2022
)
1.67
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a steroid hormone that independently influences survival and growth and may provide mechanistic insight into growth-survival tradeoffs."( Corticosterone mediates a growth-survival tradeoff for an amphibian exposed to increased salinity.
Breuner, CW; Crespi, EJ; Hossack, BR; Tornabene, BJ, 2021
)
2.79
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a kind of corticosteroid produced by cortex of adrenal glands. "( Excessive corticosterone induces excitotoxicity of hippocampal neurons and sensitivity of potassium channels via insulin-signaling pathway.
Wang, H; Xia, Q; Yang, Z; Yin, H, 2019
)
2.36
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a powerful regulator of energy metabolism, and chronically high CORT levels cause obesity and diabetes in mice. "( Chronic high corticosterone with voluntary corn oil ingestion induces significant body weight gain in mice.
Fushiki, T; Inoue, K; Ishikawa, F; Manio, MCC; Matsumura, S; Odanaka, M; Sasaki, T, 2019
)
2.33
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a glucocorticoid hormone that maintains energy balance and can modulate foraging behaviors in seabirds. "( Variation in Corticosterone Levels in Two Species of Breeding Albatrosses with Divergent Life Histories: Responses to Body Condition and Drivers of Foraging Behavior.
Crocker, DE; Kroeger, C; Sagar, P; Shaffer, SA; Thompson, DR; Torres, LG,
)
1.94
"Corticosterone (CORT) is an adrenal steroid that plays a considerable role in stress and anti-inflammatory responses."( Serotonin and corticosterone rhythms in mice exposed to cigarette smoke and in patients with COPD: implication for COPD-associated neuropathogenesis.
Huang, Y; Lyda, E; Rahman, I; Sellix, MT; Sime, PJ; Sundar, IK; Yao, H, 2014
)
1.48
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a glucocorticoid produced by adrenal glands under the control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. "( Corticosterone analgesia is mediated by the spinal production of neuroactive metabolites that enhance GABAergic inhibitory transmission on dorsal horn rat neurons.
Anton, F; Darbon, P; Hanesch, U; Juif, PÉ; Poisbeau, P; Zell, V, 2015
)
3.3
"Corticosterone is an entraining signal for extra-suprachiasmatic nucleus circadian rhythms."( Diminished circadian rhythms in hippocampal microglia may contribute to age-related neuroinflammatory sensitization.
Barrientos, RM; Fonken, LK; Gaudet, AD; Kitt, MM; Maier, SF; Watkins, LR, 2016
)
1.16
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a stress-related steroid hormone found in vertebrates, and is known to interact with behavior. "( Effects of acute corticosterone treatment on male prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster): Territorial aggression does not accompany induced social preference.
Blondel, DV; Phelps, SM, 2016
)
2.22
"(5) Corticosterone acts as a potent and rapid suppressor of reproductive behaviors during periods of acute stress."( Historical perspective: Hormonal regulation of behaviors in amphibians.
Boyd, SK; Kelley, DB; Moore, FL, 2005
)
0.81
"Corticosterone is an important hormone of the stress response that regulates physiological processes and modifies animal behavior. "( Experimental enhancement of corticosterone levels positively affects subsequent male survival.
Clobert, J; Cote, J; Fitze, PS; Meylan, S, 2006
)
2.07
"Corticosterone was proposed to be an underlying physiological mechanism for such immunosuppression."( Corticosterone selectively decreases humoral immunity in female eiders during incubation.
Bourgeon, S; Raclot, T, 2006
)
2.5
"The corticosterone surge acts as a rhythmic cue that induces the rhythmic expression of Tph2 in the raphe neurons."( Daily rhythm of tryptophan hydroxylase-2 messenger ribonucleic acid within raphe neurons is induced by corticoid daily surge and modulated by enhanced locomotor activity.
Malek, ZS; Pévet, P; Raison, S; Sage, D, 2007
)
0.82
"Corticosterone (CORT) is a likely mediator due to its dual role in mobilizing energy stores throughout the body and regulating physiological responses to stressors."( Corticosterone modulation of reproductive and immune systems trade-offs in female tree lizards: long-term corticosterone manipulations via injectable gelling material.
French, SS; Johnston, GI; McLemore, R; Moore, MC; Vernon, B, 2007
)
2.5
"Corticosterone is a major stress-induced mediator that can be immunosuppressive."( Quantitative modeling of suppression of IgG1, IgG2a, IL-2, and IL-4 responses to antigen in mice treated with exogenous corticosterone or restraint stress.
Fan, R; Pruett, SB, 2001
)
1.24

Effects

Corticosterone has a permissive effect, as blocking the hormone's actions prohibits efficient fueling. It has a biphasic effect on memory formation, short-term effects being facilitating and long- term effects resulting in cognitive impairments.

Corticosterone (CORT) has long been shown to modulate 5-HT system, and to alter hippocampal functions in various physiological and pathological conditions. Corticosterone has been used to treat painful inflammatory diseases and can produce antinociceptive effects. It has a permissive effect, as blocking the hormone's actions prohibits efficient fueling.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Corticosterone has a permissive effect, as blocking the hormone's actions prohibits efficient fueling."( Endocrine regulation of fueling by hyperphagia in migratory birds.
Eikenaar, C, 2017
)
1.18
"Corticosterone has a protective effect on CHS."( Biological clock dysfunction exacerbates contact hypersensitivity in mice.
Aoki, N; Hirao, A; Nakamura, Y; Nakao, A; Shibata, S; Tahara, Y; Takita, E; Yokota, S, 2013
)
1.11
"Corticosterone has a biphasic effect on memory formation, short-term effects being facilitating and long-term effects resulting in cognitive impairments. "( Regional and temporal modulation of brain glycoprotein synthesis by corticosterone.
Guaza, C; Sandi, C; Venero, C, 1996
)
1.97
"Corticosterone has a similar biphasic effect, although this physiological glucocorticoid was less potent than DEX."( Regulation of hepatic cytochrome P450 2C11 by glucocorticoids.
Chen, Q; Iber, H; Morgan, ET; Sewer, M, 1997
)
1.02
"Corticosterone, which has a higher affinity for Type I than Type II receptors, produced a variable response."( Mechanisms of biphasic action of glucocorticoids on alpha-lactalbumin production by rat mammary gland explants.
Fullerton, MJ; Funder, JW; Gannell, JE; Quirk, SJ, 1986
)
0.99
"Corticosterone has been found to attenuate neuronal death caused by gp120-induced microglial cytokine production"( Physiological Corticosterone Attenuates gp120-Mediated Microglial Activation and Is Associated with Reduced Anxiety-Like Behavior in gp120-Expressing Mice.
Mahdi, F; Moss, EM; Paris, JJ; Worth, CJ, 2023
)
1.99
"Corticosterone (CORT) has long been shown to modulate 5-HT system, and to alter hippocampal functions in various physiological and pathological conditions. "( Acute corticosterone treatment elicits antidepressant-like actions on the hippocampal 5-HT and the immobility phenotype.
He, T; Li, L; Li, X; Li, Y; Liang, Y; Ou, F; Sun, X; Tang, M; Wang, W; Zhang, X; Zhao, S; Zu, Y, 2019
)
2.44
"Corticosterone has been used to treat painful inflammatory diseases and can produce antinociceptive effects."( Suppression of adrenal gland-derived epinephrine enhances the corticosterone-induced antinociceptive effect in the mouse formalin test.
Beitz, AJ; Han, HJ; Kang, SY; Kim, HW; Lee, JH; Roh, DH, 2014
)
1.36
"Corticosterone has significantly lower Km's for both 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 enzymatic dehydrogenase activity, compared to cortisol."( Why do humans have two glucocorticoids: A question of intestinal fortitude.
Morris, DJ, 2015
)
1.14
"Corticosterone has a permissive effect, as blocking the hormone's actions prohibits efficient fueling."( Endocrine regulation of fueling by hyperphagia in migratory birds.
Eikenaar, C, 2017
)
1.18
"Corticosterone has been known to mediate the effects of stress on cognitive functions associated with the hippocampus. "( Differential corticosteroid modulation of inhibitory synaptic currents in the dorsal and ventral hippocampus.
Maggio, N; Segal, M, 2009
)
1.8
"Corticosterone also has preparatory effects for subsequent stressors."( Acute corticosterone elevation enhances antipredator behaviors in male tree lizard morphs.
Hews, DK; Lima, SL; Thaker, M, 2009
)
1.56
"Corticosterone has also been documented in egg yolk in oviparous vertebrates, but the extent to which this influences phenotypic development is less studied."( Sex-specific developmental plasticity in response to yolk corticosterone in an oviparous lizard.
Astheimer, L; Hollander, J; Olsson, M; Uller, T, 2009
)
1.32
"Corticosterone has received considerable attention as the principal hormonal mediator of allostasis or physiological stress in wild animals. "( Corticosterone predicts foraging behavior and parental care in macaroni penguins.
Crossin, GT; Dawson, A; Gorman, KB; Phillips, RA; Sakamoto, KQ; Trathan, PN; Williams, TD, 2012
)
3.26
"Corticosterone has a protective effect on CHS."( Biological clock dysfunction exacerbates contact hypersensitivity in mice.
Aoki, N; Hirao, A; Nakamura, Y; Nakao, A; Shibata, S; Tahara, Y; Takita, E; Yokota, S, 2013
)
1.11
"Corticosterone (CS) has been shown to regulate behavior in the learned helplessness (LH) paradigm. "( Biphasic effects of adrenal steroids on learned helplessness behavior induced by inescapable shock.
Bignante, AE; Kademian, SM; Lardone, P; McEwen, BS; Volosin, M, 2005
)
1.77
"Corticosterone has attenuated effects on expression of these enzymes in cultured mutant primary hepatocytes."( Abnormalities of glucose homeostasis and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in mice lacking hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.
Black, K; Burgess, SC; McMillan, DR; Rogoff, D; Ryder, JW; White, PC; Yan, Z, 2007
)
1.06
"Corticosterone responses have been measured in some penguins, but not in the largest, the emperor penguin (Aptenodytes forsteri)."( Corticosterone responses to capture and restraint in emperor and Adelie penguins in Antarctica.
Barrett, DP; Candy, EJ; Cockrem, JF; Potter, MA, 2008
)
2.51
"Corticosterone has been shown to affect several patterns of glial cell and neuronal development. "( Effects of corticosterone on chick embryonic retinal cells in culture.
Gremo, F; Porru, S; Vernadakis, A, 1984
)
2.1
"Both corticosterone and T4 have been previously implicated as causal factors in the ontogenic increases in jejunal sucrase and maltase activities during the third week of life in the rat. "( Relative importance of corticosterone and thyroxine in the postnatal development of sucrase and maltase in rat small intestine.
Henning, SJ; Martin, GR, 1982
)
1.09
"Thus corticosterone has biphasic effects on the IL-6 response to hemorrhage and the response to LPS during the posthemorrhage period, which has important clinical implications with regard to the optimal dose of glucocorticoid for maintaining the host defense response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)"( Rapid increase in plasma IL-6 after hemorrhage, and posthemorrhage reduction of the IL-6 response to LPS, in conscious rats: interrelation with plasma corticosterone levels.
Arimura, A; Gottschall, PE; Komaki, G; Somogyvári-Vigh, A; Tatsuno, I; Yatohgo, T,
)
0.79
"Corticosterone receptors have been found in the cortical collecting tubule, and at least four metabolites of the hormone have been identified in rat renal tissue and urine."( Corticosterone metabolism and membrane transport.
Hartsell, A; Hierholzer, K; Kurtzman, NA; Meyer, M; Sabatini, S, 1993
)
2.45
"Corticosterone has a biphasic effect on memory formation, short-term effects being facilitating and long-term effects resulting in cognitive impairments. "( Regional and temporal modulation of brain glycoprotein synthesis by corticosterone.
Guaza, C; Sandi, C; Venero, C, 1996
)
1.97
"Corticosterone has profound effects on growth, differentiation, and synaptic transmission of hippocampal neurons by activation of mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) and glucocorticoid receptors (GRs). "( Corticosterone regulates expression of BDNF and trkB but not NT-3 and trkC mRNA in the rat hippocampus.
de Kloet, ER; Hoetelmans, RW; Schaaf, MJ; Vreugdenhil, E, 1997
)
3.18
"Corticosterone has a similar biphasic effect, although this physiological glucocorticoid was less potent than DEX."( Regulation of hepatic cytochrome P450 2C11 by glucocorticoids.
Chen, Q; Iber, H; Morgan, ET; Sewer, M, 1997
)
1.02
"Corticosterone has rapid inhibitory effect on IACh, which is mediated by a nongenomic mechanism. "( Modulation of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors by glucocorticoids.
Cheng, XH; Liu, LA; Shi, LJ; Wang, CA, 2002
)
1.76
"Corticosterone has been shown to be involved in the regulation of mirex-induced adaptive liver growth. "( Alterations in the hepatic glucocorticoid response to mirex treatment.
Brown, LD; Wilson, DE; Yarbrough, JD, 1988
)
1.72
"Corticosterone, which has a higher affinity for Type I than Type II receptors, produced a variable response."( Mechanisms of biphasic action of glucocorticoids on alpha-lactalbumin production by rat mammary gland explants.
Fullerton, MJ; Funder, JW; Gannell, JE; Quirk, SJ, 1986
)
0.99

Actions

Corticosterone did not increase the activity of papain and pepsin with any of the substrates tested. High corticosterone may suppress immune function and competing energy demands may limit ability to mount an immune response.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"High corticosterone may suppress immune function and competing energy demands may limit ability to mount an immune response."( Immune response to a Trichinella spiralis infection in house mice from lines selectively bred for high voluntary wheel running.
Acosta, W; Chappell, MA; Dlugosz, EM; Downs, CJ; Garland, T; Meek, TH; Platzer, EG; Schutz, H, 2013
)
0.84
"Corticosterone was lower than in males stressed for 50 days, but still higher than in controls."( Sexual behavior attenuates the effects of chronic stress in body weight, testes, sexual accessory glands, and plasma testosterone in male rats.
Aragón-Martínez, A; Juárez-Rojas, L; Retana-Márquez, S; Torres, GR; Vigueras-Villaseñor, RM, 2014
)
1.12
"Corticosterone blunted the increase in serum TSH levels and D2 activity in BAT produced by cold in vehicle-injected animals."( An acute injection of corticosterone increases thyrotrophin-releasing hormone expression in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus but interferes with the rapid hypothalamus pituitary thyroid axis response to cold in male rats.
Charli, JL; Cote-Vélez, A; Espinoza-Ayala, C; Jaimes-Hoy, L; Joseph-Bravo, P; Sotelo-Rivera, I, 2014
)
1.44
"Corticosterone plays an important role in feeding behavior. "( The role of 5-HT
Cui, R; Fan, J; Ge, T; Hall, FS; Li, B; Liu, W; Lv, J; Song, Y; Wang, X; Zhang, Z, 2017
)
1.9
"Corticosterone induced an increase glutamate and a decrease in GABA release in hippocampal slices, which was reversed by venlafaxine."( Long lasting effects of early-life stress on glutamatergic/GABAergic circuitry in the rat hippocampus.
Horrillo, I; Martisova, E; Meana, JJ; Ortega, JE; Ramírez, MJ; Solas, M; Tordera, RM, 2012
)
1.1
"Corticosterone did not inhibit the conversion of progesterone and dehydroepiandrosterone into a number of different metabolites, including 17α-hydroxyprogesterone, androstenedione and testosterone."( Corticosterone metabolism by chicken follicle cells does not affect ovarian reproductive hormone synthesis in vitro.
Groothuids, TG; Henriksen, R; Lepschy, M; Rettenbacher, S, 2013
)
2.55
"Corticosterone promotes gluconeogenesis, helping to maintain plasma glucose levels in the initial stage of the fast."( Physiology and behavior of the hen during induced molt.
Webster, AB, 2003
)
1.04
"Corticosterone was lower in EO-exposed animals of both sexes than in their controls."( Effects of long-term exposure of lemon essential oil odor on behavioral, hormonal and neuronal parameters in male and female rats.
Aloisi, AM; Ceccarelli, I; Fiorenzani, P; Lariviere, WR; Sacerdote, P, 2004
)
1.04
"Corticosterone levels were lower in YOUNG-RW (13.0 +/- 0.36 ng/ml) than in YOUNG-S (16.4 +/- 0.83 ng/ml) hamsters and higher in OLD-RW (22.62 +/- 0.47 ng/ml) than in OLD-S (15.54 +/- 0.13 ng/ml) hamsters."( Metabolic effects of voluntary wheel running in young and old Syrian golden hamsters.
Campbell, JE; Coutinho, AE; Fediuc, S; Riddell, MC, 2006
)
1.06
"Corticosterone displays two peaks, on the first and fourth days."( Changes in blood catecholamines, insulin, corticosterone and glucose during the course of the Sephadex inflammation.
Egger, G; Gleispach, H; Porta, S; Pürstner, P; Sadjak, A, 1982
)
1.25
"Corticosterone levels were lower in GK rat plasma than in normal Wistar rat plasma."( Diabetic GK rat plasma but not normal Wistar rat plasma induces insulin-stimulated DNA synthesis in primary cultured smooth muscle cells in GK rat aorta.
Kimura, I; Kimura, M; Naitoh, T; Nakano, Y; Okabe, M, 1994
)
1.01
"Corticosterone was able to increase FGF-2 immunoreactivity in different nigral subregions and cell types (astrocytes and neurones) depending on the duration of the treatment."( Corticosterone increases FGF-2 (bFGF) immunoreactivity in the substantia nigra of the rat.
Chadi, G; Cintra, A; Fuxe, K; Pettersson, RF; Rosén, L; Tinner, B; Zoli, M, 1993
)
2.45
"Corticosterone is known to suppress levels of 5-HTA(1A) receptor mRNA in rat hippocampus. "( Regulation of hippocampal 5-HT1A receptor mRNA and binding in transgenic mice with a targeted disruption of the glucocorticoid receptor.
Cole, TJ; De Kloet, ER; Joëls, M; Meijer, OC; Schmid, W; Schütz, G, 1997
)
1.74
"Corticosterone increase induced by LPS was lower in old than in young rats."( Interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor and corticosterone induction by central lipopolysaccharide in aged rats.
De Luigi, A; De Simoni, MG; Perego, C; Terrazzino, S, 1997
)
1.28
"Corticosterone levels were lower in old rats and mean ACTH and corticosterone levels were correlated in young but not old rats, as were maximum levels of the two hormones."( Coincident plasma ACTH and corticosterone time series: comparisons between young and old rats.
Carnes, M; Goodman, BM; Jaeckels, R; Lent, SJ; Vo, H,
)
1.15
"Corticosterone failed to increase beta-adrenoceptor density at any of the doses tested."( Effect of corticosterone on beta-adrenoceptor density in rat skeletal muscle.
Gazzola, C; Huang, H; Pegg, GG; Sillence, MN, 1998
)
1.42
"(4) Corticosterone could not inhibit the [Ca2+]i rise induced by changing the concentration of extracellular calcium from Ca(2+)-free to 3 mmol/L."( [Effect of glucocorticoid on [Ca2+]i induced by high-K+ in single PC12 cells and its characteristics].
Chen, YZ; Huang, XY; Lou, SJ; Wang, CG, 1998
)
0.78
"The corticosterone-induced increase in striatal PPT mRNA was evident after 16 h, but not after 2 h, of corticosterone treatment of ADX animals."( Glucocorticoid regulation of neuropeptide mRNAs in the rat striatum.
Chao, HM; McEwen, BS, 1991
)
0.76
"Corticosterone did not increase the rate of NGF mRNA degradation."( Multiple signalling pathways interact in the regulation of nerve growth factor production in L929 fibroblasts.
D'Mello, SR; Heinrich, G, 1991
)
1
"Corticosterone showed no increase from basal levels in the fed group during hemorrhage, while starved rats increased their basal level fourfold already at 30 min."( Nutritional status and endocrine response to hemorrhage.
Efendic, S; Eneroth, P; Hamberger, B; Ljungqvist, O; Nylander, G; Ware, J, 1986
)
0.99
"Corticosterone plays an important role in the regulation of postnatal development in the rat. "( Kinetics of circulating corticosterone in infant rats.
Henning, SJ; Leeper, LL; Schroeder, R, 1988
)
2.02
"Corticosterone did not increase the activity of papain and pepsin with any of the substrates tested."( The action of corticosteroids on proteolysis.
Bellamy, D; Leonard, RA, 1966
)
0.97

Treatment

Corticosterone-treated mice exhibited a reduced spine density that was ameliorated by melatonin administration. Corticosterone treatment decreased clutch success, juvenile size and body condition, but enhanced measures of physiological performance.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Corticosterone pre-treatment enhanced the neuroinflammatory response to OTA in a mineralocorticoid receptor (MR)-dependent mechanism, which is associated with increases in extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and p38 MAPK activation."( Corticosterone potentiates ochratoxin A-induced microglial activation.
Chansawhang, A; Chantong, B; Phochantachinda, S; Temviriyanukul, P, 2022
)
2.89
"Corticosterone-treated mice had significantly higher body weight (p ≤ 0.05) and BAT mass (p ≤ 0.05), increased adipocyte area (p ≤ 0.05), were insulin resistant (p ≤ 0.05), and significantly elevated expressions of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP-1) in BAT (p ≤ 0.05) while mitochondrial content remained unchanged."( Chronic glucocorticoid exposure causes brown adipose tissue whitening, alters whole-body glucose metabolism and increases tissue uncoupling protein-1.
Bel, JS; Khaper, N; Lees, SJ; Tai, TC, 2022
)
1.44
"Corticosterone treatment significantly increased OCT3 expression in the ventral hippocampus and increased anxiety-like behavior."( Chronic administration of glucocorticoid receptor ligands increases anxiety-like behavior and selectively increase serotonin transporters in the ventral hippocampus.
Forster, GL; Renner, KJ; Scholl, JL; Solanki, RR; Watt, MJ, 2023
)
1.63
"Corticosterone treatment induced depression-like behaviors, it increased immobility time in the TST, OFT, and FST, decreased the number of movements in OFT, and decreased sucrose consumption."( Oleuropein Reverses Repeated Corticosterone-Induced Depressive-Like Behavior in mice: Evidence of Modulating Effect on Biogenic Amines.
Al-Rasheed, N; Attia, HA; Badr, AM, 2020
)
1.57
"Corticosterone treatment triggered downregulation of 13 individual genes, as well as enrichment of gene sets related to meiotic spindle organization and chromosome segregation, and additional gene sets that function in ion transport."( Corticosterone and testosterone treatment influence expression of gene pathways linked to meiotic segregation in preovulatory follicles of the domestic hen.
Bentz, AB; Gardner, ST; Lorenz, WW; Mendonça, MT; Navara, KJ; Wrobel, ER, 2020
)
2.72
"Corticosterone (CORT) treatment significantly enhanced Bag-1/GR complex formation and GR mitochondrial translocation in cultured rat cortical neurons after treatment for 30 min and 24 hr."( Bag-1 mediates glucocorticoid receptor trafficking to mitochondria after corticosterone stimulation: Potential role in regulating affective resilience.
Bao, H; Du, J; Feng, L; Hou, Y; Hunter, RG; Jia, Y; K Manji, H; Li, H; Luo, S; S McEwen, B; Wang, G; Xiao, C; Yuan, P; Zhang, Y, 2021
)
1.57
"Corticosterone treatment induced a marked increase in FoxO3a levels, while decreased the expression of NPW protein in the hypothalamus."( FoxO3a suppresses neuropeptide W expression in neuronal cells and in rat hypothalamus and its implication in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis.
Fang, J; Jiang, Y; Lazarovici, P; Li, S; Liu, L; Wang, R; Yan, F; Zhao, X; Zhen, X; Zheng, W, 2020
)
1.28
"Corticosterone treatment did not change the levels of the miRNA targets and their corresponding tested proteins."( Sex-Dependent Changes of miRNA Levels in the Hippocampus of Adrenalectomized Rats Following Acute Corticosterone Administration.
Aguayo, FI; Aliaga, E; Avalos, AM; Cidlowski, JA; Corrales, WA; Fiedler, JL; Maracaja-Coutinho, V; Oakley, RH; Olave, FA; Parra, CS; Rojas, PS; Román-Albasini, L; Silva, JP; Venegas-Zamora, L, 2021
)
1.56
"Corticosterone treatment of adrenalectomized rats also rapidly increased corpus callosum Sgk1 mRNA."( Dynamic glucocorticoid-dependent regulation of Sgk1 expression in oligodendrocytes of adult male rat brain by acute stress and time of day.
Christensen, JA; Chun, LE; Hartsock, MJ; Hinds, LR; Spencer, RL; Woodruff, ER, 2017
)
1.18
"Corticosterone (CORT) treatment has been evidenced to develop a depression-like state in animals, that mimic hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis dysregulation implicated in the development of depression. "( Ferulic acid reverses depression-like behavior and oxidative stress induced by chronic corticosterone treatment in mice.
Camargo, A; Dalmagro, AP; Zeni, ALB, 2017
)
2.12
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in increased frequency, but not amplitude, of mEPSCs in layer II/III neurons accompanied by increased complexity of the apical part of their dendritic tree, with no changes in the density of dendritic spines."( Diverse action of repeated corticosterone treatment on synaptic transmission, neuronal plasticity, and morphology in superficial and deep layers of the rat motor cortex.
Blasiak, A; Bobula, B; Danielewicz, J; Gugula, A; Hess, G; Kania, A; Kula, J; Tylko, G, 2017
)
1.47
"Corticosterone-treated birds were more likely than controls to respond as if punishment was likely when the cone was placed near to the punished location."( Elevated levels of the stress hormone, corticosterone, cause 'pessimistic' judgment bias in broiler chickens.
Bateson, M; Beard, AP; Guy, JH; Iyasere, OS, 2017
)
1.45
"Corticosterone treatments affected immune function, as both chronic and acute exposure suppressed splenocyte proliferation, although viral replication rate increased only in the chronic corticosterone treatment."( Critical disease windows shaped by stress exposure alter allocation trade-offs between development and immunity.
Crespi, EJ; Kirschman, LJ; Warne, RW, 2018
)
1.2
"The corticosterone-treated group showed delayed learning during the initial sessions and suboptimal memory consolidation throughout testing."( Corticosterone impairs flexible adjustment of spatial navigation in an associative place-reward learning task.
Jackson, JC; Joëls, M; Lankelma, JV; Pennartz, CMA; Rusu, SI; Van Mourik-Donga, LA, 2018
)
2.4
"Corticosterone treatment of mouse hippocampal neurons in vitro caused neurotoxicity with an increase in the markers of autophagy but not apoptosis."( Chronic restraint stress induces hippocampal memory deficits by impairing insulin signaling.
Choe, S; Hong, CJ; Jung, S; Woo, H; Yu, SW, 2018
)
1.2
"Corticosterone pre-treatment generated oxidative stress, altering antioxidant enzymes in the nervous tissue."( Antioxidant and antidepressant-like effects of Eugenia catharinensis D. Legrand in an animal model of depression induced by corticosterone.
Alberton, MD; Barauna, SC; Brueckheimer, MB; de Albuquerque, CAC; de Gasper, AL; de Melo, DFM; Delwing-Dal Magro, D; Delwing-De Lima, D; Döhler, AW; Harger, MC; Maia, TP; Micke, GA; Sala, GABN; Siebert, DA, 2018
)
1.41
"Corticosterone treatment induced hyperphagia within 1 day in wild-type mice, which persisted for 3 weeks."( Metabolic Abnormalities of Chronic High-Dose Glucocorticoids Are Not Mediated by Hypothalamic AgRP in Male Mice.
Adamson, A; Allen, TJ; Coll, AP; Davies, A; Harno, E; Humphreys, N; Sefton, C; Shoop, R; White, A; Wray, JR, 2019
)
1.24
"Corticosterone-treated nestlings had lower mass, higher baseline and stress-induced corticosterone, and reduced telomeres; other metrics of morphology were affected weakly or not at all."( Brief Increases in Corticosterone Affect Morphology, Stress Responses, and Telomere Length but Not Postfledging Movements in a Wild Songbird.
Haussmann, MF; Pegan, TM; Vitousek, MN; Winkler, DW,
)
1.18
"Corticosterone treatment altered all parameters in behavioral tests, leading to a depressive- and anxious-like behavior."( Reversal effect of Riparin IV in depression and anxiety caused by corticosterone chronic administration in mice.
Barbosa Filho, JM; Capibaribe, VCC; Chaves, RC; da Silva, DMA; de Carvalho, AMR; de Sousa, FCF; Gutierrez, SJC; Lopes, IS; Macêdo, DS; Mallmann, ASV; Oliveira, ICM; Oliveira, NF; Valentim, JT; Vasconcelos, SMM, 2019
)
1.47
"In corticosterone-treated wild-type and UCP1 knockout mice housed at 30°C, obesity also develops to the same extent."( Glucocorticoid-Induced Obesity Develops Independently of UCP1.
Boulet, N; Brooks, K; Cannon, B; Carlsson, B; Fischer, AW; Jaiprakash, A; Luijten, IHN; Nedergaard, J; Shabalina, IG, 2019
)
1.03
"Corticosterone treatment increased adipose tissue mass in both sexes, which was reflected by elevated serum leptin levels."( Sex Difference in Corticosterone-Induced Insulin Resistance in Mice.
Grefhorst, A; Kaikaew, K; Steenbergen, J; van Dijk, TH; Visser, JA, 2019
)
1.57
"In corticosterone-treated hens, the suppressed follicular development was associated with the reduced availability of yolk precursor, indicated by the plasma concentration of VLDL and vitellogenin and the decreased proportion of yolk-targeted VLDL (VLDLy)."( Corticosterone regulation of ovarian follicular development is dependent on the energy status of laying hens.
Guo, YY; Jiao, HC; Li, Y; Lin, H; Song, QQ; Song, ZG; Wang, XJ, 2013
)
2.35
"In corticosterone-treated mice, fluoxetine at 10 mg/kg/day downregulated expression of mature granule cell markers and attenuated strong frequency facilitation at the synapse formed by the granule cell axon mossy fiber, suggesting the induction of granule cell dematuration."( Corticosterone facilitates fluoxetine-induced neuronal plasticity in the hippocampus.
Asada, M; Ikeda, Y; Inagaki, H; Kawada, T; Kobayashi, K; Suzuki, H, 2013
)
2.35
"Corticosterone treatment increased body weight and food intake for the duration of the treatment and increased gonadal and subcutaneous white adipose tissue weight in transient group by +35% and +31%, and in the continuous group by +140% and 110%. "( Both transient and continuous corticosterone excess inhibit atherosclerotic plaque formation in APOE*3-leiden.CETP mice.
Auvinen, HE; Biermasz, NR; Havekes, LM; Meijer, OC; Pereira, AM; Princen, H; Rensen, PC; Romijn, JA; Smit, JW; Wang, Y, 2013
)
2.12
"Corticosterone treatment acutely decreased NAc dopamine clearance measured by fast-scan cyclic voltammetry, suggesting that inhibition of uptake₂-mediated dopamine clearance may underlie corticosterone effects."( Corticosterone acts in the nucleus accumbens to enhance dopamine signaling and potentiate reinstatement of cocaine seeking.
Baker, DA; Ebben, AL; Gasser, PJ; Graf, EN; Hill, JE; Mantsch, JR; McReynolds, JR; Robble, MA; Vranjkovic, O; Wheeler, DS; Wheeler, RA, 2013
)
2.55
"Corticosterone-treated CB1-KO mice showed a lack of weight gain and of increase in hypothalamic and hepatic AMPK activity."( CB1 receptor mediates the effects of glucocorticoids on AMPK activity in the hypothalamus.
Fekete, C; Füzesi, T; Grossman, AB; Kola, B; Korbonits, M; Scerif, M; Thomas, JD, 2013
)
1.11
"Corticosterone treatment also resulted in increased GFAP expression and F-actin rearrangements."( Corticosterone treatment results in enhanced release of peptidergic vesicles in astrocytes via cytoskeletal rearrangements.
Chatterjee, S; Sikdar, SK, 2013
)
2.55
"Corticosterone treatment impaired reversal learning but in addition also impaired rule abstraction and prevented the animals from forming an attentional set."( Evidence that aetiological risk factors for psychiatric disorders cause distinct patterns of cognitive deficits.
Gartside, SE; Marston, HM; McQuade, R; Wallace, J, 2014
)
1.12
"Corticosterone treatment significantly increased atherosclerotic plaque area at the aortic root."( Corticosterone accelerates atherosclerosis in the apolipoprotein E-deficient mouse.
Higashida, K; Higuchi, M; Lira, VA; Okutsu, M; Peake, J; Suzuki, K, 2014
)
2.57
"Corticosterone treatment by itself did not affect egg sex but affected sex ratio as well as laying rate and fertility rate in interaction with hen body mass."( Effect of corticosterone and hen body mass on primary sex ratio in laying hen (Gallus gallus), using unincubated eggs.
Aslam, MA; Groothuis, TG; Smits, MA; Woelders, H, 2014
)
1.53
"The corticosterone-treated rats showed significantly reduced sleep time, disinhibition of rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep and altered power spectra during non-REM sleep. "( Correlations between depression behaviors and sleep parameters after repeated corticosterone injections in rats.
Cao, Q; Cui, SY; Cui, XY; Huang, YL; Li, SJ; Sheng, ZF; Wang, ZJ; Yu, B; Zhang, XQ; Zhang, YH, 2014
)
1.19
"Corticosterone treatment 1 h after PSS-exposure prevented anxiety and hyperarousal 7 d later in both sexes, confirming the GR involvement in the PSS behavioral response."( Expression profiling associates blood and brain glucocorticoid receptor signaling with trauma-related individual differences in both sexes.
Buxbaum, JD; Cai, G; Cohen, H; Daskalakis, NP; Yehuda, R, 2014
)
1.12
"In corticosterone-pretreated rats, the cold-induced increase in pro-TRH expression was detected only in the rostral PVN."( An acute injection of corticosterone increases thyrotrophin-releasing hormone expression in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus but interferes with the rapid hypothalamus pituitary thyroid axis response to cold in male rats.
Charli, JL; Cote-Vélez, A; Espinoza-Ayala, C; Jaimes-Hoy, L; Joseph-Bravo, P; Sotelo-Rivera, I, 2014
)
1.23
"Corticosterone treatment induced longer immobility times in the FST, reflecting depressive-like behaviour."( Long-term corticosterone exposure decreases insulin sensitivity and induces depressive-like behaviour in the C57BL/6NCrl mouse.
Blokland, A; Cañete, R; Pawluski, JL; Sierksma, AS; Steinbusch, HW; Vaessen, KR; van Donkelaar, EL, 2014
)
1.53
"Corticosterone treatment caused a depressive-like behavior, evidenced by increased immobility time in the tail suspension test and decreased time in which mice spent grooming in the splash test."( Folic acid prevents depressive-like behavior induced by chronic corticosterone treatment in mice.
Bettio, LE; Colla, A; Lieberknecht, V; Moretti, M; Ribeiro, CM; Rodrigues, AL; Rosa, PB, 2014
)
1.36
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in increased feed intake (P ≤ 0.05) and decreased egg production."( Differential abundance of egg white proteins in laying hens treated with corticosterone.
Choi, YH; Kim, J, 2014
)
1.36
"Corticosterone treated birds showed a marginally significant reduction in breeding success compared to sham-implanted individuals, with all failures occurring at least 1week after implant removal."( Protracted treatment with corticosterone reduces breeding success in a long-lived bird.
Butler, A; Daunt, F; Dawson, A; Heidinger, BJ; Monaghan, P; Nelson, BF; Newell, M; Wanless, S, 2015
)
1.44
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in a 3.8-fold increase of plasma TG concentrations."( Cold Exposure Partially Corrects Disturbances in Lipid Metabolism in a Male Mouse Model of Glucocorticoid Excess.
Boon, MR; Grefhorst, A; Meijer, OC; Rensen, PC; Steenbergen, J; Themmen, AP; van den Beukel, JC, 2015
)
1.14
"Corticosterone pretreatment reduced the magnitude and incidence of avoidance."( Post-traumatic stress avoidance is attenuated by corticosterone and associated with brain levels of steroid receptor co-activator-1 in rats.
Edwards, S; Farooq, MA; Gilpin, NW; Whitaker, AM, 2016
)
1.41
"Corticosterone-treated birds showed alterations in networks of genes that included known markers of the programming actions of early-life adversity (e.g."( Pre- and Post-Natal Stress Programming: Developmental Exposure to Glucocorticoids Causes Long-Term Brain-Region Specific Changes to Transcriptome in the Precocial Japanese Quail.
Herzyk, P; Marasco, V; Robinson, J; Spencer, KA, 2016
)
1.16
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in a considerable decrease in the sIPSC amplitude 40 minutes after the beginning of treatment."( [Corticosterone-induced changes in the inhibitory neurotransmission in hippocampal CA1 synapses depending on the activity of inhibitory synapses that express cannabinoid receptors].
Bolshakov, AP; Nadareishvili, GG; Volkova, EP,
)
1.76
"Corticosterone treatment dose-dependently increased astrocyte numbers in the CA1 region, but not in the lateral and medial CA3 hippocampal regions."( The effects of chronic corticosterone on hippocampal astrocyte numbers: a comparison of male and female Wistar rats.
Bridges, N; Slais, K; Syková, E, 2008
)
1.38
"2. Corticosterone treatment significantly suppressed body weight (BW) gain and reduced feed and caloric efficiencies."( Corticosterone administration and high-energy feed results in enhanced fat accumulation and insulin resistance in broiler chickens.
Jiang, KJ; Jiao, HC; Lin, H; Song, ZG; Yuan, L, 2008
)
2.3
"Corticosterone treatment, which decreases hippocampal cell proliferation, caused PPI disruption, whereas antidepressant and exercise, which increased cell proliferation, did not affect PPI."( Intracerebroventricular infusion of cytosine-arabinoside causes prepulse inhibition disruption.
Ching, YP; Lau, BW; Lee, TM; So, KF; Tang, SW; Yau, SY, 2009
)
1.07
"In corticosterone-treated mice where hippocampal neurogenesis is abolished by X-irradiation, the efficacy of fluoxetine is blocked in some, but not all, behavioral paradigms, suggesting both neurogenesis-dependent and -independent mechanisms of antidepressant action."( Neurogenesis-dependent and -independent effects of fluoxetine in an animal model of anxiety/depression.
Antonijevic, IA; Artymyshyn, RP; Craig, DA; David, DJ; Drew, M; Gardier, AM; Gerald, C; Guiard, BP; Guilloux, JP; Hen, R; Leonardo, ED; Marsteller, D; Mendez, I; Rainer, Q; Samuels, BA; Wang, JW, 2009
)
0.87
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in marked adrenal atrophy and flattening of the glucocorticoid rhythm as measured by repeated blood sampling."( Profound changes in dopaminergic neurotransmission in the prefrontal cortex in response to flattening of the diurnal glucocorticoid rhythm: implications for bipolar disorder.
Fairchild, G; Gartside, SE; Ingram, CD; McQuade, R; Minton, GO; Young, AH, 2009
)
1.07
"Corticosterone (CORT)-treated rats have emerged as a pharmacological model of depression-like behaviors."( Morphological reorganization after repeated corticosterone administration in the hippocampus, nucleus accumbens and amygdala in the rat.
Dumont, Y; Flores, G; Morales-Medina, JC; Quirion, R; Sanchez, F, 2009
)
1.34
"Corticosterone treatment (10mg/kg, sc once daily for 21 days) of wild-type mice resulted in a decrease in 5-HT(1A) receptor function in prefrontal cortex [8-OH-DPAT-stimulated [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding (% above basal), vehicle-treated: 39+/-4.9; corticosterone-treated: 17+/-2.8], but not in hippocampus."( Regulation of cortical and hippocampal 5-HT(1A) receptor function by corticosterone in GR+/- mice.
Gass, P; Hensler, JG; Vogt, MA, 2010
)
1.32
"Corticosterone treatment also increased expression of Arc protein in hippocampal synaptic tissue."( Memory-enhancing corticosterone treatment increases amygdala norepinephrine and Arc protein expression in hippocampal synaptic fractions.
Abdi, A; Donowho, K; McGaugh, JL; McIntyre, CK; McReynolds, JR; Roozendaal, B, 2010
)
1.42
"Corticosterone treatment suppressed while paroxetine treatment increased the cell proliferation of the ciliary body. "( Roles of paroxetine and corticosterone on adult mammalian ciliary body cell proliferation.
Lau, BW; Lee, TM; Leung, N; Li, SY; So, KF; Tang, SW; Wang, H; Wang, NL; Yau, SY, 2010
)
2.11
"Corticosterone-treated mice exhibited a reduced spine density, which was ameliorated by melatonin administration."( Melatonin treatment mimics the antidepressant action in chronic corticosterone-treated mice.
Bramanti, P; Crupi, R; Cuzzocrea, S; La Spada, G; Marino, A; Mazzon, E; Spina, E, 2010
)
1.32
"In corticosterone-treated rats, reduced spatial cognitive abilities were associated with a significant increase in plasma (+25%) and cerebral corticosterone levels (+350%) parallelled by a significant reduction in adrenal gland concentrations (-84%) as compared to placebo."( A subchronic application period of glucocorticoids leads to rat cognitive dysfunction whereas physostigmine induces a mild neuroprotection.
Kopitz, J; Lewicka, S; Oesterle, D; Plaschke, K; Wüppen, K, 2010
)
0.87
"The corticosterone treatment decreased clutch success, juvenile size and body condition, but enhanced measures of physiological performance, such as metabolism and catalase activity."( Physiological actions of corticosterone and its modulation by an immune challenge in reptiles.
Haussy, C; Meylan, S; Voituron, Y, 2010
)
1.14
"Corticosterone treatment significantly increased dorsolateral and anterior prostate weights as well as prostate epithelial cell proliferation while epithelial apoptosis remained low upon corticosterone treatment. "( Long-term corticosterone treatment induced lobe-specific pathology in mouse prostate.
Brennan, TC; Handelsman, DJ; Harwood, DT; Heinevetter, U; Henneicke, H; Herrmann, M; Lampinen, A; McNamara, K; Seibel, MJ; Simanainen, U; Zhou, H, 2011
)
2.21
"Corticosterone treatment, which inhibited cell proliferation in both the SVZ and olfactory epithelium, led to inhibited male sexual performance. "( Effect of corticosterone and paroxetine on masculine mating behavior: possible involvement of neurogenesis.
Ching, YP; Lau, BW; Lee, TM; So, KF; Tang, SW; Yau, SY, 2011
)
2.21
"Corticosterone-treated mice exhibited a reduced spine density that was ameliorated by Hypericum perforatum administration."( Hypericum perforatum treatment: effect on behaviour and neurogenesis in a chronic stress model in mice.
Battaglia, F; Bramanti, P; Crupi, R; Cuzzocrea, S; La Spada, G; Marino, A; Mazzon, E; Spina, E, 2011
)
1.09
"In corticosterone-treated male kittiwakes, egg-laying date and reproductive success were not affected, but breeding probability was lower than in controls."( Experimentally reduced corticosterone release promotes early breeding in black-legged kittiwakes.
Bech, C; Chastel, O; Clément-Chastel, C; Gabrielsen, GW; Goutte, A; Moe, B, 2011
)
1.19
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in a dramatic decrease of polyamine contents at most of the time points investigated when compared with those in control rats."( The influence of corticosterone on antizyme gene expression in early regenerating rat liver.
Dong, JF; Li, JK; Ma, JM; Ning, QJ; Yang, H, 2011
)
1.43
"Corticosterone treatment induces antizyme 1 protein synthesis in early regenerating rat liver. "( The influence of corticosterone on antizyme gene expression in early regenerating rat liver.
Dong, JF; Li, JK; Ma, JM; Ning, QJ; Yang, H, 2011
)
2.15
"Corticosterone treatment reduced Npas4 expression in the frontal cortex and hippocampus, whereas adrenalectomy caused an increase in expression."( Transcriptional suppression of the neuronal PAS domain 4 (Npas4) gene by stress via the binding of agonist-bound glucocorticoid receptor to its promoter.
Furukawa-Hibi, Y; Nagai, T; Yamada, K; Yun, J, 2012
)
1.1
"Corticosterone treated endothelial cells exhibited reduced migration, which correlated with a reduction in RhoA activity."( Inhibition of proliferation, migration and proteolysis contribute to corticosterone-mediated inhibition of angiogenesis.
Beaudry, J; Haas, TL; Krylova, A; Liu, ST; Mandel, ER; Riddell, MC; Roudier, E; Shikatani, EA; Szigiato, A; Trifonova, A, 2012
)
1.33
"In corticosterone-treated H19-7 cells, the knock down of TRPC1 no longer blocks thapsigargin-stimulated Ca(2+) entry suggesting that the subtype of SOCs expressed in H19-7 cells is altered by corticosterone treatment."( Chronic exposure to stress hormones alters the subtype of store-operated channels expressed in H19-7 hippocampal neuronal cells.
Piron, M; Villereal, ML, 2013
)
0.9
"Corticosterone treatment induced an increased expression of stress-activated c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) in the hippocampus, accompanied by decreases in glycogen synthase kinase 3β, increases in pTau levels and increased neuronal cell death (caspase-3 activity)."( Mineralocorticoid receptor activation induces insulin resistance through c-Jun N-terminal kinases in response to chronic corticosterone: cognitive implications.
Gerenu, G; Gil-Bea, FJ; Ramírez, MJ; Solas, M, 2013
)
1.32
"Both corticosterone and cortisol treatment caused increased TSC. "( Increased total scavenger capacity in rats fed corticosterone and cortisol on lipid-rich diet.
Adler, I; Békési, G; Dinya, E; Lengyel, G; Marczell, I; Nagy-Répas, P; Rácz, K; Stark, J; Székács, B; Szombath, D; Tulassay, Z, 2013
)
1.16
"Corticosterone levels of treated birds were 2.4-fold higher than those of controls 18 days post treatment."( Elevated corticosterone levels and severe weather conditions decrease parental investment of incubating Adélie penguins.
Handrich, Y; Massemin, S; Raclot, T; Thierry, AM, 2013
)
1.53
"In corticosterone-treated rats, neurogenesis was decreased by 75%."( Electroconvulsive seizures increase hippocampal neurogenesis after chronic corticosterone treatment.
Bengzon, J; Ekdahl, CT; Hellsten, J; Mohapel, P; Tingström, A; Wennström, M, 2002
)
1.06
"Corticosterone treatment increased the expression of POMC by 87% and AGRP by 45% in ADX rats."( Effects of adrenalectomy on AGRP, POMC, NPY and CART gene expression in the basal hypothalamus of fed and fasted rats.
Conwell, IM; Savontaus, E; Wardlaw, SL, 2002
)
1.04
"Corticosterone treatment was found to induce a significant attenuation in the response to 8-OHDPAT, indicating functional desensitization of somatodendritic 5-HT(1A) autoreceptors."( Flattening the corticosterone rhythm attenuates 5-HT1A autoreceptor function in the rat: relevance for depression.
Gartside, SE; Ingram, CD; Leitch, MM; McQuade, R; Young, AH, 2003
)
1.39
"Corticosterone treatment also decreased the time to peak of AMPA currents, but this effect did not depend on prior stress exposure."( Effect of chronic stress on synaptic currents in rat hippocampal dentate gyrus neurons.
Joëls, M; Karst, H, 2003
)
1.04
"Corticosterone treatment via silastic implant elevated plasma B to high physiological (stress-induced) levels (24.1 +/- 5.3 ng/ml at 7-days post-implantation)."( Effects of corticosterone on the proportion of breeding females, reproductive output and yolk precursor levels.
Salvante, KG; Williams, TD, 2003
)
1.43
"Corticosterone treatment decreased [3H] 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin binding to the 5-hydroxytryptamine1A receptor in the cortex but not in the hippocampus."( Implantation of a slow release corticosterone pellet induces long-term alterations in serotonergic neurochemistry in the rat brain.
Bush, VL; Fone, KC; Marsden, CA; Middlemiss, DN, 2003
)
1.33
"Corticosterone treatments also resulted in site-specific uncoupling in an age-dependent manner."( Effect of corticosterone treatment on mitochondrial oxidative energy metabolism in developing rat brain.
Balasubramanian, S; Katyare, SS; Parmar, DV, 2003
)
1.44
"Corticosterone treatment enhanced fear conditioning to context and tone when analyzed together, but not separately."( Influence of chronic corticosterone and glucocorticoid receptor antagonism in the amygdala on fear conditioning.
Baran, SE; Conrad, CD; Fuchs, RA; MacMillan, DD; Tsekhanov, S; Wright, RL, 2004
)
1.36
"The corticosterone-treated group had fewer projections from the left side of the thalamus to the right Wulst than did the controls."( Corticosterone treatment of the chick embryo affects light-stimulated development of the thalamofugal visual pathway.
Deng, C; Rogers, LJ, 2005
)
2.25
"Corticosterone treatment was continued and they were killed 7 days later."( Glucocorticoid enhances the neurotoxic actions of quinolinic acid in the striatum in a cell-specific manner.
Herbert, J; Ngai, LY, 2005
)
1.05
"Corticosterone treatment at both ages increased the rate of pecking at grains and pebbles."( Pre- and post-hatching effects of corticosterone treatment on behavior of the domestic chick.
Freire, R; Rogers, LJ; van Dort, S, 2006
)
1.33
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in enhanced energy expenditure."( Impaired development of broiler chickens by stress mimicked by corticosterone exposure.
Buyse, J; Decuypere, E; Jiao, HC; Lin, H; Sui, SJ, 2006
)
1.29
"Corticosterone treatment of normal rats decreased expression of total brain-derived neurotrophic factor mRNA in both brain areas, specifically decreasing exons II and IV."( Antidepressants reverse corticosterone-mediated decrease in brain-derived neurotrophic factor expression: differential regulation of specific exons by antidepressants and corticosterone.
Dwivedi, Y; Pandey, GN; Rizavi, HS, 2006
)
1.36
"The corticosterone treatments did not change the rate of ROS production or the rate of oxygen consumption of rat liver mitochondria."( Effect of graded corticosterone treatment on aging-related markers of oxidative stress in rat liver mitochondria.
Barja, G; Caro, P; Gómez, J; Pamplona, R; Portero-Otín, M; Sanz, A, 2007
)
1.16
"Corticosterone treatment of control mice decreased 5-HT1A receptor function in the dorsal and median raphe but not in hippocampus or frontal cortical areas."( Regulation of serotonin-1A receptor function in inducible brain-derived neurotrophic factor knockout mice after administration of corticosterone.
Advani, T; Hensler, JG; Monteggia, LM, 2007
)
1.27
"Corticosterone-treated dams also showed an increase in maternal care."( Maternal exposure to low levels of corticosterone during lactation protects the adult offspring against ischemic brain damage.
Alemà, GS; Casolini, P; Catalani, A; Chiodi, V; Cinque, C; Domenici, MR; Galluzzo, M; Maccari, S; Mairesse, J; Marano, G; Matteucci, P; Musumeci, M; Nicoletti, F; Zuena, AR, 2007
)
1.34
"The corticosterone treatment suppressed while paroxetine treatment increased hippocampal cell proliferation. "( Modulation of the suppressive effect of corticosterone on adult rat hippocampal cell proliferation by paroxetine.
Helmeste, DM; Lau, WM; Lee, TM; Qiu, G; Samaranayake, AN; So, KF; Tang, SW, 2007
)
1.17
"Corticosterone treatment may have reduced the strength of corticosterone negative feedback within the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis."( Effects of corticosterone treatment on growth, development, and the corticosterone response to handling in young Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica).
Bridges, JP; Candy, EJ; Cockrem, JF; Davidson, CM; Hull, KL, 2007
)
1.45
"Corticosterone treatment affected time spent flying/foraging in interaction with body condition at day 0: corticosterone-implanted males in good condition spent more time flying/foraging than control ones; this was not observed in poor condition males."( Corticosterone and time-activity budget: an experiment with Black-legged kittiwakes.
Angelier, F; Chastel, O; Clément-Chastel, C; Gabrielsen, GW, 2007
)
2.5
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in ODC mRNA content after 5 h post-PH."( Regulatory effects of corticosterone on ornithine decarboxylase activity during liver regeneration in rats.
He, J; Li, C; Ning, Q; Shao, Q; Wei, K; Xu, C, 2007
)
1.38
"Corticosterone treatment results in dose-dependent decreases in ODC mRNA and enzyme protein both in the intact liver and the regenerating liver. "( Regulatory effects of corticosterone on ornithine decarboxylase activity during liver regeneration in rats.
He, J; Li, C; Ning, Q; Shao, Q; Wei, K; Xu, C, 2007
)
2.1
"Corticosterone treatment was predicted to differentially organize these females' reproductive decisions."( Corticosterone manipulation reveals differences in hierarchical organization of multidimensional reproductive trade-offs in r-strategist and K-strategist females.
Clobert, J; Hazard, LC; Lancaster, LT; Sinervo, BR, 2008
)
2.51
"Corticosterone-treated males with small eumelanic spots reduced nestling provisioning rates as compared to controls, and also to a greater degree than did corticosterone-treated males with large spots."( Parental investment and its sensitivity to corticosterone is linked to melanin-based coloration in barn owls.
Almasi, B; Jenni, L; Jenni-Eiermann, S; Roulin, A, 2008
)
1.33
"Corticosterone treatment gave rise to a delayed and significant reduction of junB mRNA signals after 2 h in all hippocampal regions, which reversed to increase at 4 h."( Time-course of immediate early gene expression in hippocampal subregions of adrenalectomized rats after acute corticosterone challenge.
Fuxe, K; Hansson, AC, 2008
)
1.28
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in an age-dependent increase in glutamine synthetase activity."( Regulation of in vivo glutamine synthetase activity by glucocorticoids in the developing rat brain.
Hunt, A; Patel, AJ; Tahourdin, CS, 1983
)
0.99
"Corticosterone treatment partly restored the oestradiol-induced rise of plasma insulin, and restored the B cell response to intravenous glucose."( Ovarian-adrenal interactions in regulation of endocrine pancreatic function in the rat.
Assan, R; Faure, A; Sutter, BC; Sutter-Dub, MT, 1983
)
0.99
"Corticosterone treatment of adrenalectomized animals enhanced both basal and postabsorptive insulin levels, but adrenalectomized rats with VMH lesions were hyperinsulinemic compared with animals with sham lesions only under the postabsorptive condition."( Hypothalamic hyperinsulinemia and obesity: role of adrenal glucocorticoids.
Banta, AR; Bruce, BK; Frohman, LA; King, BM; Tharel, GN, 1983
)
0.99
"The corticosterone-treated animals received 80 micrograms corticosterone/ml drinking water."( Effect of corticosterone on the prolactin response to psychological and physical stress in rats.
Ratner, A; Weiss, GK; Yelvington, DB, 1984
)
1.15
"Corticosterone treatment of chickens eliminated the thymic cortex but did not enhance the GvH reactivity of thymic BC cells."( Graft versus host response as influenced by the origin of the cell, age of chicken, and cellular interactions.
Glick, B; Watabe, M, 1983
)
0.99
"Corticosterone treatment increased the average rate of myofibrillar protein breakdown by 68% and 95% respectively in non-diabetic and diabetic rats."( Effect of corticosterone on myofibrillar protein turnover in diabetic rats as assessed by Ntau-methylhistidine excretion.
Tomas, FM, 1982
)
1.39
"Corticosterone treatment (20 microgram/g b.w., i.p., days 2-4) results in lower norepinephrine content of both regions, lower dopamine content of hypothalamus and higher dopamine content of mesencephalon between days 16 and 21."( Effects of perinatal thyroxine and/or corticosterone treatment on the ontogenesis of hypothalamic and mesencephalic norepinephrine and dopamine content.
Branch, BJ; Lengvári, I; Taylor, AN, 1980
)
1.25
"Corticosterone treatment (40 mg/kg, 20 days) had opposing effects on HO-2 and NO synthase transcript levels: increasing the 1.3- and 1.9-kb HO-2 mRNAs and decreasing that of the brain-specific 10.5-kb NO synthase."( Corticosterone regulates heme oxygenase-2 and NO synthase transcription and protein expression in rat brain.
Eke, BC; Maines, MD; Weber, CM, 1994
)
2.45
"Corticosterone treatment also intensified the stress response of cerebellum, including Purkinje cells and Bergmann glia in the molecular layer."( Corticosterone has a permissive effect on expression of heme oxygenase-1 in CA1-CA3 neurons of hippocampus in thermal-stressed rats.
Eke, BC; Ewing, JF; Maines, MD; Weber, CM, 1995
)
2.46
"Corticosterone treatment (50 mg/kg, for 5 d) of adrenalectomized animals yielded a recovery of nuclear immunopositivity without changing the cellular distribution of GR, as observed in control rats."( Changes in glucocorticoid receptor immunoreactivity after adrenalectomy and corticosterone treatment in the rat testis.
Agnati, LF; Biagini, G; Frasoldati, A; Marrama, P; Merlo Pich, E, 1995
)
1.24
"Corticosterone treatment decreased levels of glucocorticoid receptor immunoreactivity in the ventral tegmental area of Lewis rats, but not of Fischer rats."( Strain-selective effects of corticosterone on locomotor sensitization to cocaine and on levels of tyrosine hydroxylase and glucocorticoid receptor in the ventral tegmental area.
DeCaprio, JL; Kosten, TA; Nestler, EJ; Ortiz, J, 1995
)
1.31
"Corticosterone treatment was associated with a long lasting (5 weeks post treatment) increase in 5-HT levels (44%) in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and decrease in 5-HT (50%) and NE (36%) levels in the frontal cortex."( Effects of chronic corticosterone ingestion on spatial memory performance and hippocampal serotonergic function.
Luine, VN; McEwen, BS; Spencer, RL, 1993
)
1.34
"Corticosterone treatment restored hepatic IGFBP-1 mRNA to intact diabetic levels, and serum concentrations of corticosterone correlated with the abundance of IGFBP-1 mRNA (r = 0.475; P < 0.01), indicating that glucocorticoids play an important role in the regulation of expression of IGFBP-1 in insulin-deficient animals."( Effects of glucocorticoids on circulating levels and hepatic expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-binding proteins and IGF-I in the adrenalectomized streptozotocin-diabetic rat.
Hofert, JF; Jentel, JJ; Lacson, RG; Oehler, DT; Unterman, TG, 1993
)
1.01
"Corticosterone (CT) treatment decreases the magnitude of the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)1A receptor-mediated hyperpolarization in rat CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons. "( Modulation of the 5-hydroxytryptamine4 receptor-mediated response by short-term and long-term administration of corticosterone in rat CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons.
Beck, SG; Birnstiel, S, 1995
)
1.95
"Corticosterone treatment induced benzodiazepine receptor levels comparable to those seen after swim stress in all hormone groups."( Sex differences in GABA/benzodiazepine receptor changes and corticosterone release after acute stress in rats.
Biscardi, R; Wilson, MA, 1994
)
1.25
"Corticosterone treatment did not modify the hydrolysis of the substrate."( Effects of ACTH 1-24 on hydrolysis of beta-casomorphin-4-nitroanilide in brain homogenates in vivo and in vitro.
Endröczi, E; Sasváry, M; Simon, J; Walentin, S, 1994
)
1.01
"Corticosterone prolonged treatment resulted in morphological changes mainly in the CA1, CA4, and dentate gyrus areas of the hippocampus."( Aging, stress, and cognitive function.
Arbel, I; Dachir, S; Kadar, T; Levy, A, 1994
)
1.01
"Corticosterone pretreatment (10 mg/kg) completely blocked the increase of IL6 in serum and IL6 mRNA in spleen, adrenals, and hypophysis."( Regulation of interleukin 6 gene expression in rat.
De Kloet, ER; Holsboer, F; Schöbitz, B; Sutanto, W; Van Den Dobbelsteen, M, 1993
)
1.01
"Corticosterone treatment prevented sloughing of the skin, which resulted in a build-up of stratum corneum, and inhibited the development of gland nests and the subsequent formation of dermal granular and mucous glands in both species."( Histological examination of the effects of corticosterone in larvae of the western toad, Bufo boreas (Anura: Bufonidae), and the Oriental fire-bellied toad, Bombina orientalis (Anura: Discoglossidae).
Hayes, TB, 1995
)
1.28
"Corticosterone treatment resulted in a selective induction of neurotensin mRNA in both the periventricular and rostral arcuate nuclei of the hypothalamus but not in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus or the hippocampal CA1-CA2 region."( Hypercorticism induces neurotensin mRNA in rat periventricular hypothalamus.
Bérod, A; Nicot, A; Rostène, W, 1995
)
1.01
"Corticosterone treatment significantly decreased the number of 5-HT1A receptor sites (Bmax = 108 +/- 8.20 fmol/mg protein and 152.31 +/- 13.36 fmol/mg protein in corticosterone- and vehicle-treated rats, respectively)."( Effect of corticosterone on serotonin and catecholamine receptors and uptake sites in rat frontal cortex.
Arora, RC; Crayton, JW; Gulati, A; Joshi, I; Wolf, WA, 1996
)
1.42
"In corticosterone-treated rats, BDNF-LI was markedly reduced in the nucleus and concomitantly increased in cytoplasm."( Administration of corticosterone alters intracellular localization of brain-derived neurotrophic factor-like immunoreactivity in the rat brain.
Fukumitsu, H; Furukawa, S; Kataoka, H; Nitta, A; Nomoto, H, 1997
)
1.14
"Corticosterone treatment did not have an effect on the peak oocyst excretion, although it was administered from 4 days before initial infection."( Eimeria acervulina: influence of corticosterone-induced immunosuppression on oocyst shedding and production characteristics in broilers, and correlation with a computer simulation model.
Braunius, WW; Graat, EA; Henken, AM; Ploeger, HW, 1997
)
1.3
"Corticosterone and AA-2414 treatment may attenuate the LPS-induced production of eicosanoids, and enhance the LPS-induced ODC activation."( Effects of eicosanoids on lipopolysaccharide-induced ornithine decarboxylase activity and polyamine metabolism in the mouse liver.
Hamana, K; Matsuzaki, S; Matsuzaki, Y; Mori, M; Nagamine, T; Sugimoto, H, 1997
)
1.02
"Corticosterone treatment was associated with high levels of mounting in both sexes and did not inhibit lordosis behavior in females."( Sexual differentiation in prairie voles: the effects of corticosterone and testosterone.
Carter, CS; Roberts, RL; Zullo, AS, 1997
)
1.26
"Corticosterone-treated rats did not show this impairment of synaptic transmission."( Synaptic transmission in the rat dentate gyrus after adrenalectomy.
Bosma, A; Hesen, W; Joëls, M; Karten, YJ; Stienstra, CM; Van Der Graaf, F, 1998
)
1.02
"Corticosterone-treated turtles also showed a significant increase in plasma corticosterone concentration when pre-trial plasma samples were compared to post-trial plasma samples, while control turtles exhibited no such increase, validating the effectiveness of our implants to deliver corticosterone."( Effects of exogenous corticosterone on locomotor activity in the red-eared slider turtle, Trachemys scripta elegans.
Cash, WB; Holberton, RL, 1999
)
1.34
"Corticosterone-treated and control birds did not differ in their circulating levels of reproductive hormones or in their behavioral responses to STI (latency to respond to intrusion, number of songs, and closest approach to a decoy and tape recording)."( Corticosterone treatment has no effect on reproductive hormones or aggressive behavior in free-living male tree sparrows, Spizella arborea.
Astheimer, LB; Buttemer, WA; Wingfield, JC, 2000
)
2.47
"Corticosterone treatment on e9 or e10 was unable to increase the population of GH-secreting cells on e11 or e12."( Ontogeny of corticosterone-inducible growth hormone-secreting cells during chick embryonic development.
Bossis, I; Porter, TE, 2000
)
1.41
"Corticosterone treatment significantly inhibited glomerular infiltration of PMN, MO and LFA-1 positive cells after endotoxin infusion."( Corticosterone treatment of pregnant low dose endotoxin-treated rats: inhibition of the inflammatory response.
Faas, MM; Koiter, TR; Schuiling, GA; Slot, K, 2000
)
2.47
"Corticosterone (cort) treatment (100 mg cort pellet sc for 2-3 wk) increased baseline AP from 115 +/- 2 to 128 +/- 1 mmHg."( Glucocorticoids modulate baroreflex control of renal sympathetic nerve activity.
Mifflin, SW; Scheuer, DA, 2001
)
1.03
"Corticosterone treatment for as short as 16 h increased the percentage of GH cells compared with the control."( Somatotroph recruitment by glucocorticoids involves induction of growth hormone gene expression and secretagogue responsiveness.
Dean, CE; Ghavam, S; Medvedev, KL; Piper, MM; Porter, TE; Sandor, J, 2001
)
1.03
"Corticosterone-treatment of thymocytes in vitro decreased the number of CD4 and CD8 double positive cells, while co-culturing the cells with dehydrocorticosterone significantly attenuated this corticosterone effect (p<0.0001)."( Oxidized glucocorticoids counteract glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis in murine thymocytes in vitro.
Hirano, T; Horigome, H; Ishishita, H; Oka, K; Uda, S, 2001
)
1.03
"Corticosterone (Cort) treatment for 4-6 days doubled plasma Cort in Cort-treated relative to control rats."( Glucocorticoids modulate baroreflex control of heart rate in conscious normotensive rats.
Bechtold, AG; Scheuer, DA, 2002
)
1.04
"Corticosterone 10 micromol/L treatment for 5 d elicited typical apoptotic biochemical and morphological changes including condensed chromatin shaped like crescent moon, nuclear fragmentation, and DNA degradation. "( Desipramine antagonized corticosterone-induced apoptosis in cultured PC12 cells.
Li, YF; Luo, ZP, 2002
)
2.06
"Corticosterone treatment significantly (P<.05) advanced testis descent and increased testis weight and 3betaHSD activity at puberty."( Corticosterone administration to rat pups, but not maternal separation, affects sexual maturation and glucocorticoid receptor immunoreactivity in the testis.
Biagini, G; Pich, EM, 2002
)
2.48
"Corticosterone treatment for 7 days beginning from the 8th day of adrenalectomy virtually restored the concentrations of noradrenaline and dopamine as well as the activities of striatal tyrosine hydroxylase and cerebrocortical monoamine oxidase to the values seen for sham-operated controls."( Evidence for the role of adrenocortical hormones in the regulation of noradrenaline and dopamine metabolism in certain brain areas.
Rastogi, RB; Singhal, RL, 1978
)
0.98
"Corticosterone treatment normalized the progress of extinction in ADX animals, providing support for the afore-mentioned speculation."( Modulation of behavioral inhibition in appetitive extinction following manipulation of adrenal steroids in rats: implications for involvement of the hippocampus.
McEwen, BS; Micco, DJ; Shein, W, 1979
)
0.98
"3. Corticosterone treatment significantly decreased protein in the carcass and soleus, plantaris and gastrocnemius muscles by 13-33%."( Effects of a beta 2-adrenergic agonist, cimaterol and corticosterone on growth and carcass composition of male rats.
Brown, J; Clasper, C; Lomax, MA; Smith, T, 1992
)
1.05
"Corticosterone treatment failed to affect those values in terms with both per mg tissue and per whole tissue pad, except the less noradrenaline-stimulated oxygen consumption in terms with per mg tissue and DNA."( [Effects of nonthermal stresses on brown adipose tissue thermogenesis].
Nozu, T, 1992
)
1
"If corticosterone treatment (35 min total exposure) was started simultaneously with the CRF-41 pulse, no inhibitory effect of the steroid was observed at any subsequent time-point examined (60, 90, 120 and 150 min)."( Early glucocorticoid feedback in anterior pituitary corticotrophs: differential inhibition of hormone release induced by vasopressin and corticotrophin-releasing factor in vitro.
Antoni, FA; Shipston, MJ, 1991
)
0.8
"Corticosterone treatment inhibited the increase of alpha 2-adrenoreceptor density during ontogenesis."( [The ontogeny of the alpha 2- and beta-adrenoreceptors in the brain following exposure to corticosterone during intrauterine development].
Dygalo, NN; Milova, AA; Shishkina, GT,
)
1.07
"Corticosterone treatment induced a greater and earlier increase in mRNA levels in adrenalectomized obese rats than in adrenalectomized lean rats."( Adrenalectomy in the Zucker fatty rat: effect on m-RNA for malic enzyme and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase.
Bray, GA; Hainault, I; Lavau, M; York, DA, 1991
)
1
"Corticosterone pretreatment (100 nM) for 10 min caused a 50% reduction in the percentage of cells that bound CRH and in the levels of ACTH released in response to biotinylated CRH."( Rapid corticosterone inhibition of corticotropin-releasing hormone binding and adrenocorticotropin release by enriched populations of corticotropes: counteractions by arginine vasopressin and its second messengers.
Childs, GV; Unabia, G, 1990
)
1.48
"Corticosterone-treated animals had lower body weights than control animals on days 10-20."( Does corticosterone affect gastric mucosal cell growth during development?
Johnson, LR; Tseng, CC, 1986
)
1.51
"Corticosterone treatment restored the adrenalectomy-impaired 5-HT autoreceptor sensitivity in hippocampus and hypothalamus and 5-HT density receptor sites in the hippocampus."( Different regulation of serotonin receptors following adrenal hormone imbalance in the rat hippocampus and hypothalamus.
Martire, M; Pistritto, G; Preziosi, P, 1989
)
1
"Corticosterone treatment of adrenalectomized db/db, ob/ob or lean mice lowered GDP binding to sham levels."( Adrenalectomy in genetically obese ob/ob and db/db mice increases the proton conductance pathway.
Bray, GA; Lupien, JR; Shargill, NS, 1989
)
1
"The corticosterone-treated rat is characterized by high energy intake and expenditure relative to its body size and growth rate."( Energy balance in rats given chronic hormone treatment. 2. Effects of corticosterone.
Emery, PW; Woodward, CJ, 1989
)
0.99
"Upon corticosterone treatment of the adrenalectomized rat the GR IR is again predominantly found in the nuclei of the neurons."( Studies on the cellular localization and distribution of glucocorticoid receptor and estrogen receptor immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of the rat and their relationship to the monoaminergic and peptidergic neurons of the brain.
Agnati, LF; Cintra, A; Fuxe, K; Greene, JL; Gustafsson, JA; Härfstrand, A; Miller, LS; Okret, S; Wikstrom, AC; Zoli, M, 1987
)
0.73
"Corticosterone-treated obese rats had higher basal and glucose-stimulated insulin levels than similarly treated lean animals, although plasma glucose concentrations did not differ between phenotypes."( The parasympathetic nervous system and glucocorticoid-mediated hyperinsulinaemia in the genetically obese (fa/fa) Zucker rat.
Fletcher, JM; McKenzie, N, 1988
)
1
"Corticosterone treatment significantly depressed serum prolactin and testosterone but gonadotropins were unaltered."( Effect of corticosterone on rat epididymal lipids.
Aruldhas, MM; Balasubramanian, K; Govindarajulu, P,
)
1.26
"Corticosterone treatment for 28 days produced significant increases in plasma levels of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3)."( Influence of corticosterone infusion on plasma levels of catecholamines, thyroid hormones, and certain metabolites in laying hens.
Etches, RJ; George, JC; John, TM; Pilo, B; Viswanathan, M, 1987
)
1.36
"Corticosterone-treated males also displayed significantly less frequently than did P-treated males and gave fewer displays of a type associated with dominance."( Effects of corticosterone treatment on male aggressive behavior in a lizard (Anolis sagrei).
Tokarz, RR, 1987
)
1.38
"In corticosterone treated unweaned rats, the antral G-LI on day 11 was twice than on day 7, and thereafter remained constant."( In vitro study of antral gastrin biosynthesis in response to weaning and corticosterone acetate in rats.
Miyachi, Y; Muraki, K; Nishi, Y; Okahata, H; Sumii, K; Tanaka, K; Usui, T, 1986
)
1.02
"Corticosterone treatment in vivo on day 13 of development induced increases in both Type I and Type II activities in liver homogenates 24- and 48-h after treatment."( Avian hepatic T-3 production by two pathways of 5'-monodeiodination: effects of fasting and patterns during development.
Hughes, TE; McNabb, FM, 1986
)
0.99
"In corticosterone-treated rats, antral and corpus SLI on day 11 was 5-fold that on day 7, and thereafter remained constant before changing from breast milk to solid food; after weaning (solid food alone) antral SLI increased again to reach the adult level at 25 days of age whereas corpus SLI remained constant after weaning."( Development of gastric somatostatin-like immunoreactivity in response to corticosterone acetate and dietary changes in young rats.
Miyachi, Y; Muraki, K; Nishi, Y; Okahata, H; Sumii, K; Ueda, K, 1986
)
1.02
"Corticosterone treatment brings about two and half fold increase in activity in the liver of younger rats, whereas there is only 25% increase in the oldest group."( Effect of steroid hormones and vitamin B6 on age dependent changes in aminotransferases in rat.
Kalyankar, GD; Nirmal Kumar, A,
)
0.85
"Corticosterone- and vehicle-treated rats exhibited both comparable spontaneous behavior when given 0.9% NaCl i.p."( Reduced-5-hydroxytryptamine-dependent behavior in rats following chronic corticosterone treatment.
Curzon, G; Dickinson, SL; Kennett, GA, 1985
)
1.22
"Mice treated with corticosterone in LD6 : 18 showed exacerbated depression-like symptoms in a novelty suppressed feeding test."( Short and long photoperiods differentially exacerbate corticosterone-induced physical and psychological symptoms in mice.
Inabe, J; Ishibashi, T; Kawai, H; Kawashima, Y; Kudo, N; Mitsumoto, A, 2018
)
1.05
"Treatment with corticosterone caused a significant depressant-like behavior in the forced swimming test and tail suspension test, which was accompanied by anxiety-like condition in the light-dark test and novelty suppressed-feeding; similarly to the classical antidepressant drug paroxetine, F-DPS treatment was effective in reversing these behavioral changes. "( An organoselenium compound improves behavioral, endocrinal and neurochemical changes induced by corticosterone in mice.
Bortolatto, CF; Duarte, MM; Gai, BM; Heck, SO; Nogueira, CW; Stein, AL; Zeni, G, 2014
)
0.97
"Treatment with corticosterone for 7 days did not modify the density of dendritic spines on pyramidal neurons."( Short-term repeated corticosterone administration enhances glutamatergic but not GABAergic transmission in the rat motor cortex.
Blasiak, A; Czerw, A; Hess, G; Kula, J; Sowa, J; Tylko, G, 2016
)
1.1
"Pretreatment with corticosterone or dexamethasone inhibited stress-induced elevation of adrenocorticotropic hormone in PrP+/+ but not in PrP 0/0 mice."( Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis disregulation in PrPC-null mice.
Conti, B; Criado, JR; Klein, I; Moroncini, G; Sanchez-Alavez, M, 2008
)
0.67
"Treatment with corticosterone significantly increased both the IgA concentration and IgA alpha-chain mRNA expression in ileum but not in duodenum, suggesting that glucocorticoids may act directly on IgA-antibody forming cells to increase IgA secretion in the former segment."( Repeated restraint stress increases IgA concentration in rat small intestine.
Baeza, I; Campos-Rodríguez, R; Jarillo-Luna, A; Miliar, A; Pacheco-Yepez, J; Reyna-Garfias, H; Rivera-Aguilar, V, 2010
)
0.7
"Treatment with corticosterone or TCDD decreased the levels of serum testosterone significantly."( Effects of corticosterone and 2,3,7,8-tetrachloro- dibenzo-p-dioxin on epididymal antioxidant system in adult rats.
D'cruz, SC; Dhanabalan, S; Mathur, PP,
)
0.86
"Treatment with corticosterone alone resulted in a significant decrease in hippocampus neurofilament light chain (NF-L) protein expression and induced depression-like behavior."( Preventive action of Panax ginseng roots in hypercortisolism-induced Impairment of hippocampal neurons in male C57BL/6N mice.
Chen, L; Dai, J; Huang, Y; Wang, Z; Zhao, Y, 2011
)
0.71
"Pretreatment with corticosterone decreased the number of Fos-immunoreactive cells in the PVN and SON but not in the DMH."( Glucocorticoid maintains pulsatile aecretion of luteinizing hormone under infectious stress condition.
Matsuwaki, T; Nishihara, M; Suzuki, M; Watanabe, E; Yamanouchi, K, 2003
)
0.64
"Pre-treatment with corticosterone (0.001-1 microM) alone did not cause hippocampal damage, while NMDA exposure produced significant cellular damage in the cornu ammonis (CA)1 subregion."( (-)-nicotine ameliorates corticosterone's potentiation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor-mediated cornu ammonis 1 toxicity.
Harris, BR; Littleton, JM; Mulholland, PJ; Prendergast, MA; Self, RL, 2004
)
0.95
"Treatment with corticosterone at E10, E12, E14 and E16 produced the same cognitive outcomes as hypoxia at the same prehatch ages."( The role of corticosterone in prehatch-induced memory deficits in chicks.
Gibbs, ME; Jenkin, G; Miller, SL; Rodricks, CL, 2006
)
1.05
"Treatment with corticosterone alone had no consistent effect on either PKCalpha or PKMalpha in either fraction."( Vasopressin-induced translocation and proteolysis of protein kinase Calpha in an amphibian brain: modulation by corticosterone.
Gasser, PJ; Orchinik, M, 2007
)
0.89
"Yet, treatment with corticosterone several hours in advance of isoproterenol fully prevented any effect of isoproterenol on LTP."( Corticosterone time-dependently modulates beta-adrenergic effects on long-term potentiation in the hippocampal dentate gyrus.
Joëls, M; Krugers, HJ; Pu, Z, 2007
)
2.1
"Treatment with corticosterone (CORT) for 4 days significantly decreased GR-ir in the POA, mp, medial amygdala (MeA), BNST, and rostral pars distalis."( Distribution and corticosteroid regulation of glucocorticoid receptor in the brain of Xenopus laevis.
Denver, RJ; Hu, F; Yao, M, 2008
)
0.69
"Treatment with corticosterone (0.6 mg/kg) 2 h before each metyrapone injection partially cancelled this effect of the synthesis inhibitor."( Metyrapone-induced suppression of corticosterone synthesis reduces ethanol consumption in high-preferring rats.
Engel, JA; Fahlke, C; Hansen, S; Hård, E; Thomasson, R, 1994
)
0.91
"Rats treated with corticosterone were also slower in learning the Morris water maze than vehicle-treated rats."( Chronic corticosterone treatment potentiates deficits following traumatic brain injury in rats: implications for aging.
Hamm, RJ; White-Gbadebo, D, 1993
)
1.04
"Treatment with corticosterone alone and combined with GHRH increased the percentage of GH-secreting cells."( Induction of somatotroph differentiation in vivo by corticosterone administration during chicken embryonic development.
Dean, CE; Morpurgo, B; Porter, TE, 1999
)
0.89
"Pretreatment with corticosterone of control rats did not substantially alter the resting plasma ACTH and serum corticosterone levels measured 24 and 48 h later."( A single corticosterone pretreatment inhibits the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal responses to adrenergic and cholinergic stimulation.
Bugajski, AJ; Bugajski, J; Gadek-Michalska, A, 2001
)
1.05
"Pretreatment with corticosterone acetate or pregnenolone-16alpha-carbonitrile shared none of these effects."( Influence of steroids and stress on toxicity and disposition of tetraethylammonium bromide.
Kourounakis, P; Selye, H, 1976
)
0.58
"Pretreatment with corticosterone and RU 486 (+Cort/+RU 486/+LPS) significantly (P less than 0.001) reversed the mortality observed with RU 486 pretreatment alone (-Cort/+RU 486/+LPS), with 70% of the animals surviving at 72 h, and significantly attenuated the peak plasma tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-6 responses to LPS, compared with those in the animals treated with vehicle alone."( In vivo effects of the antiglucocorticoid RU 486 on glucocorticoid and cytokine responses to Escherichia coli endotoxin.
Calvano, SE; Hawes, AS; Keogh, CV; Lowry, SF; Rock, CS, 1992
)
0.61
"Treatment with corticosterone was more effective in HA- than in LA-line chickens."( Use of corticosterone and ampicillin for treatment of Streptococcus faecalis infection in chickens.
Gross, WB, 1991
)
1.08
"Pretreatment with corticosterone also failed to modify the PRL response to a single dose of nicotine whereas it partially suppressed the ACTH response."( Rapid desensitization of the acute stimulatory effects of nicotine on rat plasma adrenocorticotropin and prolactin.
Beyer, HS; Sharp, BM, 1986
)
0.59
"Treatment with corticosterone (5 mg/kg, i.m.) restored the decrease in the uptake of 5-HT induced by adrenalectomy in the hypothalamic synaptosomes and in the platelets, and significantly increased the uptake of 5-HT of these fractions in sham-operated rats."( Changes induced by corticosterone and adrenalectomy in synaptosomal and platelet uptake and binding of 5-HT. The relationship to [3H]imipramine binding.
Chan, MY; Lee, PH, 1985
)
0.94

Toxicity

Corticosterone (25 micrograms/ml in drinking water) to hypophysectomized rats resulted in an attenuation of the toxicity (40-60% mortality with 40-90 d mean time to death) The results suggest that the adverse effects of atrazine and Bd on amphibian growth, development, and tolerance of infection are not mediated primarily by corticosterone.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" of body weight alleviated, in part, the toxic effects of mercury as evidenced by a rapid increase in body weight."( Adrenal function in chickens experiencing mercury toxicity.
Cogburn, LA; Parkhurst, CR; Thaxton, P; Young, PS, 1975
)
0.25
"Heavy metals including mercury, cadmium, cobalt, and copper (100 microM) exerted an adverse effect on the viability of isolated rat adrenal capsular (zona glomerulosa), adrenal decapsular (fasciculata and reticularis), and Leydig cells of the testis, with mercury being the most potent."( Toxic effect of heavy metals on cells isolated from the rat adrenal and testis.
Liu, WK; Ng, TB, 1990
)
0.28
"Interleukin-2 has been tested as an anti-cancer agent, either alone or in combination with immune cells, but severe dose limiting adverse toxic effects have been observed."( Interleukin-2 induced systemic toxicity: induction of mediators and immunopharmacologic intervention.
Bendele, AM; Butler, LD; Cain, RL; Layman, NK; Mohler, KM; Puckett, LD; Riedl, PE, 1989
)
0.28
" Previous studies have indicated that pregnant animals treated acutely with toxic levels of a variety of pharmacologically unrelated chemicals produced litters without a recognizable syndrome of defects, except for an increased incidence of supernumerary ribs (SNR)."( The potential relationship of maternal toxicity, general stress, and fetal outcome.
Beyer, PE; Chernoff, N; Kavlock, RJ; Miller, D, 1987
)
0.27
" However, administration of corticosterone (25 micrograms/ml in drinking water) to hypophysectomized rats resulted in an attenuation of the toxicity (40-60% mortality with 40-90 d mean time to death) to a range of TCDD doses (125, 250, 500 micrograms/kg) much higher than the LD50 (about 60 micrograms/kg TCDD) in nonhypophysectomized rats (about 30 d mean time to death)."( Corticosterone decreases toxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) in hypophysectomized rats.
Gorski, JR; Lebofsky, M; Rozman, K, 1988
)
2.01
"Glucocorticoids, the adrenocortical hormones secreted during stress, can be cumulatively toxic to hippocampal neurons, and this steroid-induced neuron loss has a role in functional impairments of the senescent hippocampus."( Glucocorticoid toxicity in the hippocampus: temporal aspects of neuronal vulnerability.
Sapolsky, RM, 1985
)
0.27
" To determine if both groups of substances act through similar biologic mechanisms, their capacity to protect macrophages from the direct toxic effects of LPS was examined in vitro."( Inhibition of LPS toxicity for macrophages by metallothionein-inducing agents.
Costa, M; Lewis, VM; Patierno, SR; Peavy, DL, 1983
)
0.27
" Using ACTH-induced corticosterone synthesis as an indicator of cell damage the hepatic metabolite 7-hydroxymethyl-12-methyl-benz[a]anthracene was shown to be significantly more toxic than the parent compound DMBA."( Metabolism and toxic effects of 7,12-dimethyl-benz[a]anthracene in isolated rat adrenal cells.
Hallberg, E; Rydström, J, 1983
)
0.59
" Together, these data indicate that early handling may modulate or attenuate some, but not all, of the adverse effects of fetal ethanol exposure on offspring growth and physiological responsiveness."( Early handling can attenuate adverse effects of fetal ethanol exposure.
Kim, CK; Weinberg, J; Yu, W,
)
0.13
" The results indicate that immunotoxic profiles of Ro 09-1390 and 5'-DFUR are very similar and characterized primarily by myelotoxicity and Ro 09-1390 is approximately two-times less toxic than 5'-DFUR on a molar basis in BDF1 mice."( Comparative immunotoxicity assessment of N4-Trimethoxybenzoyl-5'-deoxy-5- fluorocytidine (Ro 09-1390) and 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine (5'-DFUR) in BDF1 mice.
Anderson, TD; Hayes, TJ; Horii, I; Inoue, T, 1996
)
0.29
" RIT has also shown preclinical therapeutic potential for attenuating or blocking lethal and/or toxic effects of exposure to cocaine or the selective 5-HT2 agonist dimethoxyiodophenyl-aminopropane (DOI) in the developing chicken."( Behavioral and neuroendocrine assessment of ritanserin exposure in the developing chicken: lack of toxicity at effective doses.
Bollweg, G; Sparber, SB; Wei, YX, 1998
)
0.3
"Glucocorticoids are toxic to hippocampal neurons."( Dehydroepiandrosterone antagonizes the neurotoxic effects of corticosterone and translocation of stress-activated protein kinase 3 in hippocampal primary cultures.
Fawcett, JW; Herbert, J; Kimonides, VG; Sofroniew, MV; Spillantini, MG, 1999
)
0.54
"Environmental estrogens (endocrine disruptive chemicals) have been shown to affect reproduction in wild life and it has been reported that maternal exposure to those chemicals has adverse effects on the male reproductive tract."( Possible reproductive toxicity of styrene in peripubertal male mice.
Asaba, K; Hashimoto, K; Nanamiya, W; Nazarloo, HP; Takao, T, 2000
)
0.31
" No adverse effects of the experimental and surgical procedures on NKCC, leukocyte and lymphocyte number, and corticosterone level were found, indicating that electrolytic lesions and other stereotaxic techniques can be safely used to study the brain-immune system interactions."( Peripheral blood natural killer cell cytotoxicity after damage to the limbic system in the rat.
Borman, A; Ciepielewski, Z; Jurkowski, M; Siemion, D; Tokarski, J; Trojniar, W, 2001
)
0.52
"Experiments were carried out to study the toxic effect of corticosterone (CORT) on primary cultured hippocampal cells and its relationship with mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP)."( Correlation between mitochondrial membrane potential and neurotoxic effect of corticosterone on primary cultured hippocampal cells.
Nie, W; Zhang, ZY; Zhou, JH, 2001
)
0.78
" Ace exposure occurring concurrent with injury would augment the acute-phase response, which would augment the toxic effects of IL-1 and other cytokines, and Ace exposure occurring prior to the injury would suppress or abolish the initial stimulatory effects of IL-1, which would decrease an organism's ability to combat infection or injury."( Immunotoxicity of acute acephate exposure in control or IL-1-challenged rats: correlation between the immune cell composition and corticosteroid concentration in blood.
Jiang, Y; Singh, AK,
)
0.13
" We hypothesized that oxytocin treatment early in life would alleviate adverse effects of intrauterine food restriction."( Postnatal oxytocin alleviates adverse effects in adult rat offspring caused by maternal malnutrition.
Olausson, H; Sohlström, A; Uvnäs-Moberg, K, 2003
)
0.32
" In conclusion, IL-7 has potential immunotherapeutic value since it provides substantial protection to pro- and pre-B cells against the adverse effects of Cs."( IL-7-mediated protection of pro and pre-B cells from the adverse effects of corticosterone.
Fraker, PJ; Laakko, T; Schwartz, RC, 2002
)
0.54
" Given that cigarette smoking is highly prevalent in some of these patient groups and nicotine has been shown to reduce toxic consequences of NMDA receptor function, it may be suggested that nicotine intake may attenuate the neurotoxic effects of hypercortisolemia."( (-)-nicotine ameliorates corticosterone's potentiation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor-mediated cornu ammonis 1 toxicity.
Harris, BR; Littleton, JM; Mulholland, PJ; Prendergast, MA; Self, RL, 2004
)
0.63
"The aims of this study were to propose a bioindicator organism, the newt Triturus carnifex, for the assessment of toxicological impact of thiophanate methyl in the Campania region (Italy) and the possible adverse activity on the adrenal gland."( The newt Triturus carnifex as a model for monitoring the ecotoxic impact of the fungicide thiophanate methyl: adverse effects on the adrenal gland.
Capaldo, A; De Falco, M; Gay, F; Laforgia, V; Valiante, S; Varano, L; Virgilio, F, 2006
)
0.33
" This work provides novel observations which indicate that agomelatine blocks the adverse effects of stress on hippocampus-dependent memory and activates molecular mechanisms of memory storage in response to a learning experience."( The antidepressant agomelatine blocks the adverse effects of stress on memory and enables spatial learning to rapidly increase neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) expression in the hippocampus of rats.
Campbell, AM; Conboy, L; Diamond, DM; Gabriel, C; Mocaer, E; Park, CR; Sandi, C; Tanrikut, C; Zoladz, PR, 2009
)
0.35
" Thus, restraint stress potentiates the adverse effects of TCDD on male reproductive organs."( Effect of restraint stress on 2,3,7,8 tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin induced testicular and epididymal toxicity in rats.
Dhanabalan, S; Jubendradass, R; Latha, P; Mathur, PP, 2011
)
0.37
"Long-term glucocorticoid treatment is associated with numerous adverse outcomes, including weight gain, insulin resistance, and diabetes; however, the pathogenesis of these side effects remains obscure."( Osteoblasts mediate the adverse effects of glucocorticoids on fuel metabolism.
Blankenstein, KI; Brennan-Speranza, TC; Buttgereit, F; Cogger, VC; Cooney, GJ; Dunstan, CR; Gasparini, SJ; Gundberg, C; Heinevetter, U; Henneicke, H; Seibel, MJ; Svistounov, D; Zhang, Y; Zhou, H, 2012
)
0.38
" The results suggest that hormone-mediated MS might affect embryonic development during incubation without adverse effect on chick weight and body composition."( Hormone-mediated maternal stress affects embryonic development during incubation without adverse effect on chick weight and body composition.
Babacanoğlu, E; Yalçin, S, 2014
)
0.4
" A minimum erythema dose and a threshold dose for vitamin D conversion need to be determined for each species if phototherapy is to be considered as a safe and effective therapeutic or husbandry tool."( Determination of a safe and effective ultraviolet B radiant dose in budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus): a pilot study.
Lupu, C; Robins, S, 2013
)
0.39
"Corticosterone, one of the glucocorticoids, is toxic to neurons and plays an important role in depressive-like behavior and depression."( H2S protects PC12 cells against toxicity of corticosterone by modulation of BDNF-TrkB pathway.
Gao, S; Gu, H; Li, W; Tang, X; Tian, Y; Xiao, F; Zhang, P; Zou, W, 2015
)
2.12
" However, current glucocorticoid replacement regimes are inadequate because doses sufficient to suppress excess androgens almost invariably induce adverse metabolic effects."( ABCC1 confers tissue-specific sensitivity to cortisol versus corticosterone: A rationale for safer glucocorticoid replacement therapy.
Andrew, R; Elfick, AP; Homer, NZ; Livingstone, DE; Mackenzie, SD; Mole, DJ; Morgan, RA; Mouras, R; Nixon, M; Reynolds, RM; Stimson, RH; Taylor, AI; Walker, BR, 2016
)
0.68
" Our results suggest that the adverse effects of atrazine and Bd on amphibian growth, development, and tolerance of infection are not mediated primarily by corticosterone."( Are the adverse effects of stressors on amphibians mediated by their effects on stress hormones?
Gabor, CR; Knutie, SA; Rohr, JR; Roznik, EA, 2018
)
0.68

Pharmacokinetics

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" The mean values of half-life and apparent volume of distribution at steady-state in each group were similar."( Effects of acute and chronic inflammation on the pharmacokinetics of prednisolone in rats.
Garg, V; Hon, YY; Jusko, WJ, 1994
)
0.29
"Integrated in vivo models applying intracerebral microdialysis in conjunction with automated serial blood sampling in conscious, freely moving rodents are an attractive approach for pharmacokinetic (PK) and simultaneous pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) investigations of CNS active drugs within the same animal."( An integrated microdialysis rat model for multiple pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic investigations of serotonergic agents.
Bundgaard, C; Jørgensen, M; Mørk, A,
)
0.13
" However, this sensitivity was not satisfactory for corticosterone during pharmacokinetic studies involving dexamethasone due to its strong adrenosuppressive effect."( Quantification of dexamethasone and corticosterone in rat biofluids and fetal tissue using highly sensitive analytical methods: assay validation and application to a pharmacokinetic study.
Jusko, WJ; Samtani, MN, 2007
)
0.87
" An integrated pharmacodynamic (PD) model with inhibition of lymphocyte trafficking from tissue to blood by both MPL and CS and induction of cell apoptosis by MPL reasonably captured this lymphocytopenia."( Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic modeling of corticosterone suppression and lymphocytopenia by methylprednisolone in rats.
Almon, RR; DuBois, DC; Jusko, WJ; Yao, Z, 2008
)
0.61
"A mechanism-based model for pharmacodynamic effects of dexamethasone (DEX) was incorporated into our model for arthritis disease progression in the rat to aid in identification of the primary factors responsible for edema and bone loss."( Modeling corticosteroid effects in a rat model of rheumatoid arthritis II: mechanistic pharmacodynamic model for dexamethasone effects in Lewis rats with collagen-induced arthritis.
Almon, RR; Dubois, DC; Earp, JC; Jusko, WJ; Molano, DS; Pyszczynski, NA, 2008
)
0.35
"A physiologic pharmacodynamic model was developed to jointly describe the effects of methylprednisolone (MPL) on adrenal suppression and glycemic control in normal rats."( Pharmacodynamics of glucose regulation by methylprednisolone. II. normal rats.
Jin, JY; Jusko, WJ, 2009
)
0.35
" Pharmacokinetic studies performed on these groups indicated that urinary free cortisol and cortisol-to-cortisone ratios can be treated as biomarkers of stress and depressive disorders."( Simultaneous determination of urinary cortisol, cortisone and corticosterone in parachutists, depressed patients and healthy controls in view of biomedical and pharmacokinetic studies.
Bączek, T; Konieczna, L; Kowalski, P; Olędzka, I; Plenis, A, 2011
)
0.61
"In conclusion, we have shown for the first time, an automated blood sampling technique that can be incorporated to identify pharmacodynamic biomarkers in-vivo."( Automated blood sampling to identify pharmacodynamics biomarkers of corticotrophin releasing factor receptor 1 antagonism.
Da Costa Mathews, C; Fish, R; Katugampola, SD; Wood, C; Young, K,
)
0.13
" An illustration of the impact of the age of preclinical models on pharmacokinetic properties is also highlighted."( Structure-Activity Relationships, Pharmacokinetics, and in Vivo Activity of CYP11B2 and CYP11B1 Inhibitors.
Adams, CM; Amaral, A; Beil, ME; Carvalho, J; Fu, F; Gangl, E; Hu, CW; Hu, QY; Jeng, AY; Ksander, GM; LaSala, D; Liang, G; Logman, M; Lou, C; Maniara, WM; Papillon, JP; Rajan, S; Rigel, DF; Singh, AK; Smith, SA; Zhang, C, 2015
)
0.42

Compound-Compound Interactions

Study aimed to investigate the effects of mirtazapine (MIRT) alone and combined with alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) against corticosterone (CORT) induced behavioral and oxidative alterations. Also examined whether Roman chamomile combined with clomipramine treatment affects hippocampal neurogenesis and serum cortic testosterone levels.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"To test the hypothesis that the trophic action of angiotensin II on the adrenal zona glomerulosa may allow a sustained stimulation of aldosterone by ACTH by preventing the morphological changes of the zona glomerulosa cells into zona fasciculata-like elements we investigated the effects in rats of a 6-day treatment with ACTH (100 micrograms/kg/day) alone or combined with angiotensin II (300 ng/kg/day) on corticosterone and aldosterone production and adrenal morphology."( Long-term effects of ACTH combined with angiotensin II on steroidogenesis and adrenal zona glomerulosa morphology in the rat.
Bockhorn, L; Gaillard, RC; Mazzochi, G; Muller, AF; Nussberger, J; Nussdorfer, GG; Rebuffat, P; Riondel, AM; Vallotton, MB, 1987
)
0.44
"The paper presents data on the content of corticosteroids in adrenals of rats exposed to 46, 53- and 60-day hypokinesia as well as to 60-day hypokinesia combined with graded exercises."( [Rat adrenal corticosteroid concentration during hypokinesia combined with measured physical exertion].
Zagorskaia, EA,
)
0.13
", either alone or in combination with its soluble receptor sCNTFR alpha at 20 micrograms/mouse."( Ciliary neurotrophic factor inhibits brain and peripheral tumor necrosis factor production and, when coadministered with its soluble receptor, protects mice from lipopolysaccharide toxicity.
Benigni, F; Demitri, MT; Ghezzi, P; Lagunowich, L; Panayotatos, N; Sacco, S; Sipe, JD; Villa, P, 1995
)
0.29
"CNTF, administered either alone or in combination with its soluble receptor, inhibited the induction of serum TNF levels by LPS."( Ciliary neurotrophic factor inhibits brain and peripheral tumor necrosis factor production and, when coadministered with its soluble receptor, protects mice from lipopolysaccharide toxicity.
Benigni, F; Demitri, MT; Ghezzi, P; Lagunowich, L; Panayotatos, N; Sacco, S; Sipe, JD; Villa, P, 1995
)
0.29
"In male rat experiments, the therapeutic effect of oxime HI-6 and its derivatives (HI-6 ester and amide) in combination with benactyzine on the cholinergic and stressogenic effects of a sublethal dose of soman was compared."( [Comparison of the effect of HI-6 oxime and its derivatives in combination with benactyzine on cholinergic and stress effects of soman in rats].
Kassa, J, 1996
)
0.29
" PANPAL pretreatment did not improve the efficacy of HI-6 in combination with benactyzine on soman-induced anticholinesterase and stressogenic effects."( The influence of pharmacological pretreatment on efficacy of HI-6 oxime in combination with benactyzine in soman poisoning in rats.
Bajgar, J; Kassa, J, 1996
)
0.29
" The objectives of this study were: (1) to establish an animal model of increased glucocorticoid levels by sustained delivery and (2) to determine if sustained delivery of selenomethionine in combination with glucocorticoids could protect kidney tubular structures using adult rats."( Glomerular response to adrenocortical hormone alone or in combination with selenomethionine.
Adams, S; Benghuzzi, H; Hughes, J; Lyon, R; Tucci, M, 2005
)
0.33
"This study investigated the effect of non-ventilation of the incubator during the first 10 days of incubation and its combination with dexamethasone administration at day 16 or 18 of incubation on hatching parameters and embryo and post-hatch chick juvenile physiology."( Non-ventilation during early incubation in combination with dexamethasone administration during late incubation: 1. Effects on physiological hormone levels, incubation duration and hatching events.
Bruggeman, V; De Smit, L; Decuypere, E; Figueiredo, D; Onagbesan, O; Tona, K, 2007
)
0.34
" This study sought to determine whether lifetime Pb exposure combined with prenatal stress would enhance the cognitive deficits independently associated with each of these risk factors and to explore associated mechanisms of any observed impairments."( Enhanced learning deficits in female rats following lifetime pb exposure combined with prenatal stress.
Allen, JL; Cory-Slechta, DA; Liu, S; Stern, S; Weston, D, 2010
)
0.36
"A mouse model has been developed to study the effect of dietary fat combined with food deprivation periods on palatable food seeking and on the expression of three potential addiction biomarkers in the nucleus accumbens: fumarate hydratase (FH), ATP synthase subunit alpha (ATP5a1) and transketolase (TKT)."( A high-fat diet combined with food deprivation increases food seeking and the expression of candidate biomarkers of addiction.
Alguacil, LF; Galiana-Simal, A; García-Rojo, M; González-Martín, C; Pérez-Ortiz, JM; Salas, E, 2017
)
0.46
" Rearing in social isolation increased stress reactivity in comparison to both controls and in combination with periodic maternal separation, without affecting the coping strategy associated with the forced swimming test."( Early Life Stress Increases Metabolic Risk, HPA Axis Reactivity, and Depressive-Like Behavior When Combined with Postweaning Social Isolation in Rats.
Gomez, C; Junco, M; Lajud, N; Vargas, J, 2016
)
0.43
" This study aimed to investigate the effects of mirtazapine (MIRT) alone and combined with alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) against corticosterone (CORT) induced behavioral and oxidative alterations."( Brain antioxidant effect of mirtazapine and reversal of sedation by its combination with alpha-lipoic acid in a model of depression induced by corticosterone.
de Oliveira, AA; de Sousa, CNS; de Sousa, LC; Honório Júnior, JER; Macedo, D; Maes, M; Medeiros, IDS; Oliveira, TQ; Patrocínio, CFV; Vasconcelos, GS; Vasconcelos, SMM, 2017
)
0.86
" In this study, we evaluated metabolic properties of oral nutritional supplement epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) in combination with GLP-1 agonist exendin-4 in a mouse model of dietary-induced diabetes and obesity."( Beneficial metabolic effects of dietary epigallocatechin gallate alone and in combination with exendin-4 in high fat diabetic mice.
Flatt, PR; Gault, VA; Millar, PJB; Pathak, NM; Pathak, V, 2018
)
0.48
"EGCG alone and particularly in combination with exendin-4 exerts positive metabolic properties in HF mice."( Beneficial metabolic effects of dietary epigallocatechin gallate alone and in combination with exendin-4 in high fat diabetic mice.
Flatt, PR; Gault, VA; Millar, PJB; Pathak, NM; Pathak, V, 2018
)
0.48
" We hypothesized that surgically induced IUGR combined with an HFD would increase adiposity and glucocorticoids more than in non-IUGR offspring combined with the same HFD, findings that would persist despite weaning to a regular diet."( Intrauterine growth restriction combined with a maternal high-fat diet increased adiposity and serum corticosterone levels in adult rat offspring.
Callaway, CW; McKnight, RA; Yu, B; Zinkhan, EK, 2018
)
0.7
" Our study suggests that the exposure to PAS during an emotional challenge decreases despair-like behavior in rodents that were previously housed in an enriched environment in combination with auditory stimuli."( Exposure to Patterned Auditory Stimuli during Acute Stress Prevents Despair-Like Behavior in Adult Mice That Were Previously Housed in an Enriched Environment in Combination with Auditory Stimuli.
Cabrera-Muñoz, EA; Flores-Gutiérrez, E; Ortiz-López, L; Ramírez-Rodríguez, GB; Vega-Rivera, NM, 2018
)
0.48
" We also examined whether Roman chamomile combined with clomipramine treatment affects hippocampal neurogenesis and serum corticosterone levels."( Roman chamomile inhalation combined with clomipramine treatment improves treatment-resistant depression-like behavior in mice.
Hashikawa, N; Hashikawa-Hobara, N; Ishikawa, R; Otsuka, A, 2019
)
0.72

Bioavailability

The relation between lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced fever and bioavailability of corticosterone (B) was examined in male Wistar rats. The enzymes 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (11betaHSDs) can influence bioavailability by interconverting cortic testosterone and the inert metabolite 11-dehydrocorticosterone.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Upon further investigation, it was observed that T-2 increased the absorption rate of endotoxin: as the peak height of serum endotoxin increased, the time-to-peak decreased, and the area under the curve was unchanged in animals treated simultaneously with T-2 and endotoxin."( Increased endotoxin sensitivity following T-2 toxin treatment is associated with increased absorption of endotoxin.
Frayssinet, C; Lafarge-Frayssinet, C; Luster, MI; Taylor, MJ, 1991
)
0.28
" However, in both cases, levels of corticosterone in plasma were dramatically elevated, clearly demonstrating the bioavailability of the kappa agonists."( The endogenous kappa agonist, dynorphin(1-13), does not alter basal or morphine-stimulated dopamine metabolism in the nigrostriatal pathway of the rat.
Cosi, C; Iyengar, S; Kim, HS; Wood, PL, 1987
)
0.55
" These in vivo extraction values could not be predicted from in vitro studies of steroid binding to plasma proteins and the results underscore the importance of performing in vivo studies so that we may have a better understanding of the bioavailability of steroids to tissues."( The effects of membrane permeability and binding by human serum proteins on steroid influx into the rabbit uterus.
Chaudhuri, G; Judd, HL; Pardridge, WM; Steingold, KA, 1987
)
0.27
" Collectively, these results indicate that LY228729 is potent 5-HT1A agonist with bioavailability properties sufficient for clinical evaluation and with efficacy in preclinical models of anxiety, sexual disorders and motion sickness."( Preclinical studies on LY228729: a potent and selective serotonin1A agonist.
Benvenga, MJ; Calligaro, DO; Flaugh, ME; Foreman, MM; Fuller, RW; Leander, JD; Lucot, JB; Nelson, DL; Swanson, SP; Wong, DT, 1993
)
0.29
"The relation between lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced fever and bioavailability of corticosterone (B) was examined in male Wistar rats."( The amount of free corticosterone is increased during lipopolysaccharide-induced fever.
Cabrera, R; De Kloet, ER; De Nicola, A; Korte, SM; Lentjes, EG; Romijn, F; Schönbaum, E, 2000
)
0.86
" In constant oxidative stress (ageing and liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy), high liver Zn-MTs, low zinc ion bioavailability and depressed TTA efficiency appear."( Metallothioneins (I+II) and thyroid-thymus axis efficiency in old mice: role of corticosterone and zinc supply.
Carpenè, E; Cipriano, C; Gasparini, N; Giacconi, R; Isani, G; Mocchegiani, E; Muzzioli, M; Orlando, F; Stecconi, R, 2002
)
0.54
" Significant involution of thymus and spleen confirmed the bioavailability of the corticosterone at both dosages."( Chronic treatment with supraphysiological levels of corticosterone enhances D-MDMA-induced dopaminergic neurotoxicity in the C57BL/6J female mouse.
Johnson, EA; Miller, DB; O'Callaghan, JP, 2002
)
0.79
" In old age, high metallothionein (I+II) (MT) sequesters a substantial number of intracellular zinc ions consequently leading to low zinc ion bioavailability for an adequate immune response."( Metallothionein (I+II) confers, via c-myc, immune plasticity in oldest mice: model of partial hepatectomy/liver regeneration.
Cabassi, E; Cipriano, C; Corradi, A; Gasparini, N; Giacconi, R; Mocchegiani, E; Muzzioli, M; Orlando, F,
)
0.13
" Although it has to be mentioned that the conclusion which can be drawn is limited, the bioavailability of the compounds could be different as well."( Glutamate agonists activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis through hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus but not through vasopressinerg neurons.
Makara, GB; Mergl, Z; Zelena, D, 2005
)
0.33
" The pharmacokinetics of MPL showed bi-exponential disposition with two first-order absorption components from the injection site and bioavailability was 21%."( Modeling receptor/gene-mediated effects of corticosteroids on hepatic tyrosine aminotransferase dynamics in rats: dual regulation by endogenous and exogenous corticosteroids.
Almon, RR; DuBois, DC; Hazra, A; Jusko, WJ; Pyszczynski, N, 2007
)
0.34
" It is hypothesized that once corticosterone reaches the site of inflammation, the enzymes 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (11betaHSDs) can influence bioavailability by interconverting corticosterone and the inert metabolite 11-dehydrocorticosterone."( 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases are regulated during the pulmonary granulomatous response to the mycobacterial glycolipid trehalose-6,6'-dimycolate.
Abbott, AN; Actor, JK; Guidry, TV; Hunter, RL; Kling, MA; Thomas, AM; Welsh, KJ, 2009
)
0.64
"Pramipexole is a hydrophilic, weakly basic drug, but exhibits high oral bioavailability in humans (>90%)."( Uptake of pramipexole by human organic cation transporters.
Diao, L; Polli, JE; Shu, Y, 2010
)
0.36
" To show the importance of physicochemical properties, the classic QSAR and CoMFA of neonicotinoids and prediction of bioavailability of pesticides in terms of membrane permeability in comparison with drugs are described."( Importance of physicochemical properties for the design of new pesticides.
Akamatsu, M, 2011
)
0.37
" Modulating the cellular bioavailability of glucocorticoids by local regulation of 11βHSD enzymes within responding tissue and parenchyma would allow controlled inflammatory response during infection."( IL-6 mediates 11βHSD type 2 to effect progression of the mycobacterial cord factor trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate-induced granulomatous response.
Abbott, AN; Actor, JK; Blackburn, MR; Boyd, S; Choudhury, T; Hunter, RL; Hwang, SA; Płoszaj, P; Welsh, KJ, 2011
)
0.37
" We assessed the effects of a single 15 min GSM exposure (900 MHz; specific absorption rate (SAR)=6 W/kg) on GFAP expression in young adults (6 week-old) and middle-aged rats (12 month-old)."( Effects of 900 MHz radiofrequency on corticosterone, emotional memory and neuroinflammation in middle-aged rats.
Bouji, M; de Seze, R; Hode, Y; Lecomte, A; Villégier, AS, 2012
)
0.65
" The results clearly suggest that piperine enhanced the bioavailability of curcumin and potentiated its protective effects against CUS induced cognitive impairment and associated oxidative damage in mice."( Piperine potentiates the protective effects of curcumin against chronic unpredictable stress-induced cognitive impairment and oxidative damage in mice.
Kumar, A; Rinwa, P, 2012
)
0.38
" The results show no correlation between the rate of absorption of the permeant and the rate of solvent evaporation/penetration with ethanol, hexane, isopropanol, and butanol as the solvent; all of these solvents have fast evaporation rates (complete evaporation in <30 min after application)."( Effects of solvent on percutaneous absorption of nonvolatile lipophilic solute.
Intarakumhaeng, R; Li, SK, 2014
)
0.4
" Data obtained let to suggest high bioavailability of new zinc organic form - Zn-EHPS and its usage possibility in fortification of special foods."( [Complex of zinc with enzymatic hydrolysate of pigspleen protein - in vivo investigation].
Mazo, VK; Sidorova, IuS; Zilova, IS; Zorin, SN, 2014
)
0.4
" Structure-activity relationships and optimization of their oral bioavailability are presented."( Structure-Activity Relationships, Pharmacokinetics, and in Vivo Activity of CYP11B2 and CYP11B1 Inhibitors.
Adams, CM; Amaral, A; Beil, ME; Carvalho, J; Fu, F; Gangl, E; Hu, CW; Hu, QY; Jeng, AY; Ksander, GM; LaSala, D; Liang, G; Logman, M; Lou, C; Maniara, WM; Papillon, JP; Rajan, S; Rigel, DF; Singh, AK; Smith, SA; Zhang, C, 2015
)
0.42
" These activities, associated to a good predictive bioavailability and a lack of cytotoxicity, design it as a promising hit for further in vivo investigation."( Novel benzylidenephenylpyrrolizinones with pleiotropic activities potentially useful in Alzheimer's disease treatment.
Corvaisier, S; Cresteil, T; Dallemagne, P; El Kihel, L; Jourdan, JP; Lecoutey, C; Legay, R; Malzert-Fréon, A; Rochais, C; Since, M; Sopkova-de Oliveira Santos, J, 2016
)
0.43
" Pegylated nanoparticles (NMD-NP/PEG), with a size of 190 nm and a payload of 68 µg/mg, significantly improve the oral bioavailability of nimodipine; about 7-times higher than for the control drug solution (62% vs 9%)."( Pegylated nanoparticles for the oral delivery of nimodipine: Pharmacokinetics and effect on the anxiety and cognition in mice.
Irache, JM; Martínez-Ohárriz, MC; Moreno, LCGEAI; Muñoz, E; Ramirez, MJ; Santos-Magalhães, NS; Solas, M, 2018
)
0.48
"Corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), albumin and 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD) enzymes play crucial roles in the bioavailability of glucocorticoids."( The impact of early-life stress on corticosteroid carrier protein levels and 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 expression in adolescent rats.
Chocyk, A; Majcher-Maślanka, I; Solarz, A, 2019
)
0.51
"These results indicate that ELS may potentially program glucocorticoid action through its effects on glucocorticoid bioavailability in tissues."( The impact of early-life stress on corticosteroid carrier protein levels and 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 expression in adolescent rats.
Chocyk, A; Majcher-Maślanka, I; Solarz, A, 2019
)
0.51
" Due to the small particle size and bioavailability of nano-zinc, it can be easily assimilated in the digestive system, thereby reducing excretion and environmental pollution."( Effects of zinc oxide nanoparticles on growth performance and concentrations of malondialdehyde, zinc in tissues, and corticosterone in broiler chickens under heat stress conditions.
Awad, EA; Idrus, Z; Mookiah, S; Ramiah, SK, 2019
)
0.72
" The main findings from the current study are that the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist PT150 reduces sign tracking behavior dose dependently, and SC administration may provide better bioavailability compared with our previous study that used an oral route of administration."( Repeated subcutaneous administration of PT150 has dose-dependent effects on sign tracking in male Japanese quail.
Akins, CK; Jagielo-Miller, JE; Prendergast, MA; Rice, BA; Saunders, MA, 2019
)
0.51
"The ATP-binding cassette transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is known to limit both brain penetration and oral bioavailability of many chemotherapy drugs."( A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
Ambudkar, SV; Brimacombe, KR; Chen, L; Gottesman, MM; Guha, R; Hall, MD; Klumpp-Thomas, C; Lee, OW; Lee, TD; Lusvarghi, S; Robey, RW; Shen, M; Tebase, BG, 2019
)
0.51
" Corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) plays a key role in regulating the bioavailability of Cort, with only free unbound Cort being biologically active."( Sex-specific maternal programming of corticosteroid-binding globulin by predator odour.
Abuaish, S; Boonstra, R; Hing, B; Lavergne, SG; McGowan, PO; Spinieli, RL; St-Cyr, S, 2021
)
0.62

Dosage Studied

The response to concurrent dosage of cortisol and corticosterone was less than half of that obtained with ACTH which produced a comparable alteration of blood glucocorticoid levels but a 10-fold increase in NaC1 intake. Corticosterone levels in control rats pair-fed to the lethal dose group were similarly elevated as in TCDD-treated rats.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
" A sigmoid dose-response curve was obtained when these cells were incubated with ACTH in batch incubations."( Studies on isolated rat adrenal cells. I. Continuous flow and batch incubation.
Abeln, GJ; Croughs, RJ; Degenhart, HJ; Falke, HE; Visser, HK, 1975
)
0.25
" The response to concurrent dosage of cortisol and corticosterone was less than half of that obtained with ACTH which produced a comparable alteration of blood glucocorticoid levels but a 10-fold increase in NaC1 intake."( The role of ACTH and adrenal glucocorticoids in the salt appetite of wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus (L)).
Blaine, EH; Covelli, MD; Denton, DA; Nelson, JF; Shulkes, AA, 1975
)
0.51
" A linear log dose-response relationship existed between 1/8 to 1 rat hypothalamus extract and the amounts of ACTH released."( A superfusion system technique for the study of the sites of action of glucocorticoids in the rat hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal system in vitro. I. Pituitary cell superfusion.
Mulder, GH; Smelik, PG, 1977
)
0.26
" Vasotocin was the most active of the compounds studied and, unlike the vasopressins, its dose-response relationships closely resembled those of hypothalamic extracts."( The use of corticotrophin production by adenohypophysial tissue in vitro for the detection and estimation of potential corticotrophin releasing factors.
Buckingham, JC; Hodges, JR, 1977
)
0.26
" With increasing concentrations of angiotensin II logarithmic dose-response curves for aldosterone and cyclic AMP production were similar."( Adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate production and steroidogenesis by isolated rat adrenal glomerulosa cells. Effects of angiotensin II and [Sar 1,Ala 8]angiotensin II.
Bing, RF; Schulster, D, 1978
)
0.26
"Administration of T4 on alternate weeks for 30 weeks at a dosage which does not alter body weight depresses basal serum corticosterone levels in older rats (575 days), but not in young animals (260 days)."( Control of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in young and older rats injected with thyroxine.
Meserve, LA, 1979
)
0.47
" Log dose-response curves of the adrenal cells for ACTH and of the pituitary cell-adrenal cell system for CRF were linear over the ranges used."( A superfusion system technique for the study of the sites of action of glucocorticoids in the rat hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal system in vitro. II. Hypothalamus-pituitary cell-adrenal cell superfusion.
Mulder, GH; Smelik, PG; Vermes, I, 1977
)
0.26
" Possible mechanisms for this non-linear dose-response are discussed."( Postnatal endocrine dysfunction resulting from prenatal exposure to carbofuran, diazinon or chlordane.
Avery, DL; Cranmer, JS; Grady, RR; Kitay, JI,
)
0.13
" Dose-response curves and ED50 values for levarterenol or phenylephrine in control and 6-hydroxydopamine-denervated tissues, both in the presence and absence of corticosterone, are shown."( Role of neuronal and extraneuronal uptake in responses of rabbit iris dilator muscle to levarterenol and phenylephrine.
Ahlquist, RP; Carrier, GO; Matheny, JL, 1977
)
0.45
" These data suggest that adrenal function may be associated with the reproductively inhibited condition, but not in a direct or dose-response fashion and that adrenal hyperfunction in this species may not be reflected by adrenal hypertrophy."( Serum corticosterone concentrations in reproductively mature and inhibited deermice (Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii).
Bradley, EL; Sung, KL; Terman, CR, 1977
)
0.74
" For higher initial contractions relaxation is slowed during the first minute of wash out, probably because of the sigmoid shape of the dose-response curve."( Relaxation of splenic strips during wash out with amine-free solution after an exposure to noradrenaline.
Lindmark, E; Schlör, G; Trendelenburg, U, 1976
)
0.26
" Weight loss and plasma corticosterone analysis confirmed the effectiveness of the dosage used."( Sex differences in the effects of dexamethasone phosphate on behavior in rats.
Joffe, JM; Mulick, JA; Peterson, JM, 1975
)
0.56
" Normal human serum provided a source of somatomedin which stimulated the incorporation of sulfate by cartilage in a dose-response relationship; the potency of serum with and without added steroid hormone was determined after formal parallel-line analysis."( Steroid hormone effects on sonatomedin. I. Somatomedin action in vitro.
Daughaday, WH; Herington, AC; Phillips, LS, 1975
)
0.25
" injections of thyroxine at a dosage (1 mg/d) that induced June-July thyroxine plasma levels."( Experimental studies on the annual cycles of thyroid and adrenocortical functions in relation to the reproductive cycle of drakes.
Assenmacher, I; Astier, H; Daniel, JY; Jallageas, M, 1975
)
0.25
" Adult male rats were injected with cocaine (15 mg/kg, IP) once daily for 14 days, followed by a dose-response challenge with cocaine (1-15 mg/kg, IP) either 18 hours or 7 days after the final pretreatment injection."( Neuroendocrine responses to cocaine do not exhibit sensitization following repeated cocaine exposure.
Alvarez Sanz, MC; Kerr, JE; Levy, AD; Li, Q; Rittenhouse, PA; Van de Kar, LD, 1992
)
0.28
" Estradiol also shifted the dose-response curve for GnRH-stimulated inositol phosphate (IP) accumulation rightward, increasing the EC50 for this GnRH effect by approximately 20-fold."( Estradiol regulates gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor number, growth and inositol phosphate production in alpha T3-1 cells.
Gröner, I; McArdle, CA; Poch, A; Schomerus, E, 1992
)
0.28
" The dose-response curves of these compounds in the former were shifted to the right and/or abolished, suggesting decreased sensitivity of LEW/N hypothalami to these neurotransmitters."( Neurotransmitter-induced hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responsiveness is defective in inflammatory disease-susceptible Lewis rats: in vivo and in vitro studies suggesting globally defective hypothalamic secretion of corticotropin-releasing hormone.
Aksentijevich, S; Bagdy, G; Bernardini, R; Calogero, AE; Chrousos, GP; Gold, PW; Smith, C; Sternberg, EM; Wilder, RL, 1992
)
0.28
" dosing and its effects did not show tolerance on repeated dosing."( Pharmacological characterization of PD 118717, a putative piperazinyl benzopyranone dopamine autoreceptor agonist.
Christofferson, CL; Corbin, A; Demattos, S; DeWald, HA; Meltzer, LT; Myers, SL; Pugsley, TA; Shih, YH; Whetzel, SZ; Wiley, JN, 1992
)
0.28
" Increased fat accumulation was shown in all fat depots in a dose-response fashion, but was significantly more pronounced in the mesenteric region."( Effect of chronic stress and exogenous glucocorticoids on regional fat distribution and metabolism.
McEwen, B; Rebuffé-Scrive, M; Rodin, J; Walsh, UA, 1992
)
0.28
" For each of these tests, animals that received chronic nicotine treatment were significantly less sensitive to nicotine challenge than were animals that received chronic saline treatment, as indicated by shifts to the right of dose-response curves."( Tolerance to nicotine following chronic treatment by injections: a potential role for corticosterone.
Collins, AC; Grun, EU; Pauly, JR, 1992
)
0.51
" For corticosterone determinations, mice were dosed on GD 10, and blood was collected at 1, 4, 24, or 48 hr after dosing."( The effect of teratogens on maternal corticosterone levels and cleft incidence in A/J mice.
Hansen, DK; Holson, RR; Sheehan, DM; Sullivan-Jones, P,
)
0.92
"5 months) rats and of the dose-response (0."( Differential metabolic responses to tumor necrosis factor with increase in age.
Mondon, CE; Starnes, HF, 1992
)
0.28
" Previous work had demonstrated that PHT treatment significantly increased endogenous maternal corticosterone concentrations for approximately 48 hr after dosing in A/J mice."( Embryotoxicity of phenytoin in adrenalectomized CD-1 mice.
Branham, WS; Hansen, DK; Holson, RR; Sheehan, DM, 1992
)
0.5
" Breeding trials after ketoconazole administration resulted in normal fertility and fecundity even at the highest dosage studied."( The effect of ketoconazole on endocrine and reproductive parameters in male mice and rats.
Cosentino, MJ; Heckman, WR; Kane, BR; Pakyz, RE,
)
0.13
" Very probably, pathological production or excessive dosage of steroids that are negligibly bound to SHBG or CBG will produce CSF and brain levels in the near micromolar range."( Steroid hormones and steroid hormone binding globulins in cerebrospinal fluid studied in individuals with intact and with disturbed blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier.
Pohl, P; Schwarz, S, 1992
)
0.28
" Dosing was structured so that trunk blood could be collected during the morning nadir of circulating corticosterone (CORT)."( Influence of chlordimeform on alpha-adrenergic receptor-associated mechanisms of hormonal regulation in the rat: pituitary and adrenocortical secretion.
Cooper, RL; Goldman, JM; McElroy, WK; Stoker, TE, 1991
)
0.5
"Both insulin and glucocorticosteroid (GS) deficiency causes a reduction of amylase synthesis and changes in the dose-response curve of cholecystokinin (CCK) stimulated enzyme secretion in rats."( Pancreatic enzyme synthesis and secretion are independently regulated by insulin and glucocorticosteroids.
Mössner, J; Secknus, R; Sommer, C; Spiekermann, G, 1990
)
0.28
" In a second experiment, the dose-response curve for oestradiol was examined."( Comparison of the adverse effects of adrenal and ovarian steroids on early pregnancy in mice.
de Catanzaro, D; MacNiven, E; Ricciuti, F, 1991
)
0.28
" Earlier dosing at 11 or 18 hr prior to the surge was without effect."( Suppression of the luteinizing hormone surge by chlordimeform in ovariectomized, steroid-primed female rats.
Cooper, RL; Edwards, TL; Goldman, JM; Hein, JF; McElroy, WK; Rehnberg, GL, 1991
)
0.28
" Alteration of airways function was assessed by measuring specific pulmonary conductance (SGL) and dose-response relationships to inhaled histamine, where airways responsiveness was expressed as the effective concentration causing 50% of maximal change in specific airways conductance (EC50SGL)."( Body temperature modulates the effect of platelet-activating factor (PAF) on airways responsiveness in the rabbit.
Hill, M; Irvin, CG; Nieminen, MM, 1991
)
0.28
" Acute dosing of CDP (1-27 mg/kg) produced dose-related increases in basal CS secretion but was without effect on basal NA levels."( Effects of buspirone and chlordiazepoxide on plasma catecholamine and corticosterone levels in stressed and nonstressed rats.
De Boer, SF; Slangen, JL; Van der Gugten, J, 1991
)
0.52
"In normal (N), 3-days starved (S), and streptozotocin-treated (65 mg/kg) 3-days diabetic (D) rats we examined the in vivo dose-response relationship between plasma insulin levels vs."( Whole body and hepatic insulin action in normal, starved, and diabetic rats.
de Boer, SF; Frölich, M; Koopmans, SJ; Krans, HM; Radder, JK; Sips, HC, 1991
)
0.28
" ACH dose-response curves for dexamethasone (DM)- and corticosterone (B)-treated but not deoxycorticosterone (DOC)-treated BSM were significantly shifted to the right; this provides evidence that glucocorticoid treatment reduced the sensitivity of BSM to ACH."( Effect of acetylcholine and morphine on bronchial smooth muscle contraction and its modulation by steroid hormones.
Kadir, BA; Khalid, BA; Morat, PB; Nabishah, BM, 1990
)
0.53
" Following infusions over 1 to 6 days, adrenal weight was increased with increasing dosage of TNF."( Are the catabolic effects of tumor necrosis factor mediated by glucocorticoids?
Mealy, K; Robinson, BG; Rounds, J; van Lanschot, JJ; Wilmore, DW, 1990
)
0.28
"01) stimulated ACTH secretion by EtOH rats, but there was no clear dose-response curve."( Prolonged exposure to alcohol: effect on CRF mRNA levels, and CRF- and stress-induced ACTH secretion in the rat.
Imaki, T; Rivier, C; Vale, W, 1990
)
0.28
" The CS response showed an earlier onset, prolonged (greater than 12 hr) duration, and a broader dose-response pattern."( Effect of gram-negative endotoxin on levels of serum corticosterone, TNF alpha, circulating blood cells, and the survival of rats.
Feuerstein, G; Hallenbeck, JM; Perera, PY; Rabinovici, R; Vanatta, B; Vogel, SN, 1990
)
0.53
" The dose-response of muscle protein synthesis to a 30 min infusion with 0-150 munits of insulin/h was then compared in rats pretreated with corticosterone (10 mg/100 g body wt."( Acute effects of corticosterone on tissue protein synthesis and insulin-sensitivity in rats in vivo.
Garlick, PJ; Palmer, RM; Southorn, BG, 1990
)
0.82
" Therefore, the conversion of 14C-alanine into 14C-glucose was also determined in hypophysectomized rats dosed with TCDD (125 micrograms/kg) and given corticosterone (25 micrograms/ml in drinking water)."( Reduced gluconeogenesis in 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)-treated rats.
Gorski, JR; Rozman, K; Weber, LW, 1990
)
0.48
"01) elevations in plasma corticosterone concentrations were seen 24 and 48 hr following dosing of SAD in NaHCO3 with concentrations reaching a peak just prior to the onset of shelf elevation and fusion."( Role of maternal plasma corticosterone elevation in the teratogenicity of secalonic acid D in mice.
Eldeib, MM; Reddy, CS, 1990
)
0.89
" Dose-response curves (measured as the ability to release both LH and FSH) showed that biotinylated GnRH (Bio-GnRH) was equipotent with or more potent than unlabeled [D-Lys6]GnRH in parallel cultures."( Cytochemical and cytophysiological studies of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) target cells in the male rat pituitary: differential effects of androgens and corticosterone on GnRH binding and gonadotropin release.
Childs, GV; Tibolt, RE, 1985
)
0.47
" Dose-response studies (250-3000 rad, 72 hr) indicated that similar dose-response relationships for the appearance of MT in the liver and kidney were observed."( Increased metallothionein content in rat liver and kidney following X-irradiation.
Aono, K; Hashimoto, K; Hayashi, H; Kondoh, S; Shiraishi, N; Takeda, Y; Yamamoto, H, 1986
)
0.27
" Insulin dose-dependently reversed the suppressed angiogenesis of 20 micrograms corticosterone-treated mice and the dose-response curve approximated the curve of alloxan-treated mice."( Involvement of glucocorticoid in insulin-induced angiogenesis of adjuvant pouch granuloma in diabetic mice.
Amemiya, K; Kimura, M; Suzuki, J; Yamada, T, 1987
)
0.5
" In addition, a dose-response curve for corticosterone with adrenalectomized rats shows that synthesis of the protein is maximally increased when the injected dosage causes serum levels of corticosterone to increase to the levels seen during stress."( Receptor specificity of a glucocorticoid- and stress-induced hippocampal protein.
Dokas, LA; Schlatter, LK, 1989
)
0.54
" In explanted rat hypothalami maintained viable in vitro, PAF stimulated immunoreactive CRH secretion in a bell-shaped dose-response fashion."( The alkyl-ether phospholipid platelet-activating factor is a stimulator of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in the rat.
Bernardini, R; Brucke, T; Calogero, AE; Chrousos, GP; Ehrlich, YH; Gold, PW, 1989
)
0.28
"Six pregnant women (below 49 days of amenorrhea) desiring pregnancy termination received 600 mg RU486 orally in a single dosage and 1 mg PG-05 or ONO-802 as vaginal suppository 48 h afterward."( Functional status of the pituitary-adrenal axis during treatment of RU486 for termination of early pregnancy in combination with PGs in Chinese women.
Wu, XR; Yang, XL, 1989
)
0.28
" In rats with chemical lesions of serotonergic neurons the dose-response curves of RU 24969 for PRA and PRC as well as corticotropin, corticosterone and prolactin shifted to the left, suggesting functional up-regulation of postsynaptic 5-HT receptors."( Neuroendocrine evidence for denervation supersensitivity of serotonin receptors: effects of the 5-HT agonist RU 24969 on corticotropin, corticosterone, prolactin and renin secretion.
Bethea, CL; Bonadonna, AM; Carnes, M; Kunimoto, K; Maslowski, RJ; Piechowski, RA; Rittenhouse, PA; Van de Kar, LD, 1989
)
0.68
" In a dose-response study, both glucocorticoids administered 3 h prior to testing suppressed the adrenocortical response to a 20-min restraint stress to a greater extent in the H animals."( Neonatal handling alters adrenocortical negative feedback sensitivity and hippocampal type II glucocorticoid receptor binding in the rat.
Aitken, DH; Meaney, MJ; Sarrieau, A; Sharma, S; Viau, V, 1989
)
0.28
" Using a cumulative dose-response technique, the dose of isoproterenol required to produce 50% of the maximal heart rate response (ED50) increased in intruders by 108% following aggression testing with ethanol intruders showing significantly smaller mean change."( Neuroendocrine and beta-adrenoceptor response to chronic ethanol and aggression in rats.
Hamm, MW; Peterson, JT; Pohorecky, LA, 1989
)
0.28
" In the first series of experiments, the time-course of corticosterone replacement effects on corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) mRNA levels in parvicellular neuroendocrine cells of adrenalectomized animals were determined, and a dose-response curve was established."( Differential steroid hormone and neural influences on peptide mRNA levels in CRH cells of the paraventricular nucleus: a hybridization histochemical study in the rat.
Simmons, DM; Swanson, LW, 1989
)
0.52
" In the first series of studies, the effect of different levels of corticosterone on schedule-induced wheelrunning in adrenalectomized rats was investigated; the results of this study show a dose-response relationship between levels of corticosterone and schedule-induced wheelrunning."( The action of corticosterone on schedule-induced wheelrunning.
Funder, J; Lin, WJ; Singer, G, 1989
)
0.87
" These conclusions are drawn from continuous infusion studies where corticosterone yields a bitonic dose-response curve for body weight gain and feeding efficiency."( Corticosterone's dual metabolic actions.
Devenport, L; Knehans, A; Sundstrom, A; Thomas, T, 1989
)
1.96
" The dose-response curve (peak plasma ACTH level vs."( Dose-response relationships between plasma adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), cortisol, aldosterone, and 18-hydroxycorticosterone after injection of ACTH-(1-39) or human corticotropin-releasing hormone in man.
Bähr, V; Boelke, T; Oelkers, W, 1988
)
0.49
" An inhibitory effect of the steroids on membrane-bound adenylate cyclase has been demonstrated and dose-response effects suggest the presence of specific membrane-bound glucocorticoid receptors."( Role of cyclic AMP in steroid action in rat intestine.
Franco, F; Snart, RS, 1988
)
0.27
" ANP stimulated production of cyclic GMP (cGMP), and inhibited aldosterone secretion with a similar dose-response relationship."( Regulation of aldosterone secretion by avian adrenocortical cells.
Hurwitz, S; Pines, M; Rosenberg, J, 1988
)
0.27
" There was a significant decrease in the total concentration of cytosolic binding sites for [3H]dexamethasone 12 and 48 hr after mirex dosing in intact rats, 12 and 48 hr after mirex dosing in adrenalectomized rats, and 12 and 24 hr after mirex dosing in adrenalectomized corticosterone-supplemented rats."( Alterations in the hepatic glucocorticoid response to mirex treatment.
Brown, LD; Wilson, DE; Yarbrough, JD, 1988
)
0.45
" Doses that cause receptor down-regulation are also effective at inducing tyrosine aminotransferase, suggesting that dexamethasone down-regulates its own receptors over a physiologically meaningful dosage range."( The biopotency of dexamethasone at causing hepatic glucocorticoid receptor down-regulation in the intact mouse.
Svec, F, 1988
)
0.27
" The administration of the lowest dose of EKC stimulated the release of prolactin whereas higher doses were without effect suggesting biphasic dose-response relationship."( Identification of multiple opiate receptors through neuroendocrine responses. I. Effects of agonists.
George, R; Pechnick, R; Poland, RE, 1985
)
0.27
" At 10(-8) M N-POMC1-61 amide, gamma 3-MSH and Lys-gamma 3-MSH did not modify the ACTH dose-response for steroids (gluco- and mineralocorticoids) and cAMP production."( Effects of several pro-opiomelanocortin derived peptides on steroidogenesis in ovine and bovine adrenal cells.
Cathiard, AM; Chrétien, M; Durand, P; Saez, JM; Seidah, MG, 1985
)
0.27
" The comparison of their dose-response curves indicated that two different mechanisms are involved in the release of ACTH by neurohypophysial peptides and their analogs."( Analysis of the dual mechanism of ACTH release by arginine vasopressin and its analogs in conscious rats.
Dantzer, R; LeMoal, M; Mormède, P, 1985
)
0.27
" In this study we investigated further the effects of synthetic ANP on the dose-response curve of aldosterone secretion stimulated by ACTH in vitro."( Atrial natriuretic peptide inhibits the stimulation of aldosterone secretion by ACTH in vitro and in vivo.
Chartier, L; Schiffrin, EL, 1986
)
0.27
" The dose-response to ACTH was similar for cyclic AMP and corticosterone but aldosterone secretion appeared to be more sensitive to ACTH stimulation."( Relationship between endogenous cyclic AMP production and steroid hormone secretion in chick adrenal cells.
Hurwitz, S; Pines, M; Rosenberg, J, 1986
)
0.52
" The antrum extract showed a dose-related CRF activity in vitro using rat pituitary cell culture, and the dose-response curve appeared to be parallel with that of synthetic rat hypothalamic CRF."( Corticotropin-releasing activity in the rat gastric antrum.
Arimura, A; Minamino, N; Townsend, MH; Uehara, A, 1986
)
0.27
"The dose-response relationship of neonatal (days 1-7) administration of beta-endorphin (BE) and corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) on body weight, eye opening, response to thermal pain, and concentrations of plasma and adrenal corticosterone were measured in developing rat pups."( Neonatal peptides affect developing rats: beta-endorphin alters nociception and opiate receptors, corticotropin-releasing factor alters corticosterone.
Kastin, AJ; Zadina, JE, 1986
)
0.66
" A rectilinear dose-response relationship was found, y = 24."( Comparison of the adrenal sensitivity to ACTH of laying hens with immobilization and plasma baseline levels of corticosterone.
Beuving, G; Vonder, GM, 1986
)
0.48
" When complete dose-response studies are performed and a number of antagonists are examined, a clearer definition of isoreceptor populations may also occur."( Kappa isoreceptors: neuroendocrine and neurochemical evidence.
Iyengar, S; Wood, PL, 1986
)
0.27
"The time-course and dose-response of the in-vivo secretion of aldosterone and corticosterone after administration of ACTH(1-24) were measured in adrenal venous blood from female Brattleboro rats, homozygous for hypothalamic diabetes insipidus and lacking arginine vasopressin (AVP)."( Release of aldosterone and corticosterone from the adrenal cortex of the Brattleboro rat in response to administration of ACTH.
Brudieux, R; Krifi, MN; Laulin, JP, 1986
)
0.8
" Furthermore, thyroid hormone supplementation in hypophysectomized rats dosed with 125 micrograms/kg TCDD restored the toxicity of TCDD to approximately "normal."( Corticosterone decreases toxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) in hypophysectomized rats.
Gorski, JR; Lebofsky, M; Rozman, K, 1988
)
1.72
" In control animals, maternal plasma corticosterone levels were elevated soon after dosing but gradually declined, except for an apparent circadian rhythm effect seen in samples obtained in the afternoon."( Alterations in maternal plasma corticosterone levels following treatment with phenytoin.
Grafton, TF; Hansen, DK; Holson, RR; Sullivan, PA, 1988
)
0.83
" To evaluate the biological activity of this metabolite, adx rats were injected with NaCl and KCl and with varying dosage of either 6 beta-OH-B or reference steroids (aldosterone, B, 6 beta-OH-F)."( Corticosterone is converted to 6 beta-hydroxycorticosterone in rat: effects of the metabolite on urinary electrolyte excretion.
Atkins, JL; Grogan, WM; Johnson, JP; McNeil, JS; Watlington, CO, 1988
)
1.72
" Corticosterone levels in control rats pair-fed to the lethal dose group (as a result of the severe reduction in feed intake) were similarly elevated as in TCDD-treated rats but this was not the case in pair-fed rats of the non-lethal TCDD dosage (due to an essentially unchanged feed intake)."( Elevated plasma corticosterone levels and histopathology of the adrenals and thymuses in 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin-treated rats.
Gorski, JR; Iatropoulos, MJ; Muzi, G; Pereira, DW; Rozman, K; Weber, LW, 1988
)
1.53
" Subsequently, the dose-response (mortality and mean time to death) to TCDD was determined in adrenalectomized (10, 20, 40 micrograms/kg TCDD ip in 95:5 corn oil:acetone) or demedullated (15, 30, 60 micrograms/kg TCDD) rats."( Corticosterone modulates acute toxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) in male Sprague-Dawley rats.
Gorski, JR; Greim, H; Rozman, K; Rozman, T, 1988
)
1.72
" Strain differences were observed for the dose-response to the second injection; however, no effect of acute nicotine pretreatment was demonstrated."( Influence of genotype on nicotine-induced increases of plasma corticosterone in mice as a result of acute nicotine pretreatment.
Martin, BJ; Wehner, JM, 1988
)
0.52
" This method was used to determine the dose-response curve of corticosterone and to measure the elimination and study the half-lives of total and free corticosterone in rat plasma with a dose of 5 mg/kg."( Radioimmunoassay of total and free corticosterone in rat plasma: measurement of the effect of different doses of corticosterone.
Lehtola, T; Roininen, P; Sainio, EL,
)
0.65
" A dose-response study, at the range of 2-40 mg/kg, showed that a significant decrease was noted at 6 mg/kg and it was maximal (45% inhibition) at 20 and 40 mg/kg."( Inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis in brain of rat by dexamethasone: lack of effect of dexamethasone phosphate ester and various hormonal steroids.
Abu-Amer, Y; Shohami, E; Weidenfeld, J, 1988
)
0.27
" The antiglucocorticoid RU 38486 administered subcutaneously (1 and 10 mg/kg) inhibited the dexamethasone effect and caused a parallel shift in the dose-response curve of dexamethasone."( Antiglucocorticoid RU 38486 attenuates retention of a behaviour and disinhibits the hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal axis at different brain sites.
De Kloet, ER; De Kock, S; Schild, V; Veldhuis, HD, 1988
)
0.27
" The uptake of [14C]mirex during the initial 6 hr after dosing in all other tissues studied (liver, kidney, testes, and omental fat) was essentially the same for the three treatment groups."( Mirex uptake and tissue disposition in intact and adrenalectomized rats.
Brown, LD; Yarbrough, JD, 1988
)
0.27
" The dose-response relations however, were different among the neuro-edocrine respondents."( Changes in plasma corticosterone and catecholamine contents induced by low doses of deltamethrin in rats.
de Boer, SF; Hijzen, TH; Slangen, JL; van der Gugten, J, 1988
)
0.61
" glucose than those untreated, whereas oral dosing led to a loss in weight."( Subcutaneous glucose is more advantageous in establishing the posthatch poult than oral administration.
Moran, ET, 1988
)
0.27
" The median effective concentration (EC50) and the maximal corticosterone response per microgram of DNA of dose-response curves derived from lean and obese rats were not significantly different."( Responsiveness of isolated adrenocortical cells from lean and obese Zucker rats to ACTH.
Davenport, WD; Porter, JR; White, BD, 1988
)
0.52
" Repeated dosing with fenitrothion (2."( Adrenocortical changes and uptake of 4-14C-corticosterone in rats intoxicated with fenitrothion.
Gradowska-Olszewska, I; Osicka-Koprowska, A; Wysocka-Paruszewska, B, 1987
)
0.54
" Our objective was to determine dose-response relationships for the effect of corticosterone on the obesity."( Increased sensitivity of the genetically obese mouse to corticosterone.
Himms-Hagen, J; Tokuyama, K, 1987
)
0.75
" We have used single injections of MSG, administered on postnatal day four, to explore the lower end of the dose-response curve for this toxin."( Behavioral and endocrinological effects of single injections of monosodium glutamate in the mouse.
Caudle, A; Lorden, JF,
)
0.13
" A dose-response curve for DEX demonstrated that the minimal effective dose (0."( Glucocorticoid regulation of glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase and ornithine decarboxylase activities in the spinal cord of the rat.
De Nicola, AF; Grillo, C; Moses, DF; Ortí, E, 1987
)
0.27
"Changes in blood biochemistry, resembling adrenocortical hyperfunction, induced by oral administration with hydroxyurea (HYD) at a dosage of 800 mg/Kg/d for 5 days (K+ and total protein decrease, total cholesterol increase) are not modified or enhanced (total protein) by adrenalectomy."( Possible adrenal involvement in hydroxyurea toxicity defense mechanisms.
Macrae, S; Nunziata, A; Preziosi, P; Ragazzoni, E; Vacca, M, 1985
)
0.27
" In each of three repeated measures, females given an intermediate dosage (800 micrograms/animal/injection) showed substantially higher levels of receptivity than those given vehicle injections or other dosages."( Facilitation of sexual receptivity in female mice through blockade of adrenal 11 beta-hydroxylase.
de Catanzaro, D; Kerr, TH; Lee, PC, 1985
)
0.27
" The responsiveness of the cells to GnRH, as determined from the slope of the GnRH dose-response curve for LH, was increased 43-50% by cortisol."( Effects of glucocorticoids on secretion of luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone by female rat pituitary cells in vitro.
Schwartz, NB; Suter, DE, 1985
)
0.27
" All treatments with glucocorticoids increased the slopes of the GnRH dose-response curves for both LH and FSH, cell content of LH, total (cells + medium) LH, and total FSH."( Effects of glucocorticoids on responsiveness of luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone to gonadotropin-releasing hormone by male rat pituitary cells in vitro.
Schwartz, NB; Suter, DE, 1985
)
0.27
" A dose-response curve was determined with enflurane; increasing the anesthetic time from 1 to 6 h resulted in progressively greater depression of the HSR 24 h later."( Alterations in splenic lymphocyte subpopulations and increased mortality from sepsis following anesthesia in mice.
Anderson, JK; Bartle, EJ; Carter, WH; Elliott, L; Hansbrough, JF; Mansour, MA; Zapata-Sirvent, RL, 1985
)
0.27
" The objectives of this investigation were to: (1) determine the dose-response and time course of DBH inhibition by MEA in vivo and in vitro, and correlate these findings with MEA tissue levels and (2) assess the function of SRIF and NE/EPI in regulation of episodic GH and TSH secretion using MEA."( Cysteamine effects on monoamines, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and the hypothalamic-pituitary axis.
Craig, R; Terry, LC, 1985
)
0.27
" Five glucocorticoids, when administered daily to rats for 5-7 days at a dosage of 5mg/kg, were in the following order of effectiveness with respect to their ability to decrease the weight gain of whole animals and the vastus lateralis, vastus medialis and gluteus medius muscles: corticosterone( Relative changes in the function of muscle ribosomes and mitochondria during the early phase of steroid-induced catabolism.
Bullock, GR; Carter, EE; Elliott, P; Peters, RF; Simpson, P; White, AM, 1972
)
0.43
" This latter dosage was calculated to be within the physiologic range of prolactin in blood."( Prolactin stimulates and potentiates adrenal steroid secretion in vitro.
Eldridge, JC; Lymangrover, JR, 1984
)
0.27
" Throughout the dose-response range, however, the steroidogenic cells of the IZ are more sensitive and more responsive to corticotropic stimulation than are the cells of the SCZ."( Adrenal gland: some evidence for the structural and functional zonation of the steroidogenic tissues.
Cronshaw, J; Holmes, WN, 1984
)
0.27
" Also, the degree of phosphorylation of these specific proteins followed a dose-response relationship with ACTH which correlated well to the dose-response for corticosterone production."( On the mechanism of action of adrenocorticotropic hormone. The role of ACTH-stimulated phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of adrenal proteins.
Gallant, S; Koroscil, TM, 1980
)
0.46
" The ACTH dose-response curve indicates that the effective dose for suppression of tissue CRF in donor animals is in the range of 1-10 mU/ml."( ACTH regulation of tissue-CRF.
Brodish, A; Hamlet, M; Simpson, CW, 1980
)
0.26
" Statistically significant dose-response relations were demonstrated both in vitro (corticosterone production by adrenals incubated in Krebs-Ringer solution) and in vivo (increases in the serum corticosterone concentration)."( Circadian-stage-specified effects of a synthetic short chain ACTH-1-17 (HOE 433) on blood leukocytes and corticosterone secretion in mice.
Berg, H; Brown, H; Halberg, F; Haus, E; Lakatua, D; Melby, J; Sackett, L; Wilson, T,
)
0.57
"5, 25, or 250 microgram dexamethasone/100 g body weight, while the stress response in animals given vehicle neonatally was not inhibited by the lowest dosage of dexamethasone."( Modification of pituitary-adrenal feedback sensitivity in young rats by neonatal treatment with cortisol.
Erskine, MS; Geller, E; Yuwiler, A, 1981
)
0.26
" These changes in phosphorylation were also observed in adrenal quarters and correlated well with ACTH-stimulated steroidogenesis as determined by temporal analysis and dose-response studies of corticosterone production."( The phosphorylation of adrenal proteins in response to adrenocorticotropic hormone.
Gallant, S; Koroscil, TM, 1981
)
0.45
" The slope of the dose-response curve of ILE dilution was steeper than that of alpha h 1-39 ACTH measured on zona glomerulosa steroid production."( Effect of pituitary intermediate lobe extract on steroid production by the isolated zona glomerulosa and fasciculata cells.
Szalay, KS, 1981
)
0.26
" Although they are considerably less potent than corticotropin (ACTH), the dose-response curves are parallel to those for ACTH except in the case of aldosterone stimulation by beta-MSH where the dose-response curve is biphasic."( Melanotropins: aldosterone- and corticosterone-stimulating activity in isolated rat adrenal cells.
Cheng, CH; Li, CH; Ng, TB, 1982
)
0.55
"A mammalian isolated adrenal cell system was validated as a bioassay for goldfish ACTH; the log dose-response curve for the goldfish hormone is parallel to that for synthetic mammalian ACTH1-24, and the two ACTHs induce the same maximum rate of corticosterone production."( Preparation of enriched populations of corticotrophs from goldfish rostral pars distalis.
Eastman, JT; Portanova, R, 1983
)
0.45
" (2) Normalised alpha-MSH dose-response curves for aldosterone production in glomerulosa cells from normal rats, and corticosterone in inner zone cells were coincident."( alpha-MSH and zona glomerulosa function in the rat.
Bateman, A; Dell, A; McAuley, ME; Vinson, GP; Whitehouse, BJ, 1983
)
0.48
" The shift to the left of the dose-response curve for beta MSH during sodium depletion was greater than that for AII or ACTH."( Effect of sodium deficiency on beta-melanocyte-stimulating hormone stimulation of aldosterone in isolated rat adrenal cells.
Franco-Saenz, R; Mulrow, PJ; Yamakado, M, 1983
)
0.27
" The CRF dose-response slopes for bovine CRF were somewhat steeper than those for ovine CRF or sauvagine in the in vitro system."( In vivo and in vitro comparisons of biological activities of bovine, ovine and rat CRF (corticotrophin-releasing factor).
Aizawa, T; Greer, MA; Maruta, S; Yasuda, N; Yasuda, Y, 1984
)
0.27
" Increasing insulin dosage counteracted these effects, but could not restore positive accretion rates."( Interactive effects of insulin and corticosterone on myofibrillar protein turnover in rats as determined by N tau-methylhistidine excretion.
Jones, LM; Murray, AJ; Tomas, FM, 1984
)
0.54
" Dexamethasone and aldosterone had identical dose-response curves, maximal and half-maximal activity being evident at concentrations of approximately 100 nM and 10 nM respectively."( Steroid-induced protein synthesis in giant-toad (Bufo marinus) urinary bladders. Correlation with natriferic activity.
Alvis, R; Cox, M; Geheb, M; Hercker, E; Owen, A, 1984
)
0.27
" This dosage of cortisol did not alter the diurnal rhythm of serum corticosterone in these animals."( Neonatal glucocorticoid administration: effect on the diurnal rhythm of serum concentrations of corticosterone, progesterone and LH, and the response to pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin in immature female rats.
Braverman, M; Cohen, I; Cost, M; Mann, DR, 1984
)
0.72
" In subsequent dose-response experiments, we determined that daily injections of at least 125 micrograms corticosterone or 80 micrograms hydrocortisone acetate were needed to bring about the reappearance of the maturation-delaying substance in the urine of grouped adrenalectomized females."( Effects of adrenalectomy with hormone replacement therapy on the presence of a sexual maturation-delaying chemosignal in the urine of grouped female mice.
Drickamer, LC; Shiro, BC, 1984
)
0.48
" Naloxone clearly antagonizes the release of prolactin induced by 5-hydroxytryptophan administered alone at a dosage of 50 mg/Kg/b."( Effects of naloxone on the secretion of prolactin and corticosterone induced by 5-hydroxytryptophan and a serotonergic agonist, mCPP.
Cerrito, F; Preziosi, P; Vacca, M, 1983
)
0.51
" An inverted U-shaped dose-response relationship was found following immediate post-learning administration of adrenaline (A)."( Corticosterone decreases the efficacy of adrenaline to affect passive avoidance retention of adrenalectomized rats.
Bohus, B; Borrell, J; de Kloet, ER, 1984
)
1.71
" Corticosterone and progesterone significantly inhibited the renal synthesis of the polar metabolites of aldosterone, but the inhibition was not significant at this dosage of spironolactone."( The metabolism of aldosterone in kidney.
Latif, S; McDermott, M; Morris, DJ, 1983
)
1.18
"In the isolated perfused hindlimb preparation of rats treated with corticosterone (2 x 20 mg/kg daily for 2 days), the dose-response curve to noradrenaline was shifted to the left, indicating supersensitivity of the vascular bed to noradrenaline."( Reversal of corticosterone-induced supersensitivity of vascular smooth muscle to noradrenaline by arachidonic acid and prostacyclin.
Burkart, G; Dietz, R; Gross, F; Rascher, W; Schömig, A, 1980
)
0.88
"Adrenal weight and the concentration of corticosterone and glucose in plasma of male Wistar rats, dosed orally with fenitrothion (7."( Increase of adrenal weight in rats by the repeated administration of fenitrothion.
Egashira, T; Kuroiwa, Y; Yamamoto, T; Yoshida, T, 1982
)
0.53
" This cell concentration associated (CCA) increase in aldosterone production showed a dose-response relationship with the number of cells per incubation and was further increased in modified Medium 199, compared with KRBGA."( Increased steroidogenesis by rat zona glomerulosa cells with increased cell concentration in vitro: evidence for a novel aldosterone-stimulating factor and implications regarding aldosterone biosynthesis.
Campbell, DJ, 1982
)
0.26
" Increase of the DAS dose to a twofold level failed to elicit dose-response and no further increases in bacterial counts were observed."( The effect of pure Fusarium toxins (T-2, F-2, DAS) on the microflora of the gut and on plasma glucocorticoid levels in rat and swine.
Fodor, E; Szathmáry, C; Tenk, I, 1982
)
0.26
" Experiment 2 established a dose-response curve for this corticosterone effect."( Antagonism of estrogen-induced lordosis by corticosterone in adrenalectomized-ovariectomized female rats and mice.
deCatanzaro, D; Gorzalka, BB; Knipping, RP, 1981
)
0.77
" At most doses and dosage regimens, rat pups were sacrificed at 0700 and 1900 h on postnatal days 16, 18, 20, and 22, but at the highest doses, they were sacrificed only on days 25 and 30."( Neonatal dexamethasone administration. I. Temporary delay of development of the circadian serum corticosterone rhythm in rats.
Poland, RE; Rubin, RT; Weichsel, ME, 1981
)
0.48
" In the acute croton oil-induced ear edema dose-response bioassay, the topical anti-inflammatory potencies of these esters relative to prednisolone, 1, were: 8a:1."( Steroidal anti-inflammatory antedrugs: synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of 16 alpha-alkoxycarbonyl-17-deoxyprednisolone derivatives.
Choi, SJ; Khalil, MA; Kwon, T; Lee, HJ; Yoon, KJ, 1995
)
0.29
"The dose-response curves to the chronotropic effect of adrenaline obtained in right atria isolated from female rats indicated an order of increasing sensitivity to adrenaline, at the pD2 level, according to the estrous cycle, as follows: estrus < or = metestrus < or = diestrus < or = proestrus."( Relationship among sensitivity to adrenaline, plasma corticosterone level, and estrous cycle in rats.
Marcondes, FK; Rodrigues, ML; Spadari-Bratfisch, RC, 1995
)
0.54
" Aldosterone also blunted the dose-response effects of corticosterone on CRH and NT/N mRNA levels in the central nucleus of the amygdala, but not in the PVH."( Region-specific regulation of neuropeptide mRNAs in rat limbic forebrain neurones by aldosterone and corticosterone.
Sanchez-Watts, G; Watts, AG, 1995
)
0.75
" Dose-response curves were subsequently determined under conditions of no stress, restraint, corticosterone (3 mg/kg, IP), and saline."( Effects of restraint stress and intra-ventral tegmental area injections of morphine and methyl naltrexone on the discriminative stimulus effects of heroin in the rat.
Shaham, Y; Stewart, J,
)
0.35
" The number of autophagosomes was one-fold higher in hyposecreting Leydig cells after 2 days testosterone administration, and three-fold higher in hyposecreting adrenocortical fasciculata cells after one dosage of dexamethasone administration."( Functional implication of autophagy in steroid-secreting cells of the rat.
Tang, XM; Yi, J, 1995
)
0.29
" Additional studies are also needed to determine whether such changes represent a threshold effect of the steroid or a dose-response function."( Effects of chronic corticosterone ingestion on spatial memory performance and hippocampal serotonergic function.
Luine, VN; McEwen, BS; Spencer, RL, 1993
)
0.61
" Moreover, dosing every 6 hr for 5 days induced an increase in the catabolism of methadone itself."( The effect of methadone on the immune status of B6C3F1 mice.
Brown, RD; Butterworth, LF; Fuchs, BA; Harris, LS; LeVier, DG; McCay, JA; Munson, AE; Musgrove, DL; White, KL, 1995
)
0.29
" We dosed Sprague-Dawley rats with NSAIDs and corticosterone followed by 51Cr-EDTA under conditions reported for humans and measured urinary excretion of the marker."( Antiinflammatory drug-induced small intestinal permeability: the rat is a suitable model.
Davies, NM; Jamali, F; Wright, MR, 1994
)
0.55
"The experiment were performed on model rabbits injected with large dosage of Dexamethasone (DXM) for 5 days."( [Experimental research of acupuncture manipulation of reinforcing and reducing by lifting and thrusting needle on the animal].
Li, W; Liang, C; Liang, Z; Lin, J; Lu, C; Zhong, G, 1993
)
0.29
"The effect of a liposomal formulation of methylprednisolone (MPL) on the inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation in spleen cells was investigated following IV dosing in rats."( Inhibition of rat splenocyte proliferation with methylprednisolone: in vivo effect of liposomal formulation.
Jusko, WJ; Mishina, EV, 1994
)
0.29
" Two weeks following this dosage regimen, shown to markedly reduce 5-hydroxytryptamine terminals, both glucocorticoid receptor and mineralocorticoid receptor messenger RNA expression were significantly decreased (30-47% fall) in the granule cells of the dentate gyrus and pyramidal cells of CA1-CA4 fields of Ammon's horn, but not in parietal cortex neurons."( Chronic 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine administration decreases glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptor, but increases 5-hydroxytryptamine1C receptor gene expression in the rat hippocampus.
Kelly, PA; Seckl, JR; Sharkey, J; Yau, JL, 1994
)
0.29
" Dose-response curves were obtained for 8-OH-DPAT (0."( Differential receptor reserve for 5-HT1A receptor-mediated regulation of plasma neuroendocrine hormones.
Bohmaker, K; Meller, E, 1994
)
0.29
" Costicosteroid receptor mediation was evaluated using a dose-response analysis of the effect of CORT and by the action of dexamethasone (DEX), which binds to glucocorticoid receptors but not to mineralocorticoid receptors."( Evidence against the involvement of ACTH/CRF release or corticosteroid receptors in the anxiolytic effect of corticosterone.
Andreatini, R; Leite, JR, 1994
)
0.5
"A time- and dose-dependent thymic atrophy was observed in young male Fischer 344 rats dosed intraperitoneally with etoposide (10, 30, or 100 mg/kg)."( The involvement of apoptosis in etoposide-induced thymic atrophy.
Carthew, P; Cohen, GM; Dinsdale, D; Snowden, RT; Sun, XM, 1994
)
0.29
" Treatment of these rats with human (h) GH significantly increased the LAGS level in a dose-response manner."( The role of growth hormone in regulation of low affinity glucocorticoid-binding sites from male rat liver microsomes.
Boada, LD; Chirino, R; Díaz-Chico, BN; Díaz-Chico, JC; Fernández, L; López-Guerra, A; Valerón, PF, 1994
)
0.29
" By the 15th week of dosing all groups displayed an elevation in the basal level of serum corticosterone but no change in adrenal weight."( Repeated exposure to the polychlorinated biphenyl (Aroclor 1254) elevates the basal serum levels of corticosterone but does not affect the stress-induced rise.
Andrews, JE; Gray, LE; Luebke, RW; Miller, DB; Smialowicz, RJ, 1993
)
0.72
" The dose-response characteristics for ACTH, CORT, and IL-6 were different."( Human recombinant interleukin-1 receptor antagonist prevents adrenocorticotropin, but not interleukin-6 responses to bacterial endotoxin in rats.
Berkenbosch, F; Schotanus, K; Tilders, FJ, 1993
)
0.29
" In the present experiments, dose-response relationships were determined for the effects of aminoglutethimide on corticosterone levels, motor coordination, and body temperature in C57 and DBA mice."( Dissociation of the effect of aminoglutethimide on corticosterone biosynthesis from ataxic and hypothermic effects in DBA and C57 mice.
Gallaher, EJ; Keith, LD; Roberts, AJ, 1993
)
0.75
" It is concluded that: a) damage to the basomedial hypothalamus alters an organism's response to corticosterone at both ends of the dose-response curve, and b) both Type I and Type II corticosterone receptors in the brain play a role in hypothalamic obesity."( Level of corticosterone replacement determines body weight gain in adrenalectomized rats with VMH lesions.
Dallman, MF; Kass, JM; King, BM; Neville, KL; Sam, H; Tatford, AC; Zansler, CA, 1993
)
0.92
" important differences are noted in the dose-response of aldosterone secretion to adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), which is often shifted to a lower concentration sensitivity in cultured cells."( A model for studying regulation of aldosterone secretion: freshly isolated cells or cultured cells?
Balestre, MN; Chouinard, L; Gallo-Payet, N; Guillon, G; Payet, MD, 1993
)
0.29
" Estradiol stimulated cortisol secretion in a dose-response manner in the absence of ACTH."( Estradiol stimulates cortisol production by adrenal cells in estrogen-dependent primary adrenocortical nodular dysplasia.
Barrow, R; Caticha, O; Dowdell, LA; Lamothe, JJ; Noth, RH; Odell, WD; Swislocki, AL; Wilson, DE, 1993
)
0.29
" Plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosterone were increased by AMPH in a monotonic dose-response function, with highest levels measured in rats exhibiting the most intense stereotyped behaviors."( Pituitary-adrenal axis responses to acute amphetamine in the rat.
Cador, M; Hauger, RL; Koob, GF; Lorang, M; Swerdlow, NR, 1993
)
0.53
" Whereas the dose-response relationship for aldosterone did not change with time of incubation (6 vs."( Corticosterone induces 11 beta-HSD and mineralocorticoid specificity in an amphibian urinary bladder cell line.
Duperrex, H; Gaeggeler, HP; Hautier, S; Rossier, BC, 1993
)
1.73
" In sodium pentobarbital-anesthetized rats, intracerebroventricular and intra-PVN administration of 5-HT resulted in a multi-component dose-response curve in plasma CS, whereas administration of 5-HT in conscious animals resulted in low-dose inhibition and higher dose elevation of plasma CS levels."( Central 5-HT1A receptors inhibit adrenocortical secretion.
Dunn, AJ; Farrar, GE; Saphier, D; Welch, JE, 1993
)
0.29
" We determined the horizontal position of the dose-response curves for the positive inotropic effects exerted by noradrenaline in the absence and presence of the neuronal uptake blocker cocaine and in the absence and presence of the beta-adrenoceptor antagonist timolol and of the alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin."( Location of alpha 1-adrenoceptors relative to beta-adrenoceptors in rat myocardium.
Dybvik, T; Osnes, JB; Skomedal, T, 1995
)
0.29
" In contrast, PHI was an effective stimulant in doses up to 15 nmol/rat but had no effect on either ACTH or CORT at a dose of 30 nmol/rat thus yielding a bell-shaped dose-response curve."( VIP antagonist demonstrates differences in VIP- and PHI-mediated stimulation and inhibition of ACTH and corticosterone secretion in rats.
Alexander, LD; Sander, LD, 1995
)
0.51
" The dose-response curves of ACTH were not significantly different between pregnant and nonpregnant animals."( Increase of aldosterone secretion in adrenal cortex suspensions derived from pregnant rats.
Brochu, M; Gauvin, JP; St-Louis, J, 1996
)
0.29
" Rats were injected with morphine or saline between days 4-8 postnatal (pups) or days 21-25 (weanlings) and tolerance assessed by determining dose-response curves for ACTH and corticosterone secretion following an acute morphine challenge."( Ontogenetic studies of tolerance development: effects of chronic morphine on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
Kuhn, CM; Little, PJ, 1995
)
0.48
" Because teratogenic effects follow a toxicologic dose-response curve with a no-effect dose, frequently counselors can refute a causal relationship because the dose was far below the no-observable-effect dose."( Is there a no-effect dose for corticosteroid-induced cleft palate? The contribution of endogenous corticosterone to the incidence of cleft palate in mice.
Beckman, DA; Brent, RL; Buck, SJ; Fawcett, LB, 1996
)
0.51
" Both the U-shaped dose-response curve seen with buspirone in some animal tests of anxiety and its slow onset of clinical action could be attributed to this release of stress hormones."( The pituitary-adrenal axis and the different behavioral effects of buspirone and chlordiazepoxide.
Logan, B; McNaughton, N; Panickar, KS, 1996
)
0.29
" From detailed dose-response curves, corticosterone in vivo shows approximately 3% the apparent affinity of aldosterone for MR in colon and kidney, approximately 30% for those in the heart, and approximately 300% in the hippocampus."( Exclusion of corticosterone from epithelial mineralocorticoid receptors is insufficient for selectivity of aldosterone action: in vivo binding studies.
Funder, J; Myles, K, 1996
)
0.94
" Linearity in the dose-response curve ranged between 1 and 200 nM for corticosterone and 25 and 2,000 nM for cortisol, with no evidence for complex kinetics."( Substrate and inhibitor specificity of the cloned human 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 isoform.
Ferrari, P; Funder, JW; Krozowski, ZS; Smith, RE, 1996
)
0.53
" The CRF dose-response curve was shifted in a complex manner in adrenalectomized rats, suggesting that a proportion of CRF receptors were occupied before CRF administration, and low doses of CRF were additive."( Regulation of a putative neurotransmitter effect of corticotropin-releasing factor: effects of adrenalectomy.
Pavcovich, LA; Valentino, RJ, 1997
)
0.3
" To examine the influence of corticosteroids on these changes, adrenalectomized (ADX) rats received the same dosage regimen as above."( Differential regulation by methylenedioxymethamphetamine of 5-hydroxytryptamine1A receptor density and mRNA expression in rat hippocampus, frontal cortex, and brainstem: the role of corticosteroids.
Aguirre, N; Del Río, J; Frechilla, D; García-Osta, A; Lasheras, B, 1997
)
0.3
" In particular, in a first series of experiments, we determined the effects of suppressing endogenous glucocorticoids by adrenalectomy on a full dose-response curve of cocaine-induced locomotion and the influence, on this behavioral response, of different corticosterone concentrations, by implanting different corticosterone pellets in adrenalectomized rats."( Glucocorticoids and behavioral effects of psychostimulants. I: locomotor response to cocaine depends on basal levels of glucocorticoids.
Barrot, M; De Jésus-Oliveira, C; Deroche, V; Le Moal, M; Marinelli, M; Piazza, PV; Rougé-Pont, F, 1997
)
0.48
" It was reported to potentiate GABA-mediated chloride current in cultured cells with a moderate intrinsic activity and a biphasic dose-response relationship."( Anxiolytic-like effects of PNU-101017, a partial agonist at the benzodiazepine receptor.
Carter, DB; Franklin, SR; Jacobsen, EJ; Needham, LM; Sethy, VH; Tang, AH; Von Voigtlander, PF, 1997
)
0.3
" SN related to inadequate dosage of prednisolone."( Scalp necrosis in giant cell arteritis and review of the literature.
Currey, J, 1997
)
0.3
" Previous studies in this laboratory have shown that RU 486 at a dosage of 100 mg/kg did not affect EtOH-induced suppression of NK cell activity."( Involvement of catecholamines and glucocorticoids in ethanol-induced suppression of splenic natural killer cell activity in a mouse model for binge drinking.
Pruett, SB; Wu, WJ, 1997
)
0.3
" Potency estimates were made by comparing the dose-response of natural and synthetic glucocorticoids to that of corticosterone, the major glucocorticoid in rats."( Calcium-lowering action of glucocorticoids in adrenalectomized-parathyroidectomized rats. Specificity and relative potency of natural and synthetic glucocorticoids.
Hirsch, PF; Mahgoub, A; Munson, PL, 1997
)
0.51
" While a pregnenolone surge was demonstrated by radioimmunoassay, dose-response testing with exogenous pregnenolone and progesterone (0."( Aminoglutethimide, a corticosteroid synthesis inhibitor, facilitates brain stimulation reward in food-restricted rats: an investigation of underlying mechanisms.
Abrahamsen, GC; Carr, KD; Kandawire, MJ, 1997
)
0.3
" On PND 8, unisexually reared females showed, upon maternal deprivation, a generalized shift to the left in the dose-response curve to AMPH for Crossing behaviour, while on PND 18 AMPH-induced stereotypies were considerably reduced in sexually segregated females, especially following maternal deprivation."( Sexual segregation in infant mice: behavioural and neuroendocrine responses to d-amphetamine administration.
Adriani, W; Cirulli, F; Laviola, G, 1997
)
0.3
" It appears that in female rats, at least at these doses and dosing schedules, there is no correlation between the impact of chronic in vivo exposure to these agents on PBR density and ovarian and adrenal hormone levels."( Peripheral-type benzodiazepine receptor ligands and serum steroid hormones.
Gavish, M; Leschiner, S; Schlegel, W; Weizman, R, 1997
)
0.3
" The repeated FEN dosing regimen dramatically reduced (> 50%) postmortem 5-HT levels in the mediobasal hypothalamus, basolateral amygdala, and hippocampus, while the lateral hypothalamus was unaffected."( In vivo correlates of central serotonin function after high-dose fenfluramine administration.
Ayestas, MA; Baumann, MH; Rothman, RB, 1998
)
0.3
" In particular, while the cytokine suppressed locomotor activities, these behaviors were not particularly sensitive to dosage differences."( Influence of interleukin-1beta on exploratory behaviors, plasma ACTH, corticosterone, and central biogenic amines in mice.
Anisman, H; Lacosta, S; Merali, Z, 1998
)
0.53
"The effect of corticosterone on the acquisition of cocaine-seeking behavior was investigated in rats using ascending dose-response curves for intravenous cocaine self-administration."( Corticosterone facilitates the acquisition of cocaine self-administration in rats: opposite effects of the type II glucocorticoid receptor agonist dexamethasone.
Goeders, NE; Mantsch, JR; Saphier, D, 1998
)
2.1
" At 1 and 2 weeks after the 4 d dosing regimen, acute FEN (1."( Functional consequences of central serotonin depletion produced by repeated fenfluramine administration in rats.
Ayestas, MA; Baumann, MH; Rothman, RB, 1998
)
0.3
"0 mg/kg dosage of 3 alpha,5 alpha-THP."( Prenatal stress reduces the effectiveness of the neurosteroid 3 alpha,5 alpha-THP to block kainic-acid-induced seizures.
Bayon, LE; Frye, CA, 1999
)
0.3
" Initial studies evaluated the dose-response and time course of 8-OH-DPAT-induced hypothermia and hormone secretion in normal CD-1 mice (the background strain of the 5-HTT knockout mice)."( Reduction of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)(1A)-mediated temperature and neuroendocrine responses and 5-HT(1A) binding sites in 5-HT transporter knockout mice.
Heils, A; Lesch, KP; Li, Q; Murphy, DL; Van De Kar, LD; Wichems, C, 1999
)
0.3
" Using the same behavioral assay, we also measured a dose-response curve for CORT's effects on activity in sparrows exposed to the long-day photoperiod."( Rapid behavioral response to corticosterone varies with photoperiod and dose.
Breuner, CW; Wingfield, JC, 2000
)
0.6
" First, dose-response curves of corticosterone, hydrocortisone, and dexamethasone were studied at several concentrations."( Dihydrotestosterone prevents glucocorticoid-negative effects on fetal rat metatarsal bone in vitro.
Barlet, JP; Coxam, V; Davicco, MJ; Gaumet, N; Irrigaray, JL; Lebecque, P; Martini, B; Miller, S; Oudadesse, H; Picherit, C, 2000
)
0.59
" The effects of corticosterone were evaluated by administration of a glucocorticoid antagonist (RU 486) or a dosage of corticosterone previously shown to induce similar blood levels as treatment with EtOH."( Ethanol suppresses NK cell activation by polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (poly I:C) in female B6C3F1 mice: role of endogenous corticosterone.
Collier, SD; Pruett, SB; Wu, WJ, 2000
)
0.86
"EtOH at 5-7 g/kg suppressed poly I:C-induced increases in NK cell lytic activity, and at least the lower end of this dosage range yields blood EtOH levels that are relevant for humans (0."( Ethanol suppresses NK cell activation by polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (poly I:C) in female B6C3F1 mice: role of endogenous corticosterone.
Collier, SD; Pruett, SB; Wu, WJ, 2000
)
0.51
" Plasma concentrations of corticosterone and cholinergic fibre loss after Abeta(1-42) or NMDA injection showed a clear U-shaped dose-response relationship."( Chronic corticosterone administration dose-dependently modulates Abeta(1-42)- and NMDA-induced neurodegeneration in rat magnocellular nucleus basalis.
Abrahám, I; Harkany, T; Horvath, KM; Luiten, PG; Nyakas, C; Penke, B; Veenema, AH, 2000
)
1.04
" In addition, dose-response relationships between exogenously administered ACTH or CRH and plasma CORT were demonstrated; increasing concentrations of secretagogues resulted in higher and/or more prolonged CORT responses in both males and females."( Effects of fetal ethanol exposure on pituitary-adrenal sensitivity to secretagogues.
Osborn, JA; Stelzl, GE; Weinberg, J; Yu, C, 2000
)
0.31
" Icarrin also exerted a stimulatory effect on corticosterone production at the highest dosage (1000 micrograms/L)."( [Effects of icarrin on secretive function of cultured granulosa and adrenal cortical cells of rats].
Li, E; Li, F; Lu, Z; Song, S; Tong, X; Wang, X, 1997
)
0.56
" Both peptides exhibited a clear dose-response action, although orexin-B proved to be less effective than orexin-A."( Effects of orexins on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system.
Bujdosó, E; Jászberényi, M; Pataki, I; Telegdy, G, 2000
)
0.31
" Male CD rats received a single gavage administration of vehicle, blood was collected 1 h after dosing for measurement of plasma corticosterone, and necropsies were performed 4 h after dosing."( Stress produced by gavage administration in the rat.
Brown, AP; Dinger, N; Levine, BS, 2000
)
0.51
" The lack of shift in dose-response curves for flesinoxan suggests that postsynaptic 5-HT1A receptor function is unaffected in 5-HT1B KO mice."( Corticosterone responses in 5-HT1B receptor knockout mice to stress or 5-HT1A receptor activation are normal.
Bouwknecht, JA; Hen, R; Hijzen, TH; Maes, RA; Olivier, B; van der Gugten, J, 2001
)
1.75
" The dose-response and time-response curves were bell-shaped with maximal activation at 10(-9) M and at 15 min."( Corticosterone-induced rapid phosphorylation of p38 and JNK mitogen-activated protein kinases in PC12 cells.
Chen, Y; Li, X; Qiu, J; Wang, J; Zhong, Y; Zhu, J, 2001
)
1.75
" Furthermore, using a dosing regimen adapted from studies on methamphetamine (e."( Elevations in plasmatic titers of corticosterone and aldosterone, in the absence of changes in ACTH, testosterone, or glial fibrillary acidic protein, 72 h following D,L-fenfluramine or D-fenfluramine administration to rats.
Inman-Wood, SL; McCrea, AE; Morford, LL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT,
)
0.41
"625-5 mg/kg) did not affect the dose-response curve for cocaine."( Effects of corticosterone and its synthesis blockade on the cocaine-induced discriminative stimulus effects in rats.
Filip, M; Nowak, E; Przegaliński, E; Siwanowicz, J,
)
0.52
"25-1 microg) significantly increased both the locomotor and the rearing activity, resulting in a bell-shaped dose-response curve."( Behavioral and neuroendocrine actions of endomorphin-2.
Bujdosó, E; Jászberényi, M; Telegdy, G; Tömböly, C; Tóth, G, 2001
)
0.31
" The dose-response curve was bell shaped, with the maximal activation at 10(-9) M in 15 min."( Rapid activation of ERK1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinase by corticosterone in PC12 cells.
Chen, Y; Jing, Q; Li, X; Pei, G; Qiu, J; Sun, G; Wang, P; Zhang, W; Zhong, Y, 2001
)
0.55
" Extracellular application of 10 microM corticosterone neither shifted the dose-response curve of the peak I(ACh) to the right (dissociation constant (K(d)) = 16."( Rapid nongenomic effect of corticosterone on neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in PC12 cells.
He, HY; Liu, LA; Shi, LJ; Wang, CA, 2001
)
0.88
" Neonatal corticosterone treatment, regardless of dosage level, resulted in increased adult levels of submissiveness."( Neonatal corticosterone treatment increases submissiveness in adulthood in mice.
Leshner, AI; Schwartz, SM, 1977
)
1.08
" From these dose-response profiles, the following ID(50) values (nmol/ear resulting in a 50% reduction of edema) were calculated: prednisolone (Pred); 454, FP16CM; 255, 21-acetate (FP16CM-acetyl); 402, 21-propionate (FP16CM-propionyl); 474, 21-valerate (FP16CM-valeryl); 446 and 21-pivalate (FP16CM-pivalyl); 219 nmol."( New steroidal antiinflammatory antedrugs: Methyl 3,20-dioxo-9 alpha-fluoro-11 beta,17 alpha,21-trihydroxy-1,4-pregnadiene-16 alpha-carboxylate and its 21-O-acyl derivatives.
Heiman, AS; Hudson, CE; Ko, DH; Lee, HJ, 2002
)
0.31
" No rational dosage forms make it possible to conduct clinical trials by parenteral administration."( [Pharmacological aspects in the development of liposomal medicinal preparations for the internal injection of hydrophobic cytostatics].
Baryshnikov, AIu; Oborotova, NA; Polozkova, ZS; Smirnova, ZS, 2002
)
0.31
" High grooming (HG) rats reached considerably higher breakpoints than low grooming (LG) rats but showed no differences in acquisition rate and dose-response relationships."( Enhanced motivation to self-administer cocaine is predicted by self-grooming behaviour and relates to dopamine release in the rat medial prefrontal cortex and amygdala.
Binnekade, R; de Vries, TJ; Homberg, JR; Raasø, HS; Schoffelmeer, AN; van den Akker, M; Wardeh, G, 2002
)
0.31
" Extended studies revealed that, after cessation of memantine treatment using either dosing regime, any subsequent appearance of disease was suppressed in severity and duration."( Modulation of blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neurological deficits during acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis by the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist memantine.
Bolton, C; Paul, C, 2002
)
0.31
" The acute, oral maximum-tolerated dosage (MTD) of pyridostigmine was estimated at 30 mg/kg."( Acute and repeated restraint stress have little effect on pyridostigmine toxicity or brain regional cholinesterase inhibition in rats.
Bressler, J; Pope, C; Pruett, S; Song, X; Tian, H, 2002
)
0.31
" In particular, we have demonstrated that daily exposure to electric footshock stress or daily pretreatment with corticosterone shifts the ascending limb of the dose-response curve for the acquisition of cocaine self-administration upwards and to the left."( Pretreatment with corticosterone attenuates the nucleus accumbens dopamine response but not the stimulant response to cocaine in rats.
Goeders, NE; Steketee, JD, 2002
)
0.86
") at three different dosing times, or (iv) both pCPA and l-OHP."( Pharmacological blockage of serotonin biosynthesis and circadian changes in oxaliplatin toxicity in rats.
Ben Attia, M; Boughattas, NA; Ixart, G; Lemaigre, G; Mechkouri, M; Reinberg, A, 2002
)
0.31
" Both markers co-varied with a similar dose-response and time course after the nicotine-treatment."( Nicotine-induced inflammatory decreasing effect on passive skin arthus reaction in paraventricular nucleus-lesioned wistar rats.
Kita, T; Kubo, K; Nakashima, T; Nakatani, T; Narushima, I; Tanaka, T, 2003
)
0.32
" This finding is in agreement with observations that the prolonged administration of corticotropin in sufficient dosage leads to increased output of hydrocortisone by the adrenal cortex of the rabbit."( Effects of corticosterone, hydrocortisone, and corticotropin on production of antibodies in rabbits.
FINLAND, M; KASS, EH; KENDRICK, MI, 1955
)
0.62
" The first was a time-course study in which animals were administered single doses of 50 mg/kg of Cr3+ picolinate and the second a dose-response study in which animals were given either 20 or 50 mg/kg Cr3+ picolinate versus vehicle alone via the intra-peritoneal route."( Effects of treatment with chromium picolinate on peripheral amino acid availability and brain monoamine function in the rat.
Franklin, M; Odontiadis, J, 2003
)
0.32
" We evaluated the effects of daily physical (treadmill running) stress or daily exposure to a subclinical dosage of the organophosphate ChE inhibitor paraoxon (PO) on ChE inhibition in blood, diaphragm and selected brain regions in young adult male Sprague-Dawley rats following subacute PYR exposures."( Effects of daily stress or repeated paraoxon exposures on subacute pyridostigmine toxicity in rats.
Chakraborty, D; Karanth, S; Pope, CN; Pruett, S; Shaikh, J, 2003
)
0.32
") administered immediately after a 3-min training trial enhanced 24-hr retention performance in an inverted-U shaped dose-response relationship."( Glucocorticoid effects on object recognition memory require training-associated emotional arousal.
McGaugh, JL; Okuda, S; Roozendaal, B, 2004
)
0.32
"The concurrent administration of compound E at a daily dosage of 2 mg."( The mechanism of action of 17-hydroxy-11-dehydrocorticosterone (compound E) and of the adrenocorticotropic hormone in experimental hypersensitivity in rabbits.
GERMUTH, FG; OTTINGER, B; OYAMA, J, 1951
)
0.49
" Female sparrows were dosed daily with either 5 mg p,p'-DDT per kg body mass or corn oil vehicle over 3 days."( The effect of flight, fasting and p,p'-DDT on thyroid hormones and corticosterone in Gambel's white-crowned sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelli.
Carr, JA; Cobb, GP; Scollon, EJ, 2004
)
0.56
" The design of the study mimicked the initiation of a toxicity study, but only sham dosing occurred prior to blood collection."( Use of CO2/O2 anesthesia in the collection of samples for serum corticosterone analysis from Fischer 344 rats.
Black, CA; Fomby, LM; Hatter, DE; Tuttle, RL; Wheat, TM, 2004
)
0.56
" The parallel nature of the dose-response curves suggests that both diazepam and ethanol have similar anxiolytic effects in males and females."( Anxiolytic effects of diazepam and ethanol in two behavioral models: comparison of males and females.
Burghardt, PR; Ford, KA; Primeaux, SD; Wilkinson, MB; Wilson, MA, 2004
)
0.32
" A dose-response study confirmed these results."( The effects of corticosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone on neurotrophic factor mRNA expression in primary hippocampal and astrocyte cultures.
Fawcett, JW; Gubba, EM; Herbert, J, 2004
)
0.68
" ACTH levels in response to the last morphine injection of the repeated dosage regimen were found to be lower compared to those in acutely morphine-treated mice."( Behavioral sensitization to intermittent morphine in mice is accompanied by reduced adrenocorticotropine but not corticosterone responses.
Jezova, D; Makara, GB; Mlynarik, M; Zelena, D, 2004
)
0.53
" Finally, a dose-response study showed that progressive doses of corticosterone (0-40 mg/kg/day) in ADX rats resulted in diminished suppression of proliferation in 5-HT-depleted compared with 5-HT-intact rats."( Serotonin modulates the suppressive effects of corticosterone on proliferating progenitor cells in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus in the adult rat.
Herbert, J; Huang, GJ, 2005
)
0.82
"NBI30775 reduces levels of anxiety in mice (under basal conditions) with a steep dose-response curve."( Identification of molecules potentially involved in mediating the in vivo actions of the corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 antagonist, NBI30775 (R121919).
Almeida, OF; Binder, E; Binder, EB; Holsboer, F; Ohl, F; Post, A; Rücker, M; Sillaber, I; Welt, S, 2005
)
0.33
" At 3 h, the corticosterone dose-response curve was shifted to the right compared with that of aldosterone by more than two log concentrations, an effect that was fully reverted in the presence of the 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 inhibitor carbenoxolone."( Mineralocorticoid versus glucocorticoid receptor occupancy mediating aldosterone-stimulated sodium transport in a novel renal cell line.
Gaeggeler, HP; Gonzalez-Rodriguez, E; Horisberger, JD; Jaeger, NF; Loffing, J; Loffing-Cueni, D; Norregaard, R; Rossier, BC, 2005
)
0.7
" Blood samples were collected at 0, 15, 30, 60, 120, 240, 480, and 720 min after dosing to determine plasma corticosterone concentrations."( Corticosterone in drinking water: altered kinetics of a single oral dose of corticosterone and concentrations of plasma sodium, albumin, globulin, and total protein.
Ehrich, M; Klein, B; Pung, T; Zimmerman, K, 2003
)
1.97
" E(2), 10 mug, compared to vehicle or 50 mug, reduced anxiety and depressive behavior of sham and adrenalectomized rats administered the low dosage of corticosterone, but not vehicle or the high dosage of corticosterone, suggesting that there may be an optimal level of corticosterone necessary for E(2) to exert these effects."( Antianxiety and antidepressive behavior produced by physiological estradiol regimen may be modulated by hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity.
Frye, CA; Walf, AA, 2005
)
0.53
" As a consequence, there was no significant dosing time-dependent difference in the analgesic effect of morphine in CRH-deficient mice."( Glucocorticoid hormone regulates the circadian coordination of micro-opioid receptor expression in mouse brainstem.
Fujioka, T; Higuchi, S; Koyanagi, S; Matsuo, A; Ohdo, S; To, H; Yoshida, M, 2005
)
0.33
" Based on an inverted U-shaped dose-response relationship, a moderate dose of diazepam significantly improved reaching success while at the same time reducing corticosterone levels."( Modulation of motor function by stress: a novel concept of the effects of stress and corticosterone on behavior.
Jadavji, NM; Metz, GA; Smith, LK, 2005
)
0.75
" The aim of the present study was to investigate stress and AMPH- induced release of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosterone (CORT) during withdrawal from an escalating dosage schedule of AMPH known to produce depression-like effects in rats."( Amphetamine withdrawal leads to behavioral sensitization and reduced HPA axis response following amphetamine challenge.
Feldon, J; Pryce, CR; Russig, H, 2006
)
0.54
" This was confirmed by investigating the corticosterone dose-response to ACTH in adrenals from the two strains incubated in vitro."( Intra-adrenal mechanisms in the response to chronic stress: investigation in a rat model of emotionality.
Hinson, JP; Kosti, O; Raven, PW; Renshaw, D, 2006
)
0.6
" In this study, a negative energy balance produced by wheel running exercise and restricted feeding decreased polyp burden in male Min mice and appeared to have a dose-response effect on polyp number."( Negative energy balance induced by voluntary wheel running inhibits polyp development in APCMin mice.
Berrigan, D; Colbert, LH; Hursting, SD; Mai, V; Perkins, SN; Tooze, JA, 2006
)
0.33
") on plasma corticosterone 60 min postinjection were retained after subchronic dosing (5 days, once daily) in mice."( Cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonism modulates plasma corticosterone in rodents.
Degroot, A; Nomikos, GG; Wade, MR, 2006
)
0.96
" The 30 min corticosterone response after multiple methamphetamine doses was augmented compared to single exposures, with the exception of the two earliest dosing intervals ending on P5 and P7, where the responses were lower."( Ontogeny of the adrenal response to (+)-methamphetamine in neonatal rats: the effect of prior drug exposure.
Ehrman, LA; Furay, AR; Schaefer, TL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT, 2006
)
0.71
" But at the dosage of 2 and 5 mg/kg animals do not exhibit this effect."( Involvement of hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis on the nifedipine-induced antinociception and tolerance in rats.
Ahmadiani, A; Mahani, SE; Motamedi, F, 2006
)
0.33
" On day 39 of the study, shortly after the daily stress episode, one half of the rats in each group was dosed with 60 mg/kg chlorpyrifos subcutaneously."( The effect of stress on the acute neurotoxicity of the organophosphate insecticide chlorpyrifos.
Ehrich, M; Hancock, S; Hinckley, J; Jortner, BS; Pung, T, 2007
)
0.34
" Daily administration of onion powder at a dosage of 50 mg/kg of body weight/day for 14 days significantly reduced the immobility time in FST without changing the motor dysfunction, indicating that the daily consumption of onion exerted antidepressant-like activity."( Antidepressant-like effect of onion (Allium cepa L.) powder in a rat behavioral model of depression.
Kawai, Y; Sakakibara, H; Terao, J; Yoshino, S, 2008
)
0.35
" Despite the differences in somatic signs, wild-type and CRF(2)-/- mice displayed similar plasma corticosterone responses to opiate dosing and withdrawal, indicating a marginal role for the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in the CRF(2) receptor mediation of opiate withdrawal."( Disruption of the CRF(2) receptor pathway decreases the somatic expression of opiate withdrawal.
Contarino, A; Ghozland, S; Ingallinesi, M; Koob, GF; Papaleo, F; Roberts, AJ, 2008
)
0.56
" TNF-alpha mRNA expression and BMD seemed to increase immediately after dosing but were ultimately reduced."( Modeling corticosteroid effects in a rat model of rheumatoid arthritis II: mechanistic pharmacodynamic model for dexamethasone effects in Lewis rats with collagen-induced arthritis.
Almon, RR; Dubois, DC; Earp, JC; Jusko, WJ; Molano, DS; Pyszczynski, NA, 2008
)
0.35
"This paper reviews recent studies assessing the effect of well-defined, severe, transient stress at dosing on two classical models of toxicity."( Effect of stress at dosing on organophosphate and heavy metal toxicity.
Jortner, BS, 2008
)
0.35
" Interestingly, the compound exhibited maximum efficacy if dosed in the afternoon when plasma corticosterone is high; the morning dosing when plasma corticosterone is low did not lead to efficacy."( Time of the day for 11beta-HSD1 inhibition plays a role in improving glucose homeostasis in DIO mice.
Chen, MM; Fotsch, C; Hale, C; Komorowski, R; St Jean, DJ; Véniant, MM; Wang, M, 2009
)
0.57
"Since questions have been raised about the typical neurotoxic dosing regimen used in animals and whether it adequately models human cumulative drug exposure, these experiments examined two different dosing regimens."( Effect of +-methamphetamine on path integration learning, novel object recognition, and neurotoxicity in rats.
Gudelsky, GA; Herring, NR; Schaefer, TL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT, 2008
)
0.35
" In two separate experiments, dosing regimens were compared for their effects on markers of neurotoxicity or on behavior."( Effect of +-methamphetamine on path integration learning, novel object recognition, and neurotoxicity in rats.
Gudelsky, GA; Herring, NR; Schaefer, TL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT, 2008
)
0.35
"On markers of neurotoxicity, MA showed decreased dopamine (DA) and 5-HT, increased glial fibrillary acidic protein, and increased corticosterone levels regardless of dosing regimen 3 days post-treatment."( Effect of +-methamphetamine on path integration learning, novel object recognition, and neurotoxicity in rats.
Gudelsky, GA; Herring, NR; Schaefer, TL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT, 2008
)
0.55
" Dosing regimen had no differential effects on behavior or neurotoxicity."( Effect of +-methamphetamine on path integration learning, novel object recognition, and neurotoxicity in rats.
Gudelsky, GA; Herring, NR; Schaefer, TL; Vorhees, CV; Williams, MT, 2008
)
0.35
" A DMSO-control group was used for each dosage regime."( Effects of repeated, short-term, corticosterone administration on the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis of the white-crowned sparrow (Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii).
Boyd, EH; Busch, DS; Sperry, TS; Wingfield, JC, 2008
)
0.63
" We reported previously that IFN-alpha has the ability to modulate the circadian clock function at the molecular level and that the alteration of clock function could be overcome by changing the dosing schedule."( Dosing schedule-dependent change in the disruptive effects of interferon-alpha on the circadian clock function.
Aramaki, H; Hamdan, AM; Koyanagi, S; Matsunaga, N; Ohdo, S; Shinohara, A, 2008
)
0.35
" In Experiment 1, dose-response effects of corticosterone on consolidation of contextual fear memory were determined."( Post-training administration of corticosterone enhances consolidation of contextual fear memory and hippocampal long-term potentiation in rats.
Abrari, K; Fathollahi, Y; Jadid, M; Rashidy-Pour, A; Semnanian, S, 2009
)
0.9
" These results suggest highly nonlinear dose-response patterns for MeHg."( Sublethal effects of methylmercury on fecal metabolites of testosterone, estradiol, and corticosterone in captive juvenile white ibises (Eudocimus albus).
Adams, EM; Frederick, PC; Guillette, LJ; Larkin, IL, 2009
)
0.58
" The animals in Group D (N=8) were used for body weight and hormonal dosage comparisons only."( The effects of systemic stress on orthodontic tooth movement.
de Castro, M; Gameiro, GH; Nouer, DF; Novaes, PD; Pereira-Neto, JS; Urtado, MB; Veiga, MC, 2008
)
0.35
" However, long-term dosing caused continuous hyperglycemia during and after infusion."( Pharmacodynamics of glucose regulation by methylprednisolone. II. normal rats.
Jin, JY; Jusko, WJ, 2009
)
0.35
" Exposure to 15 mg/kg decreased bw by approximately 10% after 8 days of dosing and until 2 days postdosing in both adx and sham animals; bw of adx animals were still reduced 5 days postdosing."( Suppression of humoral immunity by perfluorooctanoic acid is independent of elevated serum corticosterone concentration in mice.
Copeland, CB; DeWitt, JC; Luebke, RW, 2009
)
0.57
" Mice were dosed daily for 28 days with atrazine, ethanol, propanil, or subjected to restraint, which are known to induce neuroendocrine stress responses and thereby to alter several immunological parameters."( Patterns of immunotoxicity associated with chronic as compared with acute exposure to chemical or physical stressors and their relevance with regard to the role of stress and with regard to immunotoxicity testing.
Fan, R; Pruett, SB; Schwab, C; Zheng, Q, 2009
)
0.35
" Although DACT had only minimal effects on ACTH and steroid release, dosing with this metabolite resulted in plasma DACT concentrations that were 60-fold greater than that observed following an equimolar dose of ATR and eightfold greater than equimolar doses of DIA or DEA, indicating that DACT is not likely the primary inducer of ACTH release."( Chlorotriazine herbicides and metabolites activate an ACTH-dependent release of corticosterone in male Wistar rats.
Cooper, R; Ferrell, J; Fraites, M; Hotchkiss, M; Jayaraman, S; Laws, SC; Mills, L; Modic, W; Stoker, T; Tinfo, N, 2009
)
0.58
" The present findings suggest that glucocorticoid-regulated oscillation in the hepatic MGMT expression is the underlying cause of dosing time-dependent changes in DTIC-induced hepatotoxicity."( Glucocorticoid-dependent expression of O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase gene modulates dacarbazine-induced hepatotoxicity in mice.
Egawa, T; Horiguchi, M; Kaji, H; Kim, J; Koyanagi, S; Makino, K; Matsunaga, N; Ohdo, S, 2010
)
0.36
" Fifty percent of the patients received tacrolimus (TRL) and the others cyclosporine (CsA), both dosed according to weight."( Cytomegalovirus infection after liver transplantation: prophylaxis and preemptive treatment--a single-center experience.
Campanella, L; Cuomo, O; Esposito, C; Ioia, G; Perrella, A; Taglialatela, D, 2010
)
0.36
" Little attention has been directed toward ascertaining the doses of CR required to obtain such alterations and, indeed, whether a dose-response exists."( Calorie restriction at increasing levels leads to augmented concentrations of corticosterone and decreasing concentrations of testosterone in rats.
Kent, S; Levay, EA; Paolini, AG; Penman, J; Tammer, AH, 2010
)
0.59
"Oral gavage is a common route of precise oral dosing for studies in rodents."( A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down: a novel technique to improve oral gavage in mice.
Hoggatt, AF; Hoggatt, J; Honerlaw, M; Pelus, LM, 2010
)
0.36
" Daily administration of genistein to ovariectomized rats at a dosage of 10 mg/kg of body weight/d for 14 d significantly reduced the immobility time during the FST without changing motor dysfunction."( Genistein regulated serotonergic activity in the hippocampus of ovariectomized rats under forced swimming stress.
Kageyama, A; Ohsumi, M; Sakakibara, H; Shimoi, K; Yokogoshi, H; Yoshioka, M; Zhou, W, 2010
)
0.36
" After the food deprivation procedure, D and AFR females maintained dose-response sensitivity to the negative feedback induced by dexamethasone but only during proestrous."( Early stress leads to effects on estrous cycle and differential responses to stress.
Crumeyrolle-Arias, M; Daugé, V; Giros, B; Mourlon, V; Naudon, L, 2011
)
0.37
" In a subsequent dose-response study, we found that a single dose of 1mg/kg liposomal prednisolone phosphate (PLP) was still equally effective in suppressing joint inflammation as 4 repeated once-daily injections of 10mg/kg free PLP."( Safety of glucocorticoids can be improved by lower yet still effective dosages of liposomal steroid formulations in murine antigen-induced arthritis: comparison of prednisolone with budesonide.
Hofkens, W; Nabbe, KC; Pesman, GJ; Storm, G; Sweep, FC; van den Berg, WB; van den Hoven, JM; van Lent, PL, 2011
)
0.37
" The MPL treatments caused reduction of food consumption and body weights in all dosing groups."( Dynamic modeling of methylprednisolone effects on body weight and glucose regulation in rats.
Almon, RR; DuBois, DC; Fang, J; He, Y; Jusko, WJ, 2011
)
0.37
" The circadian disruptive effects of irinotecan, a topoisomerase I inhibitor, was investigated according to dosing time and sex."( Sex and dosing-time dependencies in irinotecan-induced circadian disruption.
Ahowesso, C; Beau, J; Claustrat, B; Delaunay, F; Dulong, S; Filipski, E; Hossard, V; Lévi, F; Li, XM; Peteri-Brunbäck, B; Zampera, S, 2011
)
0.37
" Most importantly, Pum2-deficient mice showed spontaneous EEG abnormalities and had lower seizure thresholds using a convulsing dosage of pentylenetetrazole."( Pumilio-2 function in the mouse nervous system.
Brüstle, O; Colas, D; Heller, HC; Pera, RA; Siemen, H, 2011
)
0.37
" All drugs were administered once daily for 4 days prior to testing as this dosing paradigm has previously been used to demonstrate anxiolytic effects of DPN in virgin rats."( Reproductive experience modifies the effects of estrogen receptor alpha activity on anxiety-like behavior and corticotropin releasing hormone mRNA expression.
Bridges, RS; Byrnes, EM; Casey, K, 2012
)
0.38
" Subsequently, 50% of the birds from each dosage group were subjected to a 6-day adrenal function test, whereby they were injected with long-lasting adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)."( Phytosterol additive boosts adrenal response to ACTH in male Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica).
Chen, J; Liu, F; Shi, F; Taya, K; Wang, T; Watanabe, G, 2012
)
0.38
"The present study was taken up to assess the role of subchronic exposure to an environmentally relevant dosage of cadmium in type l diabetes."( Prior cadmium exposure improves glucoregulation in diabetic rats but exacerbates effects on metabolic dysregulation, oxidative stress, and hepatic and renal toxicity.
Baxi, D; Diwedi, R; Ramachandran, AV; Singh, PK, 2012
)
0.38
" Animals dosed with DACT developed avoidance responses comparable to the highest dose of ATR."( Atrazine does not induce pica behavior at doses that increase hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation and cause conditioned taste avoidance.
Best, DS; Cooper, RL; Hotchkiss, MG; Laws, SC,
)
0.13
" Rats exposed to both repeated and variable stress displayed shifts in the cocaine dose-response curve but with different patterns of responding."( Differential modulation of cocaine's discriminative cue by repeated and variable stress exposure: relation to monoamine transporter levels.
Baumann, MH; Decicco-Skinner, KL; Hurwitz, ZE; Johari, S; Kohut, SJ; Riley, AL, 2012
)
0.38
" Dose-response studies with 1 nM-1 μM SOM230 were performed on rat adrenals."( Stimulatory effect of SOM230 on human and rat adrenal corticosteroid secretion in vitro.
Cassarino, MF; Castelli, L; Cavagnini, F; Martucci, F; Montanari, E; Pagliardini, L; Pecori Giraldi, F; Schmid, HA; Sesta, A, 2012
)
0.38
" At the end of the chronic stress session, the extent of adrenals activation in response to acute dosed stress was lowered in androgenized 45-day old females and increased gradually in stressed ones."( [The dynamics of hormonal changes in female rats exposed to chronic stress and androgen excess during pubescence].
Hanzhyĭ, IIu; Nosenko, ND; Reznikov, OH; Sachyns'ka, OV; Sinitsyn, PV; Tarasenko, LV, 2012
)
0.38
" Treatment with valproic acid (VPA), a histone deacetylase inhibitor, at 3 dosing regimens (300mg/kg at D2-9PP; 100mg/kg at D2-4PP, 200mg/kg at D5-7PP, 300mg/kg at D8-9PP; 100mg/kg at D2-5PP, 200mg/kg at D6-9PP) prior to daily separation reversed such a decrease in fear-potentiated startle."( Neonatal isolation decreases cued fear conditioning and frontal cortical histone 3 lysine 9 methylation in adult female rats.
Chen, LH; Cheng, LY; Cherng, CG; Kao, GS; Su, CC; Tzeng, WY; Wang, CY; Yu, L, 2012
)
0.38
" Using mice with reduced gene dosage of p190rhogap, a cytoskeletal regulatory protein localized to dendritic spines, we next isolated structural correlates of both behavioral vulnerability (spine elimination) and resilience (spine proliferation) to corticosterone within the orbital cortex."( Corticosteroid-induced neural remodeling predicts behavioral vulnerability and resilience.
Gourley, SL; Koleske, AJ; Swanson, AM, 2013
)
0.57
" These changes were expressed at early stages of dosing and were not exacerbated by extension of the administration period."( Effects of compound X, a novel potent inhibitor of acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol O-acyltransferase, on the adrenal gland of rats.
Amano, Y; Asahiyama, M; Hiwatashi, Y; Itagaki, K; Kato, N; Kobayashi, K; Nishimura, J; Ohmichi, K; Saito, T; Takashima, K; Tanabe, S; Tanaka, T; Tsujimoto, T; Wato, E, 2013
)
0.39
" Treatment with paroxetine was performed per os with a dosage of 20 mg/g BW."( Chronic social stress during adolescence: interplay of paroxetine treatment and ageing.
Liebl, C; Müller, MB; Scharf, SH; Schmidt, MV; Sterlemann, V, 2013
)
0.39
" Total antioxidant capacity was increased at the lowest dosage level tested."( Glucocorticoids increase protein carbonylation and mitochondrial dysfunction.
Beasley, C; Tan, H; Tang, VM; Wang, JF; Young, AH, 2013
)
0.39
"Adult male rats were orally dosed with ATR (200 mg/kg/day) or methylcellulose (1%, vehicle control) for 5 days."( Measurement of steroids in rats after exposure to an endocrine disruptor: mass spectrometry and radioimmunoassay demonstrate similar results.
Henderson, WM; Laws, SC; Riffle, BW,
)
0.13
" CORT also sexually dimorphically inhibited feeding, with females showing a greater dose-response than males."( Acute corticosterone sexually dimorphically facilitates social learning and inhibits feeding in mice.
Amor, TR; Cazzin, L; Choleris, E; Kavaliers, M; Lu, R; Lymer, JM; Valsecchi, P, 2013
)
0.87
") injections with the cannabinoid agonist WIN-55,212 (WIN) or its vehicle (VEH) for three consecutive days using a twice-daily, increasing dosage regimen (1 mg/kg day 1; 2 mg/kg day 2; 4 mg/kg day 3)."( Female adolescent exposure to cannabinoids causes transgenerational effects on morphine sensitization in female offspring in the absence of in utero exposure.
Byrnes, EM; Johnson, NL; Vassoler, FM, 2013
)
0.39
" The dosage of valerenic acid (340 μg/kg), which is the active ingredient of valerian root extract, was determined by the content of valerenic acid in valerian root extract (3."( Valeriana officinalis extract and its main component, valerenic acid, ameliorate D-galactose-induced reductions in memory, cell proliferation, and neuroblast differentiation by reducing corticosterone levels and lipid peroxidation.
Choi, JH; Hwang, IK; Jung, HY; Kang, SY; Kim, DW; Kim, JW; Kim, W; Kim, WJ; Nam, SM; Park, J; Yoo, DY; Yoon, YS, 2013
)
0.58
" Moreover, injection of 2,3-dichloro-a-methylbenzylamine, a PNMT enzyme inhibitor, (10 mg/kg) before corticosterone treatment caused a leftward shift in the dose-response curve for corticosterone and injection of propranolol (5 mg/kg), but not phentolamine, also shifted the dose-response curve to the left during the late phase."( Suppression of adrenal gland-derived epinephrine enhances the corticosterone-induced antinociceptive effect in the mouse formalin test.
Beitz, AJ; Han, HJ; Kang, SY; Kim, HW; Lee, JH; Roh, DH, 2014
)
0.86
" Experiments showed that administration of extract (25, 50 and 100 mg kg(-1)) could induced analgesia in a dose-response manner in both phases of formalin test."( Effects of Papaver rhoeas (L.) extract on formalin-induced pain and inflammation in mice.
Delfan, B; Esfandiari, B; Ghahramani, M; Jafari, F; Mojabi, N; Najafi-Abedi, A; Rahmani, B; Ranjbaran, M; Saeed-Abadi, S; Sahraei, H, 2012
)
0.38
" In ovo administration of high dose CORT significantly suppressed the growth rate from 3weeks of age and increased the frequency of aggressive behaviors, and the dosage was associated with elevated plasma CORT concentrations and significantly downregulated hypothalamic expression of arginine vasotocin (AVT) and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)."( Embryonic exposure to corticosterone modifies aggressive behavior through alterations of the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis and the serotonergic system in the chicken.
Ahmed, AA; Ma, W; Ni, Y; Zhao, R; Zhou, Q, 2014
)
0.72
" These effects were prominent at the higher dosage than at the lower dosage."( Cynomorium songaricum extract enhances novel object recognition, cell proliferation and neuroblast differentiation in the mice via improving hippocampal environment.
Choi, JH; Hwang, IK; Jung, HY; Kim, JW; Kim, W; Nam, SM; Won, MH; Yoo, DY; Yoo, KY; Yoon, YS, 2014
)
0.4
" Our findings suggest that recurrent YOH administration may prove a useful and reliable model for simulating recurrent stress/anxiety, and that enhancements to the paradigm such as higher or more frequent dosing of YOH could yield stronger or more extensive behavioral effects."( Effect of recurrent yohimbine on immediate and post-hoc behaviors, stress hormones, and energy homeostatic parameters.
Figlewicz, DP; Hill, SR; Jay, JL; Sipols, AJ; West, CH; Zavosh, AS, 2014
)
0.4
" Different dose-response curves for steroids and proteins in the adrenal and testis reveal novel adverse outcome pathways in intact and castrated male rats."( Novel molecular events associated with altered steroidogenesis induced by exposure to atrazine in the intact and castrate male rat.
Best, D; Cooper, RL; Jayaraman, S; Klinefelter, GR; Laws, SC; Riffle, BW; Suarez, J; Swank, A; Winnik, WM, 2014
)
0.4
" A hundred and seventy-five 30-day-old male Wistar rats were dosed orally by stomach tube every day for 35 days, with saline solution, low and high doses of genistein, daidzein and a mixture of both."( The effects of isoflavones on androgens and glucocorticoids during puberty on male Wistar rats.
Caceres, S; Illera, JC; Illera, MJ; Martinez-Fernandez, L; Millan, P; Monsalve, B; Peña, L; Silvan, G, 2014
)
0.4
"Development of novel therapeutic agents aimed at treating neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases require chronic and preferentially oral dosing in appropriate preclinical rodent models."( Alternative method of oral administration by peanut butter pellet formulation results in target engagement of BACE1 and attenuation of gavage-induced stress responses in mice.
Atchison, KP; Gonzales, C; Riddell, DR; Robshaw, A; Sukoff Rizzo, SJ; Zaleska, MM; Zhou, H, 2014
)
0.4
" The relative efficacy of pre versus post administration of corticosterone and high versus low dose of corticosterone on stress-induced exaggeration of innate fear response and stress-retarded body weight growth indicate that exogenous corticosterone administration within an appropriate time window and dosage are efficacious in diminishing traumatic stress induced pathophysiological processes."( Corticosterone mitigates the stress response in an animal model of PTSD.
Benedek, D; Jia, M; Li, H; Li, X; Smerin, SE; Ursano, R; Xing, G; Zhang, L, 2015
)
2.1
" Both field-based correlational studies and a recent dosing experiment suggest that mercury exposure alters levels of the primary avian stress hormone, CORT."( The effect of mercury on baseline corticosterone in a breeding songbird.
Bradley, EL; Cristol, DA; Maddux, SL; Varian-Ramos, CW, 2015
)
0.7
" Repeated CORT dosing caused depression-like behavior in mice as indicated by increased despair effects in forced swim test (FST) and anhedonia in sucrose preference test."( Effect of a novel 5-HT3 receptor antagonist 4i, in corticosterone-induced depression-like behavior and oxidative stress in mice.
Gupta, D; Kurhe, Y; Radhakrishnan, M, 2015
)
0.67
" Adenomyosis was induced in 28 female ICR mice neonatally dosed with tamoxifen, while another 12 (group C) were dosed with solvent only, serving as a blank control."( Resveratrol Reduces Myometrial Infiltration, Uterine Hyperactivity, and Stress Levels and Alleviates Generalized Hyperalgesia in Mice With Induced Adenomyosis.
Chen, Y; Guo, SW; Liu, X; Zhang, H; Zhu, B, 2015
)
0.42
" Administration of a high dosage of CORT-reduced paired-pulse inhibition and increased facilitation in DG but not in CA1, whereas administration of a moderate CORT dosage had no effect."( Differential modulation of synaptic plasticity and local circuit activity in the dentate gyrus and CA1 regions of the rat hippocampus by corticosterone.
Kehat, O; Richter-Levin, G; Segal, M; Sharvit, A; Stork, O, 2015
)
0.62
" In recent years, pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia clinical trials have used discontinuous rather than continuous dosing of dexamethasone in an effort to reduce the incidence of osteonecrosis."( Antileukemic Efficacy of Continuous vs Discontinuous Dexamethasone in Murine Models of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.
Cai, X; Cheng, C; Evans, WE; Janke, LJ; Jeha, S; Kamdem Kamdem, L; Karol, SE; Paugh, SW; Payton, MA; Pui, CH; Ramsey, LB; Relling, MV; Williams, RT, 2015
)
0.42
" Interestingly, C-K showed antidepressant-like activities similar to that of Rb3, and Rg3 displayed antidepressant-like effects at lower dosage and faster time, indicating it has better effects than Rb3, whereas Rh2 and PPD failed to show any effect."( Antidepressant-like effects of ginsenosides: A comparison of ginsenoside Rb3 and its four deglycosylated derivatives, Rg3, Rh2, compound K, and 20(S)-protopanaxadiol in mice models of despair.
Li, Z; Lou, C; Yang, H; Zhang, H; Zhong, Z; Zhou, Z, 2016
)
0.43
" For this purpose, we measured plasma concentrations of adrenal steroids in rats dosed with ketoconazole, a known inhibitor of adrenal steroidogenesis, and examined its relationship with the changes in histopathology and mRNA expression of steroidogenic enzymes in the adrenal gland."( Changes in plasma concentrations of corticosterone and its precursors after ketoconazole administration in rats: An application of simultaneous measurement of multiple steroids using LC-MS/MS.
Fujii, Y; Funabashi, H; Kouchi, M; Matsumoto, I; Miyawaki, I; Tochitani, T; Yamada, T; Yamashita, A,
)
0.41
" Our work provides a delineation of molecular mechanisms underlying the widespread clinical association of antihistamines and GR agonists, which may contribute to future dosage optimization and reduction of well-described side effects associated with glucocorticoid administration."( Effects of histamine H1 receptor signaling on glucocorticoid receptor activity. Role of canonical and non-canonical pathways.
Davio, C; Fernández, N; Fitzsimons, CP; Granja-Galeano, G; Monczor, F; Shayo, C; Zappia, CD, 2015
)
0.42
" In addition, our results showed that neither imipramine nor Sanyuansan at any dosage increased spontaneous motor activity."( Antidepressant-like effects of Sanyuansan in the mouse forced swim test, tail suspension test, and chronic mild stress model.
Gou, XJ; He, G; Lin, B; Peng, C; Yan, S; You, ZL; Zhao, QY, 2015
)
0.42
" Due to differences in timing of puberty in males and females during the P29-38 period of THC treatment, we also dosed female rats between P21-30 (pre-puberty) and male rats between P39-48 (puberty)."( Sex and age specific effects of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol during the periadolescent period in the rat: The unique susceptibility of the prepubescent animal.
Black, R; Dow-Edwards, D; Hurd, YL; Michaelides, M; Silva, L,
)
0.13
" Night-time dosing of thiazides may be particularly beneficial in patients with modest glucocorticoid excess."( Glucocorticoids Induce Nondipping Blood Pressure by Activating the Thiazide-Sensitive Cotransporter.
Al-Dujaili, EA; Bailey, MA; Dear, JW; Dhaun, N; Flatman, PW; Howarth, AR; Hunter, RW; Ivy, JR; Oosthuyzen, W; Peltz, TS; Webb, DJ, 2016
)
0.43
" The propofol self-administration model was established by a fixed ratio 1 (FR1) schedule of reinforced dosing over successive 14days in rats."( Glucocorticoid receptor mediated the propofol self-administration by dopamine D1 receptor in nucleus accumbens.
Chen, Z; Dong, Z; Ge, RS; Lian, Q; Liang, Y; Lin, W; Wang, B; Wang, S; Wu, B; Zhang, G, 2016
)
0.43
" These findings suggest that ethanol-induced RANGE effects are not simply a function of ethanol load per se, and underscore the critical role that ethanol dosing interval plays in determining the neuroimmune consequences of alcohol."( Sustained alterations in neuroimmune gene expression after daily, but not intermittent, alcohol exposure.
Deak, T; Doremus-Fitzwater, TL; Gano, A, 2016
)
0.43
" Corticosterone failed to re-establish extinguished preference alone but produced a leftward shift in the dose-response curve for cocaine-primed reinstatement."( Corticosterone Potentiation of Cocaine-Induced Reinstatement of Conditioned Place Preference in Mice is Mediated by Blockade of the Organic Cation Transporter 3.
Ambrosius, T; Baker, DA; Derricks, O; Gasser, PJ; Kurtoglu, B; Mantsch, JR; McReynolds, JR; Nino, B; Taylor, A; Vranjkovic, O; Wheeler, RA, 2017
)
2.81
" During early (days 40-60) or late (days 65-85) adolescence the birds (n=66) were dosed with either saline or the hormone corticosterone (CORT)."( Long-term effects of adolescent stress on neophobic behaviors in zebra finches are modulated by social context when in adulthood.
Emmerson, MG; Spencer, KA, 2017
)
0.66
" A dose-response study showed that 4 weeks of CORT exposure at 35 μg/ml in the drinking water enhanced the emotionality score of female mice, but with a very small size effect."( Chronic corticosterone administration effects on behavioral emotionality in female c57bl6 mice.
David, DJ; Gardier, AM; Guilloux, JP; Mekiri, M, 2017
)
0.89
" Our goal was to determine the dose-response in the plasma and fecal samples following the injection and determine if there were effects of sex, age, and time of day."( Levels of plasma and fecal glucocorticoid metabolites following an ACTH challenge in male and female coyotes (Canis latrans).
French, SS; Gese, EM; Neuman-Lee, LA; Stevenson, ET, 2018
)
0.48
" Plasma concentrations of corticosterone and its precursors were examined in rats dosed with compounds that affect adrenal steroidogenesis via different modes of action as well as the relationships of the changes with blood chemistry and adrenal histopathology."( Usefulness of Simultaneous Measurement of Plasma Steroids, Including Precursors, for the Evaluation of Drug Effects on Adrenal Steroidogenesis in Rats.
Bando, K; Fujii, Y; Kouchi, M; Matsumoto, I; Miyawaki, I; Tochitani, T; Yamada, T; Yamashita, A, 2017
)
0.76
" In conclusion, it seems that CHS is not associated with an appreciable change in broiler performance, bone characteristics, or selected serum parameters; and simultaneous vitamin C administration at the dosage of 12 g/100 l in drinking water has no beneficial effect apart from reducing oxidative stress especially in short-term chronically heat-stressed birds."( Effect of different periods of chronic heat stress with or without vitamin C supplementation on bone and selected serum parameters of broiler chickens.
Ahrari Khafi, MS; Ghahramani, Z; Mosleh, N; Namazi, F; Nematollahi, F; Shomali, T, 2018
)
0.48
" At the end of dosing schedule, neurobehavioral tests were conducted; followed by mechanistic evaluation through biochemical analysis, RTPCR and western blot in serum and hippocampus."( Antidepressant activity of vorinostat is associated with amelioration of oxidative stress and inflammation in a corticosterone-induced chronic stress model in mice.
Js, IC; Kv, A; Lahkar, M; Madhana, RM; Naidu, VGM; Sinha, S, 2018
)
0.69
" Intracerebroventricular infusion of ATR, DEA, and DIA but not DACT at concentrations equivalent to peak plasma concentrations after gavage dosing resulted in an elevation of plasma corticosterone concentrations."( Characterization of Activation of the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis by the Herbicide Atrazine in the Female Rat.
Breckenridge, CB; Foradori, CD; Handa, RJ; Healy, JE; Hinds, LR; Jones, MA; Kemppainen, RJ; Lacagnina, AF; Quihuis, AM; Read, CC; White, BD; Yi, KD; Zimmerman, AD, 2018
)
0.67
" The serum concentration of corticosterone increased after the administration of clozapine, but no significant variation was observed with the dosage of clozapine."( Clozapine-Induced Acute Hyperglycemia Is Accompanied with Elevated Serum Concentrations of Adrenaline and Glucagon in Rats.
Ishiwata, Y; Kimura, Y; Nagata, M; Takahashi, H; Yasuhara, M, 2018
)
0.77
" To test the effects of developmental stress on nestling and adult body composition, we dosed nestling zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) with either a corticosterone (CORT) or control treatment."( Developmental stress reduces body condition across avian life-history stages: A comparison of quantitative magnetic resonance data and condition indices.
Buchanan, KL; Crino, OL; Driscoll, SC; Kraft, FOH, 2019
)
0.71
" RESULTS The results showed that the extract at the dosage of 50 and 100 mg/kg significantly (p<0."( Antidepressive Effects of Taraxacum Officinale in a Mouse Model of Depression Are Due to Inhibition of Corticosterone Levels and Modulation of Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Phosphatase-1 (Mkp-1) and Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (Bdnf) Expression.
Duan, H; Gao, C; Guo, B; Kong, S; Li, D; Liang, X, 2019
)
0.73
" This study measured differences in cognitive behavior performance on the object recognition test (ORT) and social recognition test (SRT) and serum levels of corticosterone (CORT) between C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ mice after 14-day chronic exposure to either cocaine (5 mg/kg) or morphine (3 mg/kg) at a dosage of 10 ml/kg/day."( Differences in cocaine- and morphine-induced cognitive impairments and serum corticosterone between C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ mice.
Chao, R; Chen, L; Gong, D; Liang, Y; Yang, S; Yu, P; Zhao, H, 2019
)
0.94
" The efficacy of MMF as an immunosuppressant and long-term safety in cats of this dosage regimen is unknown."(
Abrams, G; Adolfsson, E; Agarwal, PK; Akkan, AG; Al Alhareth, NS; Alves, VGL; Armentano, R; Bahroos, E; Baig, M; Baldridge, KK; Barman, S; Bartolucci, C; Basit, A; Bertoli, SV; Bian, L; Bigatti, G; Bobenko, AI; Boix, PP; Bokulic, T; Bolink, HJ; Borowiec, J; Bulski, W; Burciaga, J; Butt, NS; Cai, AL; Campos, AM; Cao, G; Cao, Y; Čapo, I; Caruso, ML; Chao, CT; Cheatum, CM; Chelminski, K; Chen, AJW; Chen, C; Chen, CH; Chen, D; Chen, G; Chen, H; Chen, LH; Chen, R; Chen, RX; Chen, X; Cherdtrakulkiat, R; Chirvony, VS; Cho, JG; Chu, K; Ciurlino, D; Coletta, S; Contaldo, G; Crispi, F; Cui, JF; D'Esposito, M; de Biase, S; Demir, B; Deng, W; Deng, Z; Di Pinto, F; Domenech-Ximenos, B; Dong, G; Drácz, L; Du, XJ; Duan, LJ; Duan, Y; Ekendahl, D; Fan, W; Fang, L; Feng, C; Followill, DS; Foreman, SC; Fortunato, G; Frew, R; Fu, M; Gaál, V; Ganzevoort, W; Gao, DM; Gao, X; Gao, ZW; Garcia-Alvarez, A; Garza, MS; Gauthier, L; Gazzaz, ZJ; Ge, RS; Geng, Y; Genovesi, S; Geoffroy, V; Georg, D; Gigli, GL; Gong, J; Gong, Q; Groeneveld, J; Guerra, V; Guo, Q; Guo, X; Güttinger, R; Guyo, U; Haldar, J; Han, DS; Han, S; Hao, W; Hayman, A; He, D; Heidari, A; Heller, S; Ho, CT; Ho, SL; Hong, SN; Hou, YJ; Hu, D; Hu, X; Hu, ZY; Huang, JW; Huang, KC; Huang, Q; Huang, T; Hwang, JK; Izewska, J; Jablonski, CL; Jameel, T; Jeong, HK; Ji, J; Jia, Z; Jiang, W; Jiang, Y; Kalumpha, M; Kang, JH; Kazantsev, P; Kazemier, BM; Kebede, B; Khan, SA; Kiss, J; Kohen, A; Kolbenheyer, E; Konai, MM; Koniarova, I; Kornblith, E; Krawetz, RJ; Kreouzis, T; Kry, SF; Laepple, T; Lalošević, D; Lan, Y; Lawung, R; Lechner, W; Lee, KH; Lee, YH; Leonard, C; Li, C; Li, CF; Li, CM; Li, F; Li, J; Li, L; Li, S; Li, X; Li, Y; Li, YB; Li, Z; Liang, C; Lin, J; Lin, XH; Ling, M; Link, TM; Liu, HH; Liu, J; Liu, M; Liu, W; Liu, YP; Lou, H; Lu, G; Lu, M; Lun, SM; Ma, Z; Mackensen, A; Majumdar, S; Martineau, C; Martínez-Pastor, JP; McQuaid, JR; Mehrabian, H; Meng, Y; Miao, T; Miljković, D; Mo, J; Mohamed, HSH; Mohtadi, M; Mol, BWJ; Moosavi, L; Mosdósi, B; Nabu, S; Nava, E; Ni, L; Novakovic-Agopian, T; Nyamunda, BC; Nyul, Z; Önal, B; Özen, D; Özyazgan, S; Pajkrt, E; Palazon, F; Park, HW; Patai, Á; Patai, ÁV; Patzke, GR; Payette, G; Pedoia, V; Peelen, MJCS; Pellitteri, G; Peng, J; Perea, RJ; Pérez-Del-Rey, D; Popović, DJ; Popović, JK; Popović, KJ; Posecion, L; Povall, J; Prachayasittikul, S; Prachayasittikul, V; Prat-González, S; Qi, B; Qu, B; Rakshit, S; Ravelli, ACJ; Ren, ZG; Rivera, SM; Salo, P; Samaddar, S; Samper, JLA; Samy El Gendy, NM; Schmitt, N; Sekerbayev, KS; Sepúlveda-Martínez, Á; Sessolo, M; Severi, S; Sha, Y; Shen, FF; Shen, X; Shen, Y; Singh, P; Sinthupoom, N; Siri, S; Sitges, M; Slovak, JE; Solymosi, N; Song, H; Song, J; Song, M; Spingler, B; Stewart, I; Su, BL; Su, JF; Suming, L; Sun, JX; Tantimavanich, S; Tashkandi, JM; Taurbayev, TI; Tedgren, AC; Tenhunen, M; Thwaites, DI; Tibrewala, R; Tomsejm, M; Triana, CA; Vakira, FM; Valdez, M; Valente, M; Valentini, AM; Van de Winckel, A; van der Lee, R; Varga, F; Varga, M; Villarino, NF; Villemur, R; Vinatha, SP; Vincenti, A; Voskamp, BJ; Wang, B; Wang, C; Wang, H; Wang, HT; Wang, J; Wang, M; Wang, N; Wang, NC; Wang, Q; Wang, S; Wang, X; Wang, Y; Wang, Z; Wen, N; Wesolowska, P; Willis, M; Wu, C; Wu, D; Wu, L; Wu, X; Wu, Z; Xia, JM; Xia, X; Xia, Y; Xiao, J; Xiao, Y; Xie, CL; Xie, LM; Xie, S; Xing, Z; Xu, C; Xu, J; Yan, D; Yan, K; Yang, S; Yang, X; Yang, XW; Ye, M; Yin, Z; Yoon, N; Yoon, Y; Yu, H; Yu, K; Yu, ZY; Zhang, B; Zhang, GY; Zhang, H; Zhang, J; Zhang, M; Zhang, Q; Zhang, S; Zhang, W; Zhang, X; Zhang, Y; Zhang, YW; Zhang, Z; Zhao, D; Zhao, F; Zhao, P; Zhao, W; Zhao, Z; Zheng, C; Zhi, D; Zhou, C; Zhou, FY; Zhu, D; Zhu, J; Zhu, Q; Zinyama, NP; Zou, M; Zou, Z, 2019
)
0.51
"Background Combined oral contraceptive (COC) use has been associated with an increased risk of insulin resistance (IR) and other adverse cardiovascular events, despite efforts to reduce the dosage and/or progestin type."( Drospirenone-containing oral contraceptives do not affect glucose regulation and circulating corticosterone.
Adeyanju, OA; Olatunji, LA, 2019
)
0.73
") dosing was started from D-8 and continued up to D-32."( Repeated caffeine administration aggravates post-traumatic stress disorder-like symptoms in rats.
Dangi, DS; Krishnamurthy, S; Prajapati, SK, 2019
)
0.51
" Tailored dosing of CORT125281 may allow tissue-specific inhibition of GR transcriptional activity."( The selective glucocorticoid receptor antagonist CORT125281 has tissue-specific activity.
Heckmans, KML; Hoekstra, M; Houtman, R; Hunt, H; Koorneef, LL; Kroon, J; Meijer, OC; van Dorst, MMAR; Viho, EMG; Wahl, LF, 2020
)
0.56
" Behavioral tests such as Morris water maze test, novel object recognition test, and object in place test were performed at the end of the dosing schedule to assess cognition."( Cognitive Improvement by Vorinostat through Modulation of Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress in a Corticosterone-Induced Chronic Stress Model in Mice.
Bais, AK; K V, A; Kumar, P; Lahkar, M; Madhana, RM; Malik, A; Samudrala, PK; Singh, VB; Sinha, S, 2020
)
0.78
" These data suggest age modulates the locomotor response to MA and further research is warranted to determine the developmental neurobiological mechanism underlying the dose-response age differences in the response to acute MA exposure."( The acute effects of multiple doses of methamphetamine on locomotor activity and anxiety-like behavior in adolescent and adult mice.
Acevedo, J; Newby, ML; Ortman, HA; Siegel, JA, 2021
)
0.62
" We remotely dosed breeding females with biologically-relevant doses of CORT, or the oil vehicle, 0-3 h prior to the predicted time of ovulation, and allowed pairs to produce two clutches, one under each treatment, in a crosswise, balanced design."( Experimental manipulation of maternal corticosterone: Hormone transfer to the yolk in the zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata.
Buchanan, KL; Miltiadous, A, 2021
)
0.89
" The significant decrease in the IgM antibody response to the T cell dependent antigen keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) at a dose lower than the previously documented LOAEL was accompanied by a significant reduction of the Th2 serum cytokines IL-5 and IL-13, a non-significant dose-response reduction of IL-4, a significant reduction of the Th1 cytokine IL-12, and a non-significant dose-response increase in IL-2 and IFNγ."( Suppression of Th2 cytokines as a potential mechanism for reduced antibody response following PFOA exposure in female B6C3F1 mice.
De Guise, S; Levin, M, 2021
)
0.62
" By dosing the animals daily with high levels of corticosterone for seven days, while sampling hairs before, during, and after treatments, a timeline for glucocorticoid uptake into hairs was constructed."( Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress - Exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model.
Abelson, KSP; Colding-Jørgensen, P; Hestehave, S; Kalliokoski, O, 2023
)
1.39
" The CORT dosage administered did not appear to affect HPA axis development in ducklings."( The effects of pre-hatch elevated corticosterone and post-hatch restrictive food availability on the HPA axis development of mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos).
Machin, KL; Murray, BA; Soos, C, 2023
)
1.19
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Roles (2)

RoleDescription
human metaboliteAny mammalian metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in humans (Homo sapiens).
mouse metaboliteAny mammalian metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in a mouse (Mus musculus).
[role information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Drug Classes (7)

ClassDescription
glucocorticoidGlucocorticoids are a class of steroid hormones that regulate a variety of physiological processes, in particular control of the concentration of glucose in blood.
11beta-hydroxy steroidAny 11-hydroxy steroid in which the hydroxy group at position 11 has beta- configuration.
21-hydroxy steroid
20-oxo steroidAn oxo steroid carrying an oxo group at position 20.
C21-steroidA steroid that has a structure based on a 21-carbon (pregnane) skeleton. Note that individual examples may have ring substituents at other positions and/or contain double bonds, aromatic A-rings, expanded/contracted rings etc., so the formula and mass may vary from that given for the generic structure.
3-oxo-Delta(4) steroidA 3-oxo steroid conjugated to a C=C double bond at the alpha,beta position.
primary alpha-hydroxy ketoneAn alpha-hydroxy ketone in which the carbonyl group and the hydroxy group are linked by a -CH2 (methylene) group.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Pathways (31)

PathwayProteinsCompounds
Metabolism14961108
Metabolism of lipids500463
Metabolism of steroids111135
Metabolism of steroid hormones2537
Mineralocorticoid biosynthesis616
Biological oxidations150276
Phase I - Functionalization of compounds69175
Cytochrome P450 - arranged by substrate type30110
Endogenous sterols1838
Steroidogenesis1142
Adrenal Hyperplasia Type 3 or Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Due to 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency1142
Congenital Lipoid Adrenal Hyperplasia (CLAH) or Lipoid CAH1142
Adrenal Hyperplasia Type 5 or Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Due to 17 alpha-Hydroxylase Deficiency1142
17-alpha-Hydroxylase Deficiency (CYP17)1142
11-beta-Hydroxylase Deficiency (CYP11B1)1142
21-Hydroxylase Deficiency (CYP21)1142
Corticosterone Methyl Oxidase I Deficiency (CMO I)1142
Corticosterone Methyl Oxidase II Deficiency (CMO II)1142
Apparent Mineralocorticoid Excess Syndrome1142
3-beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Deficiency1142
Disease1278231
Diseases of metabolism69121
Metabolic disorders of biological oxidation enzymes647
Defective CYP11B2 causes CMO-1 deficiency06
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS)011
Aldosterone from Steroidogenesis816
Mineralocorticoid biosynthesis08
Biosynthesis of aldosterone and cortisol010
Glucocorticoid & Mineralcorticoid Metabolism013
Integrated breast cancer pathway9818
Biochemical pathways: part I0466
Classical pathway of steroidogenesis with glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid metabolism325

Protein Targets (74)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain A, HADH2 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency25.11890.025120.237639.8107AID893
Chain B, HADH2 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency25.11890.025120.237639.8107AID893
thioredoxin reductaseRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency39.81070.100020.879379.4328AID588453
pregnane X receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency30.30010.025127.9203501.1870AID651751
RAR-related orphan receptor gammaMus musculus (house mouse)Potency45.42480.006038.004119,952.5996AID1159521; AID1159523
NFKB1 protein, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.02000.02827.055915.8489AID895; AID928
GALC proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.707928.183828.183828.1838AID1159614
TDP1 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency14.57660.000811.382244.6684AID686978; AID686979
GLI family zinc finger 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency1.79900.000714.592883.7951AID1259369; AID1259392
ThrombopoietinHomo sapiens (human)Potency1.25890.02517.304831.6228AID917; AID918
AR proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency3.65900.000221.22318,912.5098AID1259243; AID1259247; AID1259381; AID588515; AID588516; AID743035; AID743036; AID743040; AID743042; AID743053; AID743054; AID743063
hypoxia-inducible factor 1, alpha subunit (basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor)Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.06310.00137.762544.6684AID914; AID915
progesterone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency2.08300.000417.946075.1148AID1346784; AID1347036
nonstructural protein 1Influenza A virus (A/WSN/1933(H1N1))Potency0.28180.28189.721235.4813AID2326
glucocorticoid receptor [Homo sapiens]Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.37350.000214.376460.0339AID588532; AID588533; AID720691; AID720692; AID720719
retinoic acid nuclear receptor alpha variant 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency58.62310.003041.611522,387.1992AID1159553; AID1159555
retinoid X nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.91450.000817.505159.3239AID1159527
estrogen-related nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency26.72920.001530.607315,848.9004AID1224819; AID1224820; AID1224841; AID1224842; AID1224848; AID1224849; AID1259403
farnesoid X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency28.18380.375827.485161.6524AID588527
pregnane X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency33.24450.005428.02631,258.9301AID1346982; AID720659
estrogen nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency49.95880.000229.305416,493.5996AID1259248; AID1259383; AID743069; AID743075
GVesicular stomatitis virusPotency17.37680.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
vitamin D (1,25- dihydroxyvitamin D3) receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency30.11020.023723.228263.5986AID743222; AID743223; AID743241
IDH1Homo sapiens (human)Potency29.09290.005210.865235.4813AID686970
euchromatic histone-lysine N-methyltransferase 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.44670.035520.977089.1251AID504332
cytochrome P450, family 19, subfamily A, polypeptide 1, isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.05940.001723.839378.1014AID743083
thyroid stimulating hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency12.22200.001628.015177.1139AID1224843
nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells 1 (p105), isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency54.947719.739145.978464.9432AID1159509
chromobox protein homolog 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency100.00000.006026.168889.1251AID540317
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency35.48130.010039.53711,122.0200AID588547
nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 isoform 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.85520.00419.984825.9290AID504444; AID720524
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency23.10990.000323.4451159.6830AID743065; AID743067
heat shock protein beta-1Homo sapiens (human)Potency55.07550.042027.378961.6448AID743210
mitogen-activated protein kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency3.16230.039816.784239.8107AID995
serine/threonine-protein kinase mTOR isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency16.48160.00378.618923.2809AID2668
nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency34.20330.000627.21521,122.0200AID651741; AID743202; AID743219
gemininHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.13000.004611.374133.4983AID624296
survival motor neuron protein isoform dHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.89130.125912.234435.4813AID1458
cytochrome P450 3A4 isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency7.94330.031610.279239.8107AID884; AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit piRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Interferon betaHomo sapiens (human)Potency17.37680.00339.158239.8107AID1645842
HLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)Potency17.37680.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit beta-1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit deltaRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit gamma-2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-5Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-3Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit gamma-1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-4Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit gamma-3Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-6Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Nuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.71010.026622.448266.8242AID651802
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit beta-3Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit beta-2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
GABA theta subunitRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
Inositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency17.37680.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
Gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit epsilonRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency7.94331.000012.224831.6228AID885
cytochrome P450 2C9, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency17.37680.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Solute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)34.20000.40003.10009.7000AID681561
Solute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)21.70000.21005.553710.0000AID681560
Solute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)Ki7.02000.55004.26507.4600AID681146
Solute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.94500.09003.72779.5000AID1745861; AID682144
Solute carrier family 22 member 3Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)4.90004.90006.65008.4000AID678784
Corticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.03810.01323.248110.0000AID51055
Androgen receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)23.44230.00101.979414.1600AID255211
C-8 sterol isomeraseSaccharomyces cerevisiae S288CKi100.00000.00000.90487.1500AID239296
Solute carrier organic anion transporter family member 1A1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki5.30001.10004.51259.8000AID681147
3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)Ki100.00000.00040.54906.7000AID239597
Solute carrier family 22 member 1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)157.35000.18003.68578.8000AID679317; AID681159
Solute carrier family 22 member 1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki41.00000.13002.37856.9000AID681157; AID681376
Sigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)Ki35.60000.00000.490110.0000AID239347
Solute carrier family 22 member 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)6.30001.00004.446710.0000AID679293; AID681158; AID681591
Solute carrier family 22 member 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki0.46880.39002.32959.4000AID679636; AID679637; AID679639; AID679641
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Activation Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Sex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)Kd0.45710.00020.34964.7863AID318680
Mineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)Kd0.00050.00050.00050.0005AID1440431
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (121)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
activation of cysteine-type endopeptidase activity involved in apoptotic processSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of gene expressionSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
monoatomic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
body fluid secretionSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
amine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
putrescine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
acetylcholine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
choline transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
epinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
histamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
histamine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
thiamine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
purine-containing compound transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
amino acid import across plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
L-arginine import across plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
export across plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
L-alpha-amino acid transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
L-arginine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
cellular detoxificationSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
establishment or maintenance of transmembrane electrochemical gradientSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
monoamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
putrescine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
acetylcholine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
thiamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
epinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
thiamine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
metanephric proximal tubule developmentSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
purine-containing compound transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
monoatomic cation transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
(R)-carnitine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
acyl carnitine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
cellular detoxificationSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
histamine metabolic processSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
monoatomic ion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
monocarboxylic acid transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
monoamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of appetiteSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
epinephrine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
histamine transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
serotonin uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
histamine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
epinephrine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
purine-containing compound transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine uptakeSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
cellular detoxificationSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of autophagyInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-serine phosphorylation of STAT proteinInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to interferon-betaInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell proliferationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of viral genome replicationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of MHC class I biosynthetic processInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
defense response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
neuron cellular homeostasisInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of Lewy body formationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T-helper 2 cell cytokine productionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
T cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
humoral immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class I via ER pathway, TAP-independentHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of T cell anergyHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
defense responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
detection of bacteriumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-12 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-6 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protection from natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of dendritic cell differentiationHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class IbHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
glucocorticoid metabolic processCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of endopeptidase activityCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
signal transductionMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of non-canonical NF-kappaB signal transductionMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
intracellular steroid hormone receptor signaling pathwayMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of glucose metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of steroid metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular receptor signaling pathwayNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
circadian regulation of gene expressionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to sterolNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of circadian rhythmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of fat cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
adipose tissue developmentNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
T-helper 17 cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
cholesterol biosynthetic process3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
cholesterol metabolic process3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
hemopoiesis3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
cholesterol biosynthetic process via desmosterol3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
cholesterol biosynthetic process via lathosterol3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
ossification involved in bone maturation3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate metabolic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
lipid transportSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
nervous system developmentSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled opioid receptor signaling pathwaySigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of neuron apoptotic processSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein homotrimerizationSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (60)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
amine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
acetylcholine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
monoamine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
L-amino acid transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
pyrimidine nucleoside transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
choline transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
thiamine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
putrescine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
efflux transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
toxin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
L-arginine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
acetylcholine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
dopamine:sodium symporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine:sodium symporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
monoamine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
secondary active organic cation transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
pyrimidine nucleoside transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
thiamine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
putrescine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
toxin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
(R)-carnitine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
monoamine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
organic cation transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
spermidine transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
quaternary ammonium group transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
toxin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
cytokine activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
peptide antigen bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
androgen bindingSex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
steroid bindingSex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
steroid bindingCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase inhibitor activityCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear steroid receptor activityMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
steroid bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
TBP-class protein bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
sequence-specific double-stranded DNA bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear receptor activityMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
estrogen response element bindingMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
oxysterol bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
ligand-activated transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
sequence-specific double-stranded DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear receptor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
C-8 sterol isomerase activity3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
steroid delta-isomerase activity3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein binding3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
cholestenol delta-isomerase activity3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
inositol-1,3,4,5,6-pentakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol heptakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 1-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 3-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol 5-diphosphate pentakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol diphosphate tetrakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled opioid receptor activitySigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (44)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
basal plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
presynapseSolute carrier family 22 member 2Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
basal plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
lateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
presynapseSolute carrier family 22 member 1 Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear outer membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
endomembrane systemSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
neuronal cell bodySolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
presynapseSolute carrier family 22 member 3Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
ER to Golgi transport vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
secretory granule membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
phagocytic vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
early endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
recycling endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
lumenal side of endoplasmic reticulum membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
MHC class I protein complexHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionSex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeSex hormone-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceCorticosteroid-binding globulinHomo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum membraneMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
chromatinMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
receptor complexMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusMineralocorticoid receptor Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneGamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit gamma-2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear bodyNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
chromatinNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneGamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit alpha-1Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)
plasma membraneGamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subunit beta-2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)
nuclear envelope3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum membrane3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic vesicle3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear membrane3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum3-beta-hydroxysteroid-Delta(8),Delta(7)-isomeraseHomo sapiens (human)
fibrillar centerInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear envelopeSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear inner membraneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear outer membraneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum membraneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
lipid dropletSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic densitySigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
membraneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
growth coneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic vesicleSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
anchoring junctionSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic density membraneSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumSigma non-opioid intracellular receptor 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (273)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID588378qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression: Validation
AID1347058CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - HTRF assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID1347049Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr1) antagonism - Pilot screen2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID1347083qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: Viability assay - alamar blue signal for LASV Primary Screen2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347151Optimization of GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors: Unlinked NS2B-NS3 protease assay2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347410qHTS for inhibitors of adenylyl cyclases using a fission yeast platform: a pilot screen against the NCATS LOPAC library2019Cellular signalling, 08, Volume: 60A fission yeast platform for heterologous expression of mammalian adenylyl cyclases and high throughput screening.
AID504812Inverse Agonists of the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Receptor: HTS campaign2010Endocrinology, Jul, Volume: 151, Issue:7
A small molecule inverse agonist for the human thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor.
AID1347050Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr2) antagonism - Pilot subtype selectivity assay2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID1508630Primary qHTS for small molecule stabilizers of the endoplasmic reticulum resident proteome: Secreted ER Calcium Modulated Protein (SERCaMP) assay2021Cell reports, 04-27, Volume: 35, Issue:4
A target-agnostic screen identifies approved drugs to stabilize the endoplasmic reticulum-resident proteome.
AID504810Antagonists of the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Receptor: HTS campaign2010Endocrinology, Jul, Volume: 151, Issue:7
A small molecule inverse agonist for the human thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor.
AID504836Inducers of the Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Response (ERSR) in human glioma: Validation2002The Journal of biological chemistry, Apr-19, Volume: 277, Issue:16
Sustained ER Ca2+ depletion suppresses protein synthesis and induces activation-enhanced cell death in mast cells.
AID1347082qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: LASV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347059CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - Alpha assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID1347057CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - LANCE assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID1347405qHTS to identify inhibitors of the type 1 interferon - major histocompatibility complex class I in skeletal muscle: primary screen against the NCATS LOPAC collection2020ACS chemical biology, 07-17, Volume: 15, Issue:7
High-Throughput Screening to Identify Inhibitors of the Type I Interferon-Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Pathway in Skeletal Muscle.
AID1347086qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Arenaviruses (LCMV): LCMV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID588349qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression: Validation of Cytotoxic Assay
AID1347045Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr1) antagonism - Pilot counterscreen GloSensor control cell line2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID588461High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, Validation compound set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588461High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, Validation compound set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588461High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, Validation compound set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID588460High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, Validation Compound Set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588460High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, Validation Compound Set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588460High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, Validation Compound Set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID588459High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, Validation compound set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588459High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, Validation compound set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588459High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, Validation compound set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID1296008Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening2020SLAS discovery : advancing life sciences R & D, 01, Volume: 25, Issue:1
Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated and Diverse Chemical Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening.
AID1346987P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-8-5-11 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1346986P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-3-1 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1279155Permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml at pH 7.4 after 18 hrs by PAMPA2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Apr-01, Volume: 24, Issue:7
Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel donepezil-coumarin hybrids as multi-target agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1071344Permeability of the compound by BBB-PAMPA2014European journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-12, Volume: 731,2,3,4-Tetrahydrobenzo[h][1,6]naphthyridines as a new family of potent peripheral-to-midgorge-site inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase: synthesis, pharmacological evaluation and mechanistic studies.
AID681677TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Carnitine uptake (Carnitine: 0.010? uM, Corticosterone: 500 uM) in OCTN2-expressing HEK293 cells1999The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 291, Issue:2
Na(+)-dependent carnitine transport by organic cation transporter (OCTN2): its pharmacological and toxicological relevance.
AID346025Binding affinity to beta cyclodextrin2009Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jan-15, Volume: 17, Issue:2
Convenient QSAR model for predicting the complexation of structurally diverse compounds with beta-cyclodextrins.
AID681561TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of MPP+ uptake (MPP+: 0.25 uM) in OCT2-expressing HEK293 cells2002British journal of pharmacology, Jul, Volume: 136, Issue:6
Expression and pharmacological profile of the human organic cation transporters hOCT1, hOCT2 and hOCT3.
AID1165276Permeability at pH 7.4 by PAMPA assay2014Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-23, Volume: 57, Issue:20
Development of (E)-2-((1,4-dimethylpiperazin-2-ylidene)amino)-5-nitro-N-phenylbenzamide, ML336: Novel 2-amidinophenylbenzamides as potent inhibitors of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus.
AID239597Affinity for human EMP expressed in ERG2 deficient strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae using [3H]ifenprodil or (+)-[3H]pentazocine as radioligand2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-28, Volume: 48, Issue:15
Discovery of high-affinity ligands of sigma1 receptor, ERG2, and emopamil binding protein by pharmacophore modeling and virtual screening.
AID1183278Permeability of the compound by PAMPA2014European journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-12, Volume: 84Tetrahydrobenzo[h][1,6]naphthyridine-6-chlorotacrine hybrids as a new family of anti-Alzheimer agents targeting β-amyloid, tau, and cholinesterase pathologies.
AID384955Intrinsic aqueous solubility at pH 10 by shake-flask method2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-22, Volume: 51, Issue:10
Molecular characteristics for solid-state limited solubility.
AID682232TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Dopamine uptake (Dopamine: 0.15 uM, Cocaine: 100 uM) in OCT3-expressing HRPE cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Dec-04, Volume: 273, Issue:49
Identity of the organic cation transporter OCT3 as the extraneuronal monoamine transporter (uptake2) and evidence for the expression of the transporter in the brain.
AID1378334Permeability of the compound by PAMPA2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-29, Volume: 138Design, synthesis and evaluation of coumarin-pargyline hybrids as novel dual inhibitors of monoamine oxidases and amyloid-β aggregation for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID288192Partition coefficient, log P of the compound2007Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jun-01, Volume: 15, Issue:11
QSAR study on permeability of hydrophobic compounds with artificial membranes.
AID310931Partition coefficient, log P of the compound2007Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-22, Volume: 50, Issue:4
In silico and in vitro filters for the fast estimation of skin permeation and distribution of new chemical entities.
AID681591TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake (TEA: 20 uM) in OCT2-expressing HRPE cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Dec-04, Volume: 273, Issue:49
Identity of the organic cation transporter OCT3 as the extraneuronal monoamine transporter (uptake2) and evidence for the expression of the transporter in the brain.
AID1413459Permeability of the compound at 50 ug/ml after 16 hrs by PAMPA
AID1478796Permeability of the compound by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-16, Volume: 133Design, synthesis and biological activity of novel donepezil derivatives bearing N-benzyl pyridinium moiety as potent and dual binding site acetylcholinesterase inhibitors.
AID681560TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of MPP+ uptake (MPP+: 0.25 uM) in OCT1-expressing HEK293 cells2002British journal of pharmacology, Jul, Volume: 136, Issue:6
Expression and pharmacological profile of the human organic cation transporters hOCT1, hOCT2 and hOCT3.
AID310932Permeability across human Skin2007Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-22, Volume: 50, Issue:4
In silico and in vitro filters for the fast estimation of skin permeation and distribution of new chemical entities.
AID1740545Permeability of compound in pH 7.4 PBS/EtOH buffer (7:3) after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2020European journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-15, Volume: 202Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of rasagiline-clorgyline hybrids as novel dual inhibitors of monoamine oxidase-B and amyloid-β aggregation against Alzheimer's disease.
AID1730604Permeability of compound in pH 7.4 PBS/EtOH buffer (7:3) incubated for 18 hrs by UV plate reader based PAMPA-BBB assay2021European journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-05, Volume: 213Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of novel xanthone-alkylbenzylamine hybrids as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1319976Permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml at 7.4 pH after 18 hrs by PAMPA2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-01, Volume: 24, Issue:21
Synthesis and biological evaluation of N-cyanoalkyl-, N-aminoalkyl-, and N-guanidinoalkyl-substituted 4-aminoquinoline derivatives as potent, selective, brain permeable antitrypanosomal agents.
AID1150122Relative binding affinity to sheep progesterone receptor1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 20, Issue:9
Quantitative relationships between steroid structure and binding to putative progesterone receptors.
AID51054Binding affinity for corticosteroid binding globulin is expressed as log(1/k)1996Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-24, Volume: 39, Issue:11
Comparative molecular moment analysis (CoMMA): 3D-QSAR without molecular superposition.
AID1740544Permeability of compound at pH 7.4 measured after 18 hrs PAMPA-BBB assay2020European journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-15, Volume: 202Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of rasagiline-clorgyline hybrids as novel dual inhibitors of monoamine oxidase-B and amyloid-β aggregation against Alzheimer's disease.
AID237685Lipophilicity determined as logarithm of the partition coefficient in the alkane/water system2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-05, Volume: 48, Issue:9
Calculating virtual log P in the alkane/water system (log P(N)(alk)) and its derived parameters deltalog P(N)(oct-alk) and log D(pH)(alk).
AID1421886Effective permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by BBB-PAMPA method2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-05, Volume: 158Multi-target-directed ligands for Alzheimer's disease: Discovery of chromone-based monoamine oxidase/cholinesterase inhibitors.
AID51052In silico binding affinity to corticosteroid binding globulin (CBG)1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec-19, Volume: 40, Issue:26
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationships from molecular similarity matrices and genetic neural networks. 1. Method and validations.
AID1091957Apparent permeability of the compound by PAMPA2011Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Apr-13, Volume: 59, Issue:7
Importance of physicochemical properties for the design of new pesticides.
AID74374Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from hepatoma tissue cells at 4 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID349880Permeability across porcine brain lipid coated polyvinylidene fluoride membrane by PAMPA2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-14, Volume: 52, Issue:9
Tacripyrines, the first tacrine-dihydropyridine hybrids, as multitarget-directed ligands for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID288184Permeability coefficient through artificial membrane in presence of unstirred water layer by PAMPA2007Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jun-01, Volume: 15, Issue:11
QSAR study on permeability of hydrophobic compounds with artificial membranes.
AID1730594Permeability of compound in PBS buffer at pH 7.4 incubated for 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2021European journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-05, Volume: 213Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of novel xanthone-alkylbenzylamine hybrids as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1480943Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 at 5 mg/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-21, Volume: 130Enzymatic and solid-phase synthesis of new donepezil-based L- and d-glutamic acid derivatives and their pharmacological evaluation in models related to Alzheimer's disease and cerebral ischemia.
AID1150121Relative binding affinity to human progesterone receptor1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 20, Issue:9
Quantitative relationships between steroid structure and binding to putative progesterone receptors.
AID681158TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake (TEA: 10 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes2001American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, Sep, Volume: 281, Issue:3
Interaction of cations, anions, and weak base quinine with rat renal cation transporter rOCT2 compared with rOCT1.
AID288185Permeability coefficient through artificial membrane in presence of stirred water layer2007Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jun-01, Volume: 15, Issue:11
QSAR study on permeability of hydrophobic compounds with artificial membranes.
AID51055Binding affinity to human CBG receptor (corticosteroid-binding globulins)2004Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-20, Volume: 47, Issue:11
Comparative molecular active site analysis (CoMASA). 1. An approach to rapid evaluation of 3D QSAR.
AID90104Potency relative to fluocinolone 16,17-acetonide in the human vasoconstictor test1983Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar, Volume: 26, Issue:3
Structure-activity relationships in the antiinflammatory steroids: a pattern-recognition approach.
AID1150124Relative binding affinity to guinea pig progesterone receptor1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 20, Issue:9
Quantitative relationships between steroid structure and binding to putative progesterone receptors.
AID624606Specific activity of expressed human recombinant UGT1A12000Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology, , Volume: 40Human UDP-glucuronosyltransferases: metabolism, expression, and disease.
AID1480849Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-21, Volume: 130Design, synthesis and evaluation of 2-arylethenyl-N-methylquinolinium derivatives as effective multifunctional agents for Alzheimer's disease treatment.
AID1352675Effective permeability at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-25, Volume: 146Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of new coumarin-dithiocarbamate hybrids as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID681157TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake in Xenopus laevis oocytes1994Nature, Dec-08, Volume: 372, Issue:6506
Drug excretion mediated by a new prototype of polyspecific transporter.
AID74246Relative binding affinity against glucocorticoid receptor in rat liver cytosol extract1994Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-15, Volume: 37, Issue:8
Synthesis and evaluation of 7 alpha-iodo-5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone as a potential radioligand for androgen receptor.
AID39320Relative binding affinity for androgen receptor of prostate of rat at 2 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID681227TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of E1S uptake (E1S: 0.05 uM, Corticosterone: 5 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes2001Molecular pharmacology, May, Volume: 59, Issue:5
Identification and characterization of human organic anion transporter 3 expressing predominantly in the kidney.
AID135327BBB penetration classification2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-01, Volume: 43, Issue:11
Predicting blood-brain barrier permeation from three-dimensional molecular structure.
AID1294649Permeability of the compound at 100 uM at pH 7.4 after 4 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2016European journal of medicinal chemistry, May-23, Volume: 114Novel benzylidenephenylpyrrolizinones with pleiotropic activities potentially useful in Alzheimer's disease treatment.
AID162613Relative binding affinity for progestin receptor of uterus of rabbit at 24 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID212919Binding affinity towards testosterone binding globulin is expressed as log(1/k).1996Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-24, Volume: 39, Issue:11
Comparative molecular moment analysis (CoMMA): 3D-QSAR without molecular superposition.
AID1708807Permeability of compound in PBS/EtOH buffer (70:30) at 25 ug/ml incubated for 16 hrs by UV plate reader based PAMPA-BBB2021Journal of medicinal chemistry, 02-25, Volume: 64, Issue:4
New 2-Pyrazoline and Hydrazone Derivatives as Potent and Selective Monoamine Oxidase A Inhibitors.
AID1694879Permeability of compound after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2020RSC medicinal chemistry, Feb-01, Volume: 11, Issue:2
Chromone and donepezil hybrids as new multipotent cholinesterase and monoamine oxidase inhibitors for the potential treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID521220Inhibition of neurosphere proliferation of mouse neural precursor cells by MTT assay2007Nature chemical biology, May, Volume: 3, Issue:5
Chemical genetics reveals a complex functional ground state of neural stem cells.
AID679293TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition pramipexole uptake in rOCT2-injected oocytes2005Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Apr, Volume: 33, Issue:4
Transport of the dopamine D2 agonist pramipexole by rat organic cation transporters OCT1 and OCT2 in kidney.
AID127349Binding affinity against human monoclonal antibody (mAb)-11E62002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-18, Volume: 45, Issue:15
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship analysis of ligand binding to human sequence antidigoxin monoclonal antibodies using comparative molecular field analysis.
AID680643TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of BSP uptake (BSP: 1 uM, Corticosterone: 100 uM) in Oatp1-expressing HeLa cells1996The American journal of physiology, Feb, Volume: 270, Issue:2 Pt 2
Transient expression of oatp organic anion transporter in mammalian cells: identification of candidate substrates.
AID1190185Permeability of the compound after 16 hrs by PAMPA2015Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 25, Issue:3
Multifunctional coumarin derivatives: monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) inhibition, anti-β-amyloid (Aβ) aggregation and metal chelation properties against Alzheimer's disease.
AID1742381Permeability of the compound in pH 7.4 Prisma HT buffer at 100 uM incubated for 4 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay method
AID455986Permeability across human Caco-2 cells2009Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Oct-01, Volume: 17, Issue:19
Computational modeling of novel inhibitors targeting the Akt pleckstrin homology domain.
AID624608Specific activity of expressed human recombinant UGT1A42000Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology, , Volume: 40Human UDP-glucuronosyltransferases: metabolism, expression, and disease.
AID1378879Effective permeability of the compound at 100 mg/ml after 16 hrs by UV based PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel coumarin-N-benzyl pyridinium hybrids as multi-target agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID468985Inhibition of human 17beta-HSD7 expressed in HEK293 cells assessed as inhibition of reduction of [14C]estrone into [14C]estradiol at 3 uM after 7 hrs2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec-10, Volume: 52, Issue:23
Potent and selective steroidal inhibitors of 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 7, an enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of the key hormones estrone and dihydrotestosterone.
AID679641TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Adrenaline uptake in OCT2-expressing HEK293 cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Nov-20, Volume: 273, Issue:47
Transport of monoamine transmitters by the organic cation transporter type 2, OCT2.
AID1324013Permeability of the compound at 100 ug/ml after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB method2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 24, Issue:22
Neuroprotective effects of benzyloxy substituted small molecule monoamine oxidase B inhibitors in Parkinson's disease.
AID212920Binding affinity against transport protein testosterone binding globulin.1994Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-22, Volume: 37, Issue:15
Compass: predicting biological activities from molecular surface properties. Performance comparisons on a steroid benchmark.
AID680447TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Ouabain uptake (Ouabain: 100 uM, Corticosterone: 100 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes1996The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Mar, Volume: 276, Issue:3
Polyspecific drug and steroid clearance by an organic anion transporter of mammalian liver.
AID1173449Effective permeability of the compound by PAMPA assay2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Dec-01, Volume: 24, Issue:23
Synthesis and antiprotozoal activity of oligomethylene- and p-phenylene-bis(methylene)-linked bis(+)-huprines.
AID20050Human absorption A (%)1998Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-26, Volume: 41, Issue:7
Physicochemical high throughput screening: parallel artificial membrane permeation assay in the description of passive absorption processes.
AID311367Permeability coefficient in human skin2007Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Nov-15, Volume: 15, Issue:22
Transdermal penetration behaviour of drugs: CART-clustering, QSPR and selection of model compounds.
AID1328321Neuroprotective activity in rat PC12 cells assessed as reduction in corticosterone-induced lesions by measuring cell viability at 25 uM pretreated for 24 hrs followed by corticosterone-challenge after 48 hrs by MTT assay2016Journal of natural products, 08-26, Volume: 79, Issue:8
Polyprenylated Tetraoxygenated Xanthones from the Roots of Hypericum monogynum and Their Neuroprotective Activities.
AID220020Binding affinity towards human corticosteroid binding globulin.1993Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-01, Volume: 36, Issue:20
QSAR's from similarity matrices. Technique validation and application in the comparison of different similarity evaluation methods.
AID1534778Effective permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml incubated for 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-01, Volume: 163Synthesis and evaluation of isoprenylation-resveratrol dimer derivatives against Alzheimer's disease.
AID711194Permeability at 10 uM at pH 5.0 by PAMPA method2012Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec-13, Volume: 55, Issue:23
Cyanobacterial peptides as a prototype for the design of potent β-secretase inhibitors and the development of selective chemical probes for other aspartic proteases.
AID1485936Effective permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 07-15, Volume: 25, Issue:14
Synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of novel chromone derivatives as balanced multifunctional agents against Alzheimer's disease.
AID1511119Permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml by PAMPA-BBB assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-15, Volume: 180A novel class of multitarget anti-Alzheimer benzohomoadamantane‒chlorotacrine hybrids modulating cholinesterases and glutamate NMDA receptors.
AID51059Binding affinity to corticosteroid binding globulin1998Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-02, Volume: 41, Issue:14
Three-dimensional quantitative similarity-activity relationships (3D QSiAR) from SEAL similarity matrices.
AID711193Permeability at 10 uM at pH 7.4 by PAMPA method2012Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec-13, Volume: 55, Issue:23
Cyanobacterial peptides as a prototype for the design of potent β-secretase inhibitors and the development of selective chemical probes for other aspartic proteases.
AID679317TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition pramipexole uptake in rOCT1-injected oocytes2005Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Apr, Volume: 33, Issue:4
Transport of the dopamine D2 agonist pramipexole by rat organic cation transporters OCT1 and OCT2 in kidney.
AID1201747Permeability of the compound by PAMPA2015European journal of medicinal chemistry, May-05, Volume: 95Multi-target tacrine-coumarin hybrids: cholinesterase and monoamine oxidase B inhibition properties against Alzheimer's disease.
AID318680Displacement of [3H]5alpha dihydrotestosterone from human sex hormone binding globulin2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-10, Volume: 51, Issue:7
An updated steroid benchmark set and its application in the discovery of novel nanomolar ligands of sex hormone-binding globulin.
AID386623Inhibition of 4-(4-(dimethylamino)styryl)-N-methylpyridinium uptake at human OCT1 expressed in HEK293 cells at 100 uM by confocal microscopy2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-09, Volume: 51, Issue:19
Structural requirements for drug inhibition of the liver specific human organic cation transport protein 1.
AID74378Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from thymus at 4 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID453203Lipophilicity, log D of the compound2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jan-01, Volume: 20, Issue:1
Development of an in silico model for human skin permeation based on a Franz cell skin permeability assay.
AID1909448Permeability of the compound by PAMPA-BBB assay2022European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-05, Volume: 236Design, synthesis, and in vitro and in vivo characterization of new memantine analogs for Alzheimer's disease.
AID1379031Effective permeability of compound at 50 ug/mL after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Novel cinnamamide-dibenzylamine hybrids: Potent neurogenic agents with antioxidant, cholinergic, and neuroprotective properties as innovative drugs for Alzheimer's disease.
AID1478786Permeability of the compound at 200 uL after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-16, Volume: 133Design, synthesis and biological activity of novel donepezil derivatives bearing N-benzyl pyridinium moiety as potent and dual binding site acetylcholinesterase inhibitors.
AID1392732Effective permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA
AID1347981Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jan-01, Volume: 143Discovery of novel propargylamine-modified 4-aminoalkyl imidazole substituted pyrimidinylthiourea derivatives as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID91224Antiinflammatory activity measured by using McKenzie-Stoughton human vasoconstrictor assay1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov, Volume: 29, Issue:11
Computer-aided studies of the structure-activity relationships between the structure of some steroids and their antiinflammatory activity.
AID1636268Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 10-15, Volume: 24, Issue:20
Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of N-methyl-N-[(1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)alkyl]propargylamines as novel monoamine oxidase B inhibitors.
AID1332153Effective permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 by BBB-PAMPA method2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 01-15, Volume: 25, Issue:2
N-Propargylpiperidines with naphthalene-2-carboxamide or naphthalene-2-sulfonamide moieties: Potential multifunctional anti-Alzheimer's agents.
AID680198TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of E1S uptake (E1S: 0.05 uM, Corticosterone: 500 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes2000The Journal of biological chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 275, Issue:6
Molecular cloning and characterization of multispecific organic anion transporter 4 expressed in the placenta.
AID239296Affinity for ERG2 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae using [3H]ifenprodil or (+)-[3H]pentazocine radioligand2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-28, Volume: 48, Issue:15
Discovery of high-affinity ligands of sigma1 receptor, ERG2, and emopamil binding protein by pharmacophore modeling and virtual screening.
AID1729637Effective permeability coefficient of compound incubated for 4 hrs by PAMPA2021European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jan-15, Volume: 210Pleiotropic prodrugs: Design of a dual butyrylcholinesterase inhibitor and 5-HT
AID212737Binding affinity against testosterone-binding globulin (TeBG)1993Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-19, Volume: 36, Issue:4
Structure-activity relationships from molecular similarity matrices.
AID1440431Binding affinity to MR (unknown origin)2017Journal of medicinal chemistry, 04-13, Volume: 60, Issue:7
Modulating Mineralocorticoid Receptor with Non-steroidal Antagonists. New Opportunities for the Development of Potent and Selective Ligands without Off-Target Side Effects.
AID427197Membrane permeability dissolved in PBS/EtOH (70:30) mixture by PAMPA-BBB assay2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-10, Volume: 52, Issue:17
Pyrano[3,2-c]quinoline-6-chlorotacrine hybrids as a novel family of acetylcholinesterase- and beta-amyloid-directed anti-Alzheimer compounds.
AID679637TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Noradrenaline uptake in OCT2-expressing HEK293 cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Nov-20, Volume: 273, Issue:47
Transport of monoamine transmitters by the organic cation transporter type 2, OCT2.
AID682144TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of MPP+ uptake (MPP+: 0.25 uM) in OCT3-expressing HEK293 cells2002British journal of pharmacology, Jul, Volume: 136, Issue:6
Expression and pharmacological profile of the human organic cation transporters hOCT1, hOCT2 and hOCT3.
AID681796TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of PAH uptake (PAH: 10 uM, Corticosterone: 500 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes2003Endocrinology, Oct, Volume: 144, Issue:10
Molecular evidence of organic ion transporters in the rat adrenal cortex with adrenocorticotropin-regulated zonal expression.
AID127352Binding affinity against human monoclonal antibody (mAb)-7F22002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-18, Volume: 45, Issue:15
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship analysis of ligand binding to human sequence antidigoxin monoclonal antibodies using comparative molecular field analysis.
AID1480942Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 at 1 mg/ml after 4 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-21, Volume: 130Enzymatic and solid-phase synthesis of new donepezil-based L- and d-glutamic acid derivatives and their pharmacological evaluation in models related to Alzheimer's disease and cerebral ischemia.
AID19262Aqueous solubility2000Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jun-05, Volume: 10, Issue:11
Prediction of drug solubility from Monte Carlo simulations.
AID1161578Permeability of the compound by PAMPA-BBB assay2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Oct-01, Volume: 22, Issue:19
Shogaol-huprine hybrids: dual antioxidant and anticholinesterase agents with β-amyloid and tau anti-aggregating properties.
AID266764Membrane permeability, CA(t)/CD(0) in 70% silicon-30% IPM membrane2006Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-29, Volume: 49, Issue:13
Parallel artificial membrane permeability assay: a new membrane for the fast prediction of passive human skin permeability.
AID1392733Permeability of the compound at 100 ug/ml after 10 hrs by PAMPA
AID681167TP_TRANSPORTER: Northern blot from LS174T cell2001The Journal of biological chemistry, May-04, Volume: 276, Issue:18
Nuclear receptor response elements mediate induction of intestinal MDR1 by rifampin.
AID126431Relative binding affinity against Mineralocorticoid Receptor in Male Sprague-Dawley rats1987Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 30, Issue:9
Aldosterone antagonists. 2. Synthesis and biological activities of 11,12-dehydropregnane derivatives.
AID427196Membrane permeability by PAMPA-BBB assay2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-10, Volume: 52, Issue:17
Pyrano[3,2-c]quinoline-6-chlorotacrine hybrids as a novel family of acetylcholinesterase- and beta-amyloid-directed anti-Alzheimer compounds.
AID427198Membrane permeability dissolved in PBS/EtOH (80:20) mixture by PAMPA-BBB assay2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-10, Volume: 52, Issue:17
Pyrano[3,2-c]quinoline-6-chlorotacrine hybrids as a novel family of acetylcholinesterase- and beta-amyloid-directed anti-Alzheimer compounds.
AID1091958Hydrophobicity, log P of the compound in octanol-water by shaking-flask method2011Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Apr-13, Volume: 59, Issue:7
Importance of physicochemical properties for the design of new pesticides.
AID51062In silico steroid binding affinity to transport protein corticosteroid binding globulin1994Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-22, Volume: 37, Issue:15
Compass: predicting biological activities from molecular surface properties. Performance comparisons on a steroid benchmark.
AID127351Binding affinity against human monoclonal antibody (mAb)-5C22002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-18, Volume: 45, Issue:15
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship analysis of ligand binding to human sequence antidigoxin monoclonal antibodies using comparative molecular field analysis.
AID1132664Glucocorticoid activity in sc dosed bilaterally adrenalectomized rat assessed as glycogen deposition in liver administered for 5 days relative to cortisol1978Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 21, Issue:5
A Fujita--Ban structure--activity analysis of 44 steroids.
AID678784TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake (TEA: 20 uM) in OCT3-expressing HRPE cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Dec-04, Volume: 273, Issue:49
Identity of the organic cation transporter OCT3 as the extraneuronal monoamine transporter (uptake2) and evidence for the expression of the transporter in the brain.
AID23943Diffusion constant for permeability of stratum corneum1987Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 30, Issue:7
The role of solvent-accessible surface area in determining partition coefficients.
AID1167634Blood brain permeability of the compound at donor and acceptor by PAMPA assay2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Nov-01, Volume: 22, Issue:21
Design, synthesis and evaluation of novel tacrine-(β-carboline) hybrids as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID212931Binding affinity towards human testosterone binding globulin.1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-26, Volume: 40, Issue:20
Validation of EGSITE2, a mixed integer program for deducing objective site models for experimental binding data.
AID681159TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake (TEA: 10 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes2001American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, Sep, Volume: 281, Issue:3
Interaction of cations, anions, and weak base quinine with rat renal cation transporter rOCT2 compared with rOCT1.
AID127350Binding affinity against human monoclonal antibody (mAb)-1B32002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-18, Volume: 45, Issue:15
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship analysis of ligand binding to human sequence antidigoxin monoclonal antibodies using comparative molecular field analysis.
AID1912478Inhibition of the Organic Cation Transporter 3 (OCT3, SLC22A3) as assessed by a phenotypic impedance-based assay detecting changes in cell morphology by MPP+ uptake in HEK-293 JumpIN-SLC22A3 cells (PubChem AID: 1745861)2022International journal of molecular sciences, Jan-21, Volume: 23, Issue:3
MPP
AID681146TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake in OCT1-expressing HeLa cells1998The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Jul, Volume: 286, Issue:1
Functional characterization of an organic cation transporter (hOCT1) in a transiently transfected human cell line (HeLa).
AID1534777Effective permeability of the compound at 100 mg/ml incubated for 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-01, Volume: 163Synthesis and evaluation of isoprenylation-resveratrol dimer derivatives against Alzheimer's disease.
AID1378880Effective permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel coumarin-N-benzyl pyridinium hybrids as multi-target agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID74377Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from thymus at 24 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID1264455Permeability of the compound by high throughput PAMPA method2015European journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-13, Volume: 105Multicomponent reaction-based synthesis and biological evaluation of tricyclic heterofused quinolines with multi-trypanosomatid activity.
AID395325Lipophilicity, log P by microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-26, Volume: 52, Issue:6
Relationship between brain tissue partitioning and microemulsion retention factors of CNS drugs.
AID1201746Permeability of the compound after 16 hrs by PAMPA2015European journal of medicinal chemistry, May-05, Volume: 95Multi-target tacrine-coumarin hybrids: cholinesterase and monoamine oxidase B inhibition properties against Alzheimer's disease.
AID51048In silico binding affinity to human corticosteriod binding globulin1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-26, Volume: 40, Issue:20
Validation of EGSITE2, a mixed integer program for deducing objective site models for experimental binding data.
AID1324014Permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml after 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB method2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 24, Issue:22
Neuroprotective effects of benzyloxy substituted small molecule monoamine oxidase B inhibitors in Parkinson's disease.
AID228061Binding affinity towards human testosterone binding globulin.1993Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-01, Volume: 36, Issue:20
QSAR's from similarity matrices. Technique validation and application in the comparison of different similarity evaluation methods.
AID266771Permeability in human skin2006Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-29, Volume: 49, Issue:13
Parallel artificial membrane permeability assay: a new membrane for the fast prediction of passive human skin permeability.
AID679639TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Dopamine uptake in OCT2-expressing HEK293 cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Nov-20, Volume: 273, Issue:47
Transport of monoamine transmitters by the organic cation transporter type 2, OCT2.
AID255211Inhibitory concentration against recombinant rat androgen receptor expressed in Escherichia coli using [3H]methyltrienolone (R 1881)2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-08, Volume: 48, Issue:18
Impact of induced fit on ligand binding to the androgen receptor: a multidimensional QSAR study to predict endocrine-disrupting effects of environmental chemicals.
AID624616Specific activity of expressed human recombinant UGT2B152000Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology, , Volume: 40Human UDP-glucuronosyltransferases: metabolism, expression, and disease.
AID51056Binding affinity to the corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) receptor.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-24, Volume: 43, Issue:17
GRid-INdependent descriptors (GRIND): a novel class of alignment-independent three-dimensional molecular descriptors.
AID592681Apparent permeability across human Caco2 cell membrane after 2 hrs by LC-MS/MS analysis2011Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Apr-15, Volume: 19, Issue:8
QSAR-based permeability model for drug-like compounds.
AID266763Membrane retention in 70% silicon-30% IPM membrane2006Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-29, Volume: 49, Issue:13
Parallel artificial membrane permeability assay: a new membrane for the fast prediction of passive human skin permeability.
AID1347980Permeability of the compound in PBS/EtOH at 100 ug/ml after 12 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jan-01, Volume: 143Discovery of novel propargylamine-modified 4-aminoalkyl imidazole substituted pyrimidinylthiourea derivatives as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1485937Permeability of the compound in PBS/EtOH after 16 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 07-15, Volume: 25, Issue:14
Synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of novel chromone derivatives as balanced multifunctional agents against Alzheimer's disease.
AID1365649Permeability of the compound at 100 mg/ml after 16 hrs by BBB-PAMPA method2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-01, Volume: 25, Issue:21
Design, synthesis, and evaluation of salicyladimine derivatives as multitarget-directed ligands against Alzheimer's disease.
AID74373Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from hepatoma tissue cells at 24 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID1193161Permeability of the compound by PAMPA-BBB assay2015Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Apr-01, Volume: 23, Issue:7
Isoindoline-1,3-dione derivatives targeting cholinesterases: design, synthesis and biological evaluation of potential anti-Alzheimer's agents.
AID266765Effective permeability coefficient in 70% silicon-30% IPM membrane2006Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-29, Volume: 49, Issue:13
Parallel artificial membrane permeability assay: a new membrane for the fast prediction of passive human skin permeability.
AID1511118Permeability of the compound measured after compound dilution in PBS/EtOH buffer (70:30) by PAMPA-BBB assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-15, Volume: 180A novel class of multitarget anti-Alzheimer benzohomoadamantane‒chlorotacrine hybrids modulating cholinesterases and glutamate NMDA receptors.
AID74375Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from liver at 24 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID213396Glucocorticoid induced Tyrosine Aminotransferase activity relative to Dexamethasone1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID682053TP_TRANSPORTER: increase in brain concentration in mdr1a/1b(-/-) mouse2002Journal of neuroendocrinology, Sep, Volume: 14, Issue:9
Penetration of endogenous steroid hormones corticosterone, cortisol, aldosterone and progesterone into the brain is enhanced in mice deficient for both mdr1a and mdr1b P-glycoproteins.
AID1195137Permeability of the compound in DMSO/Prisma HT buffer at 1:200 ratio after 2 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2015Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, May-15, Volume: 23, Issue:10
Synthesis of new N-benzylpiperidine derivatives as cholinesterase inhibitors with β-amyloid anti-aggregation properties and beneficial effects on memory in vivo.
AID524796Antiplasmodial activity against Plasmodium falciparum W2 after 72 hrs by SYBR green assay2009Nature chemical biology, Oct, Volume: 5, Issue:10
Genetic mapping of targets mediating differential chemical phenotypes in Plasmodium falciparum.
AID1330750Effective permeability of the compound after 18 hrs by PAMPA2016European journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-10, Volume: 123Rational modification of donepezil as multifunctional acetylcholinesterase inhibitors for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID679636TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Serotonin uptake in OCT2-expressing HEK293 cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Nov-20, Volume: 273, Issue:47
Transport of monoamine transmitters by the organic cation transporter type 2, OCT2.
AID12234881-Octanol-water distribution coefficient, log D of the compound at pH 7.42012Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Feb, Volume: 40, Issue:2
Predicting phenolic acid absorption in Caco-2 cells: a theoretical permeability model and mechanistic study.
AID524790Antiplasmodial activity against Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 after 72 hrs by SYBR green assay2009Nature chemical biology, Oct, Volume: 5, Issue:10
Genetic mapping of targets mediating differential chemical phenotypes in Plasmodium falciparum.
AID1421885Effective permeability of the compound at 1 mg/ml after 4 hrs by BBB-PAMPA method2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-05, Volume: 158Multi-target-directed ligands for Alzheimer's disease: Discovery of chromone-based monoamine oxidase/cholinesterase inhibitors.
AID639368Permeability of the compound by PAMPA assay2011European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 46, Issue:6
N-acylaminophenothiazines: neuroprotective agents displaying multifunctional activities for a potential treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID310933Permeability across PAMPA membrane after 7 hrs2007Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-22, Volume: 50, Issue:4
In silico and in vitro filters for the fast estimation of skin permeation and distribution of new chemical entities.
AID1352674Effective permeability at 25 ug/ml after 16 hrs by PAMPA2018European journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-25, Volume: 146Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of new coumarin-dithiocarbamate hybrids as multifunctional agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID51058Binding affinity towards corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG)2003Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-10, Volume: 46, Issue:8
Mapping property distributions of molecular surfaces: algorithm and evaluation of a novel 3D quantitative structure-activity relationship technique.
AID1330773Effective permeability of the compound by PAMPA2016European journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-10, Volume: 123Rational modification of donepezil as multifunctional acetylcholinesterase inhibitors for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1150123Relative binding affinity to rabbit progesterone receptor1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 20, Issue:9
Quantitative relationships between steroid structure and binding to putative progesterone receptors.
AID681376TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of MPP+ uptake in OCT1-expressing HEK293 cells
AID1264447Permeability of the compound by PAMPA method2015European journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-13, Volume: 105Multicomponent reaction-based synthesis and biological evaluation of tricyclic heterofused quinolines with multi-trypanosomatid activity.
AID1311930Permeability of the compound at 50 ug/ml in 70:30 PBS:EtOH by PAMPA-BBB assay2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 09-15, Volume: 24, Issue:18
Synthesis and evaluation of multi-target-directed ligands for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease based on the fusion of donepezil and melatonin.
AID681359TP_TRANSPORTER: ATP hydrolysis in MDR1-expressing Sf9 cells1994Biochemical pharmacology, Jul-19, Volume: 48, Issue:2
Antiestrogens and steroid hormones: substrates of the human P-glycoprotein.
AID1866897Permeability for across blood brain barrier by PAMPA2022European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-15, Volume: 234Development of 5-hydroxyl-1-azabenzanthrone derivatives as dual binding site and selective acetylcholinesterase inhibitors.
AID524791Antiplasmodial activity against Plasmodium falciparum 7G8 after 72 hrs by SYBR green assay2009Nature chemical biology, Oct, Volume: 5, Issue:10
Genetic mapping of targets mediating differential chemical phenotypes in Plasmodium falciparum.
AID679211TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of TEA uptake (TEA: 20 uM, Corticosterone: 100 uM) in OCT1-expressing HRPE cells1998The Journal of biological chemistry, Dec-04, Volume: 273, Issue:49
Identity of the organic cation transporter OCT3 as the extraneuronal monoamine transporter (uptake2) and evidence for the expression of the transporter in the brain.
AID126435Relative binding affinity for mineralocorticoid receptor of rat kidney at 24 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID681855TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Digoxin uptake (Digoxin: 0.05 uM, Corticosterone: 100 uM) in Oatp2-expressing LLC-PK1 cells2002Pharmaceutical research, Feb, Volume: 19, Issue:2
Comparative inhibitory effects of different compounds on rat oatpl (slc21a1)- and Oatp2 (Slc21a5)-mediated transport.
AID1335249Effective permeability of the compound incubated for 2 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2016European journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-29, Volume: 124Novel multi-target-directed ligands for Alzheimer's disease: Combining cholinesterase inhibitors and 5-HT
AID395328Lipophilicity, log P of the compound2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-26, Volume: 52, Issue:6
Relationship between brain tissue partitioning and microemulsion retention factors of CNS drugs.
AID453204Permeability in human skin after 48 hrs by Franz cell permeability assay2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jan-01, Volume: 20, Issue:1
Development of an in silico model for human skin permeation based on a Franz cell skin permeability assay.
AID1279139Permeability of the compound at 25 ug/ml at pH 7.4 after 16 hrs by PAMPA2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Apr-01, Volume: 24, Issue:7
Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel donepezil-coumarin hybrids as multi-target agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1413458Permeability of the compound by PAMPA
AID1495958Effective permeability of the compound in PBS/ethanol buffer2018Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 07-23, Volume: 26, Issue:12
Design, synthesis and evaluation of vilazodone-tacrine hybrids as multitarget-directed ligands against depression with cognitive impairment.
AID227718Binding energy by using the equation deltaG obsd = -RT ln KD1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec, Volume: 27, Issue:12
Functional group contributions to drug-receptor interactions.
AID51049Binding affinity against corticosteroid-binding globulin1993Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-19, Volume: 36, Issue:4
Structure-activity relationships from molecular similarity matrices.
AID1319973Permeability of the compound by PAMPA assay2016Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-01, Volume: 24, Issue:21
Synthesis and biological evaluation of N-cyanoalkyl-, N-aminoalkyl-, and N-guanidinoalkyl-substituted 4-aminoquinoline derivatives as potent, selective, brain permeable antitrypanosomal agents.
AID19419Partition coefficient (logD7.4)1998Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-26, Volume: 41, Issue:7
Physicochemical high throughput screening: parallel artificial membrane permeation assay in the description of passive absorption processes.
AID74376Relative binding affinity to glucocorticoid receptor on cytosol from liver at 4 hr1988Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 31, Issue:6
Binding of steroids to the progestin and glucocorticoid receptors analyzed by correspondence analysis.
AID126128In vivo relative Mineralocorticoid activity in Male Sprague-Dawley rats1987Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 30, Issue:9
Aldosterone antagonists. 2. Synthesis and biological activities of 11,12-dehydropregnane derivatives.
AID1753998Permeability of the compound in PBS/EtOH buffer (7:3) incubated for 16 hrs by UV plate reader based PAMPA-BBB assay2021European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-05, Volume: 219Synthesis and evaluation of multi-target-directed ligands with BACE-1 inhibitory and Nrf2 agonist activities as potential agents against Alzheimer's disease.
AID468984Inhibition of human 17beta-HSD7 expressed in HEK293 cells assessed as inhibition of reduction of [14C]estrone into [14C]estradiol at 0.3 uM after 7 hrs2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec-10, Volume: 52, Issue:23
Potent and selective steroidal inhibitors of 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 7, an enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of the key hormones estrone and dihydrotestosterone.
AID1378333Permeability of the compound in PBS/EtOH at 100 mg/ml after 16 hrs by PAMPA2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-29, Volume: 138Design, synthesis and evaluation of coumarin-pargyline hybrids as novel dual inhibitors of monoamine oxidases and amyloid-β aggregation for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1091956Apparent hydrophobicity, log D of the compound in Octanol-buffer2011Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Apr-13, Volume: 59, Issue:7
Importance of physicochemical properties for the design of new pesticides.
AID1752613Permeability of the compound in PBS buffer at pH 7.4 at 500 uM incubated for 18 hrs by PAMPA-BBB assay2021Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 09-15, Volume: 46Further SAR studies on natural template based neuroprotective molecules for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID239347Affinity for sigma receptor type 1 of guinea pig using [3H]ifenprodil or (+)-[3H]pentazocine radioligand2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-28, Volume: 48, Issue:15
Discovery of high-affinity ligands of sigma1 receptor, ERG2, and emopamil binding protein by pharmacophore modeling and virtual screening.
AID469403Permeability across PAMPA membrane 2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-26, Volume: 52, Issue:22
Neuroprotective and cholinergic properties of multifunctional glutamic acid derivatives for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
AID1223490Apparent permeability across human differentiated Caco2 cells2012Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Feb, Volume: 40, Issue:2
Predicting phenolic acid absorption in Caco-2 cells: a theoretical permeability model and mechanistic study.
AID681147TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of E217betaG uptake in Oatp1-expressing HeLa cells1996The American journal of physiology, Feb, Volume: 270, Issue:2 Pt 2
Estradiol 17 beta-D-glucuronide is a high-affinity substrate for oatp organic anion transporter.
AID679910TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Verapamil stimulated ATP hydrolysis (Verapamil: 2 uM, Corticosterone: 800 uM) in membrane vesicles from DC-3F/ADX cells1996The Biochemical journal, Jul-15, Volume: 317 ( Pt 2)Effects of steroids and verapamil on P-glycoprotein ATPase activity: progesterone, desoxycorticosterone, corticosterone and verapamil are mutually non-exclusive modulators.
AID1495957Effective permeability of the compound in PBS/ethanol buffer after 12 hrs by PAMPA2018Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 07-23, Volume: 26, Issue:12
Design, synthesis and evaluation of vilazodone-tacrine hybrids as multitarget-directed ligands against depression with cognitive impairment.
AID188016Anti-inflammatory effect in rat granuloma assay, activity relative to hydrocortisone and hydrocortisone 21-acetate1983Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar, Volume: 26, Issue:3
Structure-activity relationships in the antiinflammatory steroids: a pattern-recognition approach.
AID1365650Permeability of the compound at pH 7.4 by BBB-PAMPA2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 11-01, Volume: 25, Issue:21
Design, synthesis, and evaluation of salicyladimine derivatives as multitarget-directed ligands against Alzheimer's disease.
AID50906Inhibition of mouse constitutive androstane receptor (mCAR) activity at 10 uM was determined as percent remaining activity2003Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-23, Volume: 46, Issue:22
Molecular determinants of steroid inhibition for the mouse constitutive androstane receptor.
AID1091955Dissociation constant, pKa of the compound at pH 7.32011Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Apr-13, Volume: 59, Issue:7
Importance of physicochemical properties for the design of new pesticides.
AID1745845Primary qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression
AID1347089qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for TC32 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347424RapidFire Mass Spectrometry qHTS Assay for Modulators of WT P53-Induced Phosphatase 1 (WIP1)2019The Journal of biological chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 294, Issue:46
Physiologically relevant orthogonal assays for the discovery of small-molecule modulators of WIP1 phosphatase in high-throughput screens.
AID1347092qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for A673 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347096qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for U-2 OS cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347097qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Saos-2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347108qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh41 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347100qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for LAN-5 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347154Primary screen GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347105qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for MG 63 (6-TG R) cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347099qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB1643 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347093qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-MC cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347107qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh30 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347094qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-37 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347098qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-SH cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347101qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-12 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347407qHTS to identify inhibitors of the type 1 interferon - major histocompatibility complex class I in skeletal muscle: primary screen against the NCATS Pharmaceutical Collection2020ACS chemical biology, 07-17, Volume: 15, Issue:7
High-Throughput Screening to Identify Inhibitors of the Type I Interferon-Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Pathway in Skeletal Muscle.
AID1347091qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SJ-GBM2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347103qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for OHS-50 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347095qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB-EBc1 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347090qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for DAOY cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347102qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh18 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID651635Viability Counterscreen for Primary qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression
AID1347104qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for RD cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347425Rhodamine-PBP qHTS Assay for Modulators of WT P53-Induced Phosphatase 1 (WIP1)2019The Journal of biological chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 294, Issue:46
Physiologically relevant orthogonal assays for the discovery of small-molecule modulators of WIP1 phosphatase in high-throughput screens.
AID1347106qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for control Hh wild type fibroblast cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID588519A screen for compounds that inhibit viral RNA polymerase binding and polymerization activities2011Antiviral research, Sep, Volume: 91, Issue:3
High-throughput screening identification of poliovirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase inhibitors.
AID540299A screen for compounds that inhibit the MenB enzyme of Mycobacterium tuberculosis2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Nov-01, Volume: 20, Issue:21
Synthesis and SAR studies of 1,4-benzoxazine MenB inhibitors: novel antibacterial agents against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
AID588499High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, MLPCN compound set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588499High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, MLPCN compound set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588499High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain A protease, MLPCN compound set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID588501High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, MLPCN compound set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588501High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, MLPCN compound set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588501High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Lethal Factor Protease, MLPCN compound set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID588497High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, MLPCN compound set2010Current protocols in cytometry, Oct, Volume: Chapter 13Microsphere-based flow cytometry protease assays for use in protease activity detection and high-throughput screening.
AID588497High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, MLPCN compound set2006Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology, May, Volume: 69, Issue:5
Microsphere-based protease assays and screening application for lethal factor and factor Xa.
AID588497High-throughput multiplex microsphere screening for inhibitors of toxin protease, specifically Botulinum neurotoxin light chain F protease, MLPCN compound set2010Assay and drug development technologies, Feb, Volume: 8, Issue:1
High-throughput multiplex flow cytometry screening for botulinum neurotoxin type a light chain protease inhibitors.
AID504749qHTS profiling for inhibitors of Plasmodium falciparum proliferation2011Science (New York, N.Y.), Aug-05, Volume: 333, Issue:6043
Chemical genomic profiling for antimalarial therapies, response signatures, and molecular targets.
AID1802450Oatp1d1 Transport Assay from Article 10.1074/jbc.M113.518506: \\Molecular characterization of zebrafish Oatp1d1 (Slco1d1), a novel organic anion-transporting polypeptide.\\2013The Journal of biological chemistry, Nov-22, Volume: 288, Issue:47
Molecular characterization of zebrafish Oatp1d1 (Slco1d1), a novel organic anion-transporting polypeptide.
AID1346923Mouse Glucocorticoid receptor (3C. 3-Ketosteroid receptors)2000The Journal of biological chemistry, Jun-23, Volume: 275, Issue:25
Functional probing of the human glucocorticoid receptor steroid-interacting surface by site-directed mutagenesis. Gln-642 plays an important role in steroid recognition and binding.
AID1346923Mouse Glucocorticoid receptor (3C. 3-Ketosteroid receptors)1999FEBS letters, Dec-24, Volume: 464, Issue:1-2
Specific hydroxylations determine selective corticosteroid recognition by human glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors.
AID1346923Mouse Glucocorticoid receptor (3C. 3-Ketosteroid receptors)1993European journal of pharmacology, Oct-15, Volume: 247, Issue:2
Pharmacological and functional characterization of human mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptor ligands.
AID1159607Screen for inhibitors of RMI FANCM (MM2) intereaction2016Journal of biomolecular screening, Jul, Volume: 21, Issue:6
A High-Throughput Screening Strategy to Identify Protein-Protein Interaction Inhibitors That Block the Fanconi Anemia DNA Repair Pathway.
AID1794808Fluorescence-based screening to identify small molecule inhibitors of Plasmodium falciparum apicoplast DNA polymerase (Pf-apPOL).2014Journal of biomolecular screening, Jul, Volume: 19, Issue:6
A High-Throughput Assay to Identify Inhibitors of the Apicoplast DNA Polymerase from Plasmodium falciparum.
AID1794808Fluorescence-based screening to identify small molecule inhibitors of Plasmodium falciparum apicoplast DNA polymerase (Pf-apPOL).
AID1224864HCS microscopy assay (F508del-CFTR)2016PloS one, , Volume: 11, Issue:10
Increasing the Endoplasmic Reticulum Pool of the F508del Allele of the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Leads to Greater Folding Correction by Small Molecule Therapeutics.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (25,930)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-19909401 (36.26)18.7374
1990's4221 (16.28)18.2507
2000's5119 (19.74)29.6817
2010's5765 (22.23)24.3611
2020's1424 (5.49)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 57.08

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be very strong demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index57.08 (24.57)
Research Supply Index10.21 (2.92)
Research Growth Index4.52 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index103.51 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (57.08)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials124 (0.46%)5.53%
Reviews505 (1.86%)6.00%
Case Studies111 (0.41%)4.05%
Observational2 (0.01%)0.25%
Other26,379 (97.26%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Clinical Trials (21)

Trial Overview

TrialPhaseEnrollmentStudy TypeStart DateStatus
Quantitative Imaging of Brain Glymphatic Function in Humans [NCT04768101]Early Phase 1140 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2020-04-15Recruiting
Amyloid Brain Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Imaging With 11C-PIB and Tau PET Imaging With 18F-MK-6240 in the Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study. [NCT03757910]Early Phase 120 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2019-10-01Enrolling by invitation
Neuroimaging in Healthy Aging and Senile Dementia (HASD_IND) [NCT04579120]650 participants (Anticipated)Observational2021-09-01Recruiting
Imaging Beta-amyloid in Middle Age Alcoholics as a Mechanism That Increases Their Risk for Alzheimer's Disease [NCT03746366]Early Phase 139 participants (Actual)Interventional2018-12-01Completed
Advanced MR and PET Imaging in Inflammatory Demyelinating Diseases of the Central Nervous System [NCT05805839]Phase 2200 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2023-07-10Enrolling by invitation
Sex-Specific Effects of Endocrine Disruption on Aging and Alzheimer's Disease [NCT03821857]Phase 4200 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2019-06-27Active, not recruiting
Brain Amyloid Imaging With Pittsburgh Compound B in Normal Aging, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Dementia [NCT00950430]Phase 48,000 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2008-04-30Enrolling by invitation
Beneficial Exposome: Investigating Its Effect on Human Health [NCT06093464]40 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2023-12-31Not yet recruiting
Prevalence of Brain Health Versus Neurodegeneration in Former Professional Football Players [NCT04708613]300 participants (Anticipated)Observational2019-11-18Recruiting
Comparison of Hyaluronic Acid and Corticosteroid Intra-articular Injections for the Treatment of Osteoarthritis of the Hip Controlled With Intra-articular Injections With Bupivacaine [NCT01079455]Phase 3489 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2010-05-31Not yet recruiting
Longitudinal Imaging Biomarkers of Disease Progression in DLB [NCT03582488]Phase 4135 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2018-06-25Enrolling by invitation
Amyloid Imaging With 11C-PiB in Healthy Aging and Mild Cognitive Impairment [NCT04505735]25 participants (Actual)Observational2016-11-22Terminated(stopped due to Issues with local production of 11-cPiB radiotracer)
Prednisolone and Vitamin B1, B6, and B12 in Patients With Post-COVID-19-Syndrome (PC19S) - a Randomized Controlled Trial in Primary Care [NCT05638633]Phase 3340 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2022-11-11Recruiting
Imaging Biomarkers in Preclinical and Symptomatic AD. (ACS PiB IND) [NCT04134923]375 participants (Anticipated)Observational2021-06-08Recruiting
The Brain Eye Amyloid Memory (BEAM) Study: Validation of Ocular Measures as Potential Biomarkers for Early Detection of Brain Amyloid and Neurodegeneration [NCT02524405]345 participants (Anticipated)Observational2016-02-29Recruiting
Amyloid-related Imaging Abnormalities (Microbleeds) in Atypical AD [NCT01723553]Phase 127 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-11-30Completed
A Multicenter, Multicountry Study to Calibrate Florbetapir (18F) PET Imaging Data to the Centiloid Scale Based on 11C-PiB [NCT02120664]Phase 135 participants (Actual)Interventional2014-04-30Completed
The Impact of Depression and Preclinical Alzheimer Disease on Driving Among Older Adults (Depression and Driving) [NCT05446805]150 participants (Anticipated)Observational2021-06-17Recruiting
The Efficacy and Safety of a Compound Glutamine Capsule in the Prevention of Chemotherapy-induced Mucositis in Patients With Gastrointestinal Tumors: a Prospective, Randomized, Controlled, Double-blind, Phase III Clinical Study [NCT04988971]Phase 390 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2021-06-30Recruiting
Biodistribution of 11C-PIB PET in Alzheimer's Disease, Frontotemporal Dementia, and Cognitively Normal Elderly [NCT00811122]Early Phase 12 participants (Actual)Interventional2009-11-30Terminated(stopped due to A Fluorine-18 labeled version of the radiopharmaceutical (Flutemetamol) became available. This version is far superior to the Carbon-11 PiB. There is no need to make this compound available any longer.)
Bridging Study of C11 PiB and F18 Flutemetamol Brain PET [NCT01607476]Phase 289 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-07-31Completed
[information is prepared from clinicaltrials.gov, extracted Sep-2024]

Trial Outcomes

TrialOutcome
NCT01607476 (2) [back to overview]Global Distribution of C11 PiB in the Brain
NCT01607476 (2) [back to overview]Global Distribution of F18 Flutemetamol in the Brain
NCT02120664 (3) [back to overview]Florbetapir SUVr Conversion to Centiloid Units
NCT02120664 (3) [back to overview]Variability of PET Images in Young Healthy Control Subjects.
NCT02120664 (3) [back to overview]Correlation of Florbetapir (18F) Centiloid and 11C-PiB Centiloid

Global Distribution of C11 PiB in the Brain

"The imaging analysts use a global atlas of the brain to measure the uptake of the radioactive tracer (or brightness) globally. This global uptake was normalized to the uptake in the cerebellar crus region of the brain to get a global Standard Uptake Value Ratio (SUVR). The cerebral crus (crus cerebri) is the anterior portion of the cerebral peduncle which contains the motor tracts.~The standard uptake value (SUV) is a way of determining activity in PET imaging. The SUVR is the ratio of SUV from two different regions within the same PET image. For the SUVR, the injected activity, the body weight and the volume to mass conversion factor that are all part of the SUV calculation, cancel." (NCT01607476)
Timeframe: Approximately one hour after injection of positron emission tomography (PET) drug

Interventionstandard uptake value ratio (Mean)
Alzheimer's Disease2.50
Cognitive Normal Elderly1.47
Cognitive Normal Young1.23

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Global Distribution of F18 Flutemetamol in the Brain

"The imaging analysts use a global atlas of the brain to measure the uptake of the radioactive tracer (or brightness) globally. This global uptake was normalized to the uptake in the cerebellar crus region of the brain to get a global Standard Uptake Value Ratio (SUVR). The cerebral crus (crus cerebri) is the anterior portion of the cerebral peduncle which contains the motor tracts.~The standard uptake value (SUV) is a way of determining activity in PET imaging. The SUVR is the ratio of SUV from two different regions within the same PET image. For the SUVR, the injected activity, the body weight and the volume to mass conversion factor that are all part of the SUV calculation, cancel." (NCT01607476)
Timeframe: Approximately one hour after injection of positron emission tomography (PET) drug

Interventionstandard uptake value ratio (Mean)
Alzheimer's Disease2.49
Cognitive Normal Elderly1.59
Cognitive Normal Young1.34

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Florbetapir SUVr Conversion to Centiloid Units

Conversion of florbetapir (18F) positron emission tomography (PET) standard uptake value ratio (SUVr) to Centiloid units. The Centiloid is anchored at values of 0 and 100 corresponding to the median Pittsburgh Compound B (11C-PiB) SUVr value for a representative group of young (<45) cognitively and medically healthy control subjects (YHC) and the median SUVr value for a representative group of 11C-PiB positive patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, respectively. A cortical average to cerebellum SUVr was used for this outcome measure. (NCT02120664)
Timeframe: up to 70 minutes post injection

Interventioncentiloid (Mean)
Clincally Diagnosed AD82.44
Possible AD50.75
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)81.19
At Risk Elderly14.93
Young Healthy Controls (YHC)5.24

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Variability of PET Images in Young Healthy Control Subjects.

Coefficient of variation for 11C-PiB and florbetapir (18F) SUVr. A cortical average to cerebellum SUVr was used for this outcome measure. (NCT02120664)
Timeframe: up to 70 minutes post injection

InterventionSUVr (Mean)
PiB SUVR Variability1.01
Florbetapir SUVR Variability0.98

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Correlation of Florbetapir (18F) Centiloid and 11C-PiB Centiloid

Correlation coefficient between 11C-PiB and florbetapir (18F) SUVr as converted to centiloid units. The Centiloid is anchored at values of 0 and 100 corresponding to the median Pittsburgh Compound B (11C-PiB) SUVr value for a representative group of young (<45) cognitively and medically healthy control subjects (YHC) and the median SUVr value for a representative group of 11C-PiB positive patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, respectively. A cortical average to cerebellum SUVr was used for this outcome measure. (NCT02120664)
Timeframe: up to 70 minutes post injection

,,,,
Interventioncentiloid (Mean)
Florbetapir11C-PiB
At Risk Elderly14.9326.39
Clincally Diagnosed AD82.4487.18
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)81.1974.33
Possible AD50.7554.52
Young Healthy Controls (YHC)5.240.73

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