calcitriol has been researched along with Monkey-Diseases* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for calcitriol and Monkey-Diseases
Article | Year |
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White monkey syndrome in infant baboons (Papio species).
Over 23 months, zinc toxicosis was diagnosed in 35 baboons aged 5-12 months in one galvanized metal and concrete cage complex with conditions that led to excessive exposure to environmental zinc. Clinical signs included reduced pigmentation of hair, skin, and mucous membranes (whiteness), alopecia, dehydration, emaciation, cachexia, dermatitis, diarrhea and, in six cases, severe gangrenous dermatitis of extremities. The syndrome was characterized by pancytopenia, elevated zinc and low copper serum concentrations, low vitamin D and bone-specific alkaline phosphatase levels, and atypical myelomonocytic proliferation of bone marrow. This syndrome emphasizes the importance of proper husbandry and cage design and indicates the potential of infant baboons as a model to study the effects of excessive zinc on development. This is the first report describing the epidemiologic and clinical presentation of zinc toxicosis in infant baboons in captivity. Topics: Alopecia; Analysis of Variance; Anemia; Animals; Bone and Bones; Copper; Dermatitis; Diarrhea; DNA-Binding Proteins; Environmental Exposure; Flow Cytometry; Housing, Animal; Karyotyping; Light; Monkey Diseases; Papio; PAX5 Transcription Factor; Pigmentation; Radiography; Radioimmunoassay; Syndrome; Transcription Factors; Vitamin D; Zinc | 2004 |
Novel regulators of vitamin D action and metabolism: Lessons learned at the Los Angeles zoo.
We undertook an investigation of an outbreak of rachitic bone disease in the Emperor Tamarin New World primate colony at the Los Angeles Zoo in the mid-1980s. The disease phenotype resembled that observed in humans with an inactivating mutation of the vitamin D receptor (VDR), hypocalcemia, high 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25-(OH)(2)D) levels, and rickets in rapidly growing adolescent primates. In contrast to the human disease, the New World primate VDR was functionally normal in all respects. The proximate cause of vitamin D hormone resistance in New World primates was determined to be the constitutive overexpression of a heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein in the A family which we coined the vitamin D response element binding protein (VDRE-BP). VDRE-BP competed in trans with the VDR-retinoid X receptor (RXR) for binding to the vitamin D response element. VDRE-BP-legislated resistance to 1,25-(OH)(2)D was antagonized (i.e., compensated) by another set of constitutively overexpressed proteins, the hsp-70-related intracellular vitamin D binding proteins (IDBPs). IDBPs, present but expressed at much lower levels in Old World primates including man, exhibited a high capacity for 25-hydroxylated vitamin D metabolites and functioned to traffic vitamin Ds to specific intracellular destinations to promote their action and metabolism. Topics: Animals; Drug Resistance; Heliotherapy; Heterogeneous-Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins; HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins; Humans; Monkey Diseases; Receptors, Retinoic Acid; Retinoid X Receptors; Rickets; Saguinus; Transcription Factors; Vitamin D; Vitamin D Response Element; Vitamin D-Binding Protein | 2003 |