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Contents: June 1 2007, Volume 7, Issue 3   [Index by Author] 
      Down Viewpoints
      Down Reviews
      Down Reflections
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Table of Contents (PDF) | Editorial Board (PDF) | Front Matter (PDF) | Back Matter (PDF) | Advertising (PDF) |
Professional Opportunities (PDF)
To see an article, click its [Full Text] or [PDF] link. To review many summaries, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Summary(s)' button. To see one summary at a time, click its [Summary] link.

Viewpoints:Back

Dispatches from the Frontlines of Research - edited by John W. Nelson

Qiang Ma
Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Degradation-Promoting Factor (ADPF) and the Control of the Xenobiotic Response
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 133-137. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

R E V I E W S:Back

Louis-Eric Trudeau and Rafael Gutiérrez
On Cotransmission & Neurotransmitter Phenotype Plasticity
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 138-146. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Dale postulated that a neuron functions as a metabolic unit, whereby a process occurring in the cell can influence all of the compartments of that given neuron. With the passage of time, this statement has concretized into the more general, if, perhaps, misleading statement that "a single cell releases only one neurotransmitter." In fact, many neurons in the nervous system appear to contain and release more than one chemical acting as a neurotransmitter or neuromodulator. Indeed, cotransmission of a classical neurotransmitter and a peptide is a ubiquitous phenomenon, but several neuron types can also contain more than one classical neurotransmitter. Although the expression of peptide cotransmitters is known to be highly regulated in response to various physiological, chemical, and pathological signals, new data now suggest that a similar situation prevails in neurons that co-release two classical transmitters.

Yumin Chen, Paiboon Jungsuwadee, Mary Vore, D. Allan Butterfield, and Daret K. St. Clair
Collateral Damage in Cancer Chemotherapy: Oxidative Stress in Nontargeted Tissues
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 147-156. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

The life-extending effectiveness of anticancer chemotherapy is a major victory of post-World War II medicine. Unfortunately, many of the currently used medicines that combat cancer derive their only source of "specificity" for cancerous tissues from the aberrant rates of cellular growth that typify transformed cells, and damage to nontargeted (i.e., noncancerous) tissues remains the bane of modern chemotherapy. Of the 132 anticancer drugs that have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, fifty-six have been reported to cause oxidative damage to cells, often by mechanisms not directly related to their anticancer activities. Cognitive impairment in the "chemobrain" syndrome and heart injury from chemical therapies represent the risks that cancer patients continue to face. But new insights into mechanisms of oxidative stress have begun to point to strategies to protect healthy tissues from the oxidative threats posed by chemotherapeutics. These strategies may include the antioxidant quenching of reactive species generated under oxidative stress, the scavenging of iron ions that are released in response to chemotherapy, and the intervention of signaling molecules (e.g., tissue necrosis factor {alpha}) that may promote tissue damage in response to oxidative stress.

Manuel Miranda and Alexander Sorkin
Regulation of Receptors and Transporters by Ubiquitination: New Insights into Surprisingly Similar Mechanisms
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 157-167. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Many of the original observations of ubiquitination of the endocytic cargo and regulation of endocytosis by ubiquitination were made in yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. These findings in yeast prompted studies in mammalian cells, which have demonstrated that ubiquitin conjugation occurs on many mammalian growth factor receptors and transporters. Indeed, the function of many receptors and transport proteins at the cell surface is regulated by endocytosis and post-endocytic trafficking. This review describes recent advances in elucidating the mechanisms of ubiquitination of mammalian receptors and transporters using two examples: the receptor for epidermal growth factor and the dopamine transporter. How ubiquitination controls the endocytosis and turnover of these proteins is also discussed.

D E P A R T M E N T S:Back

Reflections:Back

Science in the cultural context

Brian M. Cox
Torald Sollmann’s Studies of Mustard Gas
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 124-128. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Significant Deciles:Back

Dayle Houston
ASPET celebrates its centennial anniversary: 1911–1920
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 130-131. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Beyond the Bench:Back

Representations of pharmacology and science in the media

Tanya Jelacic
Desperate Postdocs in the Laboratory of the Damned
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 168-169. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Net Results:Back

Sites of interest on the World Wide Web

Sites of interest on the World Wide Web—edited by David Roman
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 170. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Outliers:Back

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Outliers
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 176. [Full Text] [PDF]  

To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many summaries, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Summary(s)' button. To see one summary at a time, click its [Summary] link.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
ASPET Journals Pharmacological Reviews Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Molecular Interventions Molecular Pharmacology J Pharmacology and Exp Therapeutics
Copyright © 2007 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.