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Featured researches published by Bettye Hollins.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1980

Effects of melanotropic peptides on fetal adrenal gland.

Daniel Rudman; Bettye Hollins; N C Lewis; Rajender K. Chawla

Adrenal glands from early, mid, and late fetuses of rabbit, guinea pig, and rat, and from newborn animals of each species, were incubated for 1-4 h with and without 0.1 nM-1 microM ACTH, alpha- or beta-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha MSH or beta MSH). The effects of the peptides were measured on production of glucocorticoids, and on incorporation of labeled thymidine or leucine into DNA or protein, respectively. The findings were similar in all three species. ACTH stimulated synthesis of glucocorticoids throughout fetal life. Potency increased progressively, as reflected by declining minimal effective dose and rising maximal response. In early and mid fetus alpha MSH and beta MSH caused a modest glucocorticoid steroidogenic effect. ACTH and alpha MSH stimulated DNA and protein synthesis in the early and mid fetal gland. alpha MSH was more potent than ACTH in these respects, minimal effective dose being generally 10 times less and maximal response 25-200% greater. The effects diminished or disappeared in the late fetal and newborn gland. These data indicate that alpha- and beta MSH possess steroidogenic or growth-promoting properties, or both, for the fetal adrenal gland.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1974

Orosomucoid Content of Pleural and Peritoneal Effusions

Daniel Rudman; Rajender K. Chawla; Alejandro E. Del Rio; Bettye Hollins; Elmer C. Hall; Judy M. Conn

22 nonneoplastic, noninflammatory effusions (cirrhosis and congestive heart failure), 12 non-neoplastic inflammatory effusions (tuberculosis, lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and idiopathic pleuropericarditis), and 58 neoplastic effusions (cancer of lung, breast, ovary, and pancreas, and lymphoma) were analyzed by radial immunodiffusion for orosomucoid concentration. The average concentration +/-SE was 35+/-4, 65+/-17, and 130+/-13 mg/100 ml in the three types of effusion, respectively. By gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography, orosomucoid was isolated from 12 nonmalignant and 14 malignant fluids. The orosomucoid preparations reacted as single components in acrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 9.0, and in immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis against antisera to human serum and to human plasma orosomucoid. In radial immunodiffusion, the slope of the line relating concentration to the square of the diameter of the precipitate area was identical for orosomucoid isolated from normal human plasma and from nonneoplastic effusions, but was subnormal for orosomucoid isolated from neoplastic fluids. All orosomucoid preparations had normal amino acid composition. Orosomucoid from the nonmalignant effusions had normal carbohydrate content. 11 of 14 samples of orosomucoid isolated from neoplastic fluids had abnormalities in carbohydrate composition, consisting of subnormal content of sialic acid (11 of 14), hexose (10 of 14), and hexosamine (3 of 14), and abnormally high content of hexosamine (4 of 14). Discriminant analysis showed that concentration of orosomucoid distinguished between neoplastic and nonneoplastic noninflammatory effusions more effectively than concentration of total protein, albumin, alpha(1), alpha(2), beta, or gamma-globulin.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 1986

Analysis of B6 vitamers in plasma by reversed-phase column liquid chromatography

Bettye Hollins; J. Michael Henderson

The seven vitameric forms of B6 can be measured in biologic fluids by high-performance liquid chromatography. Use of a reversed-phase column, with optimized solvent and buffer conditions, combined with fluorometric detection, allowed linear detection of vitamers from 0.4 to 20 ng. All vitamers from plasma, urine or tissue extracts can be analyzed within 50 min. Reproducibility and recovery studies indicate a selective and sensitive procedure, which greatly enhances studies on vitamin B6 metabolism.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1974

Isolation of a novel glycoprotein from the urine of a patient with chronic myelocytic leukemia.

Daniel Rudman; Rajender K. Chawla; Alejandro E. Del Rio; Bettye Hollins

Patient B. J. with chronic myelocytic leukemia excreted 0.5-1.1 g protein per day in the urine. Gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 showed about one-third of this protein to be in molecular weight range 20,000-40,000 (fraction BJC). BJC, prepared from 9 liters of urine by gel filtration, was chromatographed on carboxymethylcellulose. Two proteins were eluted from the resin in pure form (as shown by zone and immunoelectrophoresis) in yields representing 8 and 3 mg/liter of urine: BJC1 and BJC2. Their amino acid compositions were identical. BJC1 contained 61% carbohydrate (33% hexose, 11% sialic acid, 13% glucosamine, 5% galactosamine). BJC2 contained one-fourth to one-half as much of each carbohydrate. Molecular weight of BJC1 was estimated at 29,000 by gel filtration. Neither glycoprotein reacted with rabbit antiserum to normal human serum.Antiserum to BJC1 was made in the rabbit. Immunoelectrophoresis with this antiserum showed a faint precipitin line, corresponding in mobility to BJC1, in normal human plasma, and a stronger line in most leukemic plasmas. By immunodiffusion, BJC1 was not detectable in normal human urine, but a positive reaction occurred in the following conditions: leukemia, 64-72%; other types of disseminated neoplastic disease, 36-78%; regional ileitis, 45%; ulcerative colitis, 38%; tuberculosis, 33%; during the 1st wk after major surgery, 33%.BJC2 was found in the urine by immunoelectrophoresis in 10% of patients with neoplastic disease and was not observed in urine of other patients or in human plasma. Amino acid composition, carbohydrate content, and antigenic specificity indicate BJC1 is a previously unrecognized member of the system of normal human plasma glycoproteins. Like certain other glycoproteins, its plasma concentration frequently increases in patients with neoplastic disease, chronic inflammatory disease, or tuberculosis and after surgery. Because molecular weight is 29,000, increased plasma concentration readily causes its appearance in the urine.


Archive | 1987

Metabolism of Vitamin B6 by Human Subjects with and without Normal Liver Function

J. Michael Henderson; Bettye Hollins; Elaine Wang; Alfred H. Merrill

Plasma pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) is below normal for most patients with liver disease? however, they are capable of PLP synthesis and this suggests that administration of pyridoxine (PN) might help normalize their vitamin B6 status. This has been established for patients given 25 mg of pyridoxine/day for 2 weeks both with respect to restoring plasma PLP to the normal range and in repletion of body stores, as reflected in urinary excretion of pyridoxic acid.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1979

N,O-Diacetylserine1 alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, a naturally occurring melanotropic peptide.

Daniel Rudman; Chawla Rk; Bettye Hollins


Endocrinology | 1973

Melanotropic-Lipolytic Peptides in Various Regions of Bovine, Simian and Human Brains and in Simian and Human Cerebrospinal Fluids

Daniel Rudman; Alejandro E. Del Rio; Bettye Hollins; Diane H. Houser; Michale E. Keeling; Jerome Sutin; Jw Scott; Robert A. Sears; Murray Z. Rosenberg


Cancer Research | 1972

An Abnormal Orosomucoid in the Plasma of Patients with Neoplastic Disease

Daniel Rudman; Perry E. Treadwell; W. Ralph Vogler; Carolyn H. Howard; Bettye Hollins


Endocrinology | 1983

Effects of opioid peptides and opiate alkaloids on insulin secretion in the rabbit.

Daniel Rudman; Carol J. Berry; Charles H. Riedeburg; Bettye Hollins; Michael Kutner; Michael J. Lynn; Rajender K. Chawla


Hepatology | 1986

The fasting B6 vitamer profile and response to a pyridoxine load in normal and cirrhotic subjects

J. Michael Henderson; Mark A. Codner; Bettye Hollins; Michael Kutner; Alfred H. Merrill

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Alfred H. Merrill

Georgia Institute of Technology

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