Kirti Chaturvedi
Rutgers University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kirti Chaturvedi.
Journal of Immunology | 2004
Nadka Boyadjieva; Kirti Chaturvedi; Michael M. Poplawski; Dipak K. Sarkar
Naltrexone, an opioid antagonist, has been used in clinical trials to treat alcoholism. As the opioid peptides β-endorphin and enkephalin increase splenic NK cell function in laboratory animals, it is anticipated that naltrexone treatment will cause immunosuppression. However, we report in this study that chronic naltrexone administration in laboratory rats increases the cytolytic activity of NK cells. It also prevents alcohol’s suppressive effect on these cells. We identified that, in the splenocytes, δ opioid receptor expression is tightly controlled by negative feedback regulation of μ opioid receptors. Naltrexone disrupts this feedback control by reducing μ opioid receptor function, thereby up-regulating δ opioid receptor binding, which results in an enhanced NK cell cytolytic response to δ opioid receptor ligands. We conclude that naltrexone, which has been shown to be a promising agent for the clinical management of alcoholism, may have potential use in the treatment of immune deficiency in alcoholic and nonalcoholic patients.
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2008
Kirti Chaturvedi; Dipak K. Sarkar
BACKGROUND Chronic administration of ethanol increases plasma prolactin levels and enhances estradiols mitogenic action on the lactotropes of the pituitary gland. The present study was conducted to determine the changes in the pituitary levels of G proteins during the tumor development following alcohol and ethanol treatments. METHODS Using ovariectomized Fischer-344 female rats, we have determined ethanol and estradiol actions at 2 and 4 weeks on pituitary weight and pituitary cell contents of prolactin, Gs. Gq11, Gi1, Gi2, and Gi3 proteins. Western blots were employed to measure protein contents. RESULTS Ethanol increased basal and estradiol-enhanced wet weight and the prolactin content in the pituitary in a time-dependent manner. Chronic exposure of estradiol increased the levels of Gs protein in the pituitary. Unlike estradiol, ethanol exposure did not show significant effect on the basal level of Gs protein, but moderately increased the estradiol-induced levels of this protein. Estradiol exposure enhanced Gq11 protein levels in the pituitary after 2 and 4 weeks, while ethanol treatment failed to alter these protein levels in the pituitary in control-treated or estradiol-treated ovariectomized rats. In the case of Gi1, estradiol but not ethanol increased the level of this protein at 4 weeks of treatment. However, estradiol and ethanol alone reduced the levels of both Gi2 and Gi3 proteins at 2 and 4 weeks of treatment. Ethanol also significantly reduced the estradiol-induced Gi2 levels at 4 weeks and Gi3 level at 2 and 4 weeks. CONCLUSIONS These results confirm ethanols and estradiols growth-promoting and prolactin stimulating actions on lactotropes of the pituitary and further provide evidence that ethanol and estradiol may control lactotropic cell functions by altering expression of specific group of G proteins in the pituitary.
Neuroendocrinology | 2006
Kirti Chaturvedi; Dipak K. Sarkar
Most previous studies that determined the effect of estradiol on angiogenesis used endothelial cells from nonpituitary sources. Because pituitary tumor tissue receives its blood supply via portal and arterial circulation, it is important to use pituitary-derived endothelial cells in studying pituitary angiogenesis. We have developed a magnetic separation technique to isolate endothelial cells from pituitary tissues and have characterized these cells in primary cultures. Endothelial cells of the pituitary showed the existence of endothelial cell marker, CD31, and of von Willebrand factor protein. These cells in cultures also showed immunoreactivity of estrogen receptors alpha and beta. The angiogenic factors, vascular endothelial growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor, significantly increased proliferation and migration of the pituitary-derived endothelial cells in primary cultures. These results suggest that a magnetic separation technique can be used for enrichment of pituitary-derived endothelial cells for determination of cellular mechanisms governing the vascularization in the pituitary.
Endocrinology | 2005
Dipak K. Sarkar; Kirti Chaturvedi; Souichi Oomizu; Nadka Boyadjieva; Cui Ping Chen
Molecular Pharmacology | 2005
Cui Ping Chen; Peter Kuhn; Kirti Chaturvedi; Nadka Boyadjieva; Dipak K. Sarkar
Endocrinology | 2004
Souichi Oomizu; Kirti Chaturvedi; Dipak K. Sarkar
Endocrinology | 2005
Kirti Chaturvedi; Dipak K. Sarkar
Endocrinology | 2005
Nurul Kabir; Kirti Chaturvedi; Lian Sheng Liu; Dipak K. Sarkar
Endocrinology | 2004
Kirti Chaturvedi; Dipak K. Sarkar
Journal of Endocrinology | 2007
Abby J. Sarkar; Kirti Chaturvedi; Cui Ping Chen; Dipak K. Sarkar