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2007
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Cloning and characterization of the hamster and guinea pig nicotinic acid receptors.
Cloning and characterization of the hamster and guinea pig nicotinic acid receptors.
Torhan, A.S., Cheewatrakoolpong, B., Kwee, L., Greenfeder, S.
Journal
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J Lipid Res.
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Species
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Analytes Measured
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cAMP
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Matrix Tested
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CHO-K1 cell supernatants
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Abstract
In this study, we present the identification and characterization of hamster and guinea pig nicotinic acid receptors. The hamster receptor shares approximately 80-90% identity with the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of human, mouse, and rat receptors. The guinea pig receptor shares 76-80% identity with the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of these other species. [(3)H]nicotinic acid binding affinity at guinea pig and hamster receptors is similar to that in human (dissociation constant = 121 nM for guinea pig, 72 nM for hamster, and 74 nM for human), as are potencies of nicotinic acid analogs in competition binding studies. Inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP production by nicotinic acid and related analogs is also similar to the activity in the human receptor. Analysis of mRNA tissue distribution for the hamster and guinea pig nicotinic acid receptors shows expression across a number of tissues, with higher expression in adipose, lung, skeletal muscle, spleen, testis, and ovary.
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