Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
95,504 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of pentagastrin, a synthetic analogue of the cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4), were studied in 15 patients with panic disorder and 15 healthy controls. Three different intravenous dosages of pentagastrin (0.1, 0.3 and 0.6 microgram/kg) and saline were investigated. Subjects were randomly allocated to two of the four treatment groups and tested on two separate occasions, 1 week apart, using an unbalanced double-blind incomplete block design. The mean panic rate with pentagastrin was 55% (12/22) for patients and 5% (1/22) for controls. None of the subjects panicked with saline. The frequency of panic attacks between the three pentagastrin doses in patients was not different. One control subject had a panic-like attack at the highest dose of pentagastrin. These findings concur with previous studies on the panicogenic effect of CCK4 and pentagastrin and suggest a greater sensitivity for CCK receptor agonists in patients suffering from panic disorder than in healthy controls.
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PMID:Pentagastrin induced panic attacks: enhanced sensitivity in panic disorder patients. 785 3

Cholecystokinin (CCK) may mediate human anxiety and animal data suggest that cholecystokinin antagonists could provide an important advance in the treatment of anxiety disorders. The study of CCK receptor systems in psychiatric patients has, however, been severely limited by the lack of available probes. We utilized intravenous infusions of pentagastrin, a selective CCK-B receptor agonist, and studied behavioral and cardiovascular responses in 10 patients with panic disorder and 10 normal controls. Pentagastrin produced substantial symptomatology, including anxiety, and increases in heart rate and blood pressure, in both patients and controls. Patients were more sensitive to the panicogenic effects of the pentagastrin. Panic attacks occurred in 70% of patients and 0% of controls. Patients' symptom responses were very similar to their "typical" panic attacks and to symptoms produced by CCK4. Pentagastrin provides a readily available alternative to CCK4 for studying the CCK receptor system and exploring its involvement in human anxiety.
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PMID:Pentagastrin infusions in patients with panic disorder. I. Symptoms and cardiovascular responses. 867 97

Cholecystokinin (CCK) is a neurotransmitter found in high density in the brains of mammals. Microiontophoretic studies showing that benzodiazepines selectively antagonized CCK-induced excitation of rat hippocampal neurons have led to the hypothesis that CCK is an anxiogenic peptide. The hypothesis was supported by demonstrations that CCK-tetrapeptide (CCK4) induces panic attacks in humans. This paper reviews phases of investigations which studied the validity of CCK4 as a panicogenic agent and research strategies for the study of panic disorder using CCK4 as an investigative tool.
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PMID:Neurobiological investigations into the role of cholecystokinin in panic disorder. 810 32

Antagonists of cholecystokinin-B (CCK-B) receptors have been shown to alleviate CCK4-induced panic attacks in humans and to potentiate opioid effects in animals. The clinical use of these compounds is critically dependent on their ability to cross the blood-brain barrier. In order to improve this property, new, peptoid-derived CCK-B antagonists, endowed with high affinity, selectivity, and increased lipophilicity have been developed. The affinity and selectivity of these compounds have been characterized in vitro and in vivo using guinea pig, rat, and mouse. Most of these compounds proved to be selective for the CCK-B receptor, the most potent analog, N-[N-[(2-adamantyloxy)carbonyl]-D-alpha- methyltryptophanyl]-N-[2-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]glycine (26A), having a Ki value of 6.1 nM for guinea pig cortex membranes in vitro and a good selectivity ratio (Ki CCK-A/Ki CCK-B = 174). Furthermore, the in vivo affinity of 26A for mouse brain CCK-B receptors, following intracerebroventricular injection at different concentrations, was found to be 10 nmol. Using competition experiments with the specific CCK-B ligand [3H]pBC 264, compound 26A was shown to cross the blood-brain barrier (0.2%) after intraperitoneal administration in mice. This compound is therefore an interesting pharmacological tool to further elucidate the physiopathological role of endogenous CCK.
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PMID:Cholecystokinin peptidomimetics as selective CCK-B antagonists: design, synthesis, and in vitro and in vivo biochemical properties. 841 Oct 2

We examined the ability of intravenous (i.v.) challenge with pentagastrin to induce behavioural and cardiovascular effects consistent with panic attack in conscious rhesus monkeys. For behavioural evaluation, 4 naive male rhesus monkeys familiar with minimal manual restraint necessary for drug administration received a rapid i.v. bolus of pentagastrin (4, 8 or 16 micrograms/kg) or water on four separate occasions according to a randomised cross-over design. Behaviour was rated by a blind observer continuously during, and for the first 5 min immediately following i.v. injections while the monkey sat on the handler's lap, and then for a further 25 min in an individual observation cage. In separate experiments, the ability of pentagastrin to alter cardiovascular parameters which may accompany panic or anxiety (elevated heart rate and blood pressure) was explored. For cardiovascular studies, 8 male or female rhesus monkeys with femoral artery catheters were chair restrained and received a bolus injection of pentagastrin (4, 8 or 16 micrograms/kg) or saline into the saphenous vein at 30 min intervals. Blood pressure and heart rate were monitored continuously using a Statham Gould pressure transducer. Pentagastrin induced no consistent behavioural or cardiovascular changes. Similar pilot studies using CCK4 also failed to reveal such effects. We conclude that CCK-induced panic-like effects may not be demonstrable following challenge with pentagastrin under laboratory conditions in rhesus monkeys.
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PMID:Failure of intravenous pentagastrin challenge to induce panic-like effects in rhesus monkeys. 841 56

Cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4) is known to induce panic attacks in patients with panic disorder at a lower dose than in normal controls. Therefore, the cholecystokinin B (CCKB) receptor gene is a candidate gene for panic disorder. We searched for mutations in the CCKB gene in 22 probands of panic disorder pedigrees, using single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. Two polymorphisms were detected. A polymorphism in an intron (2491 C-->A) between exons 4 and 5 was observed in 10 of 22 probands. A missense mutation in the extracellular loop of exon 2 (1550 G-->A, Val125-->Ile) was found in only one proband. This mutation was also examined in additional 34 unrelated patients with panic disorder and 112 controls. The prevalence rate of this mutation was 8.8% in patients with panic disorder (3/34) and 4.4% in controls (5/112). The mutation did not segregate with panic disorder in two families where this could be tested. These results suggest no pathophysiological significance of this mutation in panic disorder.
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PMID:Missense mutation of the cholecystokinin B receptor gene: lack of association with panic disorder. 883 9

We studied the effect of the cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4), a potent CCKB antagonist, in patients with panic disorder. Two different dosages (25 and 50 micrograms) of CCK4 and saline were tested in 12 patients who were randomly allocated to 2 of the 3 possible treatment groups. Patients were tested on 2 separate occasions, 1 week apart, using an unbalanced single-blind incomplete block design. A total of 24 intravenous injections were carried out. The panic rate with 25 micrograms CCK was 44% (4/9) and 71% (5/7) with 50 micrograms. None of the patients panicked with saline (0/8). Patients' symptom responses were very similar to their spontaneous panic attacks. Taking the Panic Symptom Scale (PSS) as outcome variable, we found that CCK4 provoked symptoms of panic in a dose-dependent fashion. The behavioral response to CCK4 was not accompanied by activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis as measured by the prolactin and cortisol responses. Moreover, CCK4-induced panic symptoms were not correlated with plasma increases in the principal noradrenergic metabolite, 3-methoxy-4-hydroxy-phenylglycol (MHPG), suggesting that activation of the locus coeruleus may not be critical for CCK4-induced panic.
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PMID:The panic-inducing properties of the cholecystokinin tetrapeptide CCK4 in patients with panic disorder. 888 78

Animals or human subjects receiving brain stimulation in the dorsal periaqueductal gray matter (dPAG) show sudden fear-suggestive behavioral reactions and physical signs of autonomic activation which are reminiscent of the symptom profile characterizing a panic attack. An experimental situation in rats measuring dPAG stimulation self-interruption thresholds has been validated as realistically simulating several aspects of panic anxiety with objective signs of symptomatic and predictive validity using established antipanic and panicogenic agents; it was utilized here to evaluate the effects of various cholecystokinin B receptor ligands. A dose-dependent increase in self-interruption thresholds (antipanic-like effect) was recorded following injection of L-365,260 (3.2, 10 and 32 mg/kg i.p.), a CCKB receptor antagonist with good brain penetration, whereas no significant changes in thresholds were recorded following CI-988 (3.2, 10 and 32 mg/kg i.p.), a dipeptoid CCKB receptor antagonist with poor brain penetration. Latencies for self-interruption were not modified, suggesting that motor functions remained intact. No significant changes in self-interruption thresholds were recorded following peripheral administration of the CCKB receptor agonists CCK4 (0.03 to 0.32 mg/kg i.v.; 0.01 to 3.2 mg/kg i.p.) or the metabolically stabilized analog Boc-CCK4 (0.1 to 10 mg/kg i.p.). Systemic administration of the panicogenic compounds caffeine and yohimbine enhance acute anxiety in this model. These data indicate that, in the dPAG simulation of panic anxiety, central CCKB receptor blockade by L-365,260 induces antiaversive effects analogous to those observed following benzodiazepine receptor activation by clonazepam or alprazolam. Potency and efficacy of L-365,260 were lower than those of clonazepam or alprazolam, suggesting modest, but nonetheless authentic, antiaversive properties for this CCKB receptor antagonist. Lack of effects observed following peripheral administration of the agonists CCK4, and Boc-CCK4 or of the dipeptoid antagonist CI-988 is likely to reflect restricted brain penetration of those compounds in rats; it furthermore excludes a contribution of peripheral gastrin and CCKA receptors to the antipanic-like properties of selective CCKB receptor antagonists such as L-365,260.
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PMID:Behavioral effects of CCKB receptor ligands in a validated simulation of panic anxiety in rats. 898 12

The effects of the cholecystokinin-B (CCK-B) receptor antagonist CI-988 on symptoms elicited by the cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4) were studied in DSM-IIIR patients with panic disorder. The study employed a double-blind, two-period incomplete block design. Patients (n = 14) received two different dosages of CI-988 (50 mg or 100 mg) or placebo 2 h prior to an IV bolus injection of CCK4 (20 micrograms) on two separate occasions. The primary efficacy parameter was the total intensity score on the Panic Symptoms Scale (PSS). Secondary parameters were the number of panic symptoms, time to and occurrence of the first panic symptoms, duration of symptoms, intensity of apprehension and the percentage of patients who did not have a panic attack. The PSS failed to show a statistically significant treatment effect on any of these outcome measures. The average panic rate was 50%, 14.3% and 37.5% after placebo, 50 and 100 mg CI-988, respectively. The differences in panic rate were not statistically significant. The results of this study suggest that CI-988 in doses up to 100 mg is not effective in reducing symptoms of panic anxiety induced by CCK4.
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PMID:The cholecystokinin-B receptor antagonist CI-988 failed to affect CCK-4 induced symptoms in panic disorder patients. 908 62

Although it is known that panic attacks are triggered by the cholecystokinin fragment CCK4, the specific involvement of peripheral or central cholecystokinin CCK receptors in various adaptive processes such as emotion, memory and anxiety has yet to be demonstrated. With this aim, we have investigated the biochemical and pharmacological effects resulting from the administration of BC264, a highly potent and selective CCK-B agonist able to cross the blood-brain barrier. Very low doses of BC264 (microg/kg i.p.), increased the exploration of animals submitted to an unknown territory but were devoid of anxiogenic properties in the elevated plus maze. BC264 increased locomotion and rearings of rats newly placed in an open field and improved their spontaneous alternation in a Y-maze. The use of vagotomized animals showed that the increased alternation induced by BC264 did not require an intact vagus nerve, unlike the locomotor activation. These behavioural effects, prevented by the prior i.p. administration of the CCK-B antagonist L-365,260 but not by the CCK-A antagonist L-364,718, were shown to depend on dopaminergic systems, since they were blocked by D1 (SCH23390, 25 microg/kg i.p.) or D2 (sulpiride, 50 or 100 mg/kg i.p.) antagonists. In addition, bilateral perfusion in freely moving rats of BC264 at pharmacologically active doses, using a newly designed microdialysis system, was found to increase the extracellular levels of DA, DOPAC and HVA in the anterior part of the nucleus accumbens. These results show that activation of CCK-B receptors by BC264 does not produce anxiogenic-like effects but appears to improve motivation and attention, whereas other CCK-B agonists such as BocCCK4 induce anxiogenic responses. Several explanations, including the existence of different sub-sites of the CCK-B receptor, could account for these differential effects.
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PMID:The CCK-B agonist, BC264, increases dopamine in the nucleus accumbens and facilitates motivation and attention after intraperitoneal injection in rats. 938 3


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