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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (
reverse transcriptase
)
31,746
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The expression of receptors for the neuropeptide
somatostatin
was investigated in cultured immunocytochemically pure rat microglial cells. By the
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction, the mRNAs for the receptor subtypes sst2, sst3 and sst4, but not sst1 and sst5 could be detected. To show that these receptors were functionally active, the effects of
somatostatin
and the metabolically stable, receptor subtype (2, 3 and 5) selective derivative octreotide (SMS 201-995, Sandostatin) on protein phosphorylation and proliferation were evaluated.
Somatostatin
induced the tyrosine phosphorylation of a 95 kDa protein in microglia. Furthermore,
somatostatin
or octreotide inhibited the basal as well as the GM-CSF-(granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor) or the IL-3-(interleukin-3)-stimulated proliferation of microglial cells. This effect was dose-dependent, with a half maximum activity of about 0.2-0.3 nM.
Somatostatin
was relatively stable in the cultures due to protease inhibitors in the serum. The results indicate that microglial cells are targets for the widespread neuropeptide
somatostatin
and that its receptors can transduce complex signals to microglia.
...
PMID:Receptors and effects of the inhibitory neuropeptide somatostatin in microglial cells. 975 47
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is a major risk factor of peptic ulcer but studies on the relation between Hp infection and gastric pathology are limited due to lack of convenient models resembling Hp infection in humans. We studied the effects of inoculation of conventional BALB/c mice with toxigenic type I Hp (cagA+ and vacA+) and non-toxigenic type II Hp (cagA- and vacA-) vs administration of vehicle on gastric secretion and healing of gastric ulcers. The gastric secretion studies were performed on mice with chronic gastric fistula before and after inoculation with toxigenic or non-toxigenic Hp strain or administration of vehicle (saline). Gastric ulcers were produced in mice inoculated with toxigenic and non-toxigenic Hp strain or vehicle and then sacrificed at day 0 and after 2, 4, 7, 14 and 28 days. Ulcer area and gastric blood flow (GBF), plasma gastrin and gastric luminal
somatostatin
were determined. Gastric mucosal biopsy specimens were also taken for the assessment of the presence of viable Hp using rapid urease test, the Hp-culture and the
reverse transcriptase
--polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of the signal for Hp CagA. Gastric acid output was reduced by over 50% immediately after Hp inoculation and this effect persisted during all time intervals tested, being significantly more pronounced in type I Hp-infected stomach. The area (7 mm2) of ulcers in control mice decreased gradually and then continued to decline during 14 days to disappear almost completely after 28 days. In contrast, the ulcers were present till day 28 in all mice infected with type I or type II Hp strain being significantly larger especially with type I Hp-infection. The GBF in control mice showed gradual rise with decreasing ulcer size being significantly higher at the ulcer margin than the ulcer crater and reached after 14 and 28 days the value not significantly different from that in vehicle-administered mice. In contrast, the GBF in type I Hp-infected mice but to a lesser extent, in type II Hp infected mice was significantly lower than in the vehicle controls, both at the ulcer margin and the crater of ulcers at all tested days. Hp-infection was accompanied by significant increment in plasma gastrin and the fall in gastric
somatostatin
contents observed at all test days, particularly in mice infected with type I Hp strain. Edema of surface epithelium appeared after 7 days and wak but significant mucosal inflammatory infiltration occurred after 14 days to further increase after 28 days, especially in type I Hp and less in type II Hp infected mice. We conclude that conventional mice with gastric ulcers can be successfully infected by both toxigenic and non-toxigenic Hp strains and this infection markedly reduces gastric acid secretion and delays healing of ulcers probably due to the fall in mucosal microcirculation in ulcer area, mucosal inflammation and impairment in gastric-
somatostatin
link.
...
PMID:Gastric secretion and ulcer healing in mouse stomach infected with cytotoxin expressing strain of Helicobacter pylori. 978 92
Treatment of restenosis after angioplasty with octapeptide
somatostatin
(
SST
) analogs has met with variable success. These analogs bind with high affinity to only two
SST
receptor (SSTR) subtypes (2 and 5), display moderate affinity for SSTR3, and low affinity for SSTR1 and 4. To optimize the vasculoprotective effect of
SST
, we have investigated the pattern of expression of all five SSTRs in rat thoracic aorta in the resting state and at 15 min, 3, 7, and 14 days after balloon endothelial denudation. SSTR1-5 were analyzed as mRNA by semiquantitative
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction and as protein by immunocytochemistry. All five SSTRs were expressed in rat aorta both as mRNA and protein and displayed a time-dependent, subtype-selective response to endothelial denudation. mRNA for SSTR1 and 2 increased acutely (SSTR1 > SSTR2) on days 3 and 7, coincident with smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation, and declined to basal levels by day 14. SSTR3 and 4 displayed a different pattern with a delayed, more gradual increase in mRNA beginning at days 3-7 and continued to increase thereafter. SSTR5 mRNA was constitutively expressed at a low level and showed no change during the 2 wk postinjury period. By immunohistochemistry, SSTR1-5 antigens were localized predominantly in SMC that were present in the media or had migrated into the intima; antigen expression correlated with receptor mRNA expression. Notably, only SSTR1,3,4 were expressed in the intima: SSTR1 and 4 during the proliferative burst and SSTR3 and 4 after proliferation, when SMC migration into the intima continues. These results demonstrate dynamic changes in SSTR1-5 expression after vascular trauma localized to areas of vascular SMC migration and replication. In view of their early and prominent induction, SSTR1 may be the optimal subtype to target for inhibition of myointimal proliferation, and SSTR3 and 4 for migration and remodeling.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of somatostatin receptor types 1-5 in rat aorta after angioplasty. 997 27
Medulloblastoma is a pediatric malignancy, which arises in cerebellum. The neuropeptide
somatostatin
(SS-14) is a neuromodulator and growth regulator in the developing cerebellum. SS-14 has previously been demonstrated in medulloblastomas with immunohistochemical techniques, but somatostatin receptor (sst) expression is less well understood. We analyzed
somatostatin
and sst subtype expression (sst1-5) in central primitive neuroectodermal tumors (cPNET), including 23 medulloblastomas, 6 supratentorial PNET, and 10 cPNET cell lines. The expression of SS-14 and sst genes in cPNET was compared with expression of these genes in 17 tumors of the Ewing's sarcoma family of tumors using
reverse transcriptase
-PCR, Southern hybridization, quantitative in vitro receptor autoradiography, and competitive membrane binding assays. The sst1 subtype was expressed in similar frequency in cPNET (83%) and Ewing's sarcoma family of tumors (71%). Nine of the 10 cell lines and 76% of the cPNET expressed mRNA for sst2 compared with 35% of the Ewing's sarcoma family of tumors. High-affinity binding of SS-14 was demonstrated in cPNET by quantitative autoradiography as well as by competitive binding assays. The cPNET cell line D283 Med bound SS-14 and octreotide with high affinity; SS-14 inhibited proliferation of D283 Med cells as measured by a decrease in [3H]thymidine uptake. We conclude that both sst1 and sst2 are highly expressed in cPNET and suggest that
somatostatin
may regulate proliferation and differentiation in these developmental tumors.
...
PMID:High expression of somatostatin receptor subtype 2 (sst2) in medulloblastoma: implications for diagnosis and therapy. 1023 68
To determine whether glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1 increases insulin sensitivity in addition to stimulating insulin secretion, we studied totally depancreatized dogs to eliminate GLP-1's incretin effect.
Somatostatin
was infused (0.8 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1)) to inhibit extrapancreatic glucagon in dogs, and basal glucagon was restored by intraportal infusion (0.65 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)). To simulate the residual intraportal insulin secretion in type 2 diabetes, basal intraportal insulin infusion was given to obtain plasma glucose concentrations of approximately 10 mmol/l. Glucose was clamped at this level for the remainder of the experiment, which included peripheral insulin infusion (high dose, 5.4 pmol x kg(-1) x min(-1), or low dose, 0.75 pmol x kg(-1) x min(-1)) with or without GLP-1(7-36) amide (1.5 pmol x kg(-1) x min(-1)). Glucose production and utilization were measured with 3-[3H]glucose, using radiolabeled glucose infusates. In 12 paired experiments with six dogs at the high insulin dose, GLP-1 infusion resulted in higher glucose requirements than saline (60.9+/-11.0 vs. 43.6+/-8.3 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1), P< 0.001), because of greater glucose utilization (72.6+/-11.0 vs. 56.8+/-9.7 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1), P<0.001), whereas the suppression of glucose production was not affected by GLP-1. Free fatty acids (FFAs) were significantly lower with GLP-1 than saline (375.3+/-103.0 vs. 524.4+/-101.1 micromol/l, P<0.01), as was glycerol (77.9+/-17.5 vs. 125.6+/-51.8 micromol/l, P<0.05). GLP-1 receptor gene expression was found using
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction of poly(A)-selected RNA in muscle and adipose tissue, but not in liver. Low levels of GLP-1 receptor gene expression were also found in adipose tissue using Northern blotting. In 10 paired experiments with five dogs at the low insulin dose, GLP-1 infusion did not affect glucose utilization or FFA and glycerol suppression when compared with saline, suggesting that GLP-1's effect on insulin action was dependent on the insulin dose. In conclusion, in depancreatized dogs, GLP-1 potentiates insulin-stimulated glucose utilization, an effect that might be contributed in part by GLP-1 potentiation of insulin's antilipolytic action.
...
PMID:Glucagon-like peptide 1 increases insulin sensitivity in depancreatized dogs. 1033 9
The gene encoding amylin is implicated in the generation of amyloid in the islets of Langerhans of diabetics and is believed to be regulated by the homeodomain transcription factor PDX-1. Although gastric mucosa also produces amylin, studies on its cellular site of production have yielded highly divergent results, localizing this peptide to either gastrin, serotonin, or
somatostatin
cells or to combinations thereof. Using region-specific amylin antisera in combination with
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction, we now document that the majority of cells expressing amylin correspond to
somatostatin
cells. Only a small subpopulation of gastrin cells contained immunoreactive amylin. Studies of PDX-1-deficient mice, which fail to develop gastrin cells while possessing normal numbers of
somatostatin
cells, revealed no detectable change in gastric amylin expression. These data show that neither normal gastrin cell development nor PDX-1 expression is needed for gastric amylin expression.
...
PMID:Gastric amylin expression. Cellular identity and lack of requirement for the homeobox protein PDX-1. A study in normal and PDX-1-deficient animals with a cautionary note on antiserum evaluation. 1042 81
The actions of the various forms of
somatostatin
(SRIF), including those of the tetradecapeptide SRIF(14), are mediated by specific receptors. In mammals, five subtypes of SRIF receptors, termed sst(1-5), have been cloned. Using a combination of
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction and genomic library screening in the gymnotiform fish Apteronotus albifrons, a gene encoding the first-known nonmammalian SRIF receptor has been isolated. The deduced amino acid sequence displays 59% identity with the human sst(3) receptor protein; hence, the gene is termed "Apteronotus sst(3)." The predicted protein consists of 494 amino acid residues exhibiting a putative seven-transmembrane domain topology typical of G protein-coupled receptors. A signal corresponding to the Apteronotus sst(3) receptor was detected in brain after amplification of poly(A)(+)-RNA by
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction, but not by Northern blot analysis or in situ hybridization, suggesting a low level of expression. Membranes prepared from CCL39 cells stably expressing the Apteronotus sst(3) receptor gene bound [(125)I][Leu(8),d-Trp(22), (125) I-Tyr(25)]SRIF(28) with high affinity and in a saturable manner (B(max) = 4470 fmol/mg protein; pK(D) = 10.5). SRIF(14) and various synthetic SRIF receptor agonists produced a dose-dependent inhibition of radioligand binding, with the following rank order of potency: SRIF(14) approximately SRIF(28) > BIM 23052 > octreotide > BIM 23056. Under low stringency conditions, an Apteronotus sst(3) probe hybridized to multiple DNA fragments in HindIII or EcoRI digests of A. albifrons DNA, indicating that the Apteronotus sst(3) receptor is a member of a larger family of Apteronotus SRIF receptors.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and pharmacological characterization of a somatostatin receptor subtype in the gymnotiform fish Apteronotus albifrons. 1048 Sep 84
The paired-homeodomain transcription factor PAX4 is expressed in the developing pancreas and along with PAX6 is required for normal development of the endocrine cells. In the absence of PAX4, the numbers of insulin-producing beta cells and
somatostatin
-producing delta cells are drastically reduced, while the numbers of glucagon-producing alpha cells are increased. To gain insight into PAX4 function, we cloned a full-length Pax4 cDNA from a beta-cell cDNA library and identified a bipartite consensus DNA binding sequence consisting of a homeodomain binding site separated from a paired domain binding site by 15 nucleotides. The paired half of this consensus sequence has similarities to the PAX6 paired domain consensus binding site, and the two proteins bind to common sequences in several islet genes, although with different relative affinities. When expressed in an alpha-cell line, PAX4 represses transcription through the glucagon or insulin promoters or through an isolated PAX4 binding site. This repression is not simply due to competition with the PAX6 transcriptional activator for the same binding site, since PAX4 fused to the unrelated yeast GAL4 DNA binding domain also represses transcription through the GAL4 binding site in the alpha-cell line and to a lesser degree in beta-cell lines and NIH 3T3 cells. Repressor activity maps to more than one domain within the molecule, although the homeodomain and carboxyl terminus give the strongest repression. PAX4 transcriptional regulation apparently plays a role only early in islet development, since Pax4 mRNA as determined by
reverse transcriptase
PCR peaks at embryonic day 13.5 in the fetal mouse pancreas and is undetectable in adult islets. In summary, PAX4 can function as a transcriptional repressor and is expressed early in pancreatic development, which may allow it to suppress alpha-cell differentiation and permit beta-cell differentiation.
...
PMID:Paired-homeodomain transcription factor PAX4 acts as a transcriptional repressor in early pancreatic development. 1056 52
Somatostatin
receptors type 2 (sst2) have been frequently detected in neuroendocrine tumors and bind
somatostatin
analogues, such as octreotide, with high affinity. Receptor autoradiography, specific mRNA detection and, more recently, antisst2 polyclonal antibodies are currently employed to reveal sst2. The aim of the present study was to investigate by three different techniques the presence of sst2 in a series of 26 neuroendocrine tumors of the lung in which fresh frozen tissue and paraffin sections were available. It was possible, therefore, to compare, in individual cases, RNA analysis studied by
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), in situ hybridization (ISH), and immunohistochemistry. A series of 20 nonneuroendocrine lung carcinoma samples served as controls. RT-PCR was positive for sst2 in 22 of 26 samples, including 15 of 15 typical carcinoids, 5 of 6 atypical carcinoids, and 2 of 5 small-cell carcinomas. The sst2 mRNA signal obtained by RT-PCR was strong in the majority (87%) of typical carcinoids and of variable intensity in atypical carcinoids and small-cell carcinomas. A weakly positive signal was observed in 5 of 20 control samples. In immunohistochemistry, two different antibodies (anti-sst2) were employed, including a monoclonal antibody, generated in the Department of Pathology, University of Turin. In the majority of samples a good correlation between sst2 mRNA (as detected by RT-PCR) and sst2 protein expression (as detected by immunohistochemistry) was observed. However, one atypical carcinoid and one small-cell carcinoma had focal immunostaining but no RT-PCR signal. ISH performed in selected samples paralleled the results obtained with the other techniques. A low sst2 expression was associated with high grade neuroendocrine tumors and with aggressive behavior. It is concluded that 1) neuroendocrine tumors of the lung express sst2, and there is a correlation between the mRNA amount and the degree of differentiation; 2) immunohistochemistry and ISH are reliable tools to demonstrate sst2 in these tumors; and 3) sst2 identification in tissue sections may provide information on the diagnostic or therapeutic usefulness of
somatostatin
analogues in individual patients with neuroendocrine tumors.
...
PMID:Correlative immunohistochemical and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis of somatostatin receptor type 2 in neuroendocrine tumors of the lung. 1071 13
gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a neurotransmitter that also occurs in a few non-neuronal cell types, where it may serve as a paracrine modulator. GABA is biosynthesized from glutamate by glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) and from putrescine via diamine oxidase (DAO). GAD is demonstrable in several GABA-positive cell types but is undetectable in the GABA-containing gastrin cells and
somatostatin
cells of the antropyloric mucosa of the stomach. Using two antisera raised against synthetic peptides corresponding to two different regions of rat DAO, we now demonstrate strong reactivity for DAO in gastrin-positive cells of the rat antropyloric mucosa, whereas
somatostatin
-positive cells as well as other structures of the antrum are unreactive. Western blotting analysis of antrum and colon demonstrate that both antisera react with a single band of 85 kD, consistent with the predicted molecular weight of DAO. Expression of DAO mRNA in the antrum is demonstrated by
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Our results strongly indicate that gastrin cells produce GABA via DAO-catalyzed oxidation of putrescine, and experimental data moreover suggest that the biosynthesis of GABA is regulated by the prandial state. Because GABA modulates release of
somatostatin
, these results point to a new mechanism of paracrine interaction between gastrin cells and
somatostatin
cells.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical evidence suggesting that diamine oxidase catalyzes biosynthesis of gamma-aminobutyric acid in antropyloric gastrin cells. 1082 Jan 57
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