Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The process(es) by which parenteral iron effects the accumulation of hepatic metallothionein (MT) is not known. The present study examined glucocorticoids as potential mediators of this process. Chicks were given either one injection (ip) of iron (+1FE) at 10 mg Fe/kg, two injections of iron (+2FE) given 24 hr apart, or a single injection of saline. Plasma corticosterone was evaluated at various times following the last injection. Plasma corticosterone increased approximately 50% following +1FE but more than 200% at 2 and 4 hr following a second injection of iron (+2FE). Plasma zinc showed a transient increase followed by a considerable depression. Coincidentally, the accumulation (determined at 24 hr) of zinc MT in liver of +2FE chicks was three times higher than that of +1FE chicks. In another experiment, markedly greater changes, at similar time intervals, in plasma corticosterone were effected by multiple subcutaneous injections of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) (either 5 IU ACTH or 20 IU ACTH/kg). Subsequent analysis of hepatic zinc MT showed only minor changes as a result of ACTH injections. These results indicate that a change in the plasma glucocorticoid corticosterone is not a primary component in the process(es) by which parenteral iron effects an increase in hepatic zinc MT.
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PMID:Iron-induced accumulation of hepatic metallothionein: the lack of glucocorticoid involvement. 303 18

Incorporation of 3H-uridine by RNA in Tetrahymena was differently influenced by insulin, glucagon, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), thyrotropic hormone (TSH), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and chorion-gonadotropic hormone (PMSG). TSH caused it to increase considerably and durably after an initial depression, while glucagon caused it to rise over the control throughout. Insulin, and especially PMSG, depressed the incorporation of label considerably, the latter to 3-6% of the control value by 120 min. ACTH and FSH accounted for an initial depression of RNA synthesis which, however, returned to normal 30 min after treatment. Remarkably, while the chemically similar hormones acted differently, insulin and glucagon showed the same trend of positive and negative influence, respectively.
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PMID:Effect of polypeptide hormones (insulin, thyrotropin, gonadotropin, adrenocorticotropin) on RNA synthesis in Tetrahymena, as assessed from incorporation of 3H-uridine. 618 2

Sixteen patients with major depressive disorder who were nonsuppressors on the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) on hospital admission were studied for plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). Eight patients reverted to normal suppression with clinical recovery, while eight remained nonsuppressors. There was a significant reduction of ACTH levels in those who normalized on their DST, while ACTH levels remained high in the group that continued to be nonsuppressors. The results favored the hypothesis that dexamethasone nonsuppression in depression is mediated by high ACTH levels.
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PMID:Plasma ACTH levels in depression before and after recovery: relationship to the dexamethasone suppression test. 632 Feb 45

The long suspected and recently demonstrated abnormality in neuroendocrine control in patients with severe depression indicates that the neurochemical and neuroanatomical analysis of the neuroendocrine response to stress may provide valuable information in understanding the etiology of severe endogenous depression. Rats were immobilized for 1, 2, 3 or 5 hours consecutively or 2 hours per day for 5 days, sacrificed and plasma corticosterone (as an index of the release of adrenocorticotropic hormone from the pituitary) and brain part noradrenaline, dopamine, and serotonin concentrations were determined fluorometrically. Plasma corticosterone and brain part monoamines were also measured in other rats given 2 hour immobilization stress one week after the intraventricular injection of the neurotoxins 6-hydroxydopamine and/or 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine. Plasma corticosterone increased by 30% to 50% after all periods of stress and serotonin was increased in all brain parts after 1, 2 or 3 hours of stress but not after 5 hours or chronic stress. Forebrain dopamine was decreased by 30% after 1 hour stress, slowly increased with increasing duration of stress becoming a marked increase of 85% over controls after prolonged or chronic stress. The destruction of catecholamine nerve terminals with 6-hydroxydopamine prevented the stress induced rise in brain part serotonin but had no effect on the plasma corticosterone response to immobilization stress. Destruction of serotonin nerve terminals with 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine potentiated by 50% the stress induced rise in plasma corticosterone. Plasma corticosterone after 2 hours immobilization stress was the same as controls in rats given both neurotoxins. These data support the hypothesis that ACTH release is stimulated by serotonergic neural activity.
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PMID:Brain part monoamines in the neuroendocrine mechanisms activated by immobilization stress in the rat. 632 55

1. Potassium was infused intravenously in an incremental fashion and the plasma aldosterone response were measured in conscious beagle dogs at five different intakes of dietary sodium. 2. Potassium/aldosterone dose-response curves were constructed for each dietary sodium regimen. 3. The rate of increase of plasma potassium during graded potassium infusion became progressively greater with increasing sodium depletion. 4. Regression lines of plasma aldosterone on plasma potassium were progressively elevated and steepened with increasing sodium depletion. 5. The alteration of these dose-response curves could in part have been the result of chronic elevation of plasma potassium and angiotensin II, and depression of plasma sodium, with sodium deprivation. 6. By contrast, acute changes in plasma angiotensin II or sodium concentrations across incremental infusions of potassium did not explain the progressive changes in the potassium/aldosterone dose-response curves. 7. The steepest part of the plasma aldosterone response curve was in the plasma potassium range 4-6 mmol/1. 8. Maximum achieved aldosterone levels were similar to or greater than those attained during angiotensin II infusion in previous studies in beagle dogs. 9. Potassium, like angiotensin II and adrenocorticotropic hormone, becomes a more effective stimulus to aldosterone with sodium depletion, thereby facilitating the preservation of sodium homoeostasis.
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PMID:Effect of changes in sodium balance on potassium/aldosterone dose-response curves in the dog. 706 59

Dextroamphetamine sulfate administered intravenously in the morning to 11 unmedicated depressed patients suppressed previously elevated plasma cortisol levels to normal in 90 minutes, a fall of 33% from baseline. Ten other depressed patients, without amphetamine, maintained high cortisol levels during the same time period. In each of five normal young men, amphetamine identically administered stimulated a rise in cortisol between 15 and 30 minutes after infusion, an acute response absent in ten of the 11 depressed patients; by 90 minutes after amphetamine administration, plasma cortisol had fallen to normal and identical levels in both groups. Since noradrenalin normally inhibits hypothalamic corticotropin releasing factor (and adrenocorticotropic hormone) secretion, a noradrenergic deficit may account for cortisol hypersecretion in depression; amphetamine may transiently "correct" this deficit in depressed patients, thereby reducing their cortisol secretion.
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PMID:Dextroamphetamine and cortisol in depression. Morning plasma cortisol levels suppressed. 719 Mar 80

The pharmacokinetics of amitriptyline (AMI) have been extensively studied, and a large interindividual variability between oral dose and concentration of the drug in plasma has been documented. The aim of this study was twofold: first, to compare AMI kinetics in depressed patients with those of healthy controls and, second, to describe the relationship between AMI levels in plasma and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system changes during depression. Thirty-eight patients with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of major depression and 13 healthy control persons received 75 mg of AMI daily for 6 weeks. Levels of AMI and nortriptyline in plasma were determined, and neuroendocrine testing with the combined dexamethasone-suppression/CRH-stimulation test (DST) was done before AMI administration and after weeks 1, 3, and 6 of medication. AMI levels in plasma were significantly higher in the patient group compared with controls during the entire treatment period, whereas nortriptyline levels did not differ between the two groups. Drug levels correlated significantly with age, but gender had no effect on the concentration of the drug in plasma. Twenty-two patients remitted after treatment. There was no difference in drug levels between responders and nonresponders. Fifteen patients were DST nonsuppressors before treatment; 23 patients and all controls suppressed cortisol after dexamethasone. DST suppressors had significantly higher AMI levels in plasma at weeks 3, 5, and 6 compared with DST nonsuppressors. In comparison to patients with high AMI levels in plasma, those with low drug concentration had higher postdexamethasone cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone levels and an increased hormone release after additional CRH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Amitriptyline metabolism in elderly depressed patients and normal controls in relation to hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system function. 759 7

Prolyl endopeptidase (PEP) is a serine proteinase, which may cleave peptides that are involved in the pathophysiology of major depression, such as arginine vasopressin, beta-endorphin, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, and maybe corticotropin-releasing hormone. PEP may be involved in activation of cell-mediated immunity, autoimmune and inflammatory responses, which repeatedly occur in severe depression. The present study investigates serum PEP activity in 33 normal controls, 16 minor, 14 simple major, and 18 melancholic depressed subjects. Pre-dexamethasone and post-dexamethasone (DST) intact adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol values were determined in 33 depressed subjects. Serum PEP activity was significantly lower in depressed subjects compared to normal controls and in melancholic depressed subjects compared to minor and simple major depressed subjects. Up to 61.1% of the melancholic patients had serum PEP activities below the mean PEP values of normal controls minus two SDs. In the depressed study group, significant negative correlations between serum PEP activity and severity of illness, post-DST cortisol, and ACTH values were observed. There was a trend toward higher serum PEP activity with increasing age. It is hypothesized that lower serum PEP activity, and lower serum activity of other peptidases, may play a role in the neuroendocrine and immune pathophysiology of major depression.
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PMID:Lower serum prolyl endopeptidase enzyme activity in major depression: further evidence that peptidases play a role in the pathophysiology of depression. 803 98

This study investigates the utility for depression research of an assay for intact (1-39) adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) versus that of a previously employed (i.e., 1-17, 1-24 sequences) ACTH assay. ACTH plasma levels were measured using two different ACTH assays (labeled as intact versus nonintact) in 10 minor and 27 major depressed subjects undergoing the combined dexamethasone suppression (DST) and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) test. Intact--but not nonintact--ACTH values were significantly correlated with the severity of illness. Major depressed subjects exhibited significantly higher post-DST+CRH intact ACTH values than minor depressives, whereas nonintact ACTH values were not significantly different between these groups. Post-DST+CRH intact ACTH values were significantly more closely related to post-DST+CRH cortisol than nonintact ACTH values. It is concluded that the assay of the intact ACTH molecule is an asset in depression research and should replace the previous less specific and sensitive ACTH assays.
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PMID:Ultrasensitive assay for measuring the intact (1-39) ACTH molecule: an asset in depression research. 804 42

This study investigates serum levels of zinc in 48 unipolar depressed subjects (16 minor, 14 simple major and 18 melancholic subjects) and 32 normal volunteers, and the relationships between zincemia and plasma neopterin levels, postdexamethasone adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol values, and anorexia-weight loss. Serum zinc levels were significantly lower in major depressed subjects than in normal controls, whereas minor depressed subjects showed intermediate values. There were significant negative correlations between serum zinc, and severity of depression and plasma neopterin concentrations. No significant relationships between zincemia and either postdexamethasone hormone values or anorexia/weight loss were found. The findings suggest that hypozincemia in major depression may be related to activation of cell-mediated immunity in that illness.
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PMID:Hypozincemia in depression. 807 76


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