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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endogenous opioid systems (endogenous opioids and their receptors) are known to participate in the regulation of tumor growth. The present study was conducted to examine whether [Met5]-enkephalin influences the growth of transplanted
neuroblastoma
, and to explore the role of other opioid peptides in carcinogenesis. A/Jax mice were inoculated with 10(6) S20Y cells and received daily injections of [Met5]-enkephalin. Dosages of 0.5 to 30 mg/kg delayed tumor appearance and prolonged survival of these mice; antitumor effects were blocked by concomitant injections of naloxone. Daily administration (10 mg/kg) of [Leu5]-enkephalin had no effect on neurotumor growth. [D-Ala2, D-Leu5]-enkephalin and ethylketocyclazocine, ligands selective for delta and kappa receptors, respectively, also did not influence neuro-oncogenesis. These results demonstrated the potent growth inhibiting effects of the naturally occurring opioid pentapeptide, [Met5]-enkephalin, and substantiate reports identifying and characterizing an
opioid receptor
(i.e., zeta) for which [Met5]-enkephalin is the most potent ligand.
...
PMID:Endogenous opioids and the growth regulation of a neural tumor. 284 18
The molecular basis of opioid tolerance/dependence has long eluded researchers, but recent advances in receptor regulation have suggested a useful conceptual approach to the problem. In NG108-15
neuroblastoma
x glioma hybrid (NG) cells, opioid agonists inhibit adenylate cyclase in a dose-dependent, naloxone-antagonizable fashion. Chronic treatment with opioid agonists results in a series of molecular processes that, in a tolerance-like fashion, counteract this inhibition. These processes include desensitization and down-regulation of receptors and an increase in adenylate cyclase activity. Opioid inhibition of adenylate cyclase and
opioid receptor
down-regulation also have been observed in the brain. However, most studies have found that the receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase are not of the mu type, which are thought to be the primary mediators of opioid analgesia. Down-regulation has been observed for both mu and delta opioid receptors in the brain. However, in most cases, the time course of down-regulation is not correlated with that for tolerance development, and chronic morphine treatment does not result in down-regulation. Thus, opioid receptors in the brain, like those in NG cells, are subject to dynamic regulation by agonists, which probably has an important role in their function. However, it remains to be established that
opioid receptor
regulation is the basis of opioid tolerance and dependence.
...
PMID:Role of receptor regulation in opioid tolerance mechanisms. 284 42
Incubation of the
neuroblastoma
x glioma hybrid cell line NG108-15 in tissue culture with dibutyryl cyclic AMP (1 mM) for up to 8 days produced a morphological differentiation of the cells, during which they extended neurite-like processes. Pertussis-toxin-catalysed ADP-ribosylation indicated that amounts of guanine-nucleotide-binding proteins (G-proteins), which are substrates for this toxin, were approximately doubled in membranes from the 'differentiated' cells in comparison with the control cells. Immunoblotting of membranes derived from either untreated or dibutyryl cyclic AMP-treated cells with anti-peptide antisera specific for the alpha subunits of the pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-proteins Gi and Go demonstrated that amounts of these G-proteins were reciprocally modulated during the differentiation process. In comparison with the untreated cells, the amount of Gi in the 'differentiated' cells was decreased, whereas the amount of Go was substantially increased. Stimulation of high-affinity GTPase activity in response to opioid peptides, which in this cell line interact with an
opioid receptor
of the delta subclass, was much decreased, and inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity was almost entirely attenuated in the 'differentiated'-cell membranes in comparison with membranes of untreated cells. Opioid receptor number was also decreased in membranes of the dibutyryl cyclic AMP-treated cells in comparison with the control cells. These data demonstrate that relatively small changes in the observed pattern of pertussis-toxin-catalysed ADP-ribosylation of membranes can mask more dramatic alterations in amounts of the individual pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-proteins, and further demonstrate the importance of methodologies able to discriminate between the different gene products.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of amounts of the guanine-nucleotide-binding proteins Gi and Go in neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cells in response to dibutyryl cyclic AMP. 285 96
A dynorphin A 1-13 amide (DYN) derivative biotinylated in position lysine 13 (B-DYN) has been prepared by automated solid-phase peptide synthesis. The derivative retained its ability to bind to avidin, and B-DYN-avidin complex showed a dissociated half-life of 10 hr at 37 degrees C. Opioid receptor binding was measured in membrane preparations of rat brain (mu), NG-108-15
neuroblastoma
-glioma hybrid cells (delta), and guinea pig cerebellum (kappa). Biotinyl substitution of DYN either did not effect receptor binding (delta) or slightly reduced binding affinity (mu and kappa). Binding of B-DYN to the kappa receptor was very tight, with an IC50 value in the low picomolar range, while binding to mu and delta sites was over two orders of magnitude lower. Preassociation of B-DYN with avidin resulted in a reduction of the affinities to the investigated opioid receptors by 100- to 1000-fold. However, the apparent affinity of B-DYN-avidin for the kappa-
opioid receptor
is sufficient to suggest that B-DYN may be a useful tool for kappa-
opioid receptor
assay, localization, and purification.
...
PMID:[Biocytin13]dynorphin A 1-13 amide: a potential probe for the kappa-opioid receptor. 290 85
125I-beta-Endorphin (human) binds with high affinity, specificity, and saturability to rat brain and
neuroblastoma
X glioma hybrid cell (NG 108-15) membranes. Dissociation constants and binding capacities were obtained from Scatchard plots and are 2 nM and 0.62 pmol/mg of protein for rat whole brain and 6 nM and 0.8 pmol/mg of protein for NG 108-15 cells. Results from competition experiments also indicate that this ligand interacts with high affinity with both mu and delta opioid binding sites, with a slight preference for mu sites, while exhibiting low affinity at kappa sites. We have demonstrated that human 125I-beta-endorphin is a useful probe for the investigation of the subunit structure of opioid receptors. The specific cross-linking of this ligand has revealed the presence of four reproducible bands or areas after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography at 65, 53, 38, and 25 kDa. All labeled bands seem to be
opioid receptor
related since they are eliminated when binding is carried out in an excess of various opiates. The evidence we have obtained using rat whole brain (delta congruent to mu), rat thalamus (largely mu), bovine frontal cortex (delta:mu congruent to 2:1), and NG 108-15 cells (delta) demonstrates that different labeling patterns are obtained when mu and delta binding sites are cross-linked. The pattern obtained on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis from cross-linked mu sites contains a major (heavily labeled) component of 65 kDa and a minor component of 38 kDa, while patterns from delta sites contain a major labeled component of 53 kDa. This 53-kDa band appears clearly in extracts from NG 108-15 cells and bovine frontal cortex, while in rat whole brain a diffusely labeled region is present between 55 and 41 kDa. In addition, NG 108-15 cells also display a minor labeled component at 25 kDa. The relationship of the minor bands to the major bands is not clear.
...
PMID:Covalent labeling of opioid receptors with radioiodinated human beta-endorphin. Identification of binding site subunit. 299 92
A series of
neuroblastoma
cell lines were screened for the presence of
opioid receptor
sites with the tracers [3H]diprenorphine (mu, delta, kappa ligand) and [3H]naloxone (mu-selective ligand). One human
neuroblastoma
cell line, SK-N-SH, displayed avid binding for both tracers. Binding experiments with multiple tracers revealed the presence of both mu and delta sites. These sites were stereospecific, saturable, and proteinaceous in character. Saturation binding experiments provided an estimate of 50,000 mu and 10,000 delta sites/cell. NaCl (100 mM) and guanine nucleotide, guanylyl imidodiphosphate (50 microM), reduced opioid agonist but not antagonist binding to these sites. Etorphine at 1 nM inhibited prostaglandin E1-stimulated cyclic AMP production by approximately 20%, which was reversible by naloxone. The opioid-binding sites on SK-N-SH cells closely resemble the previously reported mu and delta sites in human and rodent brain. Therefore, the SK-N-SH
neuroblastoma
cell line represents a useful tool to study the molecular functions of opioid receptors.
...
PMID:A human neuroblastoma cell line expresses mu and delta opioid receptor sites. 300 51
Ethanol inhibits opioid peptide binding to the delta-
opioid receptor
. When
neuroblastoma
x glioma NG108-15 hybrid cells are grown with 25-200 mM ethanol,
opioid receptor
density increases up to 2-fold without a change in receptor affinity. Since changes in neurotransmitter receptor density may be important in neuronal adaptations to ethanol, we investigated the underlying mechanisms and functional consequences of this phenomenon. The opiate antagonist, naloxone, also increased
opioid receptor
number, but produced a smaller effect than ethanol with greater fractional inhibition of binding; long term enhancement of binding by ethanol is therefore not a simple function of acute receptor inhibition. Ethanol did not inhibit receptor down-regulation by etorphine, an opiate agonist, and therefore is not likely to increase receptor expression through interference with tonic down-regulation by endogenous opioid peptides. Ethanol increased
opioid receptor
expression in NG108-15 cells treated with actinomycin D, but not cycloheximide; hence, normal protein synthesis, but not DNA transcription, may be required for this response. The opioid receptors induced in ethanol-treated cells were subject to normal up-regulation by naloxone, down-regulation by etorphine, and acute inhibition of agonist binding by Na+. Etorphine maximally inhibits cyclic AMP accumulation in NG108-15 cells with only fractional occupancy of opioid receptors. Chronic ethanol exposure increased the receptor reserve for this response, resulting in a 3.5-fold increase in the potency of etorphine for inhibiting phenylisopropyladenosine-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation. Neuronal adaptation to ethanol may involve changes in the density of receptors that regulate cellular levels of cyclic AMP.
...
PMID:Ethanol increases the expression of functional delta-opioid receptors in neuroblastoma x glioma NG108-15 hybrid cells. 300 82
The first enantiomeric pair of irreversible opioid ligands [(+)- and (-)-4] were synthesized in greater than 99.6% optical purity as determined by HPLC analysis of diastereoisomeric derivatives of the intermediate 3-methyl-N-phenyl-4-piperidinamine enantiomers. Single-crystal X-ray analysis of the (R,R)-L-(+)-tartaric acid salt of (-)-9 revealed the absolute configuration to be 3S,4R. The absolute configuration of (-)-3 [cis-(-)-3-methylfentanyl] and (-)-4 derived from (-)-9 is thus 3S,4R and that of (+)-3 and (+)-4 is 3R,4S. The (+) enantiomer of 4 (SUPERFIT) was shown to be highly potent and specific for acylation of delta opioid receptors (to the exclusion of mu) in rat brain membranes like its achiral prototype FIT and was about 10 times as potent as the latter in this assay. The (+)-4 was about 5 times as potent as FIT in acylation of delta receptors in NG108-15
neuroblastoma
X glioma hybrid cells and about 50 times as potent as its enantiomer. Both FIT and (+)-4 behaved as partial agonists in inhibition of delta receptor coupled adenylate cyclase in NG108-15 membranes and (+)-4 was 5-10 times more potent than FIT and about 100 times more potent than its enantiomer in this assay. Dibromination of amine 12, catalytic exchange of bromine with tritium gas, and reaction of the labeled amine with thiophosgene afforded [3H]-(+)-4 with a specific activity of 13 Ci/mmol. Previous experiments indicated (+)-4 acylates the same 58 000-dalton glycoprotein previously shown to be acylated by FIT but with less nonspecific labeling. In view of the high potency and specificity of (+)-4 and the availability of its enantiomer, it seems likely that these compounds will prove to be valuable tools for study of the
opioid receptor
complex.
...
PMID:Probes for narcotic receptor mediated phenomena. 12. cis-(+)-3-Methylfentanyl isothiocyanate, a potent site-directed acylating agent for delta opioid receptors. Synthesis, absolute configuration, and receptor enantioselectivity. 301 85
The role of endogenous opioid systems (endogenous opioids and opioid receptors) in human cancer was explored using an opioid antagonist paradigm and
neuroblastoma
cells (SK-N-MC) transplanted into nude mice. Mice inoculated with 2.5 X 10(6)
neuroblastoma
cells received daily injections of either 0.1 or 10 mg/kg naltrexone (=0.1 and 10 NTX groups) which blocked the
opioid receptor
for 6-8 hr/day or the entire 24 hr/day, respectively, or sterile water. The latency for appearance of a measurable tumor (5 mm diameter) in the 0.1 NTX group was 27% longer than controls (11 days), and the first death in this group occurred 33% later than controls (day 27). Mice inoculated with tumor cells in the 10 NTX group had an acceleration (18%) in the latency of tumor appearance and, 2 weeks after cell inoculation, 70% of the mice in this group had tumors, in contrast to 10% of the controls. At the termination of the experiment (day 45), only 33% of the 10 NTX group were alive, in contrast to 90% of the controls. Receptor binding assays using DAGO, DADLE, or EKC revealed specific saturable binding only for DADLE and EKC. NTX administration resulted in a 148-186% increase in density for both binding sites, but no changes in binding affinity. Measures of opioid levels showed that tumor tissue levels of both beta-endorphin and methionine-enkephalin were elevated 2.5 to 6.5 fold from control values in both NTX groups, whereas plasma beta-endorphin was subnormal by 4 to 6 fold. These results indicate that endogenous opioid systems regulate human neuro-oncogenesis, with opioids being active inhibitors of growth. Opioid antagonists up-regulate receptors and increase tissue levels of endogenous opioids and, under conditions in which the opioid antagonist is short-acting (e.g., 0.1 NTX), can have an exaggerated antitumor effect during the interval when the antagonist is no longer present.
...
PMID:Modulation of human neuroblastoma transplanted into nude mice by endogenous opioid systems. 304 Nov 43
Endogenous opioid systems participate in carcinogenic events. To understand further the action of opioids on growth, S20Y
neuroblastoma
cells in tissue culture were exposed to i) [Met5]-enkephalin, a naturally occurring opioid pentapeptide, at a concentration (10(-6) M) that inhibits cell replication by 66% of control levels, ii) [Met5]-enkephalin (10(-6) M) and the opioid antagonist naloxone (10(-6) M) which blocks opioid agonist action, or iii) naltrexone (10(-6) M), a potent antagonist that disrupts endogenous opioid-
opioid receptor
interaction and increased cell number 76% above control values. The morphology of cells exposed to these agents for 2-4 days were similar to controls (i.e., exposed to sterile water) as determined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. These results support the hypothesis that endogenous opioid systems act as trophic factors as they regulate growth; their effects on cell growth and survival, however, do not alter the basic ultrastructural morphology of the cells. Moreover, these data strengthen the validity of paradigms and therapeutic regimens that utilize opioid agonists and antagonists to modulate the relationship of endogenous opioid-
opioid receptor
interactions in neural cancer.
...
PMID:Endogenous opioid systems and neural cancer: transmission and scanning electron microscopic studies of murine neuroblastoma in tissue culture. 321 9
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