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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen di- and tripeptide analogues of MIF, Pro-Leu-
Gly
-NH2, have been synthesized and assayed for inhibition of oxotremorine-induced tremor. Replacement of Pro by HCO-Pro or cyclopentanecarboxylic acid gave inactive analogues, while some peptides of the general structure less than Glu-Leu-
Gly
-NR1R2 were highly active. Thus, R1 = C3H8 and R2 = H gave 4 times the activity of MIF, R1 = I-C3H8 and R2 = H gave 13 times the activity of MIF, and R1 = R2 = CH3 gave 29 times the activity of MIF. cyclo(-Pro-Leu-), Pro-Lys-
Gly
-NH2, and Pro-Arg-
Gly
-NH2 had no activity. Apparently, small modifications in the structure of MIF can yield highly active analogues with potential clinical value, e.g., in the treatment of
Parkinson's disease
or mental depression.
...
PMID:Tripeptide analogues of melanocyte-stimulating hormone release-inhibiting hormone (Pro-Leu-Gly-NH2) as inhibitors of oxotremorine-induced tremor. 4 28
A number of questions remain unsettled about the release of melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and about its function. Even though relatively few investigators are studying this area, some generalities have emerged during the last 10 years. It now seems that release of MSH from the pituitary is inhibited by a substance present in the hypothalamus. The structure of this physiologic inhibitor of MSH release may still not be considered an established entity but there is evidence for additional mechanisms capable of exerting a fine control on the release of MSH. Contrary to some opinions, the release of MSH does not always occur together with the release of ACTH, and the release of the two hormones can be dissociated in several laboratory and clinical situations. In addition, many studies have shown that the pituitary peptide, MSH, exerts behavioral and electroencephalographic effects in both the rat and man. The hypothalamic peptide Pro-Leu-
Gly
-NH2 (MIF-I) also has direct effects on the central nervous system that may include alleviation of the symptoms of
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Some questions related to melanocyte-stimulating hormone. 96 14
The study of neurotransmitter receptors aids in the understanding of the normal anatomy, pharmacology, therapeutics and pathophysiology of disease processes involving the basal ganglia. Receptors may be studied in vitro by homogenate binding experiments, enzyme analysis or quantitative autoradiography and in vivo with positron emission tomography. In the substantia nigra (SN), receptors have been identified for somatostatin, neurotensin, substance P, glycine, benzodiazepine and GABA, opiates, dopamine, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) and serotonin. The striatum has receptors for dopamine, GABA and benzodiazepines, acetylcholine, opiates, substance P, glutamate and cholecystokinin. GABA and benzodiazepine receptors are also located in the globus pallidus. In
Parkinson's disease
, striatal dopamine D-2 receptors are elevated in patients that have not received L-DOPA therapy. This supersensitivity is reversed with agonist therapy. Muscarinic binding to cholinergic receptors seems to correlate with dopamine receptors. Delta opiate receptors are increased in the caudate and mu binding is reduced in the striatum. In the SN of patients with
Parkinson's disease
, there is reduced binding of somatostatin, neurotensin, mu and kappa opiates, benzodiazepine and GABA and glycine. In Huntington's disease, there is reduced binding of GABA and benzodiazepines, dopamine, acetylcholine, glutamate and CCK. There is increased binding of GABA in both the SN and globus pallidus.
Glycine
binding is increased in the substantia nigra and ACE is reduced.
...
PMID:Receptors in the basal ganglia. 282 9
The binding properties of mu and delta opioid receptors were investigated in several areas of human brain by using [3H]Tyr-D-Ala-
Gly
-(Me)Phe-
Gly
-ol and [3H]Tyr-D-Thr-
Gly
-Phe-Leu-Thr as respective selective ligands, while the totality of opioid receptors was measured by using [3H]etorphine as a non-selective agonist. Receptor densities were highest in cerebral cortex, amygdala and striatum, and lowest in the substantia nigra (pars compacta). In the different brain areas of patients with
Parkinson's disease
, the density and the proportion of the various opioid receptors were not significantly different from control subjects.
...
PMID:Regional distribution of mu, delta and kappa opioid receptors in human brains from controls and parkinsonian subjects. 304 Jan 66
To determine whether the oscillating clinical response to levodopa in
Parkinson's disease
(the "on-off" phenomenon) reflects fluctuations in absorption and transport of the drug, we investigated this phenomenon in nine patients with an oscillating motor state. We studied the response to continuous infusion of levodopa and the effects of meals on the plasma levodopa concentrations and on the clinical response during oral and intravenous administration of the drug. Meals reduced peak plasma levodopa concentrations by 29 per cent and delayed absorption by 34 minutes. Bypassing absorption by constant infusion of the drug produced a stable clinical state lasting for 12 hours in all of six patients and for up to 36 hours in some. High-protein meals or oral phenylalanine, leucine, or isoleucine (100 mg per kilogram of body weight) reversed the therapeutic effect of infused levodopa without reducing plasma levodopa concentrations.
Glycine
and lysine at identical doses had no effect. We conclude that interference with absorption of levodopa by food and by competition between large neutral amino acids and levodopa for transport from plasma to the brain may be partly responsible for the fluctuating clinical response in patients with
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:The "on-off" phenomenon in Parkinson's disease. Relation to levodopa absorption and transport. 669 94
We have previously shown that a metabolically stable analogue of MPF, the C-terminal tetrapeptide of human beta-endorphin of structure Lys-Lys-
Gly
-Glu, reduces the turning behaviour of rats with unilateral lesions of their nigro-striatal pathways. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has now revealed that this effect is related to reversal of the mitochondrial damage to substantia nigra (SN) neurones induced by the lesion. The results are consistent with the concept that an inherited defect in components of the mitochondrial enzyme system is the initial step in the genesis of
Parkinson's disease
(PD). They also, in conjunction with known neurotropic properties of MPF, and our unpublished finding of high concentrations of an MPF-like peptide in human basal ganglia, suggest that MPF may have physiological significance in the development and regeneration of the human CNS.
...
PMID:Reversal of mitochondrial damage in a rat model of Parkinson's disease by a neurotrophic peptide (MPF analogue). 784 67
The specific binding of [3H]neurotensin, [3H]substance P, [3H]D-Ala2-D-Leu5-enkephalin (delta receptors) and [3H]-Tyr-D-Ala-
Gly
-(NMe)Phe-
Gly
-ol (mu receptors) were studied in membrane preparations of caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus and substantia nigra from patients with
Parkinson's disease
and from age-matched controls. The density of neurotensin receptors was decreased in globus pallidus (lateral and medial segments) in parkinsonian brain. Substance P receptors were reduced in the putamen (anterior and posterior) and in lateral globus pallidus in
Parkinson's disease
. There was a reduction in the density of opioid receptors in posterior putamen and in mu receptors in caudate nucleus and putamen (anterior and posterior). No differences in neuropeptide receptor binding were observed in substantia nigra from parkinsonian brains compared with control subjects. The reductions in neuropeptide receptor density were less marked than the decrease in caudate and putamen content of dopamine and its metabolites. This suggests that neuropeptide receptors are only partially localized to striatal dopamine terminals.
...
PMID:Neurotensin, substance P, delta and mu opioid receptors are decreased in basal ganglia of Parkinson's disease patients. 796 97
In the present study, L-prolyl-L-leucyl-glycinamide (1) peptidomimetics 3a-3d and 4a-4d were synthesized utilizing alpha, alpha-disubstituted amino acids. These analogues were designed to explore the conformational effects of constraints at the phi3 and psi3 torsion angles. Constrained conformations were verified by the use of X-ray crystallography and circular dichroism. The effects of Pro-Leu-
Gly
-NH2 analogues 3a-3d and 4a-4d on enhancing rotational behavior induced by apomorphine in the 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned animal models of
Parkinson's disease
were studied. The ability of these peptidomimetics to increase the binding of agonist N-propylnorapomorphine (NPA) to the dopamine D2 receptor was also examined. Extended analogue Pro-Leu-Deg-NH2 was the most active compound of this series. It was 10 times more potent and almost 2 times more effective than 1 in increasing apomorphine-induced rotations (56 +/- 15% at 1.0 mg/kg ip) and in enhancing [3H]NPA specific binding (40%).
...
PMID:Synthesis and dopamine receptor modulating activity of novel peptidomimetics of L-prolyl-L-leucyl-glycinamide featuring alpha,alpha-disubstituted amino acids. 1021 30
A nonapeptide derived from the C terminus of the insulin B chain, H(2)N-Arg-
Gly
-Phe-Phe-Tyr-Thr-Pro-Lys-Ala-COOH, was found to strongly inhibit dopamine (DA) uptake by rat dopamine transporter (DAT) stably expressed in CHO cells (designated D8 cells). The kinetic experiments on D8 cells gave a curve typical of competitive inhibition with an IC(50)=6.9 microM. This inhibitory effect was also confirmed by experiments on striatal synaptosomes. The rat administered with the nonapeptide unilaterally into substantia nigra showed dose-dependent velocity and duration of the round movement contralateral to the nonapeptide-injected side. In addition, the nonapeptide dose-dependently reduced the binding of the tritium-labeled cocaine analog (-)-2 beta-carbomethoxy-3 beta-(4-fluorophenyl)tropane (WIN35,428) to DAT of D8 cells, which suggests that the nonapeptide may inhibit the transport activity of DAT in the way as cocaine does. Meanwhile, the peptide DOI (insulin with 8 amino acid residues deleted at the C terminus of the B chain) shows a significantly stimulating effect on DAT uptake activity in D8 cells. So insulin is proposed as a kind of neuropeptide precursor in the brain and insulin-derived peptides may be involved in the process of regulating the DA system, and these peptides may be developed into new medicines for disorders concerning the DA system such as
Parkinson's disease
and cocaine addiction.
...
PMID:Peptide derived from insulin with regulatory activity of dopamine transporter. 1154 66
Central dopaminergic systems are implicated in schizophrenia and
Parkinson's disease
, and are known to be modulated by the endogenous tripeptide Pro-Leu-
Gly
-NH(2) (PLG or MIF-1, melanocyte-stimulating hormone release inhibiting factor-1). Differential display polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) was utilized to identify genes that are regulated by protracted PLG treatment (20 mg/kg, i.p. for 28 days) in male Sprague-Dawley rats. A total of 2400 genes were screened and 3 down-regulated bands were identified in the PLG-treated samples. Sequencing analysis revealed a total of six unique cDNA species. One fragment possessed a high degree of homology with Mus musculus hnRNP-L (protein L) mRNA (GenBank #AB009392) (termed PRG1: PLG regulated gene 1). Elongation of the PRG1 cDNA, by RACE-PCR, provided an 835 bp sequence with 95% homology to AB009392 over a 743 bp span. Open reading frame analysis provided a putative amino acid sequence consistent with the identity of PRG1 as rat hnRNP-L. Northern hybridization experiments with PRG1 revealed a 2.3 kb mRNA species that was decreased by 65% in the PLG-treated tissue. Western blot analysis revealed significantly decreased hnRNP-L levels in the striatum and pre-frontal cortex (but not the nucleus accumbens) by 71 and 61%, respectively of PLG-treated animals. The identification of altered expression of hnRNP-L following PLG treatment provides insight into the long-term effects of PLG and may provide insight into its molecular mechanism of action.
...
PMID:PLG regulates hnRNP-L expression in the rat striatum and pre-frontal cortex: identification by ddPCR. 1257 95
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