Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917801 (insomnia)
10,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A proline-rich polypeptide (PRP) complex, subsequently called Colostrinin, was isolated from ovine colostrum. The complex showed immunomodulatory properties in mice, rats, and chickens, inducing maturation and differentiation of thymocytes. It was recently found that Colostrinin is a cytokine-like factor that acts as an inducer of interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) and other cytokines in human peripheral blood and cord blood leukocyte cultures and has psycho-immuno-enhancing activity in volunteers. These observations prompted us to study the effect of Colostrinin on patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Forty six AD patients were divided into 3 groups and randomly assigned to receive orally either Colostrinin (100 microg per tablet, every second day), commercially available bioorganic selenium (100 microg selenium per tablet, every second day) or placebo tablets. One cycle of the treatment lasted 3 weeks and was separated from the next cycle by a 2 week hiatus. Each patient received 10 cycles of treatment during the year of the clinical trial. Outcomes were assessed by psychiatrists blinded to the treatment assignment. Eight of the 15 AD patients treated with Colostrinin improved and in the 7 others the disease had stabilized. In contrast, none of the 31 patients from the selenium or placebo groups with similar mild or moderate AD improved. The administration of selenium promoted stabilization in 13 of the 15 patients, whereas in the placebo group only 8 of the 16 patients were stabilized at the 12 month trials end-evaluation. Colostrinin was found to be a remarkably safe drug. Mild and transient effects were anxiety, stimulation, insomnia, and tiredness. The results obtained showed that oral administration of Colostrinin improves the outcome of AD patients with mild to moderate dementia. The results are very encouraging and deserve further research.
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PMID:Colostrinin: a proline-rich polypeptide (PRP) complex isolated from ovine colostrum for treatment of Alzheimer's disease. A double-blind, placebo-controlled study. 1060 95

Prostaglandin (PG) D2 has been proposed to be essential for the initiation and maintenance of the physiological sleep of rats because intracerebroventricular administration of selenium tetrachloride (SeCl4), a selective inhibitor of PGD synthase (PGDS), was shown to reduce promptly and effectively the amounts of sleep during the period of infusion. However, gene knockout (KO) mice of PGDS and prostaglandin D receptor (DP1R) showed essentially the same circadian profiles and daily amounts of sleep as wild-type (WT) mice, raising questions about the involvement of PGD2 in regulating physiological sleep. Here we examined the effect of SeCl4 on the sleep of WT and KO mice for PGDS and DP1R and that of a DP1R antagonist, ONO-4127Na, on the sleep of rats. The i.p. injection of SeCl4 into WT mice decreased the PGD2 content in the brain without affecting the amounts of PGE2 and PGF(2alpha). It inhibited sleep dose-dependently and immediately after the administration during the light period when mice normally sleep, increasing the wake time; and the treatment with this compound resulted in a distinct sleep rebound during the following dark period. The SeCl4-induced insomnia was observed in hematopoietic PGDS KO mice but not at all in lipocalin-type PGDS KO, hematopoietic and lipocalin-type PGDS double KO or DP1R KO mice. Furthermore, the DP1R antagonist ONO-4127Na reduced sleep of rats by 30% during infusion into the subarachnoid space under the rostral basal forebrain at 200 pmol/min. These results clearly show that the lipocalin-type PGDS/PGD2/DP1R system plays pivotal roles in the regulation of physiological sleep.
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PMID:Lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase produces prostaglandin D2 involved in regulation of physiological sleep. 1709 43

Ganoderma lucidum (Lingzhi or Reishi) is known as a bitter mushroom with remarkable health benefits. The active constituents found in mushrooms include polysaccharides, dietary fibers, oligosaccharides, triterpenoids, peptides and proteins, alcohols and phenols, mineral elements (such as zinc, copper, iodine, selenium, and iron), vitamins, and amino acids. The bioactive components found in the G. lucidum mushroom have numerous health properties to treat diseased conditions such as hepatopathy, chronic hepatitis, nephritis, hypertension, hyperlipemia, arthritis, neurasthenia, insomnia, bronchitis, asthma, gastric ulcers, atherosclerosis, leukopenia, diabetes, anorexia, and cancer. In spite of the voluminous literature available, G. lucidum is used mostly as an immune enhancer and a health supplement, not therapeutically. This review discusses the therapeutic potential of G. luidum to attract the scientific community to consider its therapeutic application where it can be worth pursuing.
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PMID:Probing Lingzhi or Reishi medicinal mushroom Ganoderma lucidum (higher Basidiomycetes): a bitter mushroom with amazing health benefits. 2355 65