Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and an increase of glucagon and somatostatin concentration under diabetes mellitus are accompanied by intensification of secretion of hypothalamic neurohormones (
CRF
, vasopressin,
oxytocin
, somatostatin) with the corresponding signs of the increase in activity of hypothalamus nuclei and subnuclei secreting them as well as ACTH, corticosterone and cortisol rise in blood. Adaptation to hypoxia has caused hypoglycemia, activated insulin biosynthesis, changed glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion.
CRF
corticosterone, cortisol and ACTH concentration in blood was not changed, vasopressin concentration lowered, somatostatin and
oxytocin
amount (in hypothalamus) increased to a higher degree than under diabetes. Adaptation to hypoxia corrected impaired hormone balance and state of Langerhans islets (beta-cells destruction process inhibition, insulin biosynthesis stimulation, glucagon and somatostatin secretion decrease) under diabetes mellitus, hypothalamus neurohormones participating in this process.
...
PMID:[Hypothalamic mechanisms of neurohormone regulation of the endocrine part of the pancreas]. 790 82
Present knowledge allows the identification of some features of the initiation of human parturition. Progesterone reduces myometrial sensitivity to labour-inducing agents. It suppresses gap junction formation and facilitates beta-adrenergic receptor expression by the myometrium which, in turn, exerts a positive feedback by enhancing beta-adrenergic-induced increases in placental progesterone production. Inhibition of gestagen action does not result in immediate initiation of labor but sensitises myometrial cells to contraction-inducing agents. Estrogens, in contrast, enable the myometrium to prepare for parturition by inducing
oxytocin
receptors and this seems to be the first step towards parturition. Coordinated myometrial contractions are facilitated by the increased gap junctions due to the estrogen drive. Absence of estrogen will result in failed parturition. The myometrium seems to be sensitised to
oxytocin
by placental
CRF
. Myometrial
CRF
receptors increase their avidity for
CRF
with ongoing pregnancy.
Oxytocin
evokes a variety of auto- and paracrine events which culminate in increased free intracellular calcium and the consequent contractions. In this cascade, prostaglandins can be identified as positive feedback agents, as they further enhance estrogen-induced expression of
oxytocin
receptors. Another second messenger of
oxytocin
action are the inositol phosphates which can further increase free intracellular calcium concentrations. Finally, endothelin-1, derived from endometrium and decidua, under
oxytocin
control, may serve as a myometrial contractor following delivery when
oxytocin
concentrations decline but when a strong myometrial contraction is needed to prevent large blood loss during and after placenta expulsion.
...
PMID:Placental progesterone, prostaglandins and mechanisms leading to initiation of parturition in the human. 799 41
To investigate functional and chemical properties of anatomically characterized corticotropin-releasing factor-41 (CRF-41) producing neurons in vitro, hypothalamic slices of 6-day-old rats were maintained in culture for up to 6 weeks using a modified roller culture technique. This technique yields thick (100 microns) slices that contained an average of 300-400
CRF
-41-immunostained neurons. The majority of
CRF
-41-positive cells were of small size (12-15 microns in diameter), and contained
CRF
-41-labeled dense core vesicles of 100 nm diameter as detected by electron microscopic postembedding immunocytochemistry. These cells represented the only
CRF
-41-positive cell population in the culture. Light microscope double immunolabelling of colchicine-treated cultures kept in a serum-containing media (SCM) indicated that about 60% of these
CRF
-41-positive neurons contains detectable levels of vasopressin-associated
neurophysin
(VP-NP). Culturing slices in serum-free, chemically defined media (SFM) resulted in an increased VP-NP immunostaining: parvicellular neurons labeled for both
CRF
-41 and VP-NP could be detected without colchicine treatment, and practically all
CRF
-41-positive neurons expressed VP-NP immunoreactivity. At the electron microscopic level there was a significant increase in VP-NP labeling density in the dense core vesicle compartment of
CRF
-41-positive varicosities. Adding dexamethasone (10 nM) to the SFM restored the staining pattern originally observed in SCM. Hence, the increased VP-NP and
CRF
-41 immunostaining after culturing
CRF
-41 neurons in SFM is most likely due to the absence of inhibitory glucocorticoids. The capacity of cultured paraventricular cells to release
CRF
-41 was assessed using an immunoassay. Unstimulated (basal) secretion of
CRF
-41 was not altered by five successive samplings at 2-hour intervals and stimulation of the same culture with 56 mmol K+ significantly increased (2-3 times) the
CRF
-41 content in the medium. The presence of dexamethasone (10 nM) in SFM induced a 6-fold reduction of K(+)-stimulated
CRF
-41 release and a 5 times reduction in tissue content in relation to cultures maintained in SFM without dexamethasone. In summary, we have demonstrated that cultured
CRF
-41 cells display morphological and biochemical features, as well as responsiveness to glucocorticoids, that is reminiscent to the situation in vivo. Thus, the model is well suited for studies of hypophysiotrophic
CRF
-41 cell functions.
...
PMID:A tissue culture model of the hypophysiotrophic CRF producing neuronal system. 836 34
Glucocorticoid hormones suppress the secretion of ACTH evoked by secretagogues such as
CRF
and arginine vasopressin. In this study, we investigated the effects of glucocorticoids on ACTH release induced by
oxytocin
(OT) and on intracellular free calcium ion levels in corticotropes prepared from the adenohypophyses of female Wistar rats. Pulsatile additions of physiological concentration of OT (10 nM) to superfused anterior pituitary cells caused pulsatile ACTH release about 4-fold above basal secretion with similar peak amounts of ACTH during subsequent OT pulses. Exposure of the cells to corticosterone (100 nM) or to a selective glucocorticoid receptor agonist RU 28362 (100 nM) for 30 min suppressed OT-stimulated but not basal ACTH release by approximately 60%. Inhibition gradually disappeared during subsequent pulses of OT in the absence of corticosterone. Pretreatment with the selective antagonist RU 38486 (1 microM) completely blocked the inhibitory effect of corticosterone on OT-induced ACTH secretion. Changes in free cytosolic calcium levels in single cultured pituitary cells were measured using the calcium indicator Fura-2. OT caused calcium transients in corticotropes, which were identified by immunocytochemistry. They responded in a similar manner to a second OT stimulus when preincubated for 30 min with corticosterone (1 microM) or with RU 28362 (1 microM). Our data indicate that glucocorticoids, via glucocorticoid receptors, rapidly inhibit OT-stimulated ACTH secretion by corticotropes without affecting intracellular calcium transients due to OT. Therefore, we conclude that rapid inhibition of ACTH release by glucocorticoids interferes with cellular signal transduction beyond the step of calcium mobilization.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoids rapidly inhibit oxytocin-stimulated adrenocorticotropin release from rat anterior pituitary cells, without modifying intracellular calcium transients. 838 Oct 78
The concentration of immunoreactive, placentally derived CRH is increased in the peripheral circulation during the third trimester of human pregnancy. However, the function of this placental CRH is entirely unknown. A number of observations have led us to believe that CRH might influence myometrial contractility and, hence, parturition via specific receptor mechanisms. 1) In idiopathic preterm labor, plasma immunoreactive-CRH concentrations are significantly elevated compared to control values. 2) CRH and
oxytocin
exhibit a marked synergistic effect on myometrial contractility which is prostaglandin dependent and can be inhibited by the CRH receptor antagonist [alpha-helical
CRF
-(9-41)]. In view of this, we searched for specific CRH-binding sites in myometrial tissue obtained at biopsy from pregnant (cesarian section) and nonpregnant (hysterectomy) patients. To test for the presence of CRH receptors, we prepared myometrial membranes and performed binding studies using [125I]tyr-o-CRH as a ligand. The binding was found to be pH, time, temperature, and divalent cation concentration dependent and was fully reversible on addition of 1 microM unlabeled ovine CRH. In both tissues, there was a single, specific, homogenous, high affinity population of CRH receptors. Scatchard analysis of the specific binding sites revealed dissociation constants of 250-300 and 30-60 pM for the nonpregnant and pregnant myometrium, respectively. This compares with dissociation constants of 130 pM (rat anterior pituitary receptor) and 100 pM (human CRH-binding protein). This would mean that in the nonpregnant state, the equilibrium for binding is in favor of the binding protein, but during the later stages of pregnancy, the change in affinity of the receptor alters the binding in favor of the myometrial receptor.
...
PMID:The identification of a human myometrial corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor that increases in affinity during pregnancy. 838 45
ACTH release by the anterior pituitary lobes of 8-day-old newborn rats (males and females) in the presence of rat corticotrophin-releasing factor (rCRF), arginine vasopressin (AVP) and
oxytocin
, given alone or in association, was measured in vitro. Rat
CRF
and AVP induced a dose-dependent release of ACTH in both sexes, while
oxytocin
was unable to stimulate ACTH secretion except at the highest dose tested. No sex-related difference was noted for any of the responses.
Oxytocin
(1 nmol/l) potentiated the response to rCRF (0.20 nmol/l) by the anterior pituitary lobes of females but not by those of males. This
oxytocin
potentiation was abolished when female newborn rats were injected at birth with testosterone (1 mg). AVP (1 nmol/l) alone stimulated ACTH release from the anterior pituitary lobes of the newborn rats of both sexes and markedly potentiated the ACTH response to rCRF. Although no difference between the sexes was noted for basal levels of AVP and
oxytocin
in the hypothalamus, the neurointermediate lobe and the peripheral plasma, the present data on the sex-related effect of
oxytocin
on the newborn adenohypophysis could, in part, explain why ACTH release in response to ether stress was previously reported to be more lasting in females than in males on day 8 postpartum.
...
PMID:ACTH secretion from isolated hypophysial anterior lobes of male and female newborn rats: effects of corticotrophin-releasing factor, arginine vasopressin and oxytocin alone or in combination. 838 13
The most established physiological function of
oxytocin
is to induce milk ejection from the mammary gland of lactating animals. It is now known that during lactation
oxytocin
is released pulsatively following brief periods of burst-like and synchronous activation of many thousands of
oxytocin
cells in the hypothalamus. The mechanism generating such activity in
oxytocin
cells has been extensively studied, but it has not been fully understood yet. To explain that suckling stimuli produce a recurrence of milk ejection bursts of
oxytocin
cells without any change in their background activity, a gating mechanism has been hypothesized. In the excitatory transmission of afferent signals of the milk ejection reflex, alpha adrenergic receptors are indicated to be involved. Among neuropeptides,
oxytocin
and
CRF
are potent facilitatory factors. As non-neurochemical factors that facilitate milk ejection bursts of
oxytocin
cells, there are osmotic stimuli, neurohypophyseal stimulation and vaginal distention. During the lactation period, responsiveness of
oxytocin
cells to various stimuli such as stress, osmotic stimuli and CCK is markedly reduced. The cause of the change has not been discovered, but it is assumed that the reduction in responsiveness may enable the animal to adapt to the large demands for the hormone during the lactation period.
...
PMID:[Control of oxytocin secretion in lactation]. 839 67
The relative importance of the paraventricular (PVN) and the supraoptic nuclei (SON) for the secretion of
oxytocin
was evaluated by comparison of stress-induced
oxytocin
release under normal conditions, in the absence of vasopressin and/or corticoliberin (
CRF
). We introduced an incomplete anterolateral cut (iALC) around the mediobasal hypothalamus designed to leave intact the SON-neurohypophysial connections but to inflict damage to the nerve fibers from the PVN. The studies were performed in conscious cannulated rats using immobilization as the stress stimulus. Stress-induced
oxytocin
release was found in heterozygous Brattleboro rats as well as in homozygous animals lacking vasopressin, yet in the latter it was less pronounced and in both cases it was prevented by iALC. In Wistar rats, stress-induced
oxytocin
release was markedly reduced after iALC and absent after PVN lesion. Both hypothalamic interventions failed to influence basal
oxytocin
levels and resulted in a similar reduction of ACTH release. It is concluded that a functional diversity exists between the hypothalamic magnocellular nuclei. At least in relation to immobilization stress, the PVN is essential for stress-induced
oxytocin
release and it is evident that the SON without the PVN cannot preserve
oxytocin
secretion during stress.
...
PMID:Paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus are not equally important for oxytocin release during stress. 841 14
Steroid-metabolizing enzymes modulate the effects of androgens on brain differentiation and function, but no similar enzymatic system has been demonstrated for adrenocorticosteroids which exert feedback control on the hypothalamus. 11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-OHSD) rapidly metabolizes physiological glucocorticoids (corticosterone, cortisol) to inactive products, thereby regulating glucocorticoid access to peripheral mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors in a site-specific manner. Using in-situ hybridization, we found expression of 11 beta-OHSD mRNA in neurones of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) where corticotrophin-releasing factor-41 (CRF-41) is synthesized and from where it is released into hypophysial portal blood. Administration of glycyrrhetinic acid (GE), a potent 11 beta-OHSD inhibitor, decreased
CRF
-41 release into hypophysial portal blood in the presence of unchanged circulating glucocorticoid levels, suggesting that 11 beta-OHSD regulates the effective corticosterone feedback signal to
CRF
-41 neurones. These effects of GE were not observed in adrenalectomized animals, demonstrating dependence on adrenal products. In contrast, GE led to two- to threefold increases in arginine vasopressin and
oxytocin
release into portal blood, effects also dependent upon intact adrenal glands. These results suggest that 11 beta-OHSD in the PVN, and possibly other sites, may represent a novel and important control point of corticosteroid feedback on
CRF
-41 release in vivo.
...
PMID:The 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase inhibitor glycyrrhetinic acid affects corticosteroid feedback regulation of hypothalamic corticotrophin-releasing peptides in rats. 847 34
We investigated the chemical and anatomical features of nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-containing neurons in the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei in the rat hypothalamus using combinations of enzyme histochemistry, in situ hybridization and immuno-histochemistry. Neurons expressing NOS mRNA completely overlapped with NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons. Topographical distribution of NOS was segregated from that of
CRF
-containing parvicellular neurons in the posterior paraventricular nucleus but overlapped with that of magnocellular neurons. In the paraventricular nucleus, 70% of
oxytocin
neurons contained NOS, which corresponded to one half of NOS neurons. About one third of vasopressin-immunoreactive neurons were NADPH-diaphorase-positive and the same proportion of NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons were vasopressin-immunoreactive. In the supraoptic nucleus, 50% of
oxytocin
neurons were NADPH-diaphorase-positive, which corresponded to 40% of NOS neurons. About 25% of vasopressin neurons were NADPH-diaphorase-positive, and 30% of NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons were vasopressin-immunoreactive. When NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry was performed first, subsequent immunostaining was markedly perturbed. Using fluoro-gold as a retrograde tracer, 4% of NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons were shown to contribute to the descending projection to the spinal cord. About 40%-50% of NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons exhibited Fos immunoreactivity after injection of lipopolysaccharide or hypertonic saline, while only 10%-15% of these neurons expressed Fos in response to immobilization or pain. Endogenous NO may be involved in the regulation of magnocellular functions, especially when the internal environment is disturbed.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide synthase-containing magnocellular neurons of the rat hypothalamus synthesize oxytocin and vasopressin and express Fos following stress stimuli. 895 94
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>