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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In vivo experiments on the vasoactive effects of vasopressin and
oxytocin
on cerebral circulation were carried out in anesthetized dogs, using an electromagnetic flowmeter to measure vertebral blood flow and angiography to measure the internal diameter of the basilar artery. Direct bolus infusion of 1 pmol to 1 nmol of vasopressin or 10 pmol to 10 nmol of
oxytocin
into a femoral-vertebral artery shunt produced a dose-dependent decrease in vertebral artery blood flow without significantly affecting mean arterial blood pressure.
Vasopressin
was more potent than endothelin and neuropeptide Y, which have also been demonstrated to induce long-lasting decreases in vertebral artery blood flow. However, direct bolus infusion of vasopressin (100 pmol and 1 nmol) or
oxytocin
(1 nmol and 10 nmol) into the vertebral artery dilated major vessels including the vertebral, anterior spinal, and basilar arteries, as well as the circle of Willis and its main branches, while endothelin (1 nmol) and neuropeptide Y (5 nmol) caused no change in the diameters of major cerebral arteries. The V1 antagonist d(CH2)5tyrosine(methyl) arginine vasopressin suppressed the effects of both vasopressin and
oxytocin
.
Vasopressin
was over 10 times as potent as
oxytocin
in both assays. The vasodilatory effect of vasopressin, which may be mediated by an endothelium-dependent mechanism, was functionally damaged in dogs after experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage. These data suggest regional differences in the sensitivity and responsiveness of vasculature to vasopressin and
oxytocin
, and specifically that both peptides act through V1 receptors to decrease the resistance of large vessels and increase the resistance of small vessels.
...
PMID:Effects of vasopressin and oxytocin on canine cerebral circulation in vivo. 150 90
The concentrations of human neurophysins in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of nine patients with Alzheimer's disease: Preliminary observations. (AD), and one patients with Pick's disease, were determined using specific radioimmunoassays (RIAs). Concentrations of vasopressin and
oxytocin
were also measured. Values were compared with those from 20 age-matched mentally normal individuals who were being treated for back pain. CSF levels of vasopressin-associated human
neurophysin
(VP-HNP) and
oxytocin
-associated human
neurophysin
(OT-HNP) in patients with AD (22 +/- 4 fmol/ml and 104 +/- 17 fmol/ml) were only 42% and 58% of those in the control subjects (p less than 0.0001, p less than 0.0004).
Vasopressin
levels for these patients (3.6 +/- 0.4 fmol/ml) were also significantly reduced to 51% of controls (p less than 0.007) and
oxytocin
levels were marginally (p = 0.092) reduced to 70% of controls. Because neurophysins and neuropeptides are gene-related products of vasopressin-neurons and
oxytocin
-neurons, the data indicate that these neurons are functionally impaired in patients with AD. Plasma
neurophysin
values suggest this impairment is confined to neurons with centrally-directed axons. Data from the one patient with Pick's disease demonstrates that reduced CSF levels of neurophysins and hormones is not confined to Alzheimer-type dementia.
...
PMID:An evaluation of human neurophysin production in Alzheimer's disease: preliminary observations. 152 43
Vasopressin
receptors in distal segments of the rat nephron were identified in isolated tubules using two labeled ligands: the [1-(beta-mercapto-beta,beta-cyclopentamethylenepropionic acid), 2-(O-methyl)tyrosine,4-threonine,8-ornithine,9-125I-tyrosylamide]- vasotocin [125I-d(CH2)5[Tyr(Me)2,Thr4,Tyr-NH2(9)]OVT] and the linear analogue, Phaa1,D-Tyr(Me)2,Phe3,Gln4,Asn5,Arg6, Pro7,Arg8,125I-Tyr-NH2(9) [125I-Tyr-NH2(9)-linear antagonist (LA)-V1a)]. Specific 125I-d(CH2)5[Tyr(Me)2,Thr4,Tyr-NH2(9)]-OVT binding to cortical collecting ducts (CCD) was saturable with incubation time and dose, reversible after elimination of free ligand, and characterized by the following rank order for recognition of vasopressin analogues: desGly9-d-(CH2)5-[Tyr(Et)2,Val4]arginine vasopressin (AVP) greater than or equal to d(CH2)5[Tyr-(ET)2,Val4]AVP greater than or equal to AVP greater than or equal to d(CH2)5[Tyr(Me)2]AVP = 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) greater than or equal to Tyr-NH2(9)-LA-V1a greater than [8-arginine]vasotocin (AVT) greater than d(CH2)5[Tyr(Me)2, Thr4,Tyr-NH2(9)]OVT greater than
oxytocin
(OT) greater than [Phe2,Orn8]VT much greater than [Thr4,Gly7]-OT. Scatchard plots of dose-dependent 125I-Tyr-NH2(9)-LA-V1a binding to medullary thick ascending limbs (MTAL), CCD, and outer medullary collecting ducts (OMCD) revealed the presence of high- and low-affinity binding sites corresponding to V1a and V2 vasopressin receptors, respectively; the densities of V1a receptors are approximately 20% of the total number of vasopressin receptors in CCD and 5% in MTAL and OMCD.
...
PMID:Pharmacological characterization of V1a vasopressin receptors in the rat cortical collecting duct. 153 99
We investigated the ontogeny of provasopressin gene expression in neurosecretory neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of developing mice by semi-quantitative in situ hybridization and immunohistochemical techniques in combination with stereometry of vasopressin-immunoreactive neurons. Provasopressin mRNA was detected in paraffin sections using a mixture of radiolabeled synthetic oligonucleotide probes complementary to the mRNA loci encoding vasopressin (2-9) and vasopressin
neurophysin
(1-8).
Vasopressin
immunoreactivity was located with a polyclonal anti-vasopressin antiserum and a monoclonal anti-vasopressin-
neurophysin
antibody either with or without enhancing technique for the diaminobenzidine reaction. Autoradiographic hybridization signals that indicate the localization of provasopressin mRNA were first detected on embryonic day 15 in the supraoptic nucleus and embryonic day 18 in the paraventricular nucleus.
Vasopressin
immunoreactivity was first found in the median eminence on embryonic day 14, and then in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei on embryonic days 15 and 16, respectively. The provasopressin mRNA levels were markedly increased in both the supraoptic and the paraventricular nuclei just after birth. The immunoreactivity of vasopressin neurons was drastically decreased in both nuclei on postnatal days 1 and 2, suggesting marked vasopressin release in the neonates. Cross-sectional areas of vasopressin-immunoreactive somata and their cell nuclei gradually increased in both the supraoptic and the paraventricular nuclei during the perinatal period by day 5, and then attained adult size between days 10 and 20. During this phase, the level of provasopressin mRNA remained low compared with that in the adult magnocellular neurosecretory cells. These results indicate that the expression of provasopressin gene is markedly increased in both the supraoptic and the paraventricular nuclei soon after birth. Secretory activity of vasopressin neurons is elevated in neonatal mice.
Vasopressin
may have an important osmoregulatory role in neonatal mice undergoing drastic changes in water metabolism following birth.
...
PMID:Expression of provasopressin gene during ontogeny in the hypothalamus of developing mice. 159 5
Syrian hamsters can communicate using a distinctive form of scent marking called flank marking.
Vasopressin
-sensitive neurons within the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic continuum (MPOA-AH) play a critical role in the control of this form of olfactory communication. Extrahypothalamic regions may also mediate hamster flank marking. Since the MPOA-AH and the periaqueductal gray (PAG) are reciprocally connected, the present study investigated whether PAG neurons are involved in the control of flank marking. The first study found that microinjection of vasopressin, but not
oxytocin
or saline, into the PAG induced high levels of flank marking in male (n = 8) and female (n = 5) hamsters (P less than 0.01). The second study demonstrated that microinjection of vasopressin into the PAG stimulated flank marking in a dose-dependent manner in both male (n = 7) and female (n = 11) hamsters (P less than 0.01). These data suggest that vasopressin-responsive neurons within the periaqueductal gray participate in the control of hamster flank marking.
...
PMID:Microinjection of arginine-vasopressin into the periaqueductal gray stimulates flank marking in Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). 161 73
Oxytocin
, when administered centrally, has been associated with the modulation of various social initiatives including maternal and sexual behaviors. The nature of these effects depends on gonadal hormone status. In the present experiments, we investigated the effects of centrally administered
oxytocin
on the behavior of pair-housed male squirrel monkeys during interactions with a familiar female monkey. Pairs of male squirrel monkeys established reliable and persistent dominance relationships with dominant males showing increased sexual and aggressive behavior as well as higher plasma concentrations of testosterone.
Oxytocin
(0.1, 1.0 micrograms) increased the sexual and aggressive behavior of dominant monkeys without affecting these measures in the subordinate monkeys. In contrast to these effects in the dominant monkeys,
oxytocin
increased associative and marking behaviors only in subordinate monkeys. Central administration of the oxytocin receptor antagonis d(CH2)5 [Tyr(Me)2, Thr4,Tyr-NH2(9)] OVT (OTA; 0.05 microgram) had no intrinsic effect on behavior but blocked the effects of exogenous
oxytocin
. To investigate further the specificity of
oxytocin
's effects on social behavior, we administered the structurally related peptide arginine vasopressin under identical conditions.
Vasopressin
(0.5, 5.0 micrograms) decreased social behaviors and increased motor activity in both dominant and subordinate monkeys. Previous studies in rodents have demonstrated that
oxytocin
receptors are induced by gonadal steroids in a regionally specific fashion. The status-related behavioral effects of
oxytocin
in the squirrel monkey may reflect differences in brain oxytocin receptor density associated with the higher concentrations of testosterone in the dominant animal. Alternatively, the status-related effects may depend on the conditioned behavioral differences associated with social organization.
...
PMID:Social status in pairs of male squirrel monkeys determines the behavioral response to central oxytocin administration. 164 3
Sites which bind
oxytocin
and vasopressin with high affinity were detected in the brain and upper spinal cord of 12 human subjects, using in vitro light microscopic autoradiography. Tissue sections were incubated with tritiated vasopressin, tritiated
oxytocin
or an iodinated
oxytocin
antagonist. The ligand specificity of binding was assessed with unlabelled vasopressin or
oxytocin
in excess, as well as in competition experiments using synthetic structural analogues. The distribution of vasopressin binding sites differed markedly from that of
oxytocin
binding sites in the forebrain, while there was overlap in the brainstem.
Vasopressin
binding sites were detected in the dorsal part of the lateral septal nucleus, in midline nuclei and adjacent intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus, in the hilus of the dentate gyrus, the dorsolateral part of the basal amygdaloid nucleus and the brainstem. The distribution of
oxytocin
binding sites in the brainstem has been recently reported (Loup et al., 1989).
Oxytocin
binding sites were also observed in the basal nucleus of Meynert, the nucleus of the vertical limb of the diagonal band of Broca, the ventral part of the lateral septal nucleus, the preoptic/anterior hypothalamic area, the posterior hypothalamic area, and variably in the globus pallidus and ventral pallidum. The presence of
oxytocin
and vasopressin binding sites in limbic and autonomic areas suggests a neurotransmitter or neuromodulator role for these peptides in the human central nervous system. They may also affect cholinergic transmission in the basal forebrain and consequently play a role in Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Localization of high-affinity binding sites for oxytocin and vasopressin in the human brain. An autoradiographic study. 165
Vasopressin
(VP) and
oxytocin
(OT) were evaluated as tumor markers for small cell carcinoma of the lung by measuring the concentrations of these hormones in plasma samples obtained from patients at the onset of therapy and during treatment. Patient levels of VP before treatment ranged from 0.9-116 pmol/L, and this hormone was elevated (greater than 2.4 times) in 37 of 80 patients (46%) when values were compared to those of 25 healthy volunteers (normal mean, 2.13 +/- 0.15 pmol/L). Seventeen patients with elevated arginine VP displayed symptoms of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. Patient levels of OT ranged from 0.3-124 pmol/L, and OT was elevated (greater than 2.4 times) in 14 of 72 patients (19%) compared with values in normal subjects (normal mean, 2.23 +/- 0.34 pmol/L). Both hormones were elevated in 6 patients. A positive response to treatment (partial or complete remission) was associated with reductions of elevated VP to 34.6 +/- 4.0% and of elevated OT to 34.7 +/- 7.5%, of values before treatment. Relapse was associated with an increase to 334 +/- 93% of remission values for VP (6 patients) and to 307% for OT (1 patient). These results indicate that VP and OT may be suitable plasma markers for a majority of small cell tumors. In most cases, an elevated concentration of hormone was associated with an elevation of the biosynthetically related
neurophysin
and vice versa. However, there were a number of exceptions, so that an elevated plasma concentration of VP, OT, or a
neurophysin
was found for 88% of patients with extensive disease and 70% of patients with limited disease.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide production by small cell carcinoma: vasopressin and oxytocin as plasma markers of disease. 165 83
Indirect immunofluorescence histochemistry was used to investigate the distribution and extent of co-localization of chemical messengers in magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei. In order to increase the number of neurons immunoreactive to the antisera used, experimental manipulations were employed. The homozygous Brattleboro (diabetes insipidus) rat was also investigated. In untreated rats, only vasopressin- and
oxytocin
-like immunoreactivities could be observed. Colchicine treatment alone resulted in appearance of galanin-, dynorphin-, cholecystokinin-, [Leu]enkephalin- and thyrotropin-releasing hormone-positive cells. In hypophysectomized rats, all these markers, except tyrosine hydroxylase, showed substantial further increases. In addition, peptide histidine-isoleucine-immunoreactive cell bodies could now be seen. After salt-loading alone, tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity was markedly increased, whereas vasopressin- and
oxytocin
-like immunoreactivity were very weak or undetectable. When salt-loaded rats received colchicine, corticotropin-releasing factor- and peptide histidine-isoleucine-like immunoreactivity in addition increased, whereas galanin- and dynorphin-like immunoreactivity markedly decreased. The Brattleboro rats resembled untreated rats, except their lack of vasopressin-like immunoreactivity, the marked increase in tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity, and smaller increase in galanin- and dynorphin-like immunoreactivity. Addition of colchicine to Brattleboro rats resulted in some distinct further changes in that dynorphin-like immunoreactivity decreased in some neurons and that [Leu]enkephalin-, corticotropin-releasing factor- and peptide histidine-isoleucine-like immunoreactivity increased substantially. Several similarities could be observed between the salt-loaded and Brattleboro rats, with or without colchicine. However, a marked difference in immunoreactive [Leu]enkephalin levels was observed with no difference in dynorphin-like immunoreactivity, and opposite changes in galanin-like immunoreactivity. The results confirm the traditional view that hypothalamic magnocellular neurons in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei contain two separate cell populations, characterized by vasopressin and
oxytocin
, respectively, and that they contain additional messenger molecules in specific patterns.
Vasopressin
-containing neurons primarily express tyrosine hydroxylase, galanin, dynorphin, [Leu]enkephalin and peptide histidine-isoleucine, and to a minor extent cholecystokinin and thyrotropin-releasing hormone.
Oxytocin
-containing neurons mainly have cholecystokinin and corticotropin-releasing factor, and to a minor extent galanin, dynorphin, [Leu]enkephalin and thyrotropin-releasing hormone. Furthermore, our results detail individual co-existence situations among these putative messenger molecules. Thus, magnocellular neurons respond in a differential way to various stimuli and they store multiple bioactive substances in specific combinations.
...
PMID:Localization of chemical messengers in magnocellular neurons of the hypothalamic supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei: an immunohistochemical study using experimental manipulations. 170 Oct 38
Vasopressin
action in the renal collecting duct is believed to be mediated by the cycling of water channels in principal and, possibly, intercalated cells. We used 6-carboxyfluorescein (6-CF) or fluorescein-labeled dextran (FITC-dextran) to determine the location and water permeability of endocytic vesicles from papilla and inner stripe of Brattleboro rats in different states of diuresis. Fifteen minutes after FITC-dextran infusion, fluorescent vesicles were concentrated at the apical pole of principal and intercalated cells. The osmotic water permeability (Pf) of these endosomes was measured by fluorescence quenching. In papillary endosomes, Pf was high (0.04 +/- 0.004 cm/s) when rats were in physiological states of antidiuresis or after treatment with vasopressin, 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP), or
oxytocin
; endosomes isolated from these regions of untreated animals had a low Pf. The number of papillary endosomes with high Pf increased with increasing doses of DDAVP. Endosomes from the inner stripe also had a high Pf only after vasopressin treatment. Confocal microscopy of sections of papilla showed that vasopressin significantly increased endocytosis in principal cells but had no effect on intercalated cells. Our data demonstrate that the bulk of fluorescently labeled vesicles from the papilla originate from the apical membrane of principal cells and contain water channels in their limiting membrane only when the rats are in physiological states of antidiuresis. In contrast, the majority of endocytosis in intercalated cells is not involved in water channel recycling.
...
PMID:Endocytosis of water channels in rat kidney: cell specificity and correlation with in vivo antidiuresis. 170 69
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