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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Proline endopeptidase (E.C.3.4.21.26) is an enzyme which cleaves several neuropeptides at the carboxyl-side of proline residues. Some peptide substrates of this enzyme may be found in the rat hypothalamus (thyrotropin releasing hormone, neurotensin,
substance P
,
oxytocin
, vasopressin, beta-endorphin). Recent research has shown that the hypothalamic levels of some of these substances (e.g., vasopressin, beta-endorphin) change by a variety of training procedures. We studied the effect of various forms of training on the activity of proline endopeptidase of rat hypothalamus. The present results show that the activity of this enzyme is not altered by electroconvulsive shock or inhibitory avoidance training when measured, 0, 1, or 3 hr after these procedures. Other behavioral procedures (habituation to an open field, two-way active avoidance conditioning, or 1 min of inescapable footshock) also had no effect on hypothalamic proline endopeptidase activity measured immediately after training or test sessions. We conclude that proline endopeptidase probably does not play a regulatory role in the effect of synaptically released hypothalamic neuropeptides on behavior.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic proline endopeptidase activity is not changed by various behavioral procedures. 353 16
Post-proline endopeptidase (PPE, EC 3.4.21.26) was purified 3,450 times from human lung. PPE was routinely assayed with the artificial substrate, carbobenzoxy-glycyl-L-prolyl-p-nitroanilide (Z-Gly-Pro-pNA). The pH optimum was 7.4, and the Mr was 77,000. Thiol blocking agents were strongly inhibitory but serine blocking agents were not inhibitory. No metal ions were required for activity, but heavy metal ions such as Hg2+, Cu2+, Cd2+, and Zn2+ completely inactivated the enzyme. Both dithiothreitol (DTT) and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) were required to stabilize PPE activity. Michaelis constant values for Z-Gly-Pro-pNA and carbobenzoxy-glycyl-L-prolyl-2-naphthylamide were 0.36 and 0.10 mmol/l, respectively. PPE cleaved vasoactive peptides including bradykinin (BK) and des-(Arg9)-BK (Pro3-Gly4 and Pro7-Phe8 bonds), angiotensins I and II (Pro7-Phe8 bond),
substance P
(Pro4-Gln5 bond), and
oxytocin
(Pro7-Leu8 bond). Each of these peptides inhibited PPE-catalyzed hydrolysis of Z-Gly-Pro-pNA competitively. BK had the lowest Ki value (2.35 mumol/l) and
oxytocin
had the highest Ki value (84.0 mumol/l). PPE was not inhibited by captopril, a potent inhibitor of angiotensin converting enzyme, which also cleaves the Pro7-Phe8 bond of BK.
...
PMID:Human lung post-proline endopeptidase: purification and action on vasoactive peptides. 354 26
Vasoactive peptides contain a high proportion of proline residues which make them resistant to hydrolysis by many peptidases. However, post proline cleaving enzyme (PPCE; EC 3.4.21.26), a proline specific endopeptidase which specifically hydrolyzes internal peptide bonds on the carboxyl side of proline residues, has been shown to inactivate numerous vasoactive peptides including angiotensins, kinins,
substance P
, vasopressin and
oxytocin
. In order to determine whether PPCE could be involved in vascular metabolism of vasoactive peptides, we carried out localization and characterization studies of PPCE-like activity in hog aorta and mesenteric artery. PPCE was assayed fluorometrically at pH 7.0 using the specific PPCE substrate CBZ-Gly-Pro-4-methyl-coumarinylamide. The subcellular distribution of vascular PPCE was essentially the same as that of the cytosolic marker enzyme lactic dehydrogenase (LDH). PPCE was enriched six-fold in the cytosolic fraction (11.4 +/- 2.7 units/mg) and unlike the plasma membrane-bound proline specific exopeptidase dipeptidyl-(amino)peptidase IV (DAP IV; EC 3.4.14.5), little or no activity could be detected in the microsomal or plasma membrane fractions. Similar to PPCE characterized from other sites, vascular PPCE was stabilized and activated by dithiothreitol and EDTA, and inhibited by DFP, p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonic acid, L-1-tosylamido-2-phenylethylchloromethyl ketone, Cu++, Ca++, and Zn++. Vascular PPCE was unaffected by inhibitors of trypsin and kallikrein (Aprotinin, ABTI), aminopeptidase M (bestatin, amastatin), neutral endopeptidase (phosphoramidon), angiotensin I converting enzyme (captopril) or carboxypeptidase N (MERGETPA). These data demonstrate that PPCE is present in vascular endothelium and/or smooth muscle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Vascular, post proline cleaving enzyme: metabolism of vasoactive peptides. 354 18
Several peptides, including arginine-vasopressin (AVP), neurotensin, and
substance P
, produce analgesia that is not mediated by opiate systems. Using the hot plate test, we studied the analgesic effects of intracisternal (i.c.) administration of various doses of the nonapeptide
oxytocin
(
OXY
) in Swiss-Webster mice. We found that
OXY
(1-4 micrograms) significantly increased the latency of animals to jump or lick their paws after placement on a hot plate. This effect was not blocked by naloxone pretreatment, which suggests that it is not opiate dependent. Using the hot plate test, we confirmed that AVP (1 and 4 micrograms) also produces analgesia. We then studied the analgesia produced by
OXY
and by AVP using 3 nonapeptide analogues with antagonist properties: [Pen1, LpMePhe2, Thr4, Orn8]
OXY
(PLMPTO-OXY) that has anti-oxytocic properties in the uterine contraction assay, d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)AVP(dTM-AVP) which antagonizes the antidiuretic properties of AVP and d(CH2)5D-Ile2,Abu4-AVP (dIA-AVP) which antagonizes the vasopressor effects of AVP. Simultaneous administration of PLMPTO-
OXY
completely blocked the analgesia produced by
OXY
whereas the antidiuretic antagonist dIA-AVP partially blocked
OXY
-induced analgesia and dTM-AVP had no effect. None of the antagonists used blocked AVP-induced analgesia. We concluded that the neural systems mediating the analgesic effects of i.c.
OXY
differ from those for AVP.
...
PMID:Effects of nonapeptide antagonists on oxytocin- and arginine-vasopressin-induced analgesia in mice. 367 85
The intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of
oxytocin
, in doses ranging from 5 to 90 ng (5-90 pmol) induced penile erection and yawning in male rats. Such response was not induced by doses of the peptide higher than 100 ng, nor by equimolar doses of i.c.v. [Arg8]vasopressin, ACTH-(1-24), alpha-MSH, rat corticotropin-releasing factor (rCRF), delta sleep-inducing peptide, neurotensin or
substance P
.
Oxytocin
-induced penile erection and yawning were prevented by atropine and morphine, but not by methylatropine or the opiate antagonist naloxone. Haloperidol, a dopamine receptor antagonist, was ineffective at low doses; it partially prevented penile erection but not yawning at high doses. Since
oxytocin
is present not only in the neurohypophysis but also in other brain areas, our results suggest that
oxytocin
is implicated in the regulation of penile erection and yawning, and provide further evidence that
oxytocin
acts as a neuropeptide in the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Oxytocin: an extremely potent inducer of penile erection and yawning in male rats. 379 49
The brain is both the source and the recipient of peptide signals. The question is: Do endogenous, blood-borne peptide molecules influence brain function? Brain regions with the tight capillaries of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) extract low but measurable amounts of labeled peptide molecules from an intracarotid bolus injection. In the rat, the extraction fractions of beta-casomorphin-5, DesGlyNH2-arginine-vasopressin, arginine-vasopressin, lysine-vasopressin,
oxytocin
, gonadoliberin,
substance P
, and beta-endorphin, studied in this laboratory, range from 0.5% (
substance P
) to 2.4% (arginine-vasopressin). Extraction varies little among the 15 examined brain regions. As shown for arginine-vasopressin, the extracted peptides may be bound in part to specific binding sites located on the luminal membrane of the tight endothelial cells. Transport of peptide molecules across the BBB cannot be ruled out, but it is unlikely that endogenous peptides pass the BBB in physiologically significant amounts. In contrast, in brain regions with leaky capillaries, e.g., selected circumventricular organs including the pineal gland, neurohypophysis, and choroid plexus, the peptide fraction extracted approaches that of water. Within the circumventricular organs, the peptide molecules actually reach the cellular elements of the tissue. However, no studies definitively show that peptides reach neurons in the deeper layers of the brain. On the other hand, blood-borne peptides influence the BBB permeability by altering the transport of essential substances. The effect may be mediated by specific peptide binding sites located at the luminal membrane of the endothelium. It is possible that the effect of peptides on the BBB is necessary for proper brain function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Blood-brain barrier and peptides. 389 53
Peptides and non-peptides acting as vasoconstrictors or vasodilators have been tested in dog isolated carotid arteries with and without endothelium and in the presence and absence of a variety of antagonists and inhibitors of endogenous substances. It has been found that
substance P
and several other tachykinins, bradykinin, neurotensin, bombesin and acetylcholine relax the isolated artery only when the endothelium is present, while VIP, isopropylnoradrenaline, adenosine, histamine, prostaglandins E1 and E2, glucagon and insulin relax and angiotensin, vasopressin,
oxytocin
, 5-HT and noradrenaline contract the isolated vessel, no matter whether the endothelium is present or not. Peptide and non-peptide antagonists have been used with success to show that vasoconstrictors and vasodilators act on specific receptors, since their effects are reduced in the presence of antagonists, specific for one or another of the various agents. Inhibitors of the arachidonic acid cascade only reduce the effect of acetylcholine, suggesting that at least two different mechanisms are involved in the endothelium-mediated relaxation of arterial smooth muscles to peptide and non-peptide agents. The results summarised in this paper suggest that the site of action of several vasodilators is the endothelium, while other vasodilators and all the vasoconstrictors influence the arterial vessels tone presumably by acting on the smooth muscle cells.
...
PMID:Effects of peptides and non-peptides on isolated arterial smooth muscles: role of endothelium. 393 Feb 67
Short-latency emetic responses were induced in dogs by injecting angiotensin II (AII), arginine vasopressin (AVP), and neurotensin (NTN) into cerebroventricular (ICV) and cisternal (ICT) sites also responsive to the emetic effects of apomorphine (APO). Angiotensin III, bradykinin, bombesin,
oxytocin
, adrenocorticotropic hormone,
substance P
, gastrin-related peptide and cholecystokinin were ineffective. The results suggest a possible dopaminergic mediation of peptide-induced emesis by receptors in the area postrema (AP).
...
PMID:Emetic effects of centrally administered angiotensin II, arginine vasopressin and neurotensin in the dog. 404 79
The survival of adult rat hepatocytes in monolayer culture was studied in the presence of different hormones (neurotensin,
oxytocin
, thyrotropin releasing hormone, luteinizing hormone releasing hormone, cholecalciferol, bradykinin,
substance P
, aldosterone, melanocyte stimulating hormone, 3,3',5-triiodo-1-thyronine, corticosterone, human growth hormone, glucagon, insulin, progesterone, testosterone, estradiol, and dexamethasone phosphate) or growth factors (fetal bovine serum). For this purpose trypan blue exclusion, lactate dehydrogenase, and DNA and protein content were measured at 24 and 72 h of culture. 10(-7) M Dexamethasone, a mixture of eight hormones, 10% fetal bovine serum, and a combination of the latter two supplements caused a more than 64% higher DNA content at 72 h when compared to control cultures. A striking agreement of these results with changes of lactate dehydrogenase leakage was observed, whereas trypan blue exclusion gave erratic results. Considerable changes of cell arrangement apparently specific for each supplement were observed by low magnification microscopy. It is concluded that glucocorticoids and fetal bovine serum have an outstanding effect on cell viability and that DNA or protein content or both are reliable indicators of cell viability in amitotic cultures.
...
PMID:Influence of hormones and growth factors on viability, DNA, and protein content of adult hepatocytes in primary culture. 405 11
1. Strips of longitudinal muscle can be obtained from guinea-pig ileum either retaining or free from Auerbach's plexus.2. The denervated strip is unresponsive to electrical stimulation by brief shocks, whether given singly or in trains; it also fails to respond to nicotine or dimethylphenylpiperazinium iodide (DMPP), and eserine causes no spasm.3. Denervated strips neither contain detectable acetylcholine (< 0.4 ng/mg), nor release it spontaneously (< 5 pg/mg/min) or in response to stimulation (< 31 pg/mg/min). The acetylcholine metabolism of the innervated strip is therefore that of the adherent Auerbach's plexus. Innervated strips had a mean acetylcholine content of 28 ng/mg, a mean resting output of 94 pg/mg/min and an output in response to stimulation at 10 c/s of 700-1200 pg/mg/min.4. By comparing the responses of innervated and denervated strips it was concluded that arecoline, methylfurmethide, alpha,beta-ethylal-gamma-tri-methylammonium propanediol iodide (2268 F), muscarine, histamine, tremorine,
oxytocin
, and
substance P
, like acetylcholine, act primarily on the smooth muscle directly; and that angiotensin, barium, potassium, m-bromophenyl choline ether and 5-hydroxytryptamine have a progressively increasing proportionate effect on the nerve plexus. Nicotine and DMPP were inactive in the absence of the plexus.5. The longitudinal muscle with its accompanying plexus contains about one quarter of the acetylcholine of the whole ileum, and is responsible for about one fifth of the output to electrical stimulation.6. The volley output of acetylcholine by the innervated strip declines sharply as rate of stimulation increases. Output of acetylcholine was reduced by morphine and by cocaine, particularly when resting or when stimulated at low rates.7. Acetylcholine output by whole ileum from guinea-pig declines in the absence of glucose, but is insulin-independent. Output by strips of ileum from rats made diabetic with alloxan was similar to that from normal rats.8. The similarity in properties of acetylcholine output from innervated strips, where it must come from nervous tissue, to that from whole ileum, and the insulin-independence of output from whole ileum suggest that the whole of the acetylcholine output of intestine is nervous in origin.9. Comparison of the acetylcholine metabolism of the innervated strip with that of the superior cervical ganglion suggests that the typical features of the former (high resting output, high volley output at low rates, low minute output at high rates of stimulation, and sensitivity to morphine) may be linked with the absence of specialized neuro-effector junctions and represent a relatively primitive transmission process.
...
PMID:The origin of acetylcholine released from guinea-pig intestine and longitudinal muscle strips. 429 53
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