Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The V2 vasopressin receptor undergoes ligand-induced sequestration and desensitization (Birnbaumer, M., Antaramian, A., Themmen, A. P. N., and Gilbert, S. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 11783-11788). The V2 receptor expressed in transfected cells labeled with [32P] orthophosphate was phosphorylated following the addition of 100 nM arginine vasopressin (AVP). Phosphorylation was complete 5 min after addition of AVP, and was not stimulated by increased levels of Ca2+ or cAMP. The half-maximal dose of AVP that stimulated phosphorylation was 2.4 +/- 0.4 nM, similar to the receptor KD of 4. 5 +/- 0.4 nM. The role of phosphorylation on receptor desensitization was investigated by studying two vasopressin receptors 14 and 27 amino acids shorter than the wild type receptor. The missing segments were not needed for normal ligand binding or coupling to Gs, but the last 14 amino acids were required for phosphorylation. The truncated receptors exposed to 100 nM AVP were sequestered and desensitized. The R137H V2R mutant receptor that binds vasopressin with wild type-like affinity and does not couple to Gs (Rosenthal, W., Antaramian, A., Gilbert, S., and Birnbaumer, M. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 13030-13033) was phosphorylated and subjected to ligand-induced sequestration. These results established that phosphorylation is not essential for sequestration and desensitization of the V2 vasopressin receptor. Furthermore, they revealed that the conformation acquired after ligand occupancy is necessary for receptor phosphorylation and sequestration, while coupling to Gs is not.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of the V2 vasopressin receptor. 899 63

Pituicytoma is a rare, poorly characterized tumor of the sella and suprasellar region that is distinct morphologically from other local tumors and is thought to be derived from neurohypophyseal pituicytes. Clinical data, neuroimaging studies, and microsections were reviewed from nine such low-grade gliomas. Immunostains for glial, neuronal, and proliferation markers were performed on all nine tumors and six control neurohypophyses. Three tumors were studied ultrastructurally. Six men and three women, age 30 to 83 years (mean, 48 years), presented with visual symptoms, headache, or hypopituitarism. Magnetic resonance images showed solid, discrete, contrast-enhancing masses, four within the sella and five in the suprasellar space. The tumors consisted of sheets and/or fascicles of plump spindle cells with slightly fibrillar cytoplasm and slightly pleomorphic, oval-to-elongate nuclei with pinpoint nucleoli. Extracellular mucin was prominent in one tumor. Rosenthal fibers, granular bodies, and Herring bodies (granular axonal dilatations characteristic of the normal neurohypophysis) were lacking. Mitoses were rare or absent. MIB-1 labeling indices were low (0.5-2%). Tumor cells were strongly reactive for vimentin and S-100 protein, variably positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein, and nonreactive for synaptophysin and neurofilament protein. Cytoplasm varied in electron density and contained intermediate filaments. Neither meningothelial nor ependymal features were noted. Two tumors recurred at 20 and 26 months after subtotal resection, but none of the six completely resected tumors have done so. Pituicytomas are discrete, largely noninfiltrative low-grade gliomas of the sellar region that occur in adults. Their histologic appearance is distinct from pilocytic and ordinary, infiltrative astrocytomas. The distinction between pituicytoma and normal neurohypophysis is aided by the latter's content of axons, Herring bodies, and perivascular anucleate zones rich in axonal terminations. Although curable by total excision, subtotal resection can be associated with recurrence.
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PMID:Pituicytoma: a distinctive low-grade glioma of the neurohypophysis. 1071 49

We report the first case of Alexander disease diagnosed and published in the region of former Czechoslovakia. The case was characterized by early (late infantile) onset, the absence of megacephaly but with extensive internal hydrocephaly, despite a patent aqueduct. Neuropathology revealed severe depletion ofoligodendroglia and myelin, loss of axons, prominent astrocytosis with massive intracellular, dense globular GFAP aggregates which differed from typical Rosenthal fibers. Additionally, many large aggregates of GFAP were located extracellularly. Globular GFAP aggregates were also identified in neurohypophyseal pituicytes. DNA analysis disclosed a heterozygous mutation c.1117G>A in the GFAP, which is predicted to lead to the amino acid exchange p.Glu-373Lys (E373K) in the C-terminal tail of the GFAP protein. The parents and a healthy sister did not show any variation in GFAP in somatic cells.
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PMID:Early onset Alexander disease: a case report with evidence for manifestation of the disorder in neurohypophyseal pituicytes. 1840 84