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)

Two important forms of cognition are knowledge about internal states and social cognition. Knowledge about internal states is dependent on the ability to discriminate between different classes of visceral sensations and to associate them specifically to distinctive cues. The phenomenon of conditioned taste aversion (CTA) is the best example of this type of knowledge. Many chemicals induce interoceptive changes that can be perceived by animals and give rise not only to subjective sensations but also to causal attributions. However, the possibility that animals are able to discriminate different forms of interoceptive changes in a CTA paradigm has received little attention. Studies of the mechanisms of vasopressin-induced CTA provide evidence that it is the case and that animals are able to classify in different categories sensations related to the vasopressor activity of vasopressin and sensation induced by a prototypical aversive drug, apomorphine. Social cognition involves what individuals know about each other. One of the requirements for social cognition is social recognition, i.e., the ability to identify other individuals and classify them in different categories. Social recognition can be assessed by changes in duration of investigation of another animal when the stimulus animal is presented at different intervals. This form of memory is based on olfactory characteristics of the stimulus animal in rats and it can be enhanced or attenuated by memory-modulating drugs, as demonstrated by experiments with vasopressin.
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PMID:Experimental assessment of drug-induced changes in cognitive function: vasopressin as a case study. 305 46

Colocalization of thyrotropin-releasing hormone-like immunoreactivity with other neuroactive substances was examined immunohistochemically in colchicine-treated rat brains using double-staining or elution-restaining methods. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone-like immunoreactivity was shown to be located in the same neurons as: 1. enkephalin-, gamma-amino butyric acid- and tyrosine hydroxylase-, but not somatostatin-like immunoreactivity in the glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb 2. oxytocin- and cholecystokinin-, but not vasopressin-like immunoreactivity in the supraoptic nucleus 3. cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity in posterior pituitary 4. enkephalin-like immunoreactivity in the perifornical area of the hypothalamus and 5. neuropeptide Y- and neurotensin-like immunoreactivity in the periaqueductal central grey. These findings provide further examples of coexistence of thyrotropin-releasing hormone with classical neurotransmitters and/or peptides in the rat central nervous system.
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PMID:Coexistence of TRH with other neuroactive substances in the rat central nervous system. 315 46

The transport of L-leucine across the blood-brain barrier was studied in heterozygous (NON-DI) and homozygous (DI) Brattleboro male rats using the carotid bolus injection technique. Furthermore, general hemodynamic parameters and cerebral blood flow were measured. No significant hemodynamic differences were found between DI and NON-DI rats except for a 22% lower cerebral blood flow in the olfactory bulb of DI rats. The maximum velocity of L-leucine transport (Vmax), the half saturation constant (Km) and the nonsaturable transport constant (KD) were estimated in nine brain regions. The Vmax values of NON-DI rats were by 28% to 64% lower than those of DI rats. The calculated regional Km values of NON-Di rats were by 14% to 58% lower. These differences were most pronounced in hippocampus and hypothalamus. The results support the suggestion that endogenous vasopressin may alter the large neutral amino acid transport across the blood-brain barrier.
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PMID:Kinetics of regional blood-brain barrier transport of L-leucine in Brattleboro rats. 325 49

Oxytocin-binding sites were detected by autoradiography on rat brain sections incubated in the presence of the [3H]oxytocin. These sites were characterized pharmacologically using quantitative autoradiography. High pressure liquid chromatography controls of the incubation media indicated that labelling was due to the intact [3H]oxytocin molecule. Pharmacological analysis of different locations (central amygdaloid nucleus, ventral subiculum and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus) showed that the sites detected had a high affinity for oxytocin and also for arginine-vasopressin. In contrast, some areas known to bind vasopressin intensely, such as suprachiasmatic and lateral septum nuclei, had little or no affinity for oxytocin. Autoradiographs revealed [3H]oxytocin-binding sites in already known brain areas (olfactory centres, ventral subiculum, central amygdaloid nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis) albeit with more extensive labelling of some of these formations, in particular, the amygdaloid complex. In addition, specific [3H]oxytocin-binding sites were found in areas not yet reported to bind oxytocin, such as the paraventricular thalamic and caudate nuclei. In the hypothalamus, specific binding sites were not detected in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei: the only structure labelled was the ventrolateral part of the ventromedial nucleus. Discrepancies between the concentrations of [3H]oxytocin-binding sites, the known distribution of oxytocin-containing endings and electrophysiological data indicate that autoradiography, under our conditions, apparently only reveals some of the oxytocin receptors in the brain. Thus, in the hypothalamus, no relationship can be established between the known effect of oxytocin on oxytocinergic magnocellular neurons and detection of specific [3H]oxytocin-binding sites. Autoradiography may reveal mainly oxytocin-binding sites in areas receiving diverse "parasynaptic" information, where oxytocin might play a modulatory role rather than exerting rapid, short-term effects of the neurotransmitter type.
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PMID:Pharmacological characteristics and anatomical distribution of [3H]oxytocin-binding sites in the Wistar rat brain studied by autoradiography. 364 80

The axonal efferents of neurons of the supraoptic nucleus area were studied by radioautography in the rat after discrete stereotaxic injections of [3H]leucine into this nucleus. Beside a densely labeled pathway running from the nucleus to the posterior pituitary through the internal median eminence, several of the visualized labeled axonal bundles were found to project into various extrahypothalamic regions, including the olfactory bulb, the cortex, the lateral habenula, the subcommissural organ, the amygdala, the mammillary bodies and the locus coeruleus. These results suggest that part of the vasopressin- or oxytocin-containing perikarya located in the supraoptic nucleus constitute the cells of origin of axons which also contain these peptides and which have already been shown to be present in the above extrahypothalamic areas. This also implies that, like the paraventricular nucleus, the supraoptic nucleus is also involved in central extrahypothalamic regulations.
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PMID:Radioautographic evidence that axons from the area of supraoptic nuclei in the rat project to extrahypothalamic brain regions. 372 90

A 28-year-old man with the chronic syndrome of Inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and hypertension was found to have an olfactory neuroblastoma. We demonstrated evidence of elevated circulating arginine vasopressin levels, significantly elevated arginine vasopressin and vasopressin neurophysin levels in the tumor extract, and immunohistochemical staining for arginine vasopressin and vasopressin neurophysin in the tumor cells. The patient's clinical syndrome, including hypertension, resolved following subtotal removal of the tumor and radiation therapy. This study identified olfactory neuroblastoma as a definite cause of ectopic arginine vasopressin secretion causing the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion.
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PMID:Chronic syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and hypertension in a patient with olfactory neuroblastoma. Evidence of ectopic production of arginine vasopressin by the tumor. 375 13

A 26-year-old woman with the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis demonstrated complete recovery following the resection of an olfactory neuroblastoma. Tissue arginine vasopressin levels by radioimmunoassay, immunohistochemical staining of the tissue arginine vasopressin, postoperative normalization of plasma arginine vasopressin levels, and the clinical resolution are evidence in support of a neurally derived tumor being the direct source of neurosecretion of arginine vasopressin rather than neurohypophyseal secretion or secretion from non-neural tissues, as reported to date in the etiology of the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis.
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PMID:Neurosecretion of arginine vasopressin by an olfactory neuroblastoma causing reversible syndrome of antidiuresis. 377 95

A detailed description is given of the distribution of vasopressin-immunoreactive structures in the brain of intact adult male rats. By application of a modified immunocytochemical procedure, vasopressin-immunoreactive fibers were detected in many new areas. In adult male rats which were castrated 15 weeks before death, vasopressin-immunoreactive cell bodies had disappeared from the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and the medial amygdaloid nucleus. No obvious changes were found in vasopressin-immunoreactive cell bodies in other areas. Furthermore, a very strong reduction was seen in the density of vasopressin-immunoreactive fibers in the olfactory tubercle, nucleus of the diagonal band and its immediate surroundings, ventral pallidum, basal nucleus of Meynert, lateral septum, septofimbrial nucleus, ventral hippocampal formation, amygdaloid area, pre- and supramammillary nucleus, supramammillary decussation, (inter)dorsomedial, parafascicular, and ventral aspect of paraventricular thalamic nuclei, zona incerta, lateral habenular nucleus, ventral tegmental area, substantia nigra, periventricular gray, dorsal and median raphe nucleus, and locus coeruleus. No changes were observed in other areas containing vasopressin-immunoreactive fibers. These changes following gonadectomy were not observed in castrated rats which had been treated with testosterone. The results suggest that vasopressin projections from the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and possibly from the medial amygdaloid nucleus require the presence of gonadal hormones for their normal appearance. This is in contrast to pathways arising from the hypothalamic vasopressin-producing nuclei, which fail to show obvious changes following castration.
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PMID:The vasopressinergic innervation of the brain in normal and castrated rats. 388 78

Microinjection of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) into the medial preoptic area of the hypothalamus of the hamster stimulates flank marking, a complex stereotypic motor behavior involved in olfactory communication. Microinjection of an antagonist of AVP, [1-deaminopenicillamine-2-(O-methyl)-tyrosine]arginine-vasopressin, into the same site blocks both the effect of microinjected AVP as well as the natural flank-marking behavior normally elicited by placing a hamster into the recently vacated home cage of another hamster. This finding supports the notion that AVP is a transmitter in the expression of flank marking.
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PMID:Inhibition of flank-marking behavior in golden hamsters by microinjection of a vasopressin antagonist into the hypothalamus. 403 6

Arginine-vasopressin (AVP) microinjected into the medial preoptic area (MPOA) induces flank marking behavior, a form of olfactory communication, in the golden hamster. When exposed to the odors of conspecifics flank marking behavior occurs naturally in association with grooming of the flank gland region. The present study examined whether microinjection of AVP, oxytocin (OXY) and other biologically active peptides into the medial preoptic area (MPOA), lateral cerebroventricle (LV) or the ventromedial or lateral hypothalamus (VMH-LH) would elicit flank gland grooming. Microinjection of AVP and OXY produced 2-3 times more flank gland grooming when microinjected into the MPOA than saline, neurotensin or angiotensin II. Injection of AVP into the LV and VMH-LH produced significantly less flank gland grooming than when injected into the MPOA.
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PMID:Behavioral effects of vasopressin and oxytocin within the medial preoptic area of the golden hamster. 408 Nov 29


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