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)

There is growing evidence of interactions between the central nervous system and the immune system. We present evidence that the cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2) influences expression of the genes encoding the neuropeptides vasopressin (VP) and oxytocin (OT) in the hypothalamus of the nude mouse. A single injection of recombinant mouse IL-2 (rmIL-2) caused a significant increase in VP and OT mRNA levels in the hypothalamus of nude mice. This effect was specific to the nude mouse. These observations stress the potential value of the nude mouse for studying interactions between the central nervous system (CNS) and the immune system.
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PMID:The influence of interleukin-2 on vasopressin and oxytocin gene expression in the rodent hypothalamus. 842 98

The immune and endocrine mediators that are released during sepsis (e.g., tumor necrosis factor [TNF] alpha, interleukin [IL]-1, IL-6, transforming growth factor [TGF] beta, prostaglandin [PG] E2, catecholamines, vasopressin, glucagon, insulin, and glucocorticoids) can produce inappropriate detrimental cellular responses contributing to exacerbation of septic injury. Examples of such sepsis-related inappropriate responses are: exaggerated hepatic acute-phase protein (APP) expression and release skeletal muscle insulin resistance, and suppressed T-lymphocyte proliferation. The studies discussed in this article present evidence that the generation of the sepsis-related hepatic, skeletal muscle, and T-lymphocyte responses emanate from alterations in intracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+i) homeostasis. In hepatocytes, there is indication of a sepsis-mediated increase in Ca2+ influx from the extracellular milieu leading to a sustained increase in the apparent resting cell Ca2+i concentration ([Ca2+]i) and its depressed elevation on stimulation with Ca2+-mobilizing hormones such as catecholamines and vasopressin. These Ca(2+)- related changes can affect not only the signaling pathways in which Ca2+i itself serves as a signaling component, but also the signaling systems turned on by other sepsis-induced agonists which may not be dependent on Ca2+ signaling. TGF-beta, IL-1, TNF alpha, and IL-6 activate a primarily protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent intracellular signal system for the elicitation of a normal hepatic APP response (APPR). The increased apparent basal [Ca2+]i in sepsis can hypersensitize PKC activation and thus lead to an exaggerated APPR. In the skeletal muscle, an evident increase in Ca2+ membrane flux during sepsis pointed to an increase in the basal [Ca2+]i resulting from a plausible cytokine-mediated overactivation of the voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. The increased basal [Ca2+]i can negatively modulate the insulin-mediated stimulation of GLUT4-dependent glucose transport despite the possibility that Ca2+i might not participate as a component in the insulin-receptor-regulated signaling pathway. Increased [Ca2+]i in skeletal myocytes can either directly promote the phosphorylation of GLUT4 or prevent its dephosphorylation, both of which effectively block insulin stimulation of glucose uptake, thereby contributing to insulin resistance. In T lymphocytes, septic injury appears to induce an attenuation in the mitogen and, thus, presumably a T-cell antigen receptor (TCR)-mediated elevation in [Ca2+]i without affecting the basal [Ca2+]i. This decrease in TCR-related Ca2+i mobilization evidently contributes to the suppression of T lymphocyte proliferation during sepsis, probably via an in vivo action of prostaglandin (PG) E2 on the T cells during sepsis. The blockade of PGE2 production after indomethacin administration to septic animals prevents alterations in both T-cell Ca2+i mobilization and proliferation. PGE2 probably acts through its second messenger, cyclic adenosine 3'5'-monophosphate, which can antagonize Ca2+i signaling in T cells.
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PMID:Alterations in calcium signaling and cellular responses in septic injury. 868 77

Intact adult male rats fed an alcohol [ethanol (EtOH)] diet for 10 days show blunted adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) release in response to immune signals such as the cytokine interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and endotoxin [lipopolysaccharide (LPS)], as well as to physical stress (mild electroshocks). The mechanisms responsible for this effect remain poorly understood, but we have recently reported that decreased pituitary responsiveness to vasopressin (VP) might play a role. In naive rats, nitric oxide (NO) exerts a restraining influence on the response of the hypothalamic-pituitary (H-P) axis to cytokines and VP. The ability of long-term EtOH treatment to increase glutamate receptors, and thus NO formation, prompted us to test the hypothesis that abnormally high NO concentrations might modulate the influence of the drug. Blockade of the activity of NO synthase (NOS), the enzyme responsible for NO formation, with the arginine derivative L-N omega nitro-L-arginine-methylester (L-NAME), augmented the ACTH response to IL-1 beta or LPS in both control (C) and EtOH-fed (E) rats. Indeed, after L-NAME treatment, ACTH concentrations were statistically comparable in C and E animals injected with endotoxin or a large dose of IL-1 beta. VP-induced ACTH secretion also became comparable in both experimental groups after blockade of NOS activity. In contrast, the decreased response of the H-P axis of E animals to shocks was only slightly ameliorated, compared with that of C rats. It is therefore possible that changes in the NOergic tone induced by alcohol play a role in the decreased response of the H-P axis to cytokines, possibly in part by altering the stimulatory action of VP on the corticotrophs. On the other hand, in E rats NO seems to exert only a minimal influence on the central nervous system circuits activated by shocks.
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PMID:Adult male rats exposed to an alcohol diet exhibit a blunted adrenocorticotropic hormone response to immune or physical stress: possible role of nitric oxide. 874 13

1. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a major pathogen in immunocompromised individuals and may participate in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis in the general population. We evaluated whether CMV-infection alters the function of arterial smooth muscle. 2. Blood pressure (BP) and arterial reactivity were recorded in immunosuppressed rats that had been infected with CMV (10(5) plaque forming units i.p.). Furthermore, the reactivity of isolated arteries was compared between CMV-infected rats and rats injected with bacterial endotoxin (LPS). 3. Initially resting BP and heart rate (HR) were not modified in CMV-infected rats, but baroreflex control of HR was impaired. By the eighth day post-CMV, BP dropped precipitously and could no longer be raised by phenylephrine (PHE). 4. In mesenteric resistance arteries, isolated at this stage from CMV-infected rats, contractile responses to nerve stimulation, noradrenaline, PHE and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were virtually absent while those to high potassium and vasopressin (AVP) were not modified. In aortae of CMV-infected rats, responses to 5-HT and AVP were impaired while those to PHE or potassium were hardly affected. Reduced contractile responses could not be restored by NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). 5. Continuous treatment of CMV-infected rats with prazosin (0.1 mg kg-1 day-1) prevented blood pressure lowering and resistance artery changes. 6. Observations in arteries of LPS-treated rats (5-10 mg kg-1, i.p.) differed markedly from those in vessels of CMV-infected animals. The contractile reactivity of their mesenteric resistance arteries was not altered while in their aortae, responses to PHE, 5-HT and AVP were reduced. With the exception of the AVP responses, this was more pronounced in the presence of 1-arginine and reversed by L-NAME. 7. These findings indicate that CMV-infection results in a reduction of resistance artery reactivity and hypotonia. This seems not to involve cytokine-mediated induction of NO synthase in the vascular wall but may be due to alterations of excitation-contraction coupling in arterial smooth muscle in response to increased sympathetic nervous input.
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PMID:Impaired arterial reactivity following cytomegalovirus infection in the immunosuppressed rat. 890 36

Oxytocin (OT) has been shown to be the dominant peptide of the neurohypophysial family expressed by thymic epithelial and nurse cells (TEC/TNC) in various species. Thymic OT is not secreted but, after translocation of a hybrid neurophysin/MHC class I protein, is integrated within the plasma membrane of TEC, thus allowing its presentation to pre-T cells. In order to further demonstrate that thymic OT behaves like a membrane antigen, we assessed the effect of mAbs to OT on cytokine productions by cultures enriched in human TEC. 75-85% pure TEC cultures were prepared from human thymic fragments. Using immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, ir-OT, ir-interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), ir-interleukin-6 (IL-6) and ir-leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) could be detected in these TEC cultures. ir-OT was restricted to TEC, while some ir-IL-6 and ir-LIF were also seen in occasional fibroblasts. In basal conditions, ir-IL-6 and ir-LIF (but not ir-OT and ir-IL-1 beta) were detected in the supernatants of human TEC cultures. MAbs to OT induced a marked increase of ir-IL-6 and ir-LIF secretion in TEC cultures. No significant effect was observed using mAbs against vasopressin, mouse immunoglobulins, or control ascitic fluid controls. These data show that OT is fully processed and recognized by specific mAbs at the outer surface of TEC plasma membrane. They further support that thymic OT behaves as the self-antigen of the neurohypophysial family.
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PMID:Cytokine production by human thymic epithelial cells: control by the immune recognition of the neurohypophysial self-antigen. 895 4

Bacterial endotoxins produce profound activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, mediated by stimulation of hypothalamic CRF neurons. Although a number of studies have described direct pituitary actions of inflammatory mediators, the effects of inflammatory stimuli on the sensitivity of corticotropes to CRF remain to be elucidated. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of inflammatory stress on the CRF receptor 1 (CRF-R1) messenger RNA (mRNA) levels in the rat pituitary. The systemic injection of endotoxin [lipopolysaccharide (LPS); 50 microg/kg, i.v.] increased plasma concentrations of ACTH and corticosterone. Ribonuclease protection analysis of total RNA isolated from individual whole pituitaries indicated that LPS produced a significant decrease in CRF-R1 mRNA that was evident by 2 h after injection (to 57% of control) and more marked by 6 h (to 38% of control). To evaluate whether the decrease in CRF-R1 mRNA was dependent upon increased exposure to CRF and/or vasopressin (AVP), LPS was injected with an anti-CRF antiserum, a CRF receptor antagonist (Astressin), or anti-AVP antiserum. A strong inhibition of the ACTH response to LPS was produced by pretreatment with anti-CRF antiserum, Astressin, or anti-AVP antiserum. However, these treatments had no effect on the decrease in CRF-R1 mRNA produced by LPS, indicating that neither CRF nor AVP are obligatory mediators of this pituitary response. The hypothesis that LPS might have direct pituitary effects on CRF-R1 mRNA levels was tested in vitro. Indeed, decreases in CRF-R1 mRNA to 43% and 53% of the control level were observed in rat anterior pituitary cell cultures that were treated with either LPS itself or the inflammatory mediator interleukin-1beta, respectively. Collectively, these results show that CRF receptor mRNA levels in the pituitary of the rat are markedly reduced by systemic LPS treatment and that this decrease is not dependent upon increased exposure of the pituitary to CRF or AVP, but may involve direct effects within the pituitary of either LPS itself or ensuing cytokine production.
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PMID:Endotoxin decreases corticotropin-releasing factor receptor 1 messenger ribonucleic acid levels in the rat pituitary. 907 23

Interleukin-6 (IL-6), the main circulating cytokine, is putatively a major mediator of the effects of the immune system on several endocrine axes and intermediate metabolism. We performed dose-response studies of recombinant human IL-6 on pituitary hormone secretion in 15 healthy male volunteers, using 5 single, escalating subcutaneous doses of IL-6 (0.1, 0.3, 1.0, 3.0 and 10.0 micrograms/kg body weight), each in 3 volunteers. We measured resting metabolic rate (RMR) with indirect calorimetry and plasma anterior pituitary hormones and vasopressin (AVP) at baseline and half-hourly over 4 h after the injection. All doses examined were tolerated well and produced no significant adverse effects. Dose-dependent RMR increases were observed in response to the 3.0- and 10.0-microgram/kg doses of IL-6, beginning at 60 min and slowly peaking between 180 and 240 min. Plasma adrenocorticotropic-hormone concentrations increased dramatically and dose-dependently in all the patients who received the 3.0- and 10.0-microgram/kg doses of IL-6, respectively, peaking to 150 and 255 pg/ml at 60 min, and slowly returning to normal by 4 h. Corresponding plasma cortisol levels peaked dose-dependently between 90 and 150 min, but remained elevated throughout the sampling period. In contrast, the growth hormone (GH) dose-response was bell-shaped, with maximum (approximately 100-fold) stimulation achieved by 3.0 micrograms/kg IL-6. Prolactin (PRL) showed a similar but less pronounced response pattern. Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) dose-dependently and progressively decreased over the 240 min, while gonadotropins showed no clear-cut changes. In conclusion, subcutaneous IL-6 administration induced synchronized dose-dependent increases in the RMR and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, suggesting that hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing hormone may mediate both of these functions in humans. IL-6 also acutely stimulated GH and PRL secretion and suppressed TSH secretion. The dose of 3.0 micrograms/kg could be used safely in the study of patients with disturbances of the hypothalamic-pituitary unit or of thermogenesis.
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PMID:Dose effects of recombinant human interleukin-6 on pituitary hormone secretion and energy expenditure. 925 19

cAMP and Ca2+ acted together with the acute phase cytokine interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) to inhibit hepatocyte DNA replication. At sub-basal activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), neither IL-1beta nor the Ca2+-elevating hormone vasopressin affected hepatocyte proliferation. Basal level of PKA activity permitted IL-1beta action. Increased PKA activity also permitted vasopressin action and sensitized further towards IL-1beta, which acted at 10-50 pM concentrations. Vasopressin acted via Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), and its action was mimicked by the serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitor microcystin, which activates CaMKII. Inhibitors (KN93 and KT5926) of CaMKII selectively counteracted the effects of vasopressin and microcystin on hepatocyte proliferation at concentrations similar to those required to inhibit CaMKII in vitro. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of 32P-prelabeled hepatocytes revealed a common set of proteins phosphorylated in response to vasopressin and microcystin. Their phosphorylation was counteracted by CaMKII inhibitor (KT5926). Phosphorylation of the CaMKII substrate phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH; EC 1.14.16.1) was used as an endogenous marker of CaMKII activation. It was found that treatment of the cells with vasopressin or microcystin increased the phosphorylation of PAH, and that the vasopressin-induced PAH phosphorylation was inhibited by KT5926. In conclusion, the Ca2+-elevating hormone vasopressin potentiated the antiproliferative effects of cAMP and IL-1beta through CaMKII activation.
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PMID:Synergistic antiproliferative actions of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate, interleukin-1beta, and activators of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase in primary hepatocytes. 932 53

Lewis rats display hyporesponsive hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axes, overproduction of cytokines, and susceptibility to inflammatory disease. The Lewis corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) neurosecretory system contains normal numbers of vasopressin (VP)-deficient axon varicosities, but abnormally sparse VP-containing varicosities in the external zone of the median eminence, compared to the normoresponsive Sprague Dawley (SD), Wistar and Fischer 344 strains. Since VP may act as a thyrotropin-releasing factor, we hypothesized that thyroid axis responsivity may be altered in Lewis rats. T3, T4 and TSH were measured by radioimmunoassay, and free T4 by equilibrium dialysis, in adult male Lewis and SD rats. One h cold (5 degrees C) induced significant increases in T3, T4 and TSH levels in Lewis rats but not in SD rats. Ninety min insulin-induced hypoglycemia (1 IU/kg, i.p.) induced a significant T3 increase in Lewis rats and a significant T4 increase in SD rats. Two h after ip LPS (0.25 or 0.75 mg/kg), T4 levels fell significantly in Lewis rats but not in SD rats. TSH decreases were significant in Lewis rats after 0.75 mg/kg and in SD rats after 0.25 mg/kg. Baseline hormone levels were generally higher in Lewis rats; the differences were significant for T3 and T4 in the insulin experiments and for T3, T4 and free T4 in the LPS experiments. The data suggest that reduced inhibition from the adrenocortical axis in Lewis rats leads to hyperresponsivity of the thyroid axis to cold, and greater LPS-induced decreases in T4 levels, probably due to an exaggerated inhibitory cytokine response.
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PMID:Altered thyroid axis function in Lewis rats with genetically defective hypothalamic CRH/VP neurosecretory cells. 943 Aug 24

Interleukin-6, an inflammatory cytokine, is characterized by pleiotropy and redundancy of action. Apart from its hematologic, immune, and hepatic effects, it has many endocrine and metabolic actions. Specifically, it is a potent stimulator of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and is under the tonic negative control of glucocorticoids. It acutely stimulates the secretion of growth hormone, inhibits thyroid-stimulating hormone secretion, and decreases serum lipid concentrations. Furthermore, it is secreted during stress and is positively controlled by catecholamines. Administration of interleukin-6 results in fever, anorexia, and fatigue. Elevated levels of circulating interleukin-6 have been seen in the steroid withdrawal syndrome and in the severe inflammatory, infectious, and traumatic states potentially associated with the inappropriate secretion of vasopressin. Levels of circulating interleukin-6 are also elevated in several inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis. Interleukin-6 is negatively controlled by estrogens and androgens, and it plays a central role in the pathogenesis of the osteoporosis seen in conditions characterized by increased bone resorption, such as sex-steroid deficiency and hyperparathyroidism. Overproduction of interleukin-6 may contribute to illness during aging and chronic stress. Finally, administration of recombinant human interleukin-6 may serve as a stimulation test for the integrity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
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PMID:The pathophysiologic roles of interleukin-6 in human disease. 944 73


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