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)

In order to know the pituitary reserves of ACTH, GH, LH, FSH, TSH and prolactin in patients with Cushing's syndrome, the responses of these hormones to hydrocortisone, lysine-8 vasopressin (LVP), insulin-induced hypoglycemia, luteinizing hormon-releasing hormone (LH-RH) and thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) were examined before and after treatment. Fourteen patients with Cushing's disease (adrenal hyperplasia), 3 patientswith adrenal adenoma and one patient with adrenal carcinoma were investigated. Before treatment, sufficient response of plasma ACTH to LVP was observed in patients with Cushing's disease, while no response was observed in 3 patients with adrenal adenoma. There was no significant difference in the responses of other pituitary hormones between the patients with Cushing's disease. and the patients with adrenal adenoma. The response of plasma GH to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was impaired in most these patients. The response of plasma TSH to TRH was impaired in 6 of 8 patients tested. The response of plasma LH and FSH to LH-RH were preserved in 6 and 5 of 8 patients, respectively. The response of plasma prolactin to TRH was normal in most patients tested. After treatment, the improvements of the impaired responses of GH, TSH, LH and FSH wereobserved. Therefore, the impaired reserve observed in these patients before treatment seemed to be due to the hypercortisolemia. If the difference of the suppressibility of these pituitary hormones by cortisol may be judged simply from our observation, the orderof the suppressibility is supposed to be ACTH, GH, TSH, LH and FSH, and then prolactin.
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PMID:The pituitary ACTH, GH, LH, FSH, TSH and prolactin reserves in patients with Cushing's syndrome. 80 44

The physiological regulation of the plasma corticosteroid concentration, measured by competitive protein-binding, was studied in female rhesus monkeys (M. mulatta) sedated with phencyclidine hydrochloride. Morning basal levels of plasma corticosteroids were found to be in the range 8-0-25-2 mug/100 ml, which is lower than that previously reported in this species. A circadian rhythm in plasma cortisol concentration was demonstrated. Prolonged sedation with phencyclidine was associated with a gradual increase in the plasma cortisol concentration. Synthetic alpha1-24 adrenocorticotrophic hormone given intravenously caused a rapid rise in plasma cortisol, the minimum effective dose was between 1 and 10 ng/kg body weight and the response was maximal after 1000 ng/kg. The administration of lysine-vasopressin and the induction of hypoglycaemia by insulin were both followed by an increase in the plasma corticosteroid concentration. Metyrapone caused a decline in plasma 11-hydroxycorticosteroids and a concomitant increase in total corticosteroids measured by competitive protein-binding. It is concluded that the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system in the rhesus monkey functions in a manner which is qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that of man.
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PMID:Studies on plasma corticosteroids in the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). 81 35

A 25-year-old woman with severe diabetes mellitus since the age of 7 developed anterior pituitary insufficiency after pregnancy toxaemia with hypofunction of the thyroid, ovaries and adrenal cortex. Following the development of Sheehan's syndrome, her insulin requirment decreased dramatically. I.v. administration of TRH, LRH and vasopressin induced nearly normal pituitary response levels of TSH, LH and plasma cortisol, indicating a hypothalamic damage as the primary aetiological factor.
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PMID:Sheehan's syndrome of hypothalamic origin in a woman with juvenile diabetes mellitus. 93 82

When sodium transport (JNa) and CO2 production (JCO2) were measured simultaneously in the toad urinary bladder in the absence of electrochemical gradients under conditions of spontaneous variation of JNa, the curve of JNa on JCO2, phiJNa/phiJCO2, was found to be highly linear in an individual epithelium. However, no unique value appeared to characterize a population of bladders. In an effort to investigate the nature of this variation, phiJNa/phiJCO2 was examined under a variety of conditions. It was found that agents that affect sodium entry into the active transport pool, e.g. vasopressin and amiloride, or those that influence the energy-linked exit step, e.g. ouabain and insulin, have no effect on the phiJNa/phiJCO2. To investigate the possibility of the presence of a significant backleak from the serosal side into the cell, the sodium concentration was changed to 75 and 160 mM. Neither of these maneuvers influenced phiJNa/phiJCO2 or (JCO2)JNa=O. Furthermore, in the absence of mucosal sodium, ouabain had no effect on JCO2, suggesting that no significant recirculation is occurring. It is concluded that for each individual epithelium JNa is coupled to JCO2, and their ratios appear, within experimental error, to be invariant. It is suggested that sodium traverses the active transport pathway largely or entirely in one direction.
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PMID:Further studies on coupling between sodium transport and respiration in toad urinary bladder. 96 63

Recent data on various environmental stressors and blood hormone patterns are presented for lactating cattle. Known stressor effects of such factors as environmental temperature, air pollution, and noise on the plasma thyroxine, growth hormone, cortisol, prolactin, progesterone, luteinzing hormone, epinephrine, and norepinephrine of lactating cattle are discussed. Information on stressor effects is lacking on glucagon, insulin, vasopressin, calcitonin, oxytocin, thyrotrophic hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, melatonin, parathyroid hormone, and estrogens in the lactating cow. The importance of evaluating both the effect of environmental stressor and of production or lactation intensity is emphasized in the overall interpretation of changes in hormone of plasma. The short and long term environmental heat effects on thyroxine, cortisol, and growth hormone are clear with initial increased due to acute stressors and a decline of amounts in plasma after prolonged exposure to stressors. The relationship of amounts in plasma of these hormones to milk production appears to be related directly for cortisol, growth hormone, and prolactin with an inverse relationship with thyroxine. Epinephrine and norepinephrine seem to be elevated with prolonged environmental heat stress. However, the influence of intensity of lactation has not been measured. Hormones in plasma as they relate to stressor effects and milk production are important as potential indicators of the physiological state of a cow and reflect the physiological compensations a cow undergoes at various lactation intensities and/or stress exposure.
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PMID:Effects of environmental and other stressors on blood hormone patterns in lactating animals. 98 81

Twelve patients (10 women and 2 men) with a primary empty sella turcica were studied. Endocrine function tests were performed as follows: growth hormone (GH) was measured after insulin-induced-hypoglycaemia, luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) after LH-releasing hormone, thyrotrophin (TSH) and prolactin after thyrotrophin-releasing hormone; pituitary reserve of adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) was determined by measurement of plasma cortisol after lysine-vasopressin and 11 deoxycortisol after metyrapone. Five of the patients (group A) had no endocrine disturbance. Seven patients (group B) had a hypothalamo-pituitary disorder. Two of them had panhypopituitarism which appeared in one case after meningoencephalitis and in the other after a severe cranial trauma. In two cases an amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea syndrome with increased prolactin level (68 and 230 ng/ml) led to a diagnosis of a prolactin producing adenoma, which was confirmed by surgery. Finally three cases of amenorrhoeagalactorrhoea, with normal prolactin level, and/or diabetes insipidus remained unexplained. However, no causal relationship could be demonstrated between the pituitary disturbance and the "empty sella". Primary empty sella turcica is therefore a neuroanatomical and neuroradiological entity with no endocrine implication. A pituitary disorder might suggest a microadenoma or an incidentally associated disease.
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PMID:The primary empty sella an endocrine study on 12 cases. 98 92

In two series of experiments, one conducted in the spring (May-June) and the other in the fall (September-November), the influence of raising temperature of the medium and of vasopressin, insulin and ethacrynic acid on polarized sodium transport in the epithelium of frog skin in vitro was studied. Net sodium transport was determined electrometrically, and active and passive components of transport by the isotope method. Raising temperature markedly increased both components, as well as net flux and electric potential of the membrane in the spring months, but not in the fall. Regardless of the character and extent of the effect on transport, raising temperature of the medium had no qualitative or quantitative influence on the action of vasopressin, insulin or ethacrynic acid.
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PMID:Seasonal differences in drug- and temperature-dependent changes of the sodium transport across the isolated frog skin. 108 44

Eighteen female rhesus monkeys subjected to complete or anterior disconnection of the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) were studied to assess the effects of these deafferentation procedures on GH and cortisol secretion. Basal serum levels of GH were not disturbed or were slightly elevated following complete or anterior MBH disconnection. GH secretion in response to vasopressin administration or insulin hypoglycemia, however, was abolished by complete isolation of the MBH. In contrast, the elevations in serum cortisol concentrations observed in response to these noxious stimuli were not noticeably affected. The normal diurnal rhythm in cortisol secretion remained fully evident following anterior deafferentation, but was severely attenuated or abolished when all neuronal inputs to the MBH were transected. Such observations suggest that the central components of the neuroendocrine systems which regulate basal GH secretion and which subserve stress-induced elevations in cortisol secretion are resident within the MBH-hypophysial unit. In addition, these data indicate that the mechanisms underlying the diurnal rhythm in cortisol secretion, as well as those mediating the discharges of GH in response to vasopressin administration and insulin hypoglycemia, are dependent on the integrity of neuronal connections between the MBH and other hypothalamic and/or extrahypothalamic areas.
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PMID:Surgical disconnection of the medial basal hypothalamus and pituitary function in the rhesus monkey. II. GH and cortisol secretion. 116 27

Interactions of several proteins with glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase (GIT) have been investigated by determining their ability to inhibit degradation of 125I-labeled insulin catalyzed by GIT. The inhibition by every insulin analog (des-Asn-des-Ala-pork insulin, desoctapeptide-pork insulin, des-Ala-pork insulin, pork insulin, proinsulin, and guinea pig insulin) was competitive vs. competitive vs. insulin indicating that they function as alternate substrates. The insulin analogs with the least hormonal activity showed the highest potency as inhigitors of insulin degradation. Whereas native ribonuclease and lysozyme showed little or no inhibition, their scrambled forms (i.e. reduced and randomly reoxidized) showed competitive inhibition with a potency greater than that of insulin. These results suggest that the conformation of the substrate or inhibitor is probably the major factor in determining the specificity for (or binding to) the enzyme. Studies withother peptide hormones showed competitive inhibition with vasopressin and oxytocin and noncompetitive inhibition with glycagon. The inhibition with growth hormone could be either competitive or noncompetitive. The inhibition by glucagon and growth hormone (physiologic antagonists of insulin) could serve as a control mechanism to modulate the activity of enzyme. The following showed very little or no inhibition; the native and scrambled form of pepsinogen, trypsin inhibitor of beef pancreas and of lima bean, C-peptide of pork proinsulin, and heptapeptide (B23-B29) of insulin.
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PMID:Interaction of insulin analogs, glucagon, growth hormone, vasopressin, oxytocin, and scrambled forms of ribonuclease and lysozyme with glytathione-insulin transhydrogenase (thiol: protein-disulfide oxidoreductase): dependence upon conformation. 117 Aug 77

Metabolic effects of vasopressin, glucagan and adrenalin were compared, in intact rats, especially in regard to time courses of effects. Hyperglycaemia was transient in response to vasopressin, prolonged following adrenalin, and, suprisingly, was not discernible after glucagon, except in response to a very large dose. Vasopressin decreased and adrenalin increased, the plasma free fatty acid concentration; both hormones decreased the triacylglycerol level. Muscle glycogen concentrations, measured in heart, diaphragm and skeletal muscle, exhibited small changes, with complex time courses, following hormone administration. Vasopressin brought about a rapid but transient activation of heaptic glycogen phosphorylase which resembled that due to adrenalin. The activation by glucagon of phosphorylase was greater and more prolonged, despite the absence of hyperglycaemia. In response to vasopressin, there was in increase in plasma insulin. Incorporation of 14C from [14C]glucose into glycogen or fatty acids was not influenced by vasopressin. Taken together, these results may be explained by rapid metabolic action of vasopressin on hepatic glycogenolysis, whereas adrenalin has multiple prolonged actions.
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PMID:Metabolic actions of vasopressin, glucagon and adrenalin in the intact rat. 118


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