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)

A recent physiological report suggested that neurotensin could inhibit the vasopressin releasing from vasopressin-producing neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus but not in the supraoptic nucleus. In the present study, the synaptic relationship between the neurotensin-like immunoreactive and vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons has been examined using a pre-embedding double immunostaining technique in the rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. At the light microscopic level, many neurotensin-like immunoreactive fibers were found near the vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons. At the electron microscopic level, the neurotensin-like immunoreactive fibers were identified as axon terminals that made many synapses on the vasopressin-like immunoreactive perikarya and dendrites. The synapses were both asymmetrical and symmetrical. These findings of the present study suggest that the inhibitory effect of neurotensin on the vasopressin neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus may be due to the direct synapses made by neurotensin-like immunoreactive axon terminals on the vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons.
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PMID:The neurotensinergic synaptic innervation of vasopressin containing neurons in the rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. 1040 90

Because obesity is a risk factor for many serious illnesses such as diabetes, better understandings of obesity and eating disorders have been attracting attention in neurobiology, psychiatry, and neuroeconomics. This paper presents future study directions by unifying (i) economic theory of addiction and obesity [4-6], and (ii) recent empirical findings in neuroeconomics and neurobiology of obesity and addiction. It is suggested that neurobiological substrates such as adiponectin, dopamine (D2 receptors), endocannabinoids, ghrelin, leptin, nesfatin-1, norepinephrine, orexin, oxytocin, serotonin, vasopressin, CCK, GLP-1, MCH, PYY, and stress hormones (e.g., CRF) in the brain (e.g., OFC, VTA, NAcc, and the hypothalamus) may determine parameters in the economic theory of obesity. Also, the importance of introducing time-inconsistent and gain/loss-asymmetrical temporal discounting (intertemporal choice) models based on Tsallis' statistics and incorporating time-perception parameters into the neuroeconomic theory is emphasized. Future directions in the application of the theory to studies in neuroeconomics and neuropsychiatry of obesity at the molecular level, which may help medical/psychopharmacological treatments of obesity (e.g., with sibutramine), are discussed.
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PMID:Toward molecular neuroeconomics of obesity. 2046 3

We herein present the case of a 53-year-old patient with adrenocorticotropin-independent macronodular adrenocortical hyperplasia (AIMAH), which is a rare form of Cushing syndrome. He had hypercortisolemia and bilateral macronodular adrenal glands with a left side predominance. The administration of vasopressin significantly increased the plasma cortisol level (1.9-fold). Following left adrenalectomy, the patient's hypercortisolemia significantly improved and vasopressin responsiveness was lost, suggesting that the responsiveness originated from the resected left adrenal gland. The marked difference in vasopressin responsiveness between the adrenals corresponded with their asymmetrical size and function. Evaluating the differences in the vasopressin sensitivity may therefore be helpful for understanding the progression of AIMAH.
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PMID:A marked difference in the vasopressin responsiveness between the adrenal glands in a patient with adrenocorticotropin-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. 2367 93


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