Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 51-year-old woman with typical Cushing's syndrome of about 9 years duration was shown to have a gastric carcinoid tumor. Plasma levels of ACTH and cortisol were elevated and lacked the normal diurnal rhythm. Urinary excretion of steroids was unaffected by the administration of either metyrapone or dexamethasone. Fluctuation in urinary steroid excretion, as well as transient hypokalemic alkalosis and glycosuria suggested periodic hormonogenesis. The extirpated gastric carcinoid was shown to contain immunoreactive ACTH and beta-MSH. However, the biologic ACTH activity was undetectable by in vivo steroidogenic assay. By gel filtration, it was demonstrated that both tumor and plasma ACTH was predominately "big" ACTH. Although postoperatively she developed hypoadrenocorticism severe enough to require ACTH treatment, her pituitary-adrenal function was gradually restored. This is the first documented case of ectopic ACTH syndrome caused by gastric carcinoid in which successful cure was achieved by surgery.
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PMID:Gastric carcinoid with ectopic production of ACTH and beta-MSH. 17 2

The adenylate cyclase responses of the human GH or ACTH producing pituitary adenomas and ectopic ACTH producing tumors to TRH, LH-RH, biogenic amines, peptides hormones, PGE1 and rat median eminence extract (MEE) have been examined. Out of 4 GH producing pituitary adenomas obtained from patients with active acromegaly at hypophysectomy two were stimulated by TRH, two by LH-RH, three by norepinephrine, one by dopamine, four by PGE1 and none by serotonin. Glucagon stimulated the adenylate cyclase in one of three and MEE in both of two tested. The positive responses of paradoxical GH release after TRH and/or LH-RH before surgery in these patients coincidentally related to the response of adenylate cyclase of each pituitary adenoma. There seems, however, to be no consistent correlation between the adenylate cyclase responses to biogenic amines and the GH release after L-Dopa or 5-hydroxytroptophan tested. The adenylate cyclase of a pituitary adenoma from case of Cushing's disease was stimulated by LH-RH, norepinephrine glucagon and MEE but not by TRH. Plasma levels of ACTH, beta-MSH and cortisol increased after LH-RH but not after TRH in this patient before hypophysectomy. The adenylate cyclase of two ectopic ACTH producing tumors (gastric carcinoid and malignant thymoma) was activated by TRH, LH-RH, norepinephrine, epinephrine, serotonin, PGE1 and MEE. These results indicate the presence of multiple hormone receptors in GH or ACTH producing pituitary adenomas and ectopic ACTH producing tumors, and suggest that the paradoxical GH or ACTH release after TRH and/or LH-RH injection in acromegaly and Cushing's syndrome might be caused by an alteration of the cellular membrane receptors of the pituitary adenomas.
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PMID:Adenylate cyclase of GH and ACTH producing tumors of human: activation by non-specific hormones and other bioactive substances. 19 Feb 56

An autopsy case of a 9-year-old Japanese girl revealed a carcinoid tumor originating in the duodenum and hyperplasia of the multiple endocrine organs as manifested by ectopic ACTH syndrome, carcinoid syndrome and giantism. The tumor cells were positive for histochemical argyrophile reaction and two types of secretory granules were identified by electron microscopy. Biochemical assay revealed the production of ACTH and beta-MSH by the tumor cells. Other changes of multiple endocrine organs included acidophil dominant hyperplasia of the pituitary, diffuse hyperplasia of the thyroid, chief cell hyperplasia of the parathyroid, hyperplasia of the islets of Langerhans and the adrenal cortex. This case was considered to be a type of multiple endocrine adenomatosis including carcinoid tumor. The relationship between the carcinoid tumor and multiple endocrine adenomatosis was discussed.
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PMID:Ectopic ACTH-MSH producing carcinoid tumor with multiple endocrine hyperplasia in a child. 21 30

Tumorlets of the lung generally have been considered benign nests of cells, usually found with bronchiectasis or fibrosis. We saw a patient with Cushing's syndrome whose tumorlets ultimately became roentgenographically visible as multiple small nodules throughout both lungs and metastasized to the mediastinum. The plasma corticotropin concentration was increased, as were the concentrations of corticotropin-like peptides in the tumor tissue. This experience lends support to the concept that some tumorlets arise from Kulchitsky's cells in the epithelium of peripheral bronchioles, as do carcinoid tumors, and have the same peptide-producing potential. The possibility of such tumors should be considered in patients with Cushing's syndrome who have no initial roentgenographic abnormality.
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PMID:Pulmonary tumorlets associated with Cushing's syndrome. 64 27

Three patients with Cushing syndrome due to ectopic production of corticotropin underwent total thymectomy on the basis of elevated concentrations of corticotropin in selective samples from thymic veins but in the absence of a radiographically detectible thymic mass. In one patient, radiologic examination demonstrated hyperplasia of neuroendocrine cells staining positively for corticotropin throughout the thymus but no discrete mass. This patient had complete remission after total thymectomy. The other two patients had no evidence of an intrathymic source of corticotropin, and both had persistent Cushing syndrome. Elevated levels of corticotropin in thymic vein samples may reflect corticotropin production by pulmonary bronchial carcinoid tumors, mediastinal metastases, thymic carcinoids, or diffuse hyperplasia of intrathymic neuroendocrine elements. In the absence of a demonstrable intrathymic mass, corticotropin gradients in thymic veins do not reliably indicate a thymic source of corticotropin and should not necessarily be used as a basis for exploratory thoracotomy or blind thymectomy.
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PMID:Corticotropin-secreting carcinoid tumors of the thymus: diagnostic unreliability of thymic venous sampling. 131 78

The most common ectopic production of a pituitary hormone is the one of ACTH leading to Cushing's syndrome. Ectopic ACTH-hypersecretion is the cause of Cushing's syndrome in 10-15% of all cases. The ACTH-secreting tumours are often oat-cell carcinomas of the lung, less frequently pancreatic cancers, hypernephromas, or C-cell carcinomas of the thyroid. Some of these tumours may be benign or semi-benign as the rare carcinoid tumours and cause great problems in the differential diagnosis of ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism. Out of 173 of our patients with Cushing's syndrome observed in the last 12 years 21 were caused by ectopic ACTH-production. Of these 21 patients 13 have a small cell carcinoma of the lung. The ectopic ACTH-syndrome often has typical clinical features caused by the levels of ACTH and cortisol leading to hypocalcemic alkalosis with muscle weakness and wasting, carbohydrate intolerance, and hypertension with oedema. The survival time in many of these patients is not long enough to allow them to develop typical signs of Cushing's syndrome though they are often highly pigmented. These patients are easily diagnosed. However, patients with small tumours which do not cause very elevated ACTH-levels and who have the more typical clinical signs of full-blown Cushing's syndrome are difficult to recognize. For the differential diagnosis of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) stimulation test and dexamethasone suppression test with high doses are helpful. In special cases the venous sampling procedure for ACTH-measurements is necessary, also CT or NMR is helpful. Ectopic CRH-production is a rare cause of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome. Patients with ectopic CRH-production and consecutive ACTH-hypersecretion from the pituitary have not been studied extensively. There are especially no well documented results of the use of the CRH-stimulation test in vivo in this group of patients with Cushing's syndrome. On the other hand, in the documented cases, not only CRH-, but also ACTH-production was found in the tumours. So far, this rare cause of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome has to be excluded or confirmed by the measurement of endogenous CRH-levels. But until now we have not been able to detect one single case of ectopic CRH-production using a sensitive homologous CRH-radioimmunoassay over a period of more than 8 years in which we have seen nearly 120 newly diagnosed patients with ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome. Only in the plasma and tumour tissue of two patients of other groups have we found high CRH-levels.
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PMID:Ectopic production of ACTH and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). 132 73

The concentrations of immunoreactive (IR) corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) in 218 neuroendocrine tumors were determined by CRH radioimmunoassay. The tumors examined were 86 pancreatic endocrine tumors (PET), 22 neuroblastic tumors (NBT), 26 carcinoid tumors (CA), 24 pheochromocytomas (PHEO), 40 small cell lung carcinomas (SCLC) and 20 medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC). IR-CRH was detectable in 21 neuroendocrine tumors (10 PET, four NBT, three CA, two PHEO and two SCLC) at levels of 10-2,700 ng/g wet weight (9.6%). The 21 patients with these CRH-producing tumors showed no clinical symptoms suggestive of Cushing's syndrome. The levels of plasma IR-CRH extracted by immunoaffinity chromatography were < 7.5 pg/ml in five normal subjects and a patient with a neuroblastic tumor containing 55 ng/g wet weight IR-CRH, but in a patient with a thymic carcinoid tumor containing 1,000 ng/g wet weight IR-CRH, the plasma level was elevated to 180 pg/ml. This patient did not have Cushing's syndrome nor an elevated plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) level. The concentrations of nine peptides (growth hormone-releasing hormone, somatostatin, ACTH, calcitonin, gastrin-releasing peptide, glucagon, vasoactive intestinal peptide, neuropeptide tyrosine and pancreatic polypeptide) were determined in extracts of the 21 IR-CRH-producing tumors. Some of these peptides were frequently found to be produced concomitantly with CRH. The results indicate IR-CRH to be produced by various neuroendocrine tumors, but Cushing's syndrome, due to the CRH, to be very rare. The results also show that CRH-producing tumors produce multiple hormones.
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PMID:Production of immunoreactive corticotropin-releasing hormone in various neuroendocrine tumors. 135 72

In a 52-year-old Caucasian man osteopoikilosis had been misdiagnosed roentgenologically 2 years before his death. Gradually he developed Cushing's syndrome and ultimately superior vena caval obstruction. At autopsy a primary thymic carcinoid with extensive osteoblastic bone metastasis was found. Immunohistochemically the tumor was shown to be positive for adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), cytokeratin (KL1), neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin, chromogranin and glucagon. Remarkably the tumour was negative for serotonin despite high urinary hydroxyindolacetic acid levels. Bilateral hyperplasia of the adrenal cortex was found. The adenohypophysis showed a considerable reduction of ACTH-producing cells and numerous Crooke's cells with a characteristic immunohistochemical pattern.
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PMID:Primary thymic carcinoid with Cushing's syndrome. 137 58

Carcinoid tumors of the lung in 10 patients were treated surgically and both the clinicopathological manifestations and immunohistochemistry were examined in detail. Five were central carcinoid tumors, located in the main, lobar or segmental bronchus and five were peripheral carcinoid tumors, located in the subsegmental bronchus or beyond. Histologically, eight of the tumors were typical carcinoid tumors, one was an atypical carcinoid tumor, and one a carcinoid tumorlet. Three growth types were also established: polypoid type, iceberg type and intrapulmonary type. The central carcinoid tumors belonged either to the polypoid type or iceberg type, while the peripheral carcinoid tumors were of the intrapulmonary type. Both the iceberg and intrapulmonary types may invade the peribronchial or parenchymal tissues more frequently than does the polypoid type. Immunohistochemically, argyrophilia and neuron-specific enolase (NSE) were detected in all the tumors examined and six stained for polypeptide hormones such as adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and/or pancreatic polypeptide (PP). Of these, five had epithelial markers such as keratin, epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) and/or carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA). These findings suggest that a carcinoid tumor of the lung originates from primitive multipotential stem cells such as those of a neuroendocrine or epithelial nature.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumor of the lung: clinicopathological and immunohistochemical studies. 137 25

An ovarian strumal carcinoid which synthesized peptide hormones, but did not induce the carcinoid syndrome, was analysed histochemically, immunohistochemically and ultrastructurally. Dot-immunobinding assays were performed in order to determine the endocrine gene expression. The amylase resistant colloid was found to be PAS-positive in the follicular portions of the tumour. Carcinoid cells showed Grimelius positive argyophilic granules in the subnuclear position. The Fontana-Masson argentaffin reaction was negative. Immunohistochemistry for adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) revealed strong reactivity in the follicular areas of the carcinoid. The immunoreactivity for somatotropic release inhibiting factor (SRIF) was found positive in the trabecular portion of the carcinoid tumour, thyroglobulin in the follicles. Neuron-specific enolase, protein S-100 A/B, synaptophysin and chromogranin A evoked weak cytoplasmic immunostaining of the tumor cells. Dot-immunobinding assays substantiated these immunohistochemical results, except for the thermolabile protein S-100 A/B. Electron microscopy of tumor cells showed numerous electron-dense cytoplasmic granules, 250 to 350 nm in diameter, both in follicular and trabecular areas of the tumor. Plasma levels of tumor-associated ACTH, SRIF and thyroglobulin were measured by radioimmunoassay and were found to be within the normal range.
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PMID:Immunochemical and ultrastructural studies of an ovarian strumal carcinoid. 198 59


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