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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of bombesin and other unrelated oligopeptides on hormonal changes induced by stress were studied in conscious adult male rats. Restraint in the
cold
for 1 h increased plasma corticosterone and PRL levels and decreased GH values but had no effect on LH levels. Bombesin (5 microgram), given intracerebroventricularly (ivt) before stress, inhibited the PRL rise without affecting corticosterone, GH, or LH response. A complete blockade of PRL rise was observed with doses of bombesin ranging from 5 microgram to 100 ng ivt, regardless of the duration (15, 30, 45, or 60 min) or the nature (
cold
exposure or restraint at room temperature) of the stressor agents. Bombesin was 10(3) more potent as a PRL inhibitor when given ivt than when given iv, and its ivt effect was not reversed by naloxone (1 or 10 mg/kg). Among other unrelated peptides tested (
beta-endorphin
, neurotensin, substance P, and TRH; 5 microgram ivt), only neurotensin decreased plasma PRL levels in rats subjected to restraint in the
cold
for 1 h. These results show that in conscious male rats, centrally administered bombesin has a very potent and long acting inhibitory effect on PRL release induced by acute stress. Since a bombesin-like peptide has been found in rat brain, its physiological role in PRL regulation remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:Effects of neuropeptides on adenohypophyseal hormone response to acute stress in male rats. 10 88
Interactions between three climatic conditions and exogenous
adrenocorticotropin
(200 IU) or saline on glucocorticoids of plasma were tested in six pregnant Holstein heifers. Animals were under
cold
(5 C, 30% relative humidity), thermoneutral (18 C, 50% relative humidity), and hot (35 C, and 80% relative humidity) conditions. Effects of treatment, interactions of environment with treatment, and environment with treatment with interval on glucocorticoids of plasma were measured through timed intervals of blood collection at pre- and postintravenous injection of a treatment solution. Adrenocorticotropin elevated corticoid concentrations in plasma, but interactions of environment with treatment and environment by treatment by sampling interval were nil for responses of corticoids in plasma.
...
PMID:Effect of exogenous corticotropin and climatic conditions on bovine adrenal cortical function. 19 32
Chronic treatment with
corticotropin
led to reduced calorigenic effect of norepinephrine in
cold
acclimatized rats, but potentiated its effect in controls. This inhibitory effect was not due to the observed decrease in corticosterone plasma level, as it was shown by metopirone administration. It is concluded that
corticotropin
could have a competitive action on receptor sites mediating the calorigenic effect of norepinephrine in nonshivering thermogenesis.
...
PMID:Corticotropin and nonshivering thermogenesis. 20 Apr 59
Studies have been made on postembryonic development of the hypophyseal-adrenal system in domestic hens. Most significant functional rearrangements were observed at the 3rd week of life, when corticosteroid content of the blood plasma decreased threefold. Birds subjected to a series of
cold
stresses at this time, exhibited more rapid sexual maturation, more rapid reaction of the adrenals to exogenous
corticotropin
and higher resistance to unfavourable factors. Stress expositions in other days of the first month of life also resulted in trace phenomena, although these were less evident. It is suggested that the 3rd week after hatching is a critical period in the development of ihe hypophyseal-adrenal system in hens.
...
PMID:[Detection of the critical period of pituitary-adrenal system development during postembryonic chicken ontogenesis]. 21 11
To establish a possible different reaction between the male and the female to short-term exposure to
cold
, thermal, cardiovascular and pituitary hormonal responses to
cold
stress were measured in eight normal men and eight women (ages 19-24). The women were eumenorrheic and were tested in the follicular phase. Each subject, lightly clad, was required to remain for 30 min in a room at an ambient temperature of 25 degrees C followed by a 30 min period in a
cold
room at 4 degrees C. A month later, control tests were carried out at a constant 25 degrees C temperature for 1 h in the same subjects. Skin temperature, heart rate, blood pressure and plasma levels of
beta-endorphin
, ACTH, cortisol, GH and PRL were measured before and after
cold
exposure in the two groups. Before the test, all examined parameters were similar in the two groups. During cooling, blood pressure rose and pulse rate decreased significantly in the men, but not in the women, whereas skin temperature dropped in both groups. However, after
cold
exposure skin temperature was significantly lower in the women than in the men. A slight, but not significant increase in
beta-endorphin
, ACTH, cortisol and GH levels was observed after cooling in the men, whereas the women showed significant increments of these hormones. When values of skin temperature were combined with the differential (after minus before
cold
test) hormonal values, significant negative correlations were found for
beta-endorphin
, ACTH, cortisol and GH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sex-related responses of beta-endorphin, ACTH, GH and PRL to cold exposure in humans. 131 May 61
1. Bovine cerebral hemispheres were extracted with an acidic medium (acetone-water-hydrochloric acid mixture, 40:5:1 by volume, pH 1.8). The precipitate which formed upon addition of a copious volume of
cold
acetone to the extract was designated acid acetone powder (AAP). 2. The AAP was then subjected to ion exchange chromatography on carboxymethyl (CM)-cellulose, gel filtration on Sephadex G100 and Sephadex G25, second ion exchange chromatography on CM-cellulose and high performance liquid chromatography. The absorbance of all fractions was measured at 280 nm and their alpha-melanotropin-(
alpha-MSH
)-like immunoreactivity was monitored with radioimmunoassay. 3. It was found that
alpha-MSH
-like immunoreactivity and bioactivity (lipolytic activity) was due to low molecular weight materials as evidenced by their retardation on Sephadex G-100 and Sephadex G-25. The immunoreactivity was distributed among fractions adsorbed and fractions unadsorbed on CM-cellulose and also among high performance liquid chromatographic fractions signifying the presence of multiple
alpha-MSH
-like molecules.
...
PMID:Substances with alpha-melanotropin-like immunoreactivity in bovine brains. 132 82
Investigators have described changes in pituitary corticotropes that correlate with changes in the physiological state of the animal. The stellate subtype degranulated and enlarged initially after adrenalectomy. This was followed by repopulation of the granules during the first 3 weeks after surgery with larger granules. There was also an increase in the percentage of corticotropes. More recent studies have shown that chronic stimulation with
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) produces some of the same changes; however, the magnitude differs because of corticosterone feedback. Corticotropes are heterogeneous in size, shape, storage patterns, and secretory responses. Specific changes are evident within a short time after stimulation as well. Their average cellular area increases within 1-2 h of stimulation by CRH in vitro or
cold
stress in vivo. Whereas many corticotropes acutely stimulated by
cold
or a novel environment are better granulated, others are depleted of granules.
Cold
stress for 30 min also stimulates an increase in the percentage of immunoreactive corticotropes and cells that bind CRH or arginine vasopressin (AVP). Secretagogues like CRH or epidermal growth factor (EGF) act in vitro to increase percentages of cells that store
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) or express mRNA for pro-
opiomelanocortin
. AVP or angiotensin II (A-II), or their activated second messengers, also increase percentages of cells that bind CRH and store ACTH. Inhibition of ACTH secretion by ion channel blockers or corticosterone has potent inhibitory effects on percentages of CRH-bound cells. AVP binding is not affected. Some of the inhibitory states reduce the average area of corticotropes. However, about 30% of the cells remain unaffected by these inhibitors. The rapid changes in cell percentages with the different treatments have led workers to postulate the existence of reserve cells that may be sensitive to certain levels of types of stimuli. Several candidate reserve cells are proposed. One group of cells that store ACTH with gonadotropins may function in the proestrous female to stimulate adrenal progesterone. Another multihormonal cell may function during
cold
stress to release both ACTH and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) under the influence of AVP. There may be subpopulations of corticotropes that act in synchrony with other cell populations. They may be awaiting the proper type or combination of secretagogues to support the pituitary-adrenal and other axes.
...
PMID:Structure-function correlates in the corticotropes of the anterior pituitary. 133 2
Although
alpha-MSH
increases skin darkening in humans, there are several reports that it fails to have melanogenic effects on human melanocytes in vitro. The purpose of this study was to see whether cultured human melanocytes express MSH receptors. Human melanocytes were grown in the absence of artificial mitogens such as 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and cholera toxin (CT) and incubated for 2 h at room temperature with increasing amounts of 125I-labelled Nle4DPhe7-
alpha-MSH
with and without excess
cold
peptide. Binding was saturable and specific: Scatchard analysis gave a Kd of 4.9 x 10(-11) M and approximately 700 binding sites/cell. Human keratinocytes and fibroblasts showed no specific binding. The addition of 1 mM dibutyryl cAMP to the culture medium caused a 62% increase in MSH binding to human melanocytes. A smaller increase (25%) was seen with 10(-9) M CT while 25 mM TPA caused a 24% decrease. These results show that human melanocytes in culture express MSH receptors and that this expression can be modulated by mitogens.
...
PMID:The expression of functional MSH receptors on cultured human melanocytes. 133 93
The effects of a single intraperitoneal injection of ethanol (3 g/kg b.wt.) on the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid system was explored as a possible explanation of the hypothermic effect of ethanol. Serum thyroid hormones were significantly reduced by ethanol injection, but ethanol did not affect the
cold
-induced increase in serum thyroid hormones or thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). Since
cold
-exposure stimulates serum levels of TSH and thyroid hormones by stimulating thyroid-releasing hormone (TRH) release from neurons of the PVN, these findings demonstrate that ethanol did not block pituitary response to TRH or thyroid response to TSH. Paradoxically, ethanol increased cellular levels of TRH mRNA in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), and blocked the
cold
-induced increase in TRH mRNA, suggesting that ethanol uncouples the regulation of TRH gene expression from the regulation of TRH release specifically in neurons of the PVN. Measurements of the effects of ethanol on TRH mRNA in thalamus, and beta-actin, vasopressin, somatostatin and
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) mRNAs in the PVN in addition to TRH mRNA revealed very specific effects of ethanol on the TRH neuronal system.
...
PMID:Ethanol blocks the cold-induced increase in thyrotropin-releasing hormone mRNA in paraventricular nuclei but not the cold-induced increase in thyrotropin. 135 12
It was found that adaptation of rats to
cold
and physical exercise prevented ventricular fibrillation caused by occlusion of the left anterior coronary artery. Adaptation to
cold
or only to physical exercise did not prevent ventricular arrhythmias. A significant increase of the
beta-endorphin
content in the hypophysis and hypothalamus was demonstrated in all adapted rats. An increased content of meth-enkephalin (ME) in the myocardium was found only in rats adapted to
cold
and physical exercise. It is suggested that increase of the myocardial ME content is of essential significance in the antiarrhythmic action of adaptation.
...
PMID:[Role of the opioid system in prevention of ischemic disorders of cardiac rhythm during adaptation to cold and physical exertion in rats]. 140 87
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