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)

Local expansion of pituitary tumors causes nonspecific symptoms, including hormone insufficiency, that may exist for years before diagnosis. Although they are more specific, symptoms of pituitary hormone oversecretion may also remain unrecognized and give rise to difficult diagnostic problems. Gonadotropic tumors do not elicit specific endocrine symptoms, whether they secrete complete gonadotropins or their biologically inactive free subunits. Hyperprolactinemia is not due to tumor secretion in the majority of cases, including some with a tumor in the pituitary (compressive hyperprolactinemia). When acromegaly is suspected, the unequivocal proof of excess growth hormone secretion is not easy to obtain, due to intermittent growth hormone secretion, both in normals and in acromegalics. The large variety of tests available for the etiological diagnosis of hypercorticism indicates the diagnostic difficulties that can be encountered. Corticotrope pituitary adenomas may be minute, and ectopic corticotropin secretion may remain occult. But on the other hand, the quality of the diagnostic tools available improves constantly. This includes new hormone measurements, such as insulin-like growth factor 1 and its binding proteins, dynamic tests, selective pituitary blood drawing by inferior petrosal sinus catheterism, pituitary nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and somatostatin-analogue scintiscan. In addition to the improving techniques of transphenoidal neurosurgery and pituitary radiotherapy, medical management of pituitary tumors remains a distinct possibility. Tumor hormone secretion can be controlled in some cases by drugs such as dopaminergic agents, somatostatin analogues and gonadoliberin analogues, which may also exert an antitumoral mass effect. Within the next few years we will be confronted with an increasing number of incidentally discovered pituitary tumors, due to the frequent use of high-resolution intracranial imaging.
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PMID:[Endocrinological aspects of hypophyseal tumors]. 759 64

A variety of neuroendocrine disturbances are observed following treatment with external radiation therapy when the hypothalamic-pituitary axis (HPA) is included in the treatment field. Radiation-induced abnormalities are generally dose dependent and may develop many years after irradiation. Growth hormone deficiency and premature sexual development can occur following doses as low as 18 Gy fractionated radiation and are the most common neuroendocrine problems noted in children. Deficiency of gonadotropins, thyroid stimulating hormone, and adrenocorticotropin are seen primarily in individuals treated with > 40 Gy HPA irradiation. Hyperprolactinemia can be seen following high-dose radiotherapy (> 40 Gy), especially among young women. Most neuroendocrine disturbances that develop as a result of HPA irradiation are treatable; patients at risk require long-term endocrine follow-up.
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PMID:Chronic neuroendocrinological sequelae of radiation therapy. 771 77

Targeted tumorigenesis, using the POMC gene promoter ligated to the simian virus 40 large T antigen, generated transgenic mice with massive tumors of the intermediate lobe (IL) of the pituitary. Inoculation of nude mice with the IL tumor cells resulted in very large secondary tumors. As the IL from several species produces a potent PRL-releasing factor (PRF), it was of interest to determine whether IL tumors from these mice also contain PRF. The objectives were to 1) measure serum PRL levels in mice with IL tumors, 2) determine whether these tumors contain PRF and examine its chromatographic properties, and 3) analyze whether this PRF is related to POMC, its derivatives, or other PRL secretagogues. Serum PRL levels were 5- to 6-fold higher in transgenic than in control mice. Primary and secondary IL tumors were acid extracted and successively fractionated using Sephadex G-100 gel filtration and reverse phase and gel permeation HPLC. PRF activity was determined using short term incubation of tissue extracts or column fractions with GH3 cells. Crude tumor extracts exhibited a strong and dose-dependent PRF activity. Upon chromatography, the PRF activity from either primary or secondary tumors resolved into two classes of compounds: a big PRF with an estimated mol wt of 70-80 kilodaltons and two small, very hydrophobic peptides. The elution profiles of the three PRFs differed from those of beta-endorphin, alpha MSH, beta MSH, ACTH, TRH, oxytocin, angiotensin II, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, or corticotropin-like intermediate peptide. In summary, we have identified an animal model with IL tumors that has hyperprolactinemia and overproduces PRF. Two classes of PRFs, big and small, were resolved which differ from POMC derivatives and known regulators of PRL release. These data suggest that PRF is produced by melanotrophs, but is not a product of the POMC gene. The IL tumors should provide an excellent source for the purification and structural elucidation of PRFs.
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PMID:Identification of two classes of prolactin-releasing factors in intermediate lobe tumors from transgenic mice. 778 36

Three cases of a composite sellar tumour composed of a gangliocytoma and an adenoma are presented. Two patients who showed acromegaly and hyperprolactinaemia had a gangliocytoma and a growth hormone (GH)-prolactin cell adenoma in close proximity. The gangliocytoma contained growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) by immunohistochemistry. At the electron microscopical level, the gangliocytoma was characterized by numerous synaptic vesicles. The third patient, a child with Cushing's disease, presented a corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)-positive gangliocytoma in close contact with an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) secreting adenoma, the latter a typical densely granulated ACTH cell adenoma. Ultrastructurally, the gangliocytoma revealed synaptic vesicles and sparse secretory granules. The results suggest that gangliocytomas may promote the development of pituitary adenomas by hypersecretion of releasing hormones. Whereas 20 cases of sellar GHRH producing gangliocytomas in acromegaly are reported in the literature, the combination of a CRH-positive gangliocytoma and an ACTH cell adenoma in Cushing's disease is apparently the first case.
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PMID:Combined sellar gangliocytoma and pituitary adenoma in acromegaly or Cushing's disease. A report of 3 cases. 792 20

A 27-yr-old woman was referred for evaluation of acromegaly and hyperprolactinemia. She had undergone left adrenalectomy at 12 and right adrenalectomy at 17 for Cushing's syndrome due to adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia. At this time a pituitary tumor was found by brain computerized tomography, but plasma levels of growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL) and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) were normal. When she was 23, symptoms and signs of acromegaly and subsequently galactorrhea-amenorrhea had developed. Plasma GH and PRL were increased and she was followed up by the administration of bromocriptine (2.5 mg-12.5 mg/day, p.o.). However the plasma GH level had been increasing gradually. On admission, plasma GH and PRL were high (19.5 micrograms/L, 61.0 micrograms/L, respectively) and increased in response to thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH, 500 micrograms i.v.). An intrasella mass, which had been detected when she was 17, had become enlarged and was removed by Hardy's operation. Microscopically, the resected tumor was an eosinophilic adenoma. Immunohistochemical studies showed GH, PRL and ACTH positive cells localized in the tumor. Immunoultrastructural analysis of the tumor confirmed that GH, PRL and ACTH were present in secretory granules and Golgi apparatus in the tumor cells. The patient was a rare case of acromegaly with hyperprolactinemia developed after bilateral adrenalectomy of Cushing's syndrome due to adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia, all of which manifestations may be caused by a GH, PRL and ACTH secreting pituitary adenoma.
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PMID:Acromegaly with hyperprolactinemia developed after bilateral adrenalectomy in a patient with Cushing's syndrome due to adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia. 795 91

1. Plasma levels of beta-endorphin were not significantly different in women with normal plasma prolactin or women with hyperprolactinemia. 2. A bromocriptine induced decrease in plasma prolactin was not accompanied by a decrease in beta-endorphin. 3. This study suggests that no direct link exists between plasma prolactin levels and endogenous beta-endorphin.
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PMID:Beta-endorphin levels in women with elevated prolactin and following bromocriptine therapy. 827 Jan 82

Several hormonal alterations have been described in patients with chronic renal failure. However, there are few epidemiological studies on uremia-associated endocrine derangements, in particular in patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis (PD). A cross-sectional descriptive study was performed to assess the prevalence of hormonal dysfunctions affecting pituitary secretions in the whole population of patients in the PD unit of our hospital. The total population included 69 patients, 66 on continuous ambulatory PD and 3 on continuous cycling PD. There were 31 men and 38 women, the mean age was 55 years (range 23-82 years), and the mean duration of PD was 32 months (range 1-161 months). There were 27 (39.1%) patients with diabetes mellitus (7 type I and 20 type II). Clinical records were reviewed for hormonal alterations affecting the pituitary and its target glands. The whole population had available data on the pituitary-thyroid axis. The following diagnoses and prevalences were found: hypothyrotropic hypothyroidism 4 (5.8%), subclinical hypothyroidism 4 (5.8%), primary hypothyroidism 8 (11.6%), and low T3 syndrome 11 (15.9%). The remaining pituitary hormones were available in 20 patients. Hyperprolactinemia was found in 7 (35%) patients and abnormally increased growth hormone levels in 6 (30%). Gonadotropin levels were normal for the age of the women and showed a tendency to be increased in most of the men. Corticotropin levels were normal in all patients with available data. There was no relationship between the high prevalence of diabetes mellitus in our population and the remaining hormonal derangements found. These results suggest that there is a non-negligible prevalence of pituitary abnormalities in uremic patients undergoing PD.
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PMID:Pituitary dysfunctions in uremic patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis: a cross sectional descriptive study. 853 9

The effects of surgery on pituitary-gonadal function were investigated in women with pituitary adenomas other than prolactinomas. The subjects were 46 women of premenopausal age with a pituitary adenoma. Twenty tumors were GH producing, 19 were nonfunctioning, and 7 were adrenocorticotropin producing adenomas. The surgery was performed mainly via the transsphenoidal route, with the aim of eradicating the tumor and preserving pituitary function. The menstrual cycle was preserved postoperatively in 9 out of 10 (90%) patients with regular preoperative menstruation. Menstrual disturbance was seen in 36 (78.3%) cases preoperatively. The causative factors for menstrual disturbance were gonadotropin impairment and hyperprolactinemia in GH producing and nonfunctioning adenoma. Excessive hormonal secretion itself is a major causative factor for menstrual disturbance in GH and ACTH producing adenoma. Regular menstruation was restored following surgery in 20 out of 36 (55.6%) patients with menstrual problems. The predicting factors for postoperative recovery of menstruation are: size of adenoma less than 40 mm, period of amenorrhea less than 5 years, and preoperatively preserved gonadotropin secretion. In addition, preoperative hyperprolactinemia was also a predicting factor in women with nonfunctioning adenoma. Thus, even in patients with pituitary adenomas other than prolactinoma, the restoration of menstruation is highly achievable when surgery is performed with attention to preserving pituitary function.
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PMID:Effect of surgery on gonadal function of premenopausal women with pituitary adenomas other than prolactinomas. 879 26

Although there is evidence that endogenous opioids, and in particular beta-endorphin (beta-EP), may mediate some of the suppressive effects of hyperprolactinemia on the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, there is controversy about the effects of prolactin (PRL) on beta-EP and its precursor, proopiomelanocortin (POMC), in the hypothalamus. In this study we have therefore examined the effects of chronic peripheral and intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) infusion of ovine PRL on POMC gene expression and beta-EP levels in the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) of castrated male and female rats. Endogenous pituitary and plasma PRL levels were determined by RIA with an antiserum to rat PRL which does not crossreact with oPRL. Suppression of endogenous rPRL levels was used as a confirmation of the biological effectiveness of the infused oPRL. POMC mRNA was measured in the MBH by solution hybridization assay. In the first experiment oPRL (5 microg/microl/h) or vehicle was infused for 2 weeks by osmotic minipump into the right lateral ventricle of ovariectomized rats. The mean plasma concentration of rPRL declined from 3.7+/-1.0 ng/ml in the controls to 1.4+/-0.13 ng/ml in the oPRL infused animals (P<0.05); pituitary rPRL content similarly decreased from 39.1+/-4.6 microg to 20.4+/-3.7 microg (P<0.02). There was no significant change in the concentration of POMC mRNA or beta-EP in the MBH of the oPRL treated animals. In the second experiment oPRL was infused for 1 week into the third ventricle of orchiectomized rats. Again despite a fall in endogenous PRL levels, there was no significant change in POMC or beta-EP in the MBH. In the third experiment oPRL was infused subcutaneously into orchiectomized rats for 2 weeks. Mean plasma oPRL levels were 150+/-7.3 ng/ml after 1 week and 58+/-7.5 ng/ml after 2 weeks. Pituitary rPRL content was again suppressed in the oPRL treated animals but no change in POMC or beta-EP was detected in the MBH. We conclude that oPRL can be infused both peripherally and centrally for up to 2 weeks with resulting suppression of endogenous pituitary PRL content and release. Under these conditions no effects on the concentrations of POMC mRNA or beta-EP could be demonstrated in the hypothalamus. These results suggest that either PRL has nongenomic effects on hypothalamic beta-EP or that endogenous opioids other than beta-EP mediate the suppressive effects of PRL on the HPG axis.
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PMID:Effect of chronic prolactin infusion on pituitary prolactin and hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin. 904 59

Based on the facts that prolactin and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) each seem to influence the secretion of the other, that dopamine is the established inhibitory factor for prolactin secretion and negatively modulates ACTH release, and finally that alterations of the central dopaminergic tone have been postulated in tumorous hyperprolactinemia, we studied the effects of pharmacological manipulations of the dopaminergic system on ACTH and cortisol secretion in patients bearing a prolactinoma and in normal subjects. Twenty-seven patients with a prolactin-secreting pituitary tumor and 12 healthy controls were submitted to three tests: (a) 4-h saline infusion; (b) 10 mg metoclopramide (MTC) as an intravenous bolus after a 2-h saline infusion; and (c) 4-h dopamine infusion at the dose of 0.01 microgram/kg/min with a 10-mg intravenous bolus of MTC given at the second hour of dopamine infusion. Administration of MTC, compared to saline, caused a moderate (not significant) plasma ACTH increase, and a significant cortisol increase (p < 0.05), both in hyperprolactinemic and normal subjects, without statistically significant differences between the two group. When MTC was administered during dopamine infusion, the ACTH and cortisol elevation was significantly potentiated in prolactinoma patients while it was similar in magnitude to that recorded after MTC alone in control subjects. These findings support the concept of an inhibitory role exerted by dopamine and are compatible with a stimulatory influence exerted by prolactin on corticotropin-releasing hormone and ACTH secretion, and also favor the view of a reduced central dopaminergic tone in patients with tumorous hyperprolactinemia.
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PMID:Dopamine infusion enhances the adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol response to metoclopramide in hyperprolactinemic patients but not in normal subjects. 920 95


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