Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of a medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland that secreted both calcitonin and
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) is reported. The patient was a 32-year-old man who was referred to the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health with radiologic evidence of intrathoracic and hepatic masses accompanied by florid Cushing's syndrome. Serum levels of calcitonin and ACTH were elevated. The thoracic and hepatic masses were resected. The histologic findings were typical of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid with extensive metastases to the liver. The
neoplasm
had a predominantly solid pattern, and the neoplastic cells were either round or spindled, many with cytologic atypia. Immunohistochemical analysis of fixed, paraffin-embedded sections demonstrated chromogranin, calcitonin, and ACTH in the neoplastic cells. The immunostaining for chromogranin was intense in all of the cells, whereas weaker staining for calcitonin and ACTH was present in scattered cells. Electron microscopy revealed sparse secretory granules in the majority of
tumor
cells; a minority of neoplastic cells contained numerous granules. We further characterized this
neoplasm
by performing dual immunohistochemical analysis. This technique clearly demonstrated the presence of ACTH and calcitonin within the same neoplastic cells. Thus, the medullary carcinoma of the thyroid in this patient was the source of ectopic ACTH secretion causing Cushing's syndrome. In addition, this report highlights the value of using double immunostaining to localize both the ACTH and calcitonin within the same cells.
...
PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid as a cause of Cushing's syndrome: a case with ectopic adrenocorticotropin secretion characterized by double enzyme immunostaining. 156 56
We describe a man without the clinical findings of Cushing's syndrome, but who harbored an incidentally found cortisol-producing adrenal adenoma. On adrenal 131I-adsterol imaging, there was good uptake to the nodule, but no visualization of the contralateral adrenal. No abnormalities were found in the basal plasma cortisol, ACTH, urinary free cortisol and 17OHCS. However, dynamic hormone assessment revealed the existence of abnormal cortisol secretion: no suppression to dexamethasone, incomplete response to human
corticotropin
-releasing hormone, and lack of diurnal variation in plasma cortisol. Left adrenalectomy was performed with the diagnosis of cortisol-producing adrenal
tumor
. The pathological finding was an adrenal adenoma, and the perifusion of the excised tissues revealed a negligible response of the
tumor
tissue to ACTH though the residual normal cortex responded. Postoperative course was uneventful without replacement therapy with cortisol. It is suggested that the
tumor
autonomously produced a small amount of cortisol not only insufficient to provide clinical Cushing's syndrome, but also to provide typical suppression of hypothalamo-pituitary corticotroph-adrenal system.
...
PMID:A case of asymptomatic cortisol producing adrenal adenoma. 160 18
A 24-year-old man visited our hospital complaining of hypertension and headache. Endocrinological findings revealed no abnormalities except for a slight decrease in serum
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
, a slight increase in urine 17-ketosteroid (17-KS), and a marked increase in serum pregnenolone. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 3 x 3 cm mass in the right adrenal area and I131-aldosterol scintigraphy demonstrated a high absorption of the isotope in the right adrenal area. Vena cavography suggested a 2 x 2 cm
tumor
thrombus originating in the right adrenal. Under the diagnosis of the right adrenocortical carcinoma, adrenalectomy and removal of the
tumor
thrombus were performed. Both serum pregnenolone and urine 17-KS returned to the normal level within a week after the operation and blood pressure was well controlled without any medication 3 months after the operation. Thus, the
tumor
seemed to be endocrinologically active.
...
PMID:[Adrenocortical carcinoma: report of a case]. 164 74
A 19-year-old man with blurred vision, headache, and no signs or symptoms of hormone excess was found to have a pituitary adenoma. The
tumor
was removed by a transfrontal approach. He had postoperative radiation therapy, but subsequently had three recurrences, all removed surgically. By histology, the
tumor
was a chromophobic, slightly acidophilic pituitary adenoma. Immunohistochemistry revealed the presence of
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) in all four biopsies, alpha-subunit of glycoprotein hormones, and, to a lesser extent, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) in the third and fourth
tumor
resection specimens. Ultrastructurally, the
tumor
had typical features of a silent corticotroph adenoma subtype 2. In tissue culture, the second, third, and fourth specimens released ACTH, alpha-subunit, FSH, and LH and responded to
corticotropin
-releasing hormone with increased release of ACTH, alpha-subunit, FSH, and LH. To our knowledge only one silent corticotroph adenoma has been reported previously which expressed plurihormonality. Change in immunohistochemical profile in malignant tumors is a well-known phenomenon; however, it was not reported previously in benign pituitary adenomas. The factors accounting for changing
tumor
phenotype are unknown.
...
PMID:Changes in hormone production of a recurrent silent corticotroph adenoma of the pituitary: a histologic, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and tissue culture study. 164 19
Determining the cause of Cushing's disease and correcting the abnormality presents a continuing challenge to the clinician despite remarkable advances in diagnostic and therapeutic techniques. We present seven cases to illustrate 1) the classic disorder cured by pituitary adenomectomy; 2) persistence of the disease after adenomectomy; 3) Cushing's disease manifesting in the puerperium and remitting with dopamine agonist therapy; 4) a patient whose disease relapsed at least five times during 20 years of treatment by adrenalectomy, pituitary radiation, mitotane, and pituitary adenomectomy; 5) the Nelson syndrome; 6) the ectopic
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
syndrome in a patient with dexamethasone suppressible urinary cortisol who had a pituitary adenoma which stained positively for ACTH but who was not cured by total hypophysectomy; and 7) a patient whose ACTH-secreting
tumor
proved fatal despite repeated surgical, radiologic and pharmacologic measures.
...
PMID:Cushing's disease: dilemmas of diagnosis and management. 164 7
An ideal in vitro model for the study of endocrine functions would be one in which cells could propagate in culture and express their specialized functions. Most endocrine studies to date have relied on primary cell culture or on the use of
tumor
cell lines. This report describes the characterization of three endocrine cell lines immortalized by transfecting endocrine cells with a temperature-sensitive mutant SV40 virus. Rabbit endometrium (HRE-H9), human placenta (SPA209-10) and rat pituitary (RP) cells were immortalized by SV40 virus, a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant in the A gene, which encodes the large
tumor
antigen that is required for the maintenance of transformation. The transformed phenotype of the SV40 tsA mutant-immortalized cell line can be reversed simply by a shift in temperature. At the permissive temperature (34 degrees C), all three types of cells exhibited a transformed phenotype, which is characterized by high cell density growth and by the overgrowth of nontransformed cell layers. However, at the non-permissive temperature (40 degrees C) these cells reverted to a non-transformed phenotype as demonstrated by a marked decrease in the overgrowth of nontransformed layers and by the expression of differentiated functions. At the non-permissive temperature (40 degrees C), the endometrial cell line was capable of synthesizing
beta-endorphin
, and it exhibited hormonally regulated expression of the transfected hybrid uteroferrin gene construct. The human placenta cell line was capable of secreting GnRH upon stimulation by cAMP, forskolin, theophyllin, PGE, catecholamine and Ca++ channel stimulators. Moreover, the rat pituitary cell line was capable of synthesizing and secreting growth hormone (GH) which was stimulated by GHRH and cAMP. The advantage of the temperature-sensitive cell lines is that a single cell line is the source of both the normal and transformed states; thus, studies are internally controlled. These results demonstrate that tsA mutants of SV40 virus are the best available agents for immortalizing mammalian endocrine cells that retain differentiated functions.
...
PMID:Characterization of endocrine cell lines immortalized by a temperature-sensitive mutant SV40. 165 33
A 36-year-old man with depression, Cushingoid features and hypogonadism was found to have simultaneous pituitary-dependent Cushing's disease and marked elevation of serum prolactin (PRL). CT-scan revealed a macroadenoma with suprasellar extension. Transphenoidal surgery cured the patient's Cushing's disease, but failed to correct his hyperprolactinemia, which was controlled by subsequent bromocriptine therapy. Immunostaining of the pituitary tumor was positive for PRL as well as for ACTH, and ACTH-related peptides beta-lipotropin and
beta-endorphin
in two distinct
tumor
cell lines. This pituitary tumor is one of the few mixed PRL- and ACTH-secreting tumors documented by immunostaining. It is the second reported in a macroadenoma, in which PRL-secreting tumoral cells are much more abundant than ACTH-secreting cells.
...
PMID:Cushing's disease and hyperprolactinemia due to a mixed ACTH- and prolactin-secreting pituitary macroadenoma. 165 8
A uterine cervical cancer is reported in a woman who developed Cushing's syndrome. The
tumor
measured 1.3 x 0.7 cm, and was a pure small cell carcinoma, identical to that in the lung. The primary tumor cells showed argyrophilia with Grimelius staining and reacted positively to the anti-chromogranin antibody. Clinically, the
neoplasm
behaved in an aggressive manner in spite of adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy, and the patient died of widespread metastasis. Cushing's syndrome was noted after the occurrence of liver metastasis with an elevation of the serum
adrenocorticotropin
hormone (ACTH) level. At autopsy, metastatic
tumor
cells from the liver reacted immunohistochemically positively not only to anti-ACTH but also to antichromogranin, anti-gastrin and anti-calcitonin antibodies. This is the first report of an immunohistochemical analysis of, and comparison of primary and metastatic sites in cervical carcinoma showing Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix showing Cushing's syndrome caused by ectopic adrenocorticotropin hormone production. 165 16
Bilateral, selective, and simultaneous catheterization of the inferior petrosal sinus is not only a valuable tool in the differential diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome, but may also provide new insights into paracrine interactions at the pituitary level. We have investigated whether CRH (1 microgram/kg BW) has any effect on the release of PRL, GH, TSH, or the alpha-subunit of hCG during this procedure. Sixteen patients under evaluation for Cushing's syndrome (Cushing's disease, n = 12; ectopic ACTH syndrome, n = 2; glucocorticoid resistance, n = 1; hormonally inactive adenoma, n = 1) were catheterized. Two of the patients with Cushing's disease received 4.0 mg naloxone iv 15 min before stimulation with CRH. Patients with Cushing's disease demonstrated a central/peripheral gradient and an intersinus gradient not only for ACTH, but also for PRL, alpha-subunit, GH, and TSH, provided that the latter two hormones were not completely suppressed by the glucocorticoid excess. Moreover, all hormones increased in response to CRH on the side with the highest ACTH concentration; PRL rose from 31.2 +/- 6.4 to 61.6 +/- 12.4 micrograms/L (P less than 0.01), and alpha-subunit from 2.6 +/- 0.6 to 6.4 +/- 1.7 micrograms/L, (P less than 0.01). Naloxone was unable to abolish the PRL or alpha-subunit increase in response to CRH. A multihormonal response to CRH in inferior petrosal sinus blood was also observed in the patient with glucocorticoid resistance and in the patient with the hormonally inactive
tumor
, but not in the patients with ectopic ACTH secretion. The multihormonal response to CRH could be explained by cosecretion of other hormones together with ACTH from corticotroph adenoma, by an effect of CRH on pituitary blood flow, or by a paracrine action of pituitary corticotrophs on adjacent normal pituitary cells. Our results do not support the concept that such a paracrine action is mediated by
beta-endorphin
. However, a higher dose of naloxone may be required to antagonize the action of pituitary
beta-endorphin
.
...
PMID:A multihormonal response to corticotropin-releasing hormone in inferior petrosal sinus blood of patients with Cushing's disease. 169 62
Forskolin-resistant mutants arise from Y1 mouse adrenocortical
tumor
cells with a frequency indicative of a mutational event at a single genetic locus and exhibit adenylyl cyclases that are resistant to activation by forskolin,
corticotropin
, and guanyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate. This study examined the levels of guanyl nucleotide-binding regulatory protein subunits (G) in plasma membranes from the forskolin-resistant mutants by Western blot immunoanalysis. In plasma membranes prepared from parental Y1 cells and from four forskolin-resistant mutants, 10r-2, 10r-3, 10r-6, and 10r-9, the levels of the alpha-subunits of Gs and Gi-2 were reduced by 70-80% relative to the levels in parental Y1 cells. The levels of the beta 36-subunit were much less affected, and the levels of the alpha i-3 and beta 35-subunits varied independently of the forskolin-resistant phenotype. As determined by slot blot hybridization analyses, the levels of Gs alpha and Gi alpha RNA in the forskolin-resistant mutants were equivalent to those in the Y1 parent. Therefore, the decreased levels of Gs alpha and Gi alpha-2 subunits observed in the forskolin-resistant mutants did not result from decreased expression of the genes encoding these proteins. Our observations suggest that the forskolin-resistant phenotype of Y1 mutants resulted from single mutations that affected the processing of specific G alpha subunits or their incorporation into the plasma membrane.
...
PMID:Decreased levels of guanyl nucleotide-binding regulatory protein alpha-subunits in Y1 adrenocortical tumor cell mutants resistant to forskolin. 170 99
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>