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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several studies in the rat indicate that opioid peptides produced in the testicular interstitial compartment can affect events in the tubular compartment. For example, it is thought that some specific functions of Sertoli cells, such as androgen-binding protein production are decreased by a paracrine mechanism. In this study ACTH
beta-endorphin
and cortisol were measured in the femoral and spermatic venous blood drawn from 18 patients affected by
varicocele
during catheterization for venous occlusion. The results showed the absence of a significant secretory gradient of
beta-endorphin
in the human testis and also demonstrated that this opioid is circulating at picomolar concentrations within human testis under stress conditions.
...
PMID:Beta-endorphin concentration in the femoral and spermatic venous blood of males affected by varicocele. 133 4
Based on the analysis of a RX-ray study and a selective blood test for the activity of the plasma renin, aldesterone, hydrocortisone and
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
in 57 patients with arterial hypertension--14 persons without renal failure, 14 ones regularly treated by hemodialysis, 29 patients with left orthostatic
varicocele
--the authors demonstrated the impact of the renal arterio- and phlebography on the hormone levels studied. Arteriography resulted in an increase in the absolute value of the renal vein renin mean 2.1-fold, aldosterone, 3.3-fold and hydrocortisone, 1.7-fold. A 2.2-fold increase in the renin activity and a 2.6-fold increase in the levels of aldosterone and hydrocortisone noted in all the patients were the result of retrograde renal phlebography. No correlations were established between the changes in hormone levels and the central mechanism of the secretion regulation (ACTH). Radiopaque investigations of the patients with arterial hypertension gave 22 per cent of false positive results with regard to the site of renin secretion and 18 per cent of those with regard to the participation of the studied kidney in renin secretion. The authors supposed a possible regulation of adrenal mineralocorticoid performance by a retrograde blood flow appeared through the adrenal central veins that was induced by phlebography--related elevation of blood pressure in the renal vein.
...
PMID:[The effect of renal arterio- and phlebography on the function of the renin-angiotensin and hypophyseal-adrenal systems]. 218 46
Beta-endorphin
(beta-ED) levels were evaluated in blood and seminal plasma of men with infertility due to
varicocele
, obstructive and nonobstructive azoospermia, and idiopathic oligoasthenospermia. The relation of this opiate to serum levels of gonadotropins, prolactin, testosterone, androstenedione, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate has also been investigated. beta-ED levels in seminal plasma were significantly higher than in blood plasma (p less than 0.001) in all persons studied. No statistically significant differences were found for beta-ED concentrations in semen or blood among any of the infertility situations studied. Nor were significant correlations observed between the concentration of this opiate and that of gonadotropins, prolactin, and androgens. The measurement of beta-ED in semen has little value in the differential diagnosis of male infertility. Nonetheless, its presence in high levels in semen must have some unknown function. Possibly, it comes from the various sites of the male reproductive tract, since no significant differences were found between obstructive and nonobstructive azoospermias.
...
PMID:Beta-endorphin and male infertility. 294 70
Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), the key neuropeptide in the stress cascade, has major inhibitory actions on testicular function in addition to its known antireproductive effects at the central level (inhibition of sexual behavior and LH secretion). CRF is secreted by the Leydig cells of the testis and acts through high-affinity receptors at the Leydig cell membrane as a potent negative regulator of LH action, inhibiting gonadotropin-induced cAMP generation and androgen production. CRF is also a primary stimulus of
beta-endorphin
secretion by the Leydig cells, which in turn exerts paracrine inhibition of FSH action in the tubular compartment of the testis through high-affinity receptors in the Sertoli cells. CRF action in the Leydig cells involves a pertussis toxin-insensitive guanyl nucleotide regulatory unit. In contrast to CRF receptors in the brain, pituitary, and other peripheral tissues, those in the Leydig cell are not coupled to Gs. The inhibitory action of CRF in the Leydig cell is exerted through protein kinase C, at the level of the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase. The secretion of CRF by the Leydig cell is stimulated by LH, acting via release of serotonin (5HT) and autocrine activation of 5HT2 receptors. Serotonin acts on 5HT2 receptors in the Leydig cell to stimulate CRF secretion via a pertussis toxin insensitive G-protein and presumably through activation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis. The diversity of the biochemical responses to CRF and 5HT2 receptor activation (i.e., inhibition of adenylate cyclase at the cytoplasmic aspect of the cell membrane vs. stimulation of CRF release from secretion granules) may reflect the stimulation of different protein kinase C isoenzymes. The LH-->5HT-->CRF inhibitory loop serves to continuously buffer the stimulation of androgen production by gonadotropin. 5HT, the immediate stimulus of testicular CRF secretion, is released during stress and is locally increased in the testis in pathological conditions associated with impaired testicular function (i.e., orchitis,
varicocele
). Also, propranolol, the beta-adrenergic antagonist frequently used in the control of blood pressure in patients with hypertension and often associated with impotence, acts via a serotonergic mechanism to stimulate CRF secretion and causes marked inhibition of LH-induced cAMP production and steroidogenesis in cultured Leydig cells. These basic studies of 5HT and CRF are relevant to the pathogenesis of testicular dysfunction and for the development of antagonist therapies to block CRF production and its local antireproductive effects.
...
PMID:Corticotropin-releasing factor: an antireproductive hormone of the testis. 838 38
Human semen contains large amounts of opioid peptides and cytokines. We have measured the concentrations of interleukin (IL)-6 in 140 semen samples and of
beta-endorphin
in 77 semen samples. The median concentration of
beta-endorphin
in seminal plasma from normozoospermic men (n = 23) was 154.7 pg/ml (10th-90th percentiles, 42.0-774.6), and there was no significant difference in the
beta-endorphin
concentration among normozoospermic, oligozoospermic (n = 28), asthenozoospermic (n = 15), azoospermic (n = 4) and post-vasectomy (n = 7) samples. There was no correlation between
beta-endorphin
concentration and sperm characteristics, nor with blood hormones. beta-Endorphin concentration was lower in cases with immunological infertility, as revealed by a positive direct mixed antiglobulin reaction test (n = 12) (P < 0.01), than in matched controls. The median concentration of IL-6 in samples with normal sperm concentration, motility and morphology with or without white blood cells (n = 39) was 26.1 pg/ml (10th-90th percentiles, 7.3-172.3), and there was no significant difference in the IL-6 concentration among normozoospermic, oligozoospermic (n = 46), asthenozoospermic (n = 32), azoospermic (n = 13) and post-vasectomy (n = 10) samples. The IL-6 concentration was significantly higher in cases of
varicocele
(n = 22) without white blood cells in semen (P < 0.001) than in matched controls without
varicocele
(n = 23). In addition, the IL-6 concentration was elevated (P < 0.0001) in cases with accessory sex gland inflammation (n = 40). IL-6 concentration was positively correlated with white blood cells in semen (n = 60, r = 0.59, P < 0.0001), but there was no correlation with
beta-endorphin
concentration. The IL-6 concentration chosen to differentiate between cases with and without accessory gland inflammation was 45.3 pg/ml, with a specificity of 80.6% and a sensitivity of 92.5%. It is concluded that
beta-endorphin
in seminal plasma plays an immune suppressive role, and that increased IL-6 concentration may be related to testicular dysfunction in cases with
varicocele
. Furthermore, IL-6 is an accurate marker of accessory sex gland inflammation.
...
PMID:Evaluation of beta-endorphin and interleukin-6 in seminal plasma of patients with certain andrological diseases. 882 35