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)

To investigate the pathogenetic mechanisms of Cushing's syndrome, we studied variations in plasma cortisol levels (episodic variations, or pulses) over 24 hours in 51 normal subjects, 14 patients with adrenal adenoma, and 46 patients with Cushing's disease. Data were obtained both from our patients and from the literature. As compared with normal subjects, patients with adrenal adenoma had fewer spikes in cortisol levels (defined as an elevation of at least 10 per cent and no less than 1 microgram per deciliter), and the spikes were lower both in absolute terms (4.0 +/- 1.8 vs. 5.1 +/- 2.2 micrograms per deciliter, P less than 0.05) and in terms of the percentage of the preceding trough concentration (23 +/- 7 vs. 123 +/- 74 per cent, P less than 0.001). Patients with Cushing's disease seemed to fall into two groups: those with hypopulsatile and those with hyperpulsatile secretion. The hypopulsatile group had a normal number and absolute height of spikes, but their height relative to the preceding trough concentration was lower than in controls (42 +/- 16 vs. 123 +/- 74 per cent, P less than 0.005). In contrast, the hyperpulsatile group had a similar number of spikes as the hypopulsatile group, but their absolute and relative heights were twice as great (12.7 +/- 2.3 vs. 6.0 +/- 1.6 micrograms per deciliter and 84 +/- 40 vs. 42 +/- 16 per cent, respectively; P less than 0.001 for both). We hypothesize that the Cushing's disease in the second group of patients may have been caused by increased hypothalamic release of, or pituitary responsiveness to, corticotropin-releasing factor, whereas that in the first group may represent pituitary oversecretion of corticotropin that is relatively independent of corticotropin-releasing factor.
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PMID:Evidence for two subtypes of Cushing's disease based on the analysis of episodic cortisol secretion. 387 8

To evaluate their potential usefulness in the differential diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome, we estimated the urinary excretion rates of the following non-metabolized, unbound steroid hormones: pregnenolone, progesterone, 17-OH-pregnenolone, 17-OH-progesterone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), androstenedione, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, 11-deoxycorticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol, corticosterone, cortisol, 18-OH-11-deoxycorticosterone, 18-OH-corticosterone, and aldosterone. These were measured in normal subjects and in patients with Cushing's disease, adrenal adenoma, or ectopic corticotropin syndrome. We used "high-performance" liquid chromatography and subsequent radioimmunoassay. Our results indicate that simultaneous estimation of urinary free cortisol and DHEA may be useful in differential diagnosis of hypercorticoid states due to adrenal adenoma and Cushing's disease.
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PMID:Urinary excretion rates of 15 free steroids: potential utility in differential diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome. 394 Jul 40

A non-ACTH aldosterone-stimulating factor(s) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA). Although this factor has not been fully characterized, some evidence suggests that it may be related to a pro-gamma-melanotropin (pro-gamma-MSH), derived from the NH2-terminal region of pro-opiomelanocortin. In the present study, plasma immunoreactive (IR-) gamma-MSH levels at 0800 h in patients with IHA were evaluated (90 +/- 17 fmol/ml; range: 13-173 fmol/ml) and found to be significantly higher (P less than 0.05) than those in subjects with aldosterone-producing adenomas (33 +/- 8 fmol/ml), essential hypertension (33 +/- 6 fmol/ml), and normotensive controls (19 +/- 2 fmol/ml). Seven of nine IHA subjects had circulating IR-gamma-MSH levels above the normal range (greater than 35 fmol/ml). In plasmas sampled at 1200 h, IR-gamma-MSH was significantly higher in patients with IHA (95 +/- 26 fmol/ml) and adenomas (63 +/- 23 fmol/ml), as compared with essential hypertensives (31 +/- 6 fmol/ml) and normotensives (19 +/- 3 fmol/ml). Mean plasma IR-ACTH, plasma cortisol, and urinary cortisol levels did not differ significantly between any of these groups. In order to evaluate the effect of a pro-gamma-MSH in vitro, adrenal adenoma tissue was obtained from two patients, one with elevated IR-gamma-MSH (61 fmol/ml) and a second with low IR-gamma-MSH (12 fmol/ml). Aldosterone secretion by dispersed adenoma cells from the former, but not the latter, underwent a fourfold dose-dependent (10(-14)-10(-9) M) increase in response to human Lys-gamma 3-MSH. These data suggest that a pro-gamma-MSH may be implicated as a pathogenic factor in a subset of patients with primary aldosteronism, particularly among those differentially diagnosed as having IHA.
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PMID:Plasma immunoreactive gamma melanotropin in patients with idiopathic hyperaldosteronism, aldosterone-producing adenomas, and essential hypertension. 401 76

To elucidate the significance of beta-endorphin in human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), CSF levels of beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity (beta-EP-LI) in various diseases were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay and compared with simultaneously determined ACTH-like immunoreactivity (ACTH-LI) levels in CSF. CSF beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI in the control group, consisting of 5 normal subjects and 19 patients with nonendocrine diseases, were 22.2+/-1.3 and 14.6+/-0.4 fmol/ml, respectively. CSF levels of these peptides in patients with schizophrenia (n = 19) and acromegaly (n = 10) were not significantly different from those in the control group. Patients with Cushing's disease (n = 7) had significantly lower CSF beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI levels than those in the control group. Four of them showed a parallel increase in CSF beta-EP-LI and CSF ACTH-LI levels after the complete removal of pituitary microadenomas (P < 0.05). Gel chromatography of CSF beta-EP-LI from a normal volunteer, a control patient, and one patient each with catatonia, Nelson's syndrome, Cushing's syndrome (adrenal adenoma), and acromegaly gave similar patterns consisting of three peaks with the elution positions comparable to those of authentic beta-endorphin, beta-lipotropin, and possibly their precursor molecule. Gel chromatographic patterns of CSF beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI were compared in a normal volunteer. The first peaks of beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI eluted at the same position and the second peak of ACTH-LI coincided with the elution position of authentic ACTH.CSF beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI levels determined every 5 min over a period of 80 min in three normal volunteers did not show moment-to-moment variability.A significant correlation (r = 0.75, P < 0.001) was seen between CSF beta-EP-LI and ACTH-LI levels in normal subjects and patients studied (n = 73). This suggests that beta-endorphin and ACTH in human CSF share the common regulatory mechanism in normal and pathologic conditions.
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PMID:Immunoreactive beta-endorphin and adrenocorticotropin in human cerebrospinal fluid. 625 11

We present two patients with Cushing's syndrome due to ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia who showed marked plasma cortisol response to lysine-8-vasopressin (LVP) injection (from 930 and 731 pmol/L to 2177 and 1920 pmol/L, respectively), while plasma ACTH levels remained undetectable. The ACTH independence of cortisol secretion in the two patients was determined from the following endocrinological findings. Plasma cortisol levels were not increased by corticotropin-releasing hormone injections and were not suppressed by high dose (16 mg) dexamethasone administrations. The plasma ACTH levels, measured by two independent sensitive immunoassays, were persistently undetectable even after corticotropin-releasing hormone injection, metyrapone administration, and bilateral adrenalectomy. The particular pathological finding of the two cases, atrophic lesions in nonnodular parts of the adrenal cortexes, also indicated ACTH independence of the macronodular hyperplasia. In vitro examination revealed a direct effect of LVP on cortisol secretion from the adrenal cells of the macronodules. We also examined seven patients with Cushing's syndrome caused by adrenal adenoma and found a statistically significant plasma cortisol response to LVP injection. The direct effect of LVP was also demonstrated in cultured adenoma cells. In conclusion, we discovered a direct adrenal effect of LVP on cortisol secretion in patients with ACTH-independent macronodular hyperplasia and, to a lesser extent, in patients with cortisol-producing adrenal adenoma. The cortisol response to LVP may serve to facilitate their diagnosis and choice of therapy.
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PMID:Lysine vasopressin stimulation of cortisol secretion in patients with adrenocorticotropin-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. 762 26

We present the case of a 65-year-old woman with an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) secreting bronchopulmonary carcinoid. This patient showed the typical long history of Cushing's syndrome, including hypokaliemia, impaired glucose tolerance, high levels of ACTH and beta-endorphin, and coproduction of other peptides. At the onset of clinical symptoms in 1979 an adrenal adenoma was suspected, and left-sided adrenalectomy was performed. The symptoms soon recurred, and the diagnosis of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome was made. As no ACTH-secreting tumor was found, the right adrenal was resected, and the patient was followed up regularly. Fourteen years later chest roentgenography and computed tomography revealed a para-aortic pulmonary lesion, which was suspicious for a bronchopulmonary carcinoid. ACTH and beta-endorphin were excessively, pancreatic polypeptide slightly elevated at that time. The final diagnosis was made using somatostatin receptor scintigraphy which confirmed the hormonal activity of the suspicious lesion; no additional focus was found. This method turned out to be not only a useful additional localization technique but also a promising tool for characterization and staging of a suspected ACTH-producing carcinoid. The tumor was resected curatively, and the diagnosis was confirmed histologically.
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PMID:Ectopic ACTH secretion due to a bronchopulmonary carcinoid localized by somatostatin receptor scintigraphy. 789 18

We studied a 45-yr-old woman with food-dependent Cushing's syndrome. Plasma cortisol levels were subnormal (4-47 nmol/L) after an overnight fast and increased after a mixed meal to values between 500-1000 nmol/L. There was a close correlation between circulating gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) and cortisol levels during normal food intake (r = 0.92; P < 0.0002). Plasma corticotropin (ACTH) levels were undetectable. Nonfasting plasma cortisol levels were not suppressed by low or high doses of dexamethasone. Plasma ACTH and cortisol levels did not increase after human CRH administration, but fasting plasma cortisol levels increased after ACTH treatment. The infusion of GIP increased plasma cortisol levels to 7.8 times above baseline. Radiological and cholesterol uptake studies pointed to a unilateral adrenal adenoma. Treatment with octreotide initially prevented the meal-induced increases in cortisol and GIP levels and decreased urinary cortisol excretion. Unilateral adrenalectomy was performed. Cortisol production by cultured adrenal adenoma cells from the patient was stimulated by GIP and ACTH. In situ hybridization studies using a GIP receptor probe showed an abundant expression of GIP receptor messenger ribonucleic acid in the adrenocortical adenoma. We conclude that food-dependent Cushing's syndrome results from the expression of GIP receptors on adrenocortical adenoma cells.
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PMID:Food-dependent Cushing's syndrome resulting from abundant expression of gastric inhibitory polypeptide receptors in adrenal adenoma cells. 878 63

The reported number of adrenal incidentalomas has been increasing because of wider application of imaging techniques. Patients with asymptomatic cortisol producing adrenal adenoma (ASCA) which secretes cortisol without clinical evidence of Cushing's syndrome has been more frequently observed than previously assumed, and they have a risk of adrenal insufficiency after adrenalectomy. Therefore patients with incidentalomas should be screened for cortisol overproduction. The aim of this study is to discover an easy screening test to uncover ASCA. We investigated the hormone profiles of 4 patients with ASCA in comparison with 11 patients with non-functional adrenal tumor and 10 patients with adrenal Cushing's syndrome. We also investigated the expression of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfotransferase (DHEA-ST) in surgically removed attached non-neoplastic adrenal tissues by immunostaining, which was considered to represent the degree of suppression of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. Serum dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) levels of all the patients with ASCA and adrenal Cushing's syndrome were lower than those of healthy subjects of corresponding age, but they were within the normal range in the patients with non-functional adrenal tumors. The serum DHEA-S level reflects the degree of suppression of the normal adrenal gland by cortisol hypersecretion from adrenal tumors. But the serum level of DHEA-S decreases with age, and because the normal range of serum DHEA-S is low in elderly subjects, we should be careful to evaluate the level of DHEA-S in elderly patients with adrenal Cushing's syndrome or ASCA. The immunohistochemical study showed DHEA-ST expression was noticeably suppressed in the adjacent adrenal cortex in ASCA and adrenal Cushing's syndrome. The decreased expression of DHEA-ST may reflect autonomous neoplastic cortisol secretion and subsequent ACTH suppression in ASCA and adrenal Cushing's syndrome. A single measurement of plasma ACTH or measurement of ACTH response to corticotropin-releasing hormone was not enough to screen for ASCA because of the wide variation among the cases. Dexamethasone suppression test is essential in identifying ASCA and also a single determination of serum DHEA-S is easy and may be useful for the screening of ASCA in adrenal incidentalomas in young and middle aged subjects, and is especially useful for outpatients.
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PMID:Serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate in patients with asymptomatic cortisol producing adrenal adenoma: comparison with adrenal Cushing's syndrome and non-functional adrenal tumor. 893 May 26

Incidentally discovered adrenal masses are mostly benign, asymptomatic lesions, often arbitrarily considered as nonfunctioning tumors. Recent studies, however, have reported increasing evidence that subtle cortisol production and abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are more frequent than previously thought. The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinical and hormonal features of patients with incidentally discovered adrenal adenomas, in relation to their clinical outcome. Fifty consecutive patients with incidentally detected adrenal adenomas, selected from a total of 65 cases of adrenal incidentalomas, were prospectively evaluated. All of them underwent abdominal computed tomography scan and hormonal assays of the HPA axis function: circadian rhythm of plasma cortisol and ACTH, urinary cortisol excretion, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, androgens, corticotropin stimulation test and low-dose (2 mg) dexamethasone test. The patients were reevaluated at regular intervals (6, 12, and 24 months) for a median period of 38 months. Subtle hypercortisolism, defined as abnormal response to at least 2 standard tests of the HPA axis function in the absence of clinical signs of Cushing's syndrome (CS), was defined as subclinical CS. Mild-to-severe hypertension was found in 24 of 50 (48%) patients, type-2 diabetes in 12 of 50 (24%), and glucose intolerance in 6 of 50 (12%) patients. Moreover, 18 of 50 patients (36%) were diffusely obese (body mass index, determined as weight/height2, > 25), and 14 patients (28%) had serum lipid concentration abnormalities (cholesterol > or = 6.21 mmol/L, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol > or = 4.14 mmol/L and/or triglycerides > or = 1.8 mmol/L). Compared with a healthy population, bone mineral density Z-score, determined by the DEXA technique, tended to be slightly (but not significantly) lower in patients with adrenal adenoma (-0.41 SD). Endocrine data were compared with 107 sex- and age-matched controls, and patients with adenomas were found to have heterogeneous hormonal abnormalities. In particular, significantly higher serum cortisol values (P < 0.001), lower ACTH concentration (P < 0.05), and impaired cortisol suppression by dexamethasone (P < 0.001) were observed. Moreover, in patients with adenomas, cortisol, 17-OH progesterone, and androstenedione responses to corticotropin were significantly increased (P < 0.001, all), whereas dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate levels were significantly lower at baseline, with blunted response to corticotropin (P < 0.001, both). However, the criteria for subclinical CS were met by 12 of 50 (24%) patients. Of these, 6 (50%) were diffusely obese, 11 (91.6%) had mild-to-severe hypertension, 5 (41.6%) had type-2 diabetes mellitus, and 6 (50%) had abnormal serum lipids. The clinical and hormonal features improved in all patients treated by adrenalectomy, but seemed unchanged in all those who did not undergo surgery (follow-up, 9 to 73 months), except for one, who was previously found as having nonfunctioning adenoma and then revealed to have subclinical CS. In conclusion, an unexpectedly high prevalence of subtle autonomous cortisol secretion, associated with high occurrence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, elevated lipids, and diffuse obesity, was found in incidentally discovered adrenal adenomas. Although the pathological entity of a subclinical hypercortisolism state remained mostly stable in time during follow-up, hypertension, metabolic disorders, and hormonal abnormalities improved in all patients treated by adrenalectomy. These findings support the hypothesis that clinically silent hypercortisolism is probably not completely asymptomatic.
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PMID:Subclinical Cushing's syndrome in patients with adrenal incidentaloma: clinical and biochemical features. 1115 83

It has been demonstrated that adrenomedullin, a newly discovered peptide with structural similarity to calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), is expressed in pituitary gland and affects basal and corticotropin (ACTH)-releasing factor (CRF)-stimulated ACTH release in animals, thus suggesting its potential role in regulating the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis. To evaluate whether ACTH and cortisol levels affect adrenomedullin production in humans, we studied 14 patients with Cushing's syndrome due to pituitary adenoma and 8 patients with Cushing's syndrome due to adrenal tumor, with measurement of circulating adrenomedullin by a specific radioimmunoassay (RIA). Adrenomedullin concentrations were significantly higher in patients with pituitary adenoma (37.6 +/- 17.8 pg/mL) versus controls (13.7 +/- 6.1 pg/mL) and patients with adrenal adenoma (17.8 +/- 2.2 pg/mL). After pituitary surgical treatment, plasma adrenomedullin decreased significantly. In one patient with Cushing's syndrome due to pituitary adenoma who underwent simultaneous sampling of the inferior petrosal venous sinuses, the adrenomedullin concentration was significantly higher in plasma collected from the side with the adenoma and increased after CRF administration (delta increase, 42.6%), according to ACTH levels. Our findings indicate that circulating adrenomedullin is increased in Cushing's disease, and the pituitary gland may represent the site of the elevated production of adrenomedullin in this condition.
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PMID:Circulating adrenomedullin is increased in patients with corticotropin-dependent Cushing's syndrome due to pituitary adenoma. 1087 3


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