Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of leu-enkephalin and met-enkephalin on the number of the antibody-forming cells (AFC) in the mouse spleen at the primary immune response to ram erythrocytes depending on the dose and time of the agent administration with relation to the time of immunization were studied. The data indicating diverse effects of these endogenous opioid peptides on antibody genesis were obtained. When administered before immunization, met-enkephalin increased the number of AFC in the CBA mouse spleen and its administration simultaneously with an antigen and afterwards decreased the number of AFC. Leu-enkephalin both decreased and increased the number of AFC in the spleen in the dose-dependent way. The stimulating effect of this agent was more pronounced in the C57BL/6 mice with the initially low immune response as compared to the CBA mice.
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PMID:[Effect of endogenous opioid peptides on antibody formation in the primary immune response to sheep erythrocytes]. 319 82

Changes in endogenous opioid concentrations and the effect of treatment with the opiate receptor antagonist WIN 44,441-3 (WIN) were evaluated after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCA-O) in rats. Animals treated with WIN at doses of 0.4 to 400 micrograms/kg 15 min, 3 hr and 6 hr after MCA-O had significantly higher mean arterial blood pressure than saline controls (P less than .05). Twenty-four hours after MCA-O, WIN-treated rats had significantly greater recovery of EEG activity and higher neurological scores than the controls; these actions were greatest at a dose of 40 micrograms/kg (P less than .01). The neurological outcome correlated with recovery of the ipsilateral EEG (P less than .01). The mortality rate 24 hr after occlusion and the infarct size were not significantly different from controls. At 1 hr after MCA-O, there were no significant differences in regional concentrations of endogenous opioid peptides (dynorphin, Leu-enkephalin and beta-endorphin) between the injured and uninjured hemispheres. These are the first studies to evaluate the effects of an opiate antagonist over a wide dose range in cerebral ischemia. Dose-related beneficial actions were found with regard to several, but not all, outcome measures. The absence of regional opioid changes after regional ischemia, in contrast to previous studies of spinal cord ischemia and brain trauma, was unexpected, but may reflect limited regional and temporal sampling.
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PMID:Levels of endogenous opioids and effects of an opiate antagonist during regional cerebral ischemia in rats. 320 16

Endogenous opioid peptides have been implicated in stress-induced analgesia and stress-induced feeding behavior. An earlier study from our laboratory showed that rats subjected to cold swim stress consumed significantly more food compared to controls. The present study describes changes in the levels of various opioid peptides in the central nervous system and periphery due to cold swim stress. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to cold swim stress (1 degree C for 5 min), then sacrificed by decapitation; brain, pituitary, adrenals and plasma were collected. Tissue extracts were assayed for opioid peptides by RIA. Cold swim stress resulted in analgesia which could be blocked by prior administration of naloxone, as observed by a tail-flick latency test. Cold swim stress caused a 42% decrease in pituitary beta-endorphin, but increased the level of this peptide in the hypothalamus and plasma by 36% and 337%, respectively. Dynorphin level decreased by 62% in the hypothalamus, but was not affected in the pituitary. Levels of Leu-enkephalin and Met-enkephalin decreased in the adrenal gland by 37% and 18%, respectively, but were not significantly affected in the CNS. These results indicate that cold swim stress has a differential effect on the level of CNS and peripheral opioid peptides, and that both central and peripheral opioid peptides may be important in stress-induced analgesia and feeding behavior.
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PMID:Cold swim stress-induced changes in the levels of opioid peptides in the rat CNS and peripheral tissues. 335 22

The occurrence of cross-tolerance between morphine and met-enkephalin, and between morphine and DADL (D-Ala-D-Leu-enkephalin) in causing mydriasis in mice was studied. Morphine-tolerant mice treated with met-enkephalin or DADL intracerebroventricularly (ICV) showed marked reduction of the pupillary effect of the endopioids. Maximal mydriasis in tolerant animals was only about 30% for met-enkephalin and 50% for DADL, compared to levels in nontolerant animals. These results are among the first to demonstrate cross-tolerance between morphine and enkephalins in intact animals and may suggest involvement of multiple opiate receptor systems in producing mydriasis.
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PMID:Opioid mydriasis: cross-tolerance between morphine and enkephalins. 352 Jun 6

Five opioid peptides (immunoreactivity) derived from their respective opioid precursors were measured in neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid cells (NG 108CC15; pmol/g protein): heptapeptide (Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met-Arg-Phe), 13.0 +/- 2.6; alpha-neoendorphin, 6.6 +/- 0.8; dynorphin A, 4.4 +/- 1.5; dynorphin A 1-8, 1.3 +/- 0.29; beta-endorphin, 0.3 +/- 0.13. These peptides originate from preproenkephalin A (heptapeptide), prodynorphin (alpha-neonedorphin, dynorphin A, dynorphin A 1-8) and proopiomelanocortin (beta-endorphin). The data suggest the expression of all three known opioid precursors in a single hybrid cell line, permitting a simultaneous investigation of the processing of different opioid peptides under identical experimental conditions.
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PMID:Evidence for the expression of peptides derived from three opioid precursors in NG 108CC15 hybrid cells. 356 21

Carcinoid tumors of the middle ear are rare, with only three previously reported cases. The authors report the light and electron microscopic and immunohistochemical features of two carcinoid tumors that occurred in a 34-year-old female and a 21-year-old male. Both presented with unilateral hearing loss. By light microscopic examination, both were characterized by trabecula of tall columnar cells with basal nuclei and no mitotic activity. Electron microscopic examination demonstrated large numbers of pleomorphic neurosecretory granules, perinuclear aggregates of intermediate filaments, cell junctions, and surface microvillous processes. Some cells contained intermediate filaments forming tonofilaments and lacked secretory granules. These cells stained for cytokeratin by immunoperoxidase and separated the neuroendocrine cells from the underlying basal lamina. The cells in this tumor stained for the molluscan cardioexcitatory peptide. Cells in both tumors also stained for pancreatic polypeptide. Neither case stained for lysozyme, insulin, glucagon, somatastatin, gastrin, substance P, thyroid-stimulating hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, Met-enkephalin, Leu-enkephalin, neuropeptide Y, peptide YY, neurotensin, Bombesin, serotonin, neuron-specific enolose, glial and neural filaments, S-100 protein, cholecystokinin, beta-endorphin, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin, luteinizing hormone/follicle-stimulating hormone, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, prolactin or calcitonin. Carcinoid tumor of the middle ear can be distinguished from paraganglioma and middle ear adenoma.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumors of the middle ear. 357 33

Tissue contents of immunoreactive met-enkephalin (Met-Enk), leu-enkephalin (Leu-Enk) and met-enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu (Met-Enk-AGL) were determined by specific RIAs in 17 pheochromocytomas and the levels of preproenkephalin A mRNA were compared in some of these tissues by Northern blot hybridization. Remarkably wide distributions in the amounts of immunoreactive Met-Enk, Leu-Enk and Met-Enk-AGL were observed in 17 pheochromocytomas. Medullary pheochromocytomas contained significantly larger amounts of immunoreactive Met-Enk, Leu-Enk and Met-Enk-AGL than did the extramedullary ones. Significant positive correlations of tumor tissue immunoreactivities between Met-Enk and Leu-Enk (r = 0.97, P less than 0.01) and between Met-Enk and Met-Enk-AGL (r = 0.97, P less than 0.01) were observed. No difference in size of mRNA of preproenkephalin A was observed in the pheochromocytomas. Medullary pheochromocytomas contained higher amounts of preproenkephalin A mRA than did the extramedullary ones. The quantities of preproenkephalin A mRNA in nine pheochromocytoma tissues significantly correlated with those of immunoreactive Met-Enk in these tissues (r = 0.94, P less than 0.01). These results indicate that the remarkable difference in tissue immunoreactivities of preproenkephalin A-derived opioid peptides is decided at the transcriptional level but not at the posttranslational level.
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PMID:Preproenkephalin A-derived opioid peptides and mRNA of preproenkephalin A in human pheochromocytomas. 359 3

Opioid peptides including met- and leu-enkephalins are co-stored with catecholamines at similar concentrations in highly purified chromaffin granule fractions from bovine adrenal medulla and large dense cored vesicle (LDV) fractions from bovine splenic nerve. An initial attempt was made to test the universality of the co-storage of enkephalins in LDVs of sympathetic nerves. Based on a number of practical considerations, vasa deferentia were chosen from seven species. Leu-and met-enkephalin contents were quantitated by radio-immunoassays and norepinephrine by HPLC with electrochemical detection. Norepinephrine contents varied 11-fold and generally paralleled the density of sympathetic innervation among the species as reported in the literature. Leu-enkephalin contents varied 26-fold, generally paralleling the percentage composition of LDVs in the respective terminal varicosities among the species and animal size (axonal length). Met-enkephalin contents varied 20-fold, generally paralleling the density of sympathetic innervation, but not the percentage LDVs. Various amounts of met-enkephalin were also likely stored in cells other than sympathetic nerves, including chromaffin-like cells, the incidence of which varied according to species. Thus, the met- to leu-enkephalin ratios varied from 1.2:1 in dog; 1.7-1.9:1 in rabbit, cat and bull; 2.9:1 in man; 8.2:1 in rat; and essentially only met-enkephalin in guinea pig. The data imply differences in the processing of preproenkephalins in the same tissue of different species as well as in different cells of that tissue.
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PMID:Enkephalin contents reflect noradrenergic large dense cored vesicle populations in vasa deferentia. 372 73

Total RNA has been prepared from human leukocytes from patients with chronic lymphoblastic leukemia (CLL) as well as from post mortem human caudate nucleus, hypothalamus, cerebellum and cerebral cortex. Dot-blot and Northern blot analysis, using a human proenkephalin A clone and SP-6 derived "complementary" proenkephalin A RNA respectively, revealed the existence of proenkephalin A-like RNA:s in CLL-leukocytes with the same characteristics as in caudate nucleus, hypothalamus, and cortex. Furthermore, RIA and Western blot analysis confirmed that immunoreactive pro-enkephalin A activity is present in human CLL-leukocytes. The progress in DNA recombinant technology has allowed the study of opioid peptide regulation at the transcriptional and translational-posttranslational level. Studies on the distribution and quantitation of preproenkephalin A mRNA in bovine, rat and human central nervous system (CNS) have recently been reported. Different opioid peptides, related to the enkephalins, dynorphins and beta-endorphin have also been detected in tissues outside the CNS including the adrenal medulla and in pheochromocytomas. Northern blot analysis and cDNA-cloning confirmed that the proenkephalin A gene is indeed expressed in these tissues. Proenkephalin A derived peptides are potentially significant in nervous disorders. We have chosen to investigate whether the corresponding gene is expressed not only in CNS-tissues but also in human leukocytes, cells readily obtained in individual patients.
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PMID:Proenkephalin A-like mRNA in human leukemia leukocytes and CNS-tissues. 378 78

The messenger RNAs coding for opioid peptide precursors have been detected and mapped in histological sections by "in situ' hybridization using specific DNA probes labelled with 32P. Using bovine preproenkephalin A (PPA) cDNA, PPA mRNA was detected in adrenal medulla of bull, hamster and guinea pig. No signal was detected in adrenal of man, rat and cat. The pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA was detected in pituitary of man, bull, cat, rat and pig, in all cells of the intermediate lobe as well as in scattered cells of the anterior lobe producing POMC. Adequate controls demonstrated the specificity of the labelling. These results provide evidence of the expression of the gene coding for PPA in the adrenal and for POMC in the pituitary. They show cross-hybridization of one DNA probe with mRNAs of various mammals and then provide evidence that one single probe can be used to analyze expression of a given gene in tissues of several animal species by "in situ' hybridization.
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PMID:Detection of the messenger RNAs coding for the opioid peptide precursors in pituitary and adrenal by "in situ' hybridization: study in several mammal species. 383 78


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