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)

In the adult, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is the key mediator for the behavioural and neuroendocrine response to stress. It has also been hypothesized that, during postnatal development of the stress system, CRH controls the activity of the HPA axis and mediates the effects of early disturbances, e.g. 24 h of maternal deprivation. In the current study we investigated the function of specific brain corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor type 1 (CRHR1) subpopulations in the control of the HPA axis during postnatal development under basal conditions as well as after 24 h of maternal deprivation. We used two conditional CRHR1-deficient mouse lines which lack this receptor, either specifically in forebrain and limbic structures (Cam-CRHR1) or in all neurons (Nes-CRHR1). Basal circulating corticosterone was increased in Nes-CRHR1 mice compared to controls. Corticosterone response to maternal deprivation was significantly increased in both CRHR1-deficient lines. In the paraventricular nucleus, Cam-CRHR1 animals displayed enhanced CRH and decreased vasopressin expression levels. In contrast, gene expression in Nes-CRHR1 pups was strikingly similar to that in maternally deprived control pups. Furthermore, maternal deprivation resulted in an enhanced response of Cam-CRHR1 pups in the brain, while expression levels in Nes-CRHR1 mouse pups were mostly unchanged. Our results demonstrate that brainstem and/or hypothalamic CRHR1 contribute to the suppression of basal corticosterone secretion in the neonate, while limbic and/or forebrain CRHR1 dampen the activation of the neonatal HPA axis induced by maternal deprivation.
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PMID:Differential disinhibition of the neonatal hypothalamic- pituitary-adrenal axis in brain-specific CRH receptor 1-knockout mice. 1704 89

The genetically dystonic (dt) rat, an autosomal recessive model of generalized dystonia, harbors an insertional mutation in Atcay. As a result, dt rats are deficient in Atcay transcript and the neuronally-restricted protein caytaxin. Previous electrophysiological and biochemical studies have defined olivocerebellar pathways, particularly the climbing fiber projection to Purkinje cells, as sites of significant functional abnormality in dt rats. In normal rats, Atcay transcript is abundantly expressed in the granular and Purkinje cell layers of cerebellar cortex. To better understand the consequences of caytaxin deficiency in cerebellar cortex, differential gene expression was examined in dt rats and their normal littermates. Data from oligonucleotide microarrays and quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-PCR (QRT-PCR) identified phosphatidylinositol signaling pathways, calcium homeostasis, and extracellular matrix interactions as domains of cellular dysfunction in dt rats. In dt rats, genes encoding the corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 (CRH-R1, Crhr1) and plasma membrane calcium-dependent ATPase 4 (PMCA4, Atp2b4) showed the greatest up-regulation with QRT-PCR. Immunocytochemical experiments demonstrated that CRH-R1, CRH, and PMCA4 were up-regulated in cerebellar cortex of mutant rats. Along with previous electrophysiological and pharmacological studies, our data indicate that caytaxin plays a critical role in the molecular response of Purkinje cells to climbing fiber input. Caytaxin may also contribute to maturational events in cerebellar cortex.
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PMID:Caytaxin deficiency disrupts signaling pathways in cerebellar cortex. 1709 53

Chronic stress is widely regarded as a key risk factor for a variety of diseases. A large number of paradigms have been used to induce chronic stress in rodents. However, many of these paradigms do not consider the etiology of human stress-associated disorders, where the stressors involved are mostly of social nature and the effects of the stress exposure persist even if the stressor is discontinued. In addition, many chronic stress paradigms are problematic with regard to stress adaptation, continuity, duration and applicability. Here we describe and validate a novel chronic social stress paradigm in male mice during adolescence. We demonstrate persistent effects of chronic social stress after 1 week of rest, including altered adrenal sensitivity, decreased expression of corticosteroid receptors in the hippocampus and increased anxiety. In addition, pharmacological treatments with the antidepressant paroxetine (SSRI) or with the corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 antagonist DMP696 were able to prevent aversive long-term consequences of chronic social stress. In conclusion, this novel chronic stress paradigm results in persistent alterations of hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis function and behavior, which are reversible by pharmacological treatment. Moreover, this paradigm allows to investigate the interaction of genetic susceptibility and environmental risk factors.
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PMID:Persistent neuroendocrine and behavioral effects of a novel, etiologically relevant mouse paradigm for chronic social stress during adolescence. 1744 87

Urocortin, a potent peptide inhibitor of feeding behavior, can enter the brain from blood by leptin-facilitated permeation across the blood-brain barrier. Here, we show in cultured RBE4 cerebral microvessel endothelial cells that urocortin endocytosis is increased by leptin in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Fluorescently labeled urocortin (Alexa488-urocortin) shows vesicular trafficking localized in early endosomes at 1 min and the Golgi complex at 20 min. The endocytosis at 20 min was increased by 10 microg/mL, but not 2 microg/mL, of leptin. The facilitating effect of leptin at the dose of 10 microg/mL was seen at 20 and 30 min but not at 10 min. This increase could be abolished by excess unlabeled urocortin in radio-tracer uptake studies, indicating selective rather than nonsaturable entry. The specificity of the effect was further supported by the lack of changes in gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity and endothelial nitric oxide synthase upon stimulation by high doses of leptin and urocortin. Leptin did not affect the level of expression of the urocortin corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor (CRHR) after 30 min of treatment but appeared to slow the turnover of CRHRs induced by urocortin. In MDCK cells overexpressing CRHR2, leptin facilitated urocortin uptake, whereas ObRa coexpression did not exert an additional effect. Thus, urocortin endocytosis is a saturable process leading to vesicular intracellular transport that can be enhanced by cell-surface leptin.
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PMID:Urocortin trafficking in cerebral microvessel endothelial cells. 1747 91

The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of an acute stressor (restraint) versus a chronic stressor (social isolation) on the expression of mRNAs for corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor type 2 (CRH-R2) and urocortin 1 (Ucn 1) and urocortin 2 (Ucn 2) in the cardiovascular system of socially monogamous prairie voles of both sexes. Acute restraint for 1 h was followed by a marked increase in plasma corticosterone, and when the animals were re-paired for 1 day, the increment of corticosterone was normalized. However, following chronic social isolation for 4 weeks, plasma corticosterone did not differ significantly from the levels measured in animals living in pairs. Restraint or isolation significantly decreased CRH-R2 mRNA in ventricle, atria, and aorta; however, when these animals were re-paired for 1 day, the modulation of CRH-R2 mRNA was normalized in restraint but not in isolated animals. Restraint stress increased the Ucn 1 mRNA expression in the heart of female and male prairie voles, and when the animals were re-paired, the modulation of Ucn 1 mRNA expression was normalized. However, chronic isolation showed no effect on cardiac Ucn 1 mRNA expression. Although acute restraint stress produced no effect on the cardiac Ucn 2 mRNA expression, chronic isolation was followed by an increased heart Ucn 2 mRNA expression in both sexes. When the isolated animals were re-paired for 1 day, the cardiac Ucn 2 mRNA expression remained upregulated. The results of the present study reveal that acute restraint as well as social isolation can have significant consequences for the modulation of gene expression for the CRH-R2 and the urocortin peptides in cardiovascular tissue in female and male prairie voles.
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PMID:Modulation of corticotropin-releasing hormone type 2 receptor and urocortin 1 and urocortin 2 mRNA expression in the cardiovascular system of prairie voles following acute or chronic stress. 1755 Dec 67

To determine whether corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 (CRHR1) coexists with endothelin-1 (ET-1) in rat paraventricular nucleus (PVN), ET-1 expression and its regulation by CRH and CRHR1 under hypoxia, rats were exposed to simulated continuous hypoxia at 5 km altitude (CH5km, equal to 10.8% O(2)) in a hypobaric chamber for 1, 2, 5, 10, 15 or 25 days. ET-1, CRH, and its mRNA were measured using radioimmunoassay (RIA), immunohistochemistry, and in situ hybridization. The coexistence of ET-1 and CRHR1 was identified by confocal immunofluorescence. The results showed that CH5km caused a significant decrease of ET-1 level in PVN at 5 days, but decreased CRH on days 1 and 2 while it increased on days 5 and 10. CH5km induced ET-1 mRNA upregulation and ET-1 decrease at 5 days, the effects were completely reversed by treatment with five-daily-injections of a CRHR1 antagonist (butyl-[2,5-dimethyl-7-(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d] pyrimidin-4-yl]-ethylamine: CP-154,526). Also, this treatment significantly reversed the CH5km-induced increase in CRH and CRHmRNA in PVN at 5 days. Moreover we found that the changes in expression of ET-1 and CRHR1 induced by CH5km were co-localized in parvocellular PVN cells. In conclusion, CRHR1 coexists with ET-1 in parvocellular PVN, continuous hypoxia stimulates ET-1 and ET-1mRNA as well as CRH and CRHmRNA, and CRHR1 evidently modulates ET-1 release and ET-1mRNA activation caused by continuous hypoxia.
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PMID:Corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 coexists with endothelin-1 and modulates its mRNA expression and release in rat paraventricular nucleus during hypoxia. 1832 12

Pharmacological inhibitors and knockout mice have developed into routine tools to analyze the role of specific genes in behavior. Both strategies have limitations like the availability of inhibitors for only a subset of proteins and the large efforts required to construct specific mouse mutants. The recent emergence of RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated gene silencing provides a fast alternative that can be applied to any coding gene. We established an approach for the efficient generation of transgenic knockdown mice by targeted insertion of short hairpin (sh) RNA vectors into a defined genomic locus and studied the efficiency of gene silencing in the adult brain and the utility of such mice for behavioral analysis. We generated shRNA knockdown mice for the corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor type 1 (Crhr1), the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (Lrkk2) and the purinergic receptor P2X ligand-gated ion channel 7 (P2rx7) genes and show the ubiquitous expression of shRNA and efficient suppression of the target mRNA and protein in the brain of young and 11-month-old knockdown mice. Knockdown mice for the Crhr1 gene exhibited decreased anxiety-related behavior, an impaired stress response, and thereby recapitulate the phenotype of CRHR1 knockout mice. Our results show the feasibility of gene silencing in the adult brain and validate knockdown mice as new genetic models suitable for behavioral analysis.
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PMID:Genetic mouse models for behavioral analysis through transgenic RNAi technology. 1851 23

Corticotropin releasing hormone receptor (CRHR) and the VT2 arginine vasotocin receptor (VT2R) are vital links in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis that enable a biological response to stressful stimuli in avian species. CRHR and VT2R are both G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), and have been shown by us to form a heterodimer via fluorescent resonance energy transfer (FRET) analysis in the presence of their respective ligands, corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) and arginine vasotocin (AVT). The dimerization interface of the heterodimer is unknown, but computational analyses predict transmembrane domains (TMs) as likely sites of the interaction. We constructed chimerical VT2Rs, tagged at the C-terminal ends with either cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) or yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), by replacing the fourth transmembrane region (TM4) of VT2R with TM4 of the beta2-adrenergic receptor (beta2AR). The VT2R/beta2AR chimeras were expressed in HeLa cells and proper trafficking is confirmed by observing cell membrane localization using confocal microscopy. VT2R/beta2AR-YFP chimera functionality was confirmed with a Fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester (Fura-2AM) assay. FRET analysis was then performed on VT2/beta2AR-chimera/CRHR pairs, and the calculated distance was observed to be >10 nm apart, indicating that heterodimerization was partly disrupted by mutating TM4 of the VT2R. Therefore, TM4 may form one region of the possible dimerization interfaces between the VT2R and CRHR.
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PMID:Transmembrane domain IV of the Gallus gallus VT2 vasotocin receptor is essential for forming a heterodimer with the corticotrophin releasing hormone receptor. 1860 32

Gastroenteritis is one of the risk factors for developing irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). However, the precise mechanism of postinfectious IBS is still unknown. We tested the hypothesis that a combination of previous inflammation and repetitive colorectal distention (CRD) makes the colon hypersensitive and that treatment with a corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 (CRH-R1) antagonist blocks this colonic hypersensitivity. Rats were pretreated with vehicle or 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulphonic acid (TNBS) 6 weeks before CRD. For the CRD experiment, the colorectum was distended once a day for six consecutive days. The CRH-R1 antagonist (CP-154,526, 20 mg kg(-1)) or vehicle was injected subcutaneously 30 min before CRD. Visceral perception was quantified as visceromotor response (VMR) using an electromyograph. For histological examination, the rats were killed on the last day of CRD experiment, and haematoxylin and eosin-staining of colon segments was performed. Although from the first to the third day of CRD, VMRs increased in both the vehicle-treated rats and TNBS-treated rats, they were significantly higher in TNBS-treated rats than those in vehicle-treated controls. On the fifth day of CRD, however, VMRs in the vehicle-treated rats were significantly greater than those in TNBS-treated rats. Pretreatment of rats with CP-154,526 significantly attenuated the increase in VMR induced by repetitive CRD with previous inflammation. Finally, we found that repetitive CRD and repetitive CRD after colitis induced visceral inflammation. These results indicate that a combination of previous inflammation and repetitive CRD induces visceral hypersensitivity and that a CRH-R1 antagonist attenuates this response in rats.
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PMID:Corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 antagonist blocks colonic hypersensitivity induced by a combination of inflammation and repetitive colorectal distension. 1876 32

We investigated changes in mRNA expression of the somatotropic, thyrotropic, and corticotropic axes of Langshan (LS) and Arbor Acres (AA) broiler chickens during embryonic and postnatal development. We found an inverse expression profile between pituitary growth hormone (GH) and hepatic GH receptor mRNA [postnatal d (P)28 to P42], insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I, and IGF-IR (P0 to P42), respectively. Hepatic IGF-I was a major point of control in the GH-IGF axis from P0 to P28. Pituitary GH-releasing hormone receptor may serve an autocrine-paracrine function from P0 to P28, and hypothalamic ghrelin may affect growth by stimulating the release of hepatic IGF-I from embryonic d (E)8 to P28. Hypothalamic ghrelin might interact with corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) from P0 to P28. Hepatic IGF-binding protein-2 regulated growth by regulating hepatic IGF-II bioavailability from P0 to P42. Hepatic IGF-binding protein-5 was an important IGF mediator. A coexpression profile was found between hypothalamic GH-releasing hormone (E10 to E16 and P0 to P42), somatostatin (SS; P0 to P28), thyrotropin-releasing hormone (E10 to E16 and P0 to P28), ghrelin (P0 to P42), and pituitary GH mRNA, hypothalamic SS (P0 to P28), corticotropin-releasing hormone (P0 to P42), thyrotropin-releasing hormone (E10 to E18 and P0-P42), and thyroid-stimulating hormone-beta mRNA, respectively. Moreover, AA chickens were fed a nutrient-rich AA diet (as a control group) and LS chickens were fed either a less nutritious LS diet or the AA diet. Langshan and AA chickens fed the same AA diet showed no differences in pituitary GH, hypothalamic SS, ghrelin, hepatic IGF-I, or GH receptor mRNA. Our data indicate that select genes may show parallel expression during certain periods of development, and that differences in BW and gene expression respond differently to nutrient intake in LS and AA chickens. Our findings may help improve the molecular breeding of chickens.
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PMID:Expression of genes involved in the somatotropic, thyrotropic, and corticotropic axes during development of Langshan and Arbor Acres chickens. 1880 71


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