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)

Hormonal changes during pregnancy regulate the onset of maternal behavior at parturition. In addition, the concentrations of beta-endorphin and mu opioid receptors are higher during pregnancy and lower during lactation. Previous studies have shown that sensitivity of female rats to the disruptive behavioral effects of morphine changes as a function of the number of pregnancies and/or lactations the females undergo. The objectives of the present study were to determine whether central infusions of the endogenous opioid, beta-endorphin, would disrupt maternal behavior. Next, we investigated the possibility that the neural sensitivity to beta-endorphin changes with repeated pregnancies. And finally, we examined whether opioid-mediated endocrine responses also change as a function of multiparity. In the first study, bilateral infusions of low doses (0.06-0.72 nmol) of beta-endorphin into the medial preoptic area (MPOA) of lactating, primiparous rats disrupted maternal behavior. When comparable doses of beta-endorphin were infused into the MPOA of age-matched, multiparous rats, the behavioral effects of beta-endorphin were significantly attenuated. In response to suckling stimulation, an opioid-mediated endocrine response, primiparous mothers secreted more prolactin than did multiparous rats. Moreover, multiparous, but not primiparous, mothers were insensitive to the ability of naloxone, an opiate antagonist, to block suckling-induced increases in prolactin. These findings indicate that reductions in neural sensitivity to opioids develop as females undergo repeated pregnancies and lactations, changes which affect both behavioral and endocrine functions.
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PMID:Neural and endocrine sensitivities to opioids decline as a function of multiparity in the rat. 150 3

A stimulatory effect on prolactin secretion had been describe after acute and systemic administration of met-enkephalin, but the effects of this opioid after chronic administration has not been reported, and the response of mammotroph cells is not clear. As a complement to previous studies, a morphometric analysis (light and electron microscopy) was carried out on prolactin cells from female rats treated chronically with met-enkephalin. Clear features of cellular hyperactivity appeared after chronic and systemic administration of the opioid, and these persisted for two weeks. The changes consisted in increases of cellular, cytoplasmic and nuclear areas, volume and surface densities of the Golgi complex and rough endoplasmic reticulum, as well as the numbers of exocytotic figures. These morphological alterations were paralleled by an increase in serum prolactin levels as detected by RIA. It is concluded that the increase in the synthesis and secretory activity of prolactin cells following chronic and systemic administration of met-enkephalin is very similar to those observed after acute and intraventricular administration.
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PMID:Morphometrical variations of prolactin cells in response to prolonged and systemic administration of Met-enkephalin in female rats. 151 7

Changes in the level of antidiuretic hormone (ADH), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), somatotropic hormone (STH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PL), thyroxin (T4), triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG) have been assessed before and during multiorgan excision in 22 donors with brain death. A progressing decrease in ADH blood supply and changes in ACTH, STH, FSH and PL content have been recorded. No regularities have been observed in LH level changes. TSH and thyroid hormone changes were in most cases characterized by a gradual decrease in their plasma levels. A drop in T3 concentration observed at the initial stage of the study was most pronounced with practically normal T4 and TBG values, that also decreased by the moment of heart excision. It has been concluded that brain death is accompanied by a considerable neuroendocrine disfunction and a marked syndrome of low T3 content.
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PMID:[Neuroendocrine disorders in brain-dead donors at the time of multiorgan harvesting]. 152 55

Various drugs and hormones influence the light microscopic and especially the electron microscopic structure of the anterior pituitary and its tumors. Many structural effects are known only from animal experiments since specimens from human pituitaries are mostly not available. The structure of growth hormone (GH) cells is relatively stable. A massive GH cell hyperplasia is known only in rare cases with growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) excess from tumors. Prolactin cells can be stimulated by drugs, neurotransmitters, and hormones which decrease the dopamine inhibition. Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) cells are stimulated by stress, some hormones, loss of adrenals, and drugs which activate the alpha 1- and beta-receptors or inhibit the alpha 2-receptors. They are suppressed and changed into Crooke's cells by treatment with glucocorticoids. Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) cells increase in number and size in states for overstimulation especially by thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH). A decrease results from hyperthyroidism and possibly from somatostatin, L-dopa, and dopamine. Gonadotroph cells transform into castration cells in strongly hyperactive states (gonadectomy, antiandrogens, gonadotropin releasing hormone [Gn-RH]agonists, aminoglutethimide). Special types of pituitary adenomas can be treated with drugs which suppress hormone production and proliferation. Dopamine agonists and somatostatin reduce the tumor size of varying proportions of GH secreting adenomas in acromegaly. Ultrastructurally, a decrease of cytoplasmic and nuclear volume and an increase of lysosomes are found. Bromocriptine and other dopamine agonists are established in the treatment of prolactin secreting adenomas. They induce a shrinkage in many cases. Ultrastructurally, a reduction of cellular and nuclear size, an increase in number of secretory granules and of lysosomes, and a reduction of rough endoplasmic reticulum can be demonstrated.
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PMID:Effect of drugs on pituitary ultrastructure. 154 57

Sodium nitroprusside was infused intravenously for 10 minutes in normal men, reclining at 45 degrees, in a dose sufficient to decrease the arterial pressure by 10 mmHg. The effect on a variety of plasma hormones was measured during the infusion and for 20 minutes afterwards. The heart rate increased to a maximum of 149%. Norepinephrine rose to a maximum of 196% in 5 minutes. Epinephrine reached a peak of 207% after 10 minutes. Plasma renin activity reached a peak of 449% at 10 minutes. Aldosterone did not change during the infusion, but increased to a maximum of 145% 10 minutes later. Vasopressin increased sharply at the end of the infusion to 893% and then rapidly decreased. Corticotropin, prolactin and growth hormone started to increase toward the end of the infusion, but reached their maxima during recovery. Corticotropin (225%) and prolactin (288%) peaked 10 minutes after the infusion, while growth hormone (414%) appeared still to be rising 20 minutes after the end of the infusion. Cortisol also rose progressively during recovery to a level of 138%. No significant changes were seen in the concentrations of insulin, glucagon, atrial natriuretic peptide, bombesin or neurotensin.
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PMID:Temporal relations of the endocrine response to hypotension with sodium nitroprusside. 155 71

Dopamine (DA) neurons participate in tonic inhibition of prolactin (PRL), whereas beta-endorphin (beta-End) and serotonin (5-HT) neurons appear to be important stimulatory links for nocturnal PRL surges that occur throughout the first half of pregnancy in the rat. The purpose of this study was to determine how these neuronal components might be organized within the pathway controlling PRL release during gestation. Maximal stimulation of DA receptors with the agonist bromocriptine mesylate (Bromo) completely blocked the PRL response to beta-End (100 ng/microliters/min for 15 min) given intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) on day 8 of pregnancy. DA receptor blockade, produced by implanting a 25 mg pellet of haloperidol (Hal) on day 7 of pregnancy, resulted in PRL levels of 500-600 ng/ml by the following morning. beta-End i.c.v. or 250 mg/ml/kg BW of the DA synthesis inhibitor, alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (alpha-MPT), given during the intersurge period, were equally effective in significantly increasing PRL (p less than 0.01) above pretreatment levels. beta-End and alpha-MPT evoked similar increases in rats pretreated with Hal, suggesting the stimulatory effect of beta-End on nocturnal PRL surges may primarily be due to DA inhibition. The next objective was to determine how beta-End and 5-HT might interact to stimulate the nocturnal surge. Day 8 pregnant rats were infused continuously with the opioid receptor blocker, naloxone hydrochloride (Nal), at a rate of 2.0 mg/10 min from 1000-1300 h. The PRL response to an injection of 20 mg/kg BW 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) at 1200 h was greatly attenuated, compared to controls infused with saline instead of Nal. This suggests that 5-HT stimulates PRL, at least in part, by an action at opioid receptors. Distilled H2O or 10 mg/kg BW of the selective S2 receptor blocker, ketanserin tartrate (Ket), was given intraperitoneally (i.p.) during the intersurge period on day 8 of pregnancy. All animals demonstrated an identical response to beta-End given 2 hours later, regardless of the type of pretreatment. It appears that beta-End does not stimulate PRL by way of an S2 receptor. Although beta-End induced a significant increase in PRL on day 16 of pregnancy, the response was attenuated by more than 60% compared to the response on day 8 of pregnancy. This attenuation may involve placental lactogens, shown to be secreted during this time and to inhibit PRL secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanisms for the stimulatory effects of opioidergic and serotonergic input signals on prolactin in pregnant rats. 157 43

The effects of neurotensin on the activity of hypothalamic tuberoinfundibular and periventricular-hypophysial dopaminergic (DA) neurons, and on the secretion of pituitary hormones that are tonically regulated by these neurons (i.e. prolactin and alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone [alpha MSH], respectively) were examined in estrogen-primed ovariectomized rats. The activity of tuberoinfundibular and periventricular-hypophysial DA neurons was estimated by measuring concentrations of the dopamine metabolite 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) in the terminals of these neurons in the median eminence and intermediate lobe of the posterior pituitary, respectively. Intracerebroventricular administration of neurotensin caused a dose- and time-related increase in DOPAC concentrations in both the median eminence and intermediate lobe, and a concurrent decrease in plasma levels of prolactin and alpha MSH. These results suggest that neurotensin-induced inhibition of secretion of prolactin and alpha MSH from the pituitary may be due to the stimulatory action of this neuropeptide on the release of dopamine from tuberoinfundibular and periventricular-hypophysial neurons.
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PMID:Neurotensin-induced activation of hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons is accompanied by a decrease in pituitary secretion of prolactin and alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone. 159 29

In several diseases chronic pain is associated with long-lasting pathophysiological responses which differ strongly from those observed in acute situations. When persisting, acute pain often results in physical and psychological stress which may in turn aggravate the initial pathological state. In the present work we examined the secretory patterns of pituitary hormones related to acute stress (growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL) and beta-endorphin (beta-END)) in rats during the phase of Freund adjuvant-induced arthritis (AIA, a model used for chronic pain studies) when chronic pain is maximum (14 and 21 days, postinoculation (PI)). Using radio-immunoassay hormones were measured in plasma samples taken every 30 min for 7 h in free-moving rats 14 and 21 days after Freund adjuvant or vehicle injection and in control animals. The total amount of GH secretion was higher at 14 and 21 days PI in AIA rats as compared to vehicle-treated and control animals, and the pulsatility of GH secretory pattern was not modified by AIA. PRL and beta-END secretion were not significantly different in arthritic rats as compared to controls. These results show that GH, PRL and beta-END responses induced by acute stress are not observed during the AIA phase when chronic pain is maximum. Thus, in our experimental conditions, beta-END and PRL do not seem to be good plasma markers of chronic pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Chronic pain induces a paradoxical increase in growth hormone secretion without affecting other hormones related to acute stress in the rat. 159 79

Breast feeding can serve as a contraceptive up to 6 months after birth with 98% effectiveness. The so-called suckling reflex arc is a sensitive mechanism conveying messages about nutritional needs of the child, stimulating the release of prolactin responsible for milk production, suppressing ovarian activity by hypothalamic beta-endorphin production leading to reduction in the pulsatile release of gonadotrophic hormones. Increased suckling produces more milk, but only in well-fed women. In Bangladesh, malnourished children required more suckling time than better-fed infants. Increasing the amounts of weaning food lowers feed urgency and suckling intensity thereby relaxing ovarian suppression. Breast-milk consumption can be measured by test weighing the infant before and after feeding, but it is subject to error, especially in developing countries where up to 20 feeds are required to deliver 800 ml of milk. Thus, weighing over 2-5 days is more accurate. The method of giving deuterium oxide tracer to the mother, and measuring its disappearance from the mother's milk and the infant's saliva for 2 weeks is precise and noninvasive. The Doppler ultrasound technique measures milk flow through an artificial teat for research purposes. Manual or mechanical pump measurement of milk transfer separates the mother from the child, thus it is not useful for normal conditions. It can be used for estimating the amount of milk left and the rate of milk secretion by using a breast pump along with oxytocin for full emptying of milk. Accurate estimation of suckling intensity and milk transfer is essential for the determination of the relationship of breast feeding and lactational infecundity.
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PMID:Breast-feeding patterns, maternal milk output and lactational infecundity. 163 60

Urinary cortisol output and serum cortisol concentrations were measured in the steady state, under "field" conditions, and during standardized inhibitory and stimulatory tests in premenopausal, obese women, and were analyzed in relation to adipose tissue distribution. Urinary cortisol output was increased under field conditions in women with an elevated waist to hip circumference ratio (WHR) and, in particular, in women with a large abdominal sagittal diameter, indicating visceral fat accumulation. However, dexamethasone inhibition of cortisol secretion was normal. Stimulation with corticotropin analogue and with physical (cold-pressor test) or mental (color-word or mathematic) stress tests also showed elevated responses of serum cortisol, but not of prolactin or growth hormone concentrations. It is suggested that women with visceral fat accumulation have elevated cortisol secretion due to an increased sensitivity along the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and that this may be causing their abnormal fat depot distribution.
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PMID:Cortisol secretion in relation to body fat distribution in obese premenopausal women. 164 Aug 67


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