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)

L-pyroglutamyl-L-histidyl-L-proline thioamide--([Prot3]TRH), a new TRH analogue, has been previously found to have the same binding affinity to adenopituitary receptors as well as TSH and alpha-MSH releasing activities as native TRH. In this paper we report also the same time course of TSH response after i.p. injection of this compound (10 micrograms kg-1) to rats. Binding affinity to specific receptors in rat amygdala, cortex (frontal lobes), hypothalamus, striatum (order according to decreasing affinity) of both peptides was also similar. In contrast to TRH, however, [Prot3]TRH in doses 0.5 and 5 mg kg-1 i.p. did not affect sleeping time and breathing frequency in the rats during barbiturate anaesthesia. Surprisingly, human plasma degraded the new analogue much faster (T1/2 8.5 min) than native TRH (T1/2 30 min). [Prot3]TRH was also degraded faster in plasma of adult rats. Plasma of 6-day-old rat pups failed to degrade both peptides. It was concluded that the substitution of proline amide, for proline thioamide group in TRH molecule did not change binding affinity to receptors in the central nervous system, but decreased biological effectiveness in CNS and substantially decreased the resistance to degradation in human and rat plasma.
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PMID:TRH analogue with C-terminal thioamide group: rapid degradation by plasma and its biological effects. 300 50

Cerebrospinal fluid and plasma beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin immunoreactivity and adrenocorticotropin hormone were determined in simultaneously obtained samples from 25 healthy, adult surgical patients about to undergo spinal anesthesia using radioimmunoassay techniques. Cerebrospinal fluid adrenocorticotropin concentrations were significantly higher than those in plasma (25.76 +/- 2.11 fm/ml vs. 8.83 +/- 0.84 fm/ml), whereas beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid were significantly lower than those in plasma (6.60 +/- 0.43 fm/ml vs. 3.35 +/- 0.30 fm/ml). In cerebrospinal fluid, a significant positive correlation was found between beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin and adrenocorticotropin (r = 0.64, p less than 0.01), whereas no such relationship could be demonstrated in plasma. This suggests that beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin and adrenocorticotropin might enter the cerebrospinal fluid via a mechanism unrelated to their entry into plasma. This may have implications for the pharmacologic manipulation of these peptides within the central nervous system.
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PMID:The relationship of beta-endorphin and ACTH in the cerebrospinal fluid and plasma of adult surgical patients. 300 79

The effects of exogenous corticotropin releasing factor and arginine vasopressin were evaluated in 6- and 11-week-old spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). Basal adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and vasopressin levels did not differ between SHR and WKY, but basal corticosterone level was higher in 6-week-old SHR (p less than 0.01). To block endogenous corticotropin releasing factor secretion and nonspecific systemic responses, both groups were pretreated with chlorpromazine, morphine, and sodium pentobarbital anesthesia before measurement of ACTH responses to corticotropin releasing factor and vasopressin infusion. Basal ACTH level was lower in anesthetized 6-week-old SHR than in age-matched WKY (p less than 0.01), but no difference was seen between 11-week-old WKY and SHR. The ACTH response to corticotropin releasing factor in 6-week-old WKY was significantly greater than that in age-matched SHR (p less than 0.01), whereas in 11-week-old SHR and WKY the response was similar. Compared with responses in WKY, SHR showed an increased ACTH response to high doses of vasopressin (0.25 micrograms/100 g body weight) at both ages (p less than 0.05). These results indicate that the ACTH response to corticotropin releasing factor is blunted in the early stages of hypertension in SHR but later recovers. These abnormal responses to corticotropin releasing factor and vasopressin may be related to the development of spontaneous hypertension.
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PMID:Adrenocorticotropin responses to corticotropin releasing factor and vasopressin in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 300 24

A circannual analysis was made of serum cortisol, luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone concentrations in the male clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa). Group I males (n = 4), maintained in a standardized environment, were bled serially during a regimented anesthesia/electroejaculation episode occurring monthly (beginning in January, ending in December). Additional sampling intervals were conducted under anesthesia only (control, n = 8), anesthesia plus a single adrenocorticotropin hormone challenge (ACTH, Cortrosyn, n = 4), or anesthesia plus a single 25 micrograms injection of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH, Gonadorelin, n = 4). Group II males (n = 6) from various zoological collections were sampled serially under the same semen collection conditions on one random occasion within the year. Serum cortisol levels were 2 times greater than values measured in comparable studies involving other felid species. Cortisol concentrations were similar during electroejaculation and control (anesthesia only) episodes, and mean levels did not rise as a result of semen collection. Adrenocorticotropin caused an immediate rise in cortisol to levels at least 1.5 times greater than electroejaculated or control counterparts. Mean concentrations of basal cortisol in individual males gradually increased as the year progressed, possibly as a consequence of repeated psychogenic stress. Between seasons, there were no differences in mean LH; however, testosterone levels were greater (p less than 0.05) in the winter compared to all other seasons. There were no differences (p greater than 0.05) between individual males in secretory patterns or mean concentrations of cortisol, LH, or testosterone. Within males, distinct temporal fluctuations were observed in both LH and testosterone during the approximately 80-min sampling interval. Neither LH nor testosterone profiles appeared affected by cortisol patterns during electroejaculation or after an ACTH challenge. A bolus of GnRH induced a marked rise in serum LH and testosterone within 15 and 30 min respectively, indicating that these two hormones were coupled. Both LH and testosterone profiles in Group II males mimicked those in Group I; concentrations of cortisol in Group II males immobilized on one occasion were similar to those of Group I animals sampled from January-May but appeared to be less than values measured from June-December. These data demonstrate that the clouded leopard, compared to other felids, produces markedly elevated concentrations of cortisol, which are likely related to an aggressive behavioral temperament.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Reproductive physiology of the clouded leopard: II. A circannual analysis of adrenal-pituitary-testicular relationships during electroejaculation or after an adrenocorticotropin hormone challenge. 301 73

Experiments were conducted to compare the blood pressure and heart rate responses of conscious rats given intracerebroventricular (ICV) injections of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH 1-24) and corticotropin releasing factor (CRF). Under sodium pentobarbital anaesthesia, rats were implanted with a stainless-steel cannula into the lateral cerebral ventricle and had their right femoral artery and vein cannulated. Upon recovery (24-48 hr later) conscious, unrestrained rats were given ICV injections (total volume 5 microliter by gravity flow) of sterile saline, ACTH (1-24) (0.85 and 1.7 nmoles) or CRF (0.55 and 1.1 nmoles) and blood pressure and heart rate were monitored over the next 2 hr (from the abdominal aorta via the femoral arterial catheter). Both ACTH and CRF caused mean arterial pressure (MAP) to increase, which was paralleled with increases in mean heart rate (MHR). Moreover, these elevations in MAP and MHR were temporally associated with excessive grooming (for ACTH) and locomotor activity (for CRF), which occurred before and lasted as long as MAP and MHR were enhanced. Intravenous (IV) pretreatment whereby naloxone was given 10 min before ICV administration of ACTH (1.7 nmoles) or CRF (1.1 nmoles), showed that naloxone blocked the behavioral, pressor and tachycardic effects of both ACTH and CRF. The results demonstrate that the pressor, tachycardic and locomotor effects evoked in conscious rats by ICV administration of ACTH or CRF are antagonized by naloxone and that their hemodynamic changes may, in part, be mediated by prior behavioral activation.
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PMID:Pressor, tachycardic and behavioral excitatory responses in conscious rats following ICV administration of ACTH and CRF are blocked by naloxone pretreatment. 302 May 26

The influence of halothane-nitrous oxide anaesthesia and normotensive epidural analgesia (level of sensory block T8-T10), respectively, on the plasma concentrations of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH), beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH), cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHA) and aldosterone as well as on the metabolites glucose, lactate and free fatty acids (FFA) was studied in 20 healthy patients who underwent elective orthopaedic procedures on the lower limbs. ACTH and beta-LPH concentrations in plasma rose significantly (P less than 0.001) during halothane-nitrous oxide anaesthesia. DHA secretion closely followed the secretory profile of cortisol. Increased renin levels and increased ACTH release seemed to be responsible for increased aldosterone secretion, intra-operatively. The hormonally induced rise of glycogenolysis and lipolysis did not produce important intra-operative increases in metabolite concentrations in the blood. In normotensive epidural analgesia no significant increase in stress response could be demonstrated, even with low levels of sensory block.
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PMID:A comparison of two types of anaesthesia on the endocrine and metabolic responses to anaesthesia and surgery. 302 43

Potentiated pituitary-adrenocortical responses to the second of two identical small hemorrhages, spaced 24 h apart, are seen in the pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized dog. To investigate the role of pentobarbital anesthesia in these results and to better define the range of the effect, we studied awake trained dogs with chronic adrenal venous catheters. Each dog was bled an amount between 8.7 and 21.8% of measured blood volume [131I] (MBV) over 3 min, and peripheral and adrenal blood were sampled. Blood was reinfused 1 h later, and the dogs were fed. The same hemorrhage and experimental protocol were repeated 24 h later. Steroids were assayed by high-performance liquid chromatography-ultraviolet (HPLC-UV) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) by radioimmunoassay (RIA). Secretory rates of cortisol were calculated using measured adrenal blood flow rates. Maximal secretion of cortisol was determined after injection of 100 mU ACTH following each experiment. Dogs whose day 1 cortisol secretion after hemorrhage was submaximal (hem volume = 14.8 +/- 3.7% MBV; n = 7) showed a greater cortisol secretory response to the same hemorrhage on day 2 (P less than 0.005). This increased cortisol response on day 2 was accompanied by an increased ACTH presentation rate (APR) (P less than 0.025) and by increased adrenal sensitivity to ACTH (P less than 0.025). The increased APR was caused by both an increased venous ACTH and by an increased adrenal blood flow. If posthemorrhage cortisol secretion was maximal on day 1, ACTH, APR, and ABF were not different on the 2 days. No hemodynamic differences were seen to explain these findings. These results confirm and extend our previous results.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pituitary-adrenal responses to repeated small hemorrhage in conscious dogs. 302 12

Concentrations of immunoreactive (IR) growth hormone (GH) in the plasma of domestic fowl have been measured by homologous and heterologous radioimmunoassays and the estimates compared. Both assays detected an age-related decline in the circulating IR-GH concentration, an increase in IR-GH secretion following TRH-stimulation or fasting, and a fall in the IR-GH concentration following adrenocorticotropin administration. However, while the overall estimates of IR-GH concentration were significantly correlated, the magnitude of the changes in IR-GH concentration determined by the homologous assay were far greater than those detected by the heterologous system, which failed to show any inhibitory effect of anesthesia or exogenous thyroid hormones on basal or stimulated IR-GH release. These results suggest that the heterologous GH radioimmunoassay lacks the sensitivity of the homologous chicken GH assay and that circulating GH in birds is probably composed of heterogeneous moieties with differing immunoreactivities with rat GH antibodies.
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PMID:Plasma immunoreactive-growth hormone in domestic fowl: measurement by homologous and heterologous radioimmunoassays. 302 86

Right medullary and various cardiovascular responses to stimulation of the peripheral end of the splanchnic nerve have been investigated in the presence and absence of exogenous adrenocorticotrophin, ACTH1-24, (5 ng min-1 kg-1). The adrenal-clamp technique was employed in conscious calves, after the pituitary stalk had been cauterized and they had recovered from anaesthesia. The intravenous infusion of ACTH1-24 increased the plasma ACTH concentration by about 1100 pg ml-1 and right adrenal venous output of cortisol by about 400 ng min-1 kg body weight-1. Stimulation of the splanchnic nerve at 4 Hz for 10 min had no effect on either arterial plasma ACTH concentration or the adrenal output of cortisol. Closely similar amounts of both adrenaline and noradrenaline were released in response to nerve stimulation in the presence and absence of exogenous ACTH. In contrast, the fall in adrenal vascular resistance of about 40%, which normally occurred in response to splanchnic nerve stimulation, was completely abolished by ACTH. The adrenal produced relatively large quantities of met-enkephalin-containing peptides. During splanchnic nerve stimulation the output of these increased 2-100-fold, at which time free met5-enkephalin accounted for only 10-20% of total. During ACTH infusion the output of free met5-enkephalin was reduced at rest and during nerve stimulation, but that of total met-enkephalin-containing peptides was unaffected. These results indicate that ACTH or an adrenal steroid may alter the processing of proenkephalin in the adrenal medulla acutely but not total opiate secretion. Alternatively, the presence of ACTH could act by influencing the population of chromaffin cells activated by splanchnic nerve stimulation.
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PMID:Effects of synthetic adrenocorticotrophin on adrenal medullary responses to splanchnic nerve stimulation in conscious calves. 303 Dec 82

In 29 cases of vaginal delivery with normal outcome and 4 cases of cesarean section, the concentrations of beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol were determined in maternal venous and umbilical venous plasma immediately postpartum. According to duration of labor and mode of delivery the cases examined were classified into three groups: Group A (18 cases) = vaginal delivery of less than 10 hours' duration, Group B (11 cases) = vaginal delivery of more than 10 hours' duration of labor, Group C (4 cases) = cesarean section under general anesthesia. With the exception of one, the deliveries took place at term. The 33 neonates were in a very good clinical state 5 minutes after parturition (11 Saling points as median value). For measurement of the hormone concentrations radioimmunoassays were used. In Group a the mean beta-endorphin concentration in maternal plasma amounted to 150.9 +/- 16.3 pg/ml, that in neonatal plasma to 239.2 +/- 23.5 pg/ml (means +/- SEM). In Group B plasma beta-endorphin, both maternal and neonatal, was slightly higher than in Group A: 153.0 +/- 12.0 pg/ml (maternal) and 260.9 +/- 37.1 pg/ml (neonatal). The differences between maternal and neonatal beta-endorphin levels were statistically significant: Group A p less than 0.01, Group B p less than 0.05; chi 2-test. The mean ACTH concentrations in the plasma of the newborn infants were also found to be considerably higher compared with those in the plasma of their mothers: Group A 78.2 +/- 16.5 pg/ml (maternal) and 98.0 +/- 23.3 pg/ml (neonatal); Group B 98.0 +/- 20.1 pg/ml (maternal) and 165.8 +/- 39.6 pg/ml (neonatal).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Plasma immunoreactive beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol concentrations in mothers and their neonates immediately after delivery--their relationship to the duration of labor. 303 60


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