Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Following 25 mug/day synthetic
alpha-MSH
administration, the liver regeneration of partially hepatectomized rats proved to be increased. The hormone treatment resulted in an enhanced alanine incorporation of the liver proteins, but this effect was uncertain on partially hepatectomized rats. Due to the hormone treatment the low liver protein content of the operated rats became normal. The
pseudocholinesterase
activity of the liver homogenate of
alpha-MSH
treated rats was also elevated. On the basis of these experiments authors are supposing some protein synthesis increasing effect of synthetic
alpha-MSH
.
...
PMID:The effect of alpha-melanophor-stimulating hormone on liver regeneration and incorporation of amino acid in rats' liver protein. 122 18
We assessed the effects of age on cholinergic regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and other neuroendocrine systems by measuring the plasma cortisol and
beta-endorphin
responses to an infusion of the centrally active
cholinesterase
inhibitor physostigmine (0.0125 mg/kg) in 12 healthy older men (68 +/- 1.7 yr) and 9 healthy young men (25 +/- 1.4 yr). We also measured the responses to physostigmine of plasma GH, arginine vasopressin, epinephrine, and norepinephrine (NE). As estimated by comparing calculated areas under the curve, older subjects had greater cortisol (P = 0.02) and
beta-endorphin
(P less than 0.01) secretory responses, but a reduced GH (P less than 0.01) secretory response. The arginine vasopressin response did not differ between groups. By analysis of variance, older subjects also had a greater epinephrine response (P = 0.01). Older subjects had higher basal NE concentrations (P less than 0.05), but NE responses to physostigmine did not differ between groups. These findings suggest age-related enhancement of the cholinergic stimulatory regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and adrenal medulla. They also confirm previous reports of reduced GH secretory response with aging in normal men.
...
PMID:Differential effects of aging on neuroendocrine responses to physostigmine in normal men. 213 80
CSF neurotransmitter markers may reflect neurochemical alterations in Alzheimer's disease (AD). The best studied neurochemical deficit in AD is that of acetylcholine. Both acetylcholinesterase and
butyrylcholinesterase
activity have been reported to be reduced in some but not all studies of AD CSF. Studies of monoamine metabolites have also been controversial but most authors have found reduced concentrations of CSF HVA, lesser reductions in HIAA and no change in MHPG. CSF GABA concentrations have been found to be reduced in AD. Studies of CSF neuropeptides in AD have shown reduced concentrations of somatostatin and vasopressin, normal concentrations of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and either normal or decreased concentrations of
beta-endorphin
and corticotropin releasing factor. Although no individual CSF neurochemical markers are specific for AD it may be possible to develop a profile of several neurochemical markers which will have enhanced specificity.
...
PMID:CSF neurotransmitter markers in Alzheimer's disease. 287 17
The molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase in extracts of gastrocnemius muscle from four vertebrate species and in electric eel (Electrophorus) electric organ were separated and identified by low-salt precipitation and velocity sedimentation. The activity of the heavy insoluble (A12) form of human muscle acetylcholinesterase was inhibited by synthetic human
beta-endorphin
(500 mM). The homologous form in rat muscle extracts was poorly inhibited by human
beta-endorphin
at the same concentration, but was more effectively inhibited by camel
beta-endorphin
. The activities of heavy forms of
pseudocholinesterase
, present in small amounts in both species, were not reduced by
beta-endorphin
. Selective inhibition of homologous heavy forms of acetylcholinesterase activity by camel and human
beta-endorphin
was also seen in skeletal muscle extracts from frog and pigeon, but with decreased effectiveness. No inhibition was detectable in the heavy acetylcholinesterase form from extracts of electric organ tissue of the electric eel. The inhibition of heavy acetylcholinesterase activity in human muscle by human
beta-endorphin
was dependent on the presence of its NH2-terminal pentapeptide sequence. Maximal inhibitory potency depended on the presence of the entire amino acid sequence, since potency was considerably reduced in synthetic peptide analogues lacking either middle or COOH-terminal segments of
beta-endorphin
. The relative potency of
beta-endorphin
from various species as inhibitors of rat heavy acetylcholinesterase activity was also investigated. beta-Endorphin sequences most closely resembling that of the rat peptide (camel, equine) were most potent, whereas those with sequence differences of more than one amino-acid were less potent (turkey, human) or had no inhibitory activity (ostrich). The selective inhibition of heavy acetylcholinesterase by
beta-endorphin
thus exhibits species specificity, even among mammals, in which homologues of this molecular form of the enzyme are otherwise indistinguishable.
...
PMID:Structural requirements and species specificity of the inhibition by beta-endorphin of heavy acetylcholinesterase from vertebrate skeletal muscle. 608 17
The space adaptation syndrome is one of the more vexing problems confronted by our nation's astronauts during their journeys. This syndrome may be a variant of motion sickness, although this possibility has been questioned. Physostigmine, a centrally active
cholinesterase
inhibitor which increases brain acetylcholine, was found to cause a motion sickness-like syndrome--in psychiatric patients and normals--including nausea, emesis, malaise, dysphoria, increases in serum ACTH,
beta-endorphin
, cortisol, and prolactin, Neostigmine, a non-centrally acting
cholinesterase
inhibitor, and saline placebo caused no such effects. The above effects closely parallel those of motion sickness. Thus, the effects of physostigmine may be a convenient model for screening for treatments for motion sickness or space adaptation syndrome, or for predicting who will develop these syndromes.
...
PMID:A cholinomimetic model of motion sickness and space adaptation syndrome. 648 3
Serum
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
and growth hormone (GH) concentrations were assessed simultaneously with hypothalamic neuronal activities of norepinephrine (NE), dopamine (DA), and serotonin (5-HT) 60 min after the third cerebroventricular administration of neostigmine (a
cholinesterase
inhibitor) in awake rats. Serum ACTH and GH concentrations were significantly increased and decreased, respectively. Neostigmine caused significant increases in hypothalamic NE and DA activities and a significant decrease in hypothalamic 5-HT activity. The reciprocal changes of serum ACTH and GH concentrations were similar to those of hypothalamic NE and 5-HT activities. Multiple regression analyses with stepwise procedure revealed that hypothalamic NE and 5-HT activities were respectively significant determinants of serum ACTH and GH concentrations. Apart from the direct influence of neostigmine on ACTH and GH secretions, it is suggested that the changes in hypothalamic monoaminergic activities play an important role in modulating ACTH and GH secretions following the administration of neostigmine.
...
PMID:Adrenocorticotropin and growth hormone secretions after intracerebroventricular administration of neostigmine in rats: their relationships to hypothalamic monoaminergic neuronal activities. 782 Jun 71
We asked whether hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis responses to a cholinergic stimulus are blunted in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) of mild to moderate severity. Such a finding would be consistent with a central cholinergic deficiency early in the course of AD. To address this question, we measured the plasma
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
,
beta-endorphin
-like immunoreactivity (beta E-LI), and cortisol responses to the
cholinesterase
inhibitor physostigmine in 10 healthy normal older subjects (age = 71 +/- 2 years) and 11 outpatients with probable AD (age = 72 +/- 2 years; Mini Mental State Exam score = 19 +/- 2). Cortisol concentrations were higher in AD subjects throughout the study, but AD and normal older subjects had similar robust ACTH, beta E-LI, and cortisol responses to physostigmine. In all subjects combined, women had greater ACTH, beta E-LI, and cortisol responses to physostigmine than did men. Plasma physostigmine concentrations did not differ between groups. These results suggest that female gender enhances the magnitude of HPA axis responses to cholinergic stimulation in older humans; however, the HPA axis response to physostigmine does not appear to reflect central cholinergic deficiency in the early stages of AD.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis responses to physostigmine: effects of Alzheimer's disease and gender. 878 Aug 56
The effect of acetylcholine on the neurointermediate lobe
beta-endorphin
secretion was studied in the neonatal and in the adult rat in vitro. Acetylcholine stimulated
beta-endorphin
secretion from the 2-day- and 5-day-old neurointermediate lobe, the effect was dose dependent and more pronounced in the presence of the
cholinesterase
inhibitor eserine. The 10-day-, the 21-day-old and the adult rat neurointermediate lobes did not respond to acetylcholine, even in the presence of eserine. Basal
beta-endorphin
secretion was elevated by the D2 receptor antagonist sulpiride, but acetylcholine was without effect in the 10-day-old and in the adult neurointermediate lobe even after dopamine receptor blockade. The
beta-endorphin
stimulatory response to acetylcholine was diminished by the M1 muscarinic receptor antagonist pirenzepine and blocked by the M3 > M1 antagonist 4-diamino-phenyl-piperidine (4-DAMP). The selective M2 antagonist methoctramine and nicotine had no effect. These data indicate that the neurointermediate lobe
beta-endorphin
secretion is under special muscarinic cholinergic regulation for a relatively short time after birth. The disappearance of this stimulatory cholinergic effect in later life might be due to changes in the intracellular secretory machinery in the IL and/or to the uncoupling of the cholinergic receptors from the intracellular signal transduction system(s) responsible for the stimulated secretion in the rat melanotrope cells.
...
PMID:Age-dependent muscarinic stimulation of beta-endorphin secretion from rat neurointermediate lobe in vitro. 942 Nov 36
We have reported that physostigmine, a reversible
cholinesterase
inhibitor, enhances verbal memory in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). To elucidate the mechanism of cognition enhancement, plasma hormones were measured during high-dose acute and low-dose chronic steady-state intravenous infusions of physostigmine in nine subjects with AD. High-dose hormone responses were measured during and for 24 h after the infusion of physostigmine 1-1.5 mg over 45-60 min. Chronic responses were measured during continuous intravenous infusions of physostigmine at doses (0.5-25 mg/day) that escalated over 2 weeks, and then during 1 week infusion of the dose that optimized cognition (2-12 mg/day) or placebo administered in a randomized, double-blind, cross-over design. A replicable improvement in verbal memory was found in five subjects. High-dose physostigmine infusion that produced noxious side effects resulted in significant elevation above baseline in plasma levels of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) (p = 0.0001), cortisol (p = 0.0001), and
beta-endorphin
(p = 0.0001). Chronic physostigmine administration, in the absence of adverse effects, produced no significant elevation in ACTH (p = 0.08), cortisol (p = 0.70), or
beta-endorphin
(p = 0.82). These results indicate that high-dose physostigmine activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, likely representing a "stress response." In contrast, cognition-enhancing doses do not produce a peripheral corticosteroid response. Thus, physostigmine-induced memory improvement is independent of the activation of the HPA axis.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine responses to intravenous infusion of physostigmine in patients with Alzheimer disease. 1037 54
Of heuristic value in understanding the neurochemistry of major depression is whether the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis hyperactivity that occurs in this illness can be related to putative neurotransmitter dysfunction(s). Cholinergic neurotransmission stimulates hypothalamic corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) secretion, both of which stimulate pituitary
corticotropin
(ACTH) secretion, but whether the HPA axis in humans is activated only by doses of cholinergic agonists that produce noxious side effects remains controversial. To test the hypothesis of increased cholinergic sensitivity in major depression, physostigmine (PHYSO), a reversible
cholinesterase
inhibitor, was administered to patients and control subjects at a dose that elevated plasma ACTH, cortisol, and AVP concentrations but produced few or no side effects. Exogenous AVP also was administered to determine if it would augment the effect of low-dose PHYSO on the HPA axis. Twelve premenopausal or estrogen-replaced female major depressives, 12 individually matched female control subjects, eight male major depressives, and eight matched male control subjects underwent four test sessions 5-7 days apart: PHYSO (8 microg/kg IV), AVP (0.08 U/kg IM), PHYSO + AVP, and saline control. Serial blood samples were taken before and after pharmacologic challenge and analyzed for ACTH1-39, cortisol, and AVP. Estradiol and testosterone were also measured at each test session. PHYSO (8 microg/kg) significantly increased plasma ACTH, cortisol, and AVP, while producing no side effects in approximately half the subjects and predominantly mild side effects in the other half. These hormone increases following PHYSO occurred primarily in the female depressives and the male control subjects and were not significantly related to the presence or absence of side effects. The greater the ACTH and AVP responses to PHYSO, the stronger their correlation, suggesting that AVP may have been acting as a secretagogue for ACTH. Administered AVP significantly increased the secretion of ACTH in the patients and control subjects to a similar degree, and AVP given after PHYSO did not augment the HPA axis response to a greater degree in the depressives than in the control subjects. Plasma estradiol and testosterone were within the normal range for all four groups of subjects and were not significantly related to their HPA axis hormone responses. The study results support the hypothesis of heightened cholinergic sensitivity in premenopausal female, but not in male, patients with major depression. The low dose of PHYSO used may represent a useful paradigm for central cholinergic stimulation of the HPA axis.
...
PMID:Hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal cortical responses to low-dose physostigmine and arginine vasopressin administration: sex differences between major depressives and matched control subjects. 1064 73
1
2
Next >>