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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide-27 (PACAP-27) caused a dose-dependent increase in
met-enkephalin
secretion and increased production of
met-enkephalin
peptide and proenkephalin A (PEnk) mRNA in bovine chromaffin cells, at concentrations as low as 300 pM. PACAP-38 was less potent than PACAP-27, but had similar effects. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) (1-100 nM) was without appreciable effect on either enkephalin secretion or biosynthesis, implicating PACAP type I receptors in PACAP-stimulated enkephalin secretion and synthesis. PACAP type I receptors can activate adenylate cyclase and stimulate
phospholipase C
through heterotrimeric G protein interactions, leading to increased intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP), inositol triphosphate (IP3)-mediated calcium mobilization, and calcium- and diacylglycerol (DAG)-mediated protein kinase C (PKC) activation. Enkephalin secretion evoked by 10-100 nM PACAP-27 was not inhibited by 1 microM (-)-202-791, an L-type specific dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, but was inhibited 65-80% by the arylalkylamine calcium channel blocker D600. Forty mM potassium-evoked secretion was inhibited > 90% by both D600 and (-)-202-791, 25 microM forskolin-induced secretion was blocked < 50% by D600 and was unaffected by (-)-202-791, and 100 nM phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-induced secretion was unaffected by either D600 or (-)-202-791. Enkephalin biosynthesis was increased by 10 nM PACAP-27, as measured by increased
met-enkephalin
pentapeptide content and PEnk A mRNA levels. PACAP-, forskolin-, and PMA-stimulated enkephalin synthesis were not blocked by D600 or (-)-202-791. Elevated potassium-induced enkephalin biosynthesis upregulation was completely blocked by either D600 or (-)-202-791 at the same concentrations. PACAP acting through type I PACAP receptors couples calcium influx-dependent enkephalin secretion and calcium influx-independent enkephalin biosynthesis in chromaffin cells. Restriction of the effects of enhanced calcium influx to stimulation of secretion, but not of biosynthesis, is unique to PACAP. By contrast, potassium-induced enkephalin biosynthesis upregulation is completely calcium influx dependent, specifically via calcium influx through L-type calcium channels. We propose that subpopulations of voltage-dependent calcium channels are differentially linked to intracellular signal transduction pathways that control neuropeptide gene expression and secretion in chromaffin cells.
...
PMID:PACAP activates calcium influx-dependent and -independent pathways to couple met-enkephalin secretion and biosynthesis in chromaffin cells. 982 85
Under control incubation conditions, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) binds only a fraction of its receptors in rat-cultivated pituitary cells. Unmasking of the remaining receptors, which have been termed 'cryptic', requires drug- or peptide-induced protein kinase activation. Spontaneous masking however is not observed on pituitary cells sampled from castrated male rats, suggesting the presence of an intrinsic unmasking factor. Many endogenous factors could theoretically account for the effect. Here we attempted to identify the factor involved by taking advantage of their differential dependency upon second messengers and transduction cascades. Spontaneous unmasking of GnRH binding was found reversed by pertussis toxin (PTX), an inhibitor of alphai and alphao subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins, and by U73122, a
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) inhibitor. In contrast, desensitization of protein kinase C (PKC) or inhibition of tyrosine kinase by herbimycin were ineffective. Among endogenous pituitary factors able to unmask GnRH receptors in pituitary cells from normal male rats, as EGF, NPY or opiate peptides, only the latter were found to correspond to this transduction profile. In an attempt to characterize the pharmacology of opiate effects, naloxone (10 microM), a poorly selective opiate antagonist, restored masking of GnRH binding in cells from castrates. Only the delta antagonist naltrindole (1 microM) was able to mimick the action of naloxone. Conversely, when tested on cells from intact animals, morphine (10 microM), as well as dslet (1 microM) and met-ENK (10 nM), preferential delta agonists, but not dago and
beta-endorphin
or U50488 H and dynorphin, respectively micro and kappa agonists, were able to suppress masking. Among opioid peptides endogenous to the pituitary, only met-ENK was able to unmask cryptic receptors, an effect antagonized by naltrindole. We conclude that an opiate delta receptor subtype is endogenously activated in the pituitary of castrated male rats to prevent masking of GnRH binding.
...
PMID:Delta opiate receptors account for the castration-induced unmasking of gonadotropin-releasing hormone binding sites in the rat pituitary. 987 2
We have previously shown that the stimulatory effect of TRH on
alpha-MSH
secretion from the frog pars intermedia is associated with Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, activation of a
phospholipase C
and mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores. The aim of the present study was to investigate the contribution of protein kinase C (PKC), adenylyl cyclase (AC), Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CAM KII), phospholipase A2, and protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) in TRH-induced
alpha-MSH
release. Incubation of frog neurointermediate lobes (NILs) with phorbol 12-myristate-13-acetate (24 h), which causes desensitization of PKC, or with the PKC inhibitor NPC-15437, reduced by approximately 50% of the effect of TRH on
alpha-MSH
release. In most melanotrope cells, TRH induces a sustained and biphasic increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). Preincubation with phorbol 12-myristate-13-acetate or NPC-15437 suppressed the plateau phase of the Ca2+ response. Incubation of NILs with TRH (10(-6) M; 20 min) had no effect on cAMP production. In addition, the AC inhibitor SQ 22,536 did not affect the secretory response of NILs to TRH. These data indicate that the
phospholipase C
/PKC pathway, but not the AC/protein kinase A pathway, is involved in TRH-induced
alpha-MSH
release. The calmodulin inhibitor W-7 and the CAM KII inhibitor KN-93 did not significantly reduce the response to TRH. Similarly, the phospholipase A2 inhibitors quinacrine and 7-7'-DEA did not impair the effect of TRH on
alpha-MSH
secretion. The PTK inhibitors ST638 and Tyr-A23 had no effect on TRH-induced [Ca2+]i increase but inhibited in a dose-dependent manner TRH-evoked
alpha-MSH
release (ED50 = 1.22x10(-5) M and ED50 = 1.47x10(-5) M, respectively). Taken together, these data indicate that, in frog melanotrope cells, PKC and PTK are involved in TRH-induced
alpha-MSH
secretion. Activation of PKC is responsible for the sustained phase of the increase in [Ca2+]i, whereas activation of PTK does not affect Ca2+ mobilization.
...
PMID:Involvement of protein kinase C and protein tyrosine kinase in thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced stimulation of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone secretion in frog melanotrope cells. 1038 23
Secretin, glucagon, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), and parathyroid hormone (PTH) belong, together with vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and pituitary adenylate cyclase (AC)-activating polypeptide, to a family of peptides (the VIP-secretin-glucagon family), which also includes growth hormone-releasing hormone and exendins. All the members of this peptide family possess a remarkable amino-acid sequence homology, and bind to G-protein-coupled receptors, whose signaling mechanism primarily involves AC/protein kinase A and
phospholipase C
/protein kinase C cascades. VIP and pituitary AC-activating polypeptide play a role in the regulation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and in this review we survey findings that also other members of the VIP-secretin-glucagon family may have the same function. Secretin and secretin receptors are expressed in the hypothalamus and pituitary gland, and secretin inhibits
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
release. No evidence is available for the presence of secretin receptors in adrenal glands, but secretin selectively depresses the glucocorticoid response to ACTH of dispersed zona fasciculata-reticularis (ZF/R) cells. Glucagon and glucagon-like peptide-1 are contained in the hypothalamus, and all the components of the HPA axis are provided with glucagon and glucagons-like-1 receptors. These peptides exert a short-term inhibitory effect on stress-induced pituitary ACTH release and depress the ZF/R cell response to ACTH by inhibiting the AC/protein kinase A cascade; they also stimulate hypothalamic arginine-vasopressin release. GIP receptors are present in the ZF/R of the normal adrenals, and are particularly abundant in some types of adrenocortical adenomas and hyperplasias. GIP, through the activation of the AC/protein kinase A cascade, evokes a sizeable glucocorticoid secretagogue effect, leading to the identification of a food/GIP-dependent Cushing's syndrome. PTH and PTH-related protein are expressed in the hypothalamus and pituitary gland, and PTH and PTH-related protein receptors in all the components of the HPA axis. Both peptides enhance ACTH and arginine-vasopressin release, as well as stimulate aldosterone and glucocorticoid secretion of dispersed zona glomerulosa and ZF/R cells, respectively. The involvement of growth hormone-releasing hormone and exendins in the functional regulation of the HPA axis has not yet been extensively investigated.
...
PMID:Secretin, glucagon, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, parathyroid hormone, and related peptides in the regulation of the hypothalamus- pituitary-adrenal axis. 1076 61
The binding of [(125)I] orexin-A (Ox-A) to particulates from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing the cloned orexin-A receptor, or from rat forebrain areas, was sensitive to blockers of phosphatidylinositol-specific
phospholipase C
(PtdIns-PLC) U-73122 and ET-18-OCH(3), little affected by phospholipase A(2) inhibitor quinacrine, and not sensitive to D609, a xanthate inhibitor of phosphatidylcholine-selective PLC. Interaction of the receptor with a PtdIns-PLC was further indicated by a large sensitivity of the binding to Ca(2+). Up to 50% of the binding was sensitive to the G-protein nucleotide site agonist GTP-gamma-S. Ligand attachment to the orexin-A receptor thus depends on an association with both PtdIns-PLC and G-protein alpha-subunits. In all paradigms examined, the binding of [(125)I]orexin-A was competed by human/rat neuropeptide Y (hNPY) and porcine secretin with a potency similar to orexin-A (IC(50) range 30-100 nM). The rank order of potency for NPY-related peptides was hNPY > porcine peptide YY (pPYY) > (Leu(31), Pro(34)) human PYY > human PYY(3-36) > hNPY free acid > human pancreatic polypeptide. Among secretin-related peptides, the rank order of potency was porcine secretin > or = orexin-A > human pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide > orexin-B > porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide. Among opioid peptides, rat
beta-endorphin
and camel delta-endorphin were much less active than NPY and secretin, and two enkephalins were inactive at 1 microM. In view of high abundance of NPY in forebrain, the above cross-reactivity could indicate a significant contribution of NPY to signaling via orexin-A receptors.
...
PMID:Sensitivity of orexin-A binding to phospholipase C inhibitors, neuropeptide Y, and secretin. 1086 Aug 58
The action of antidepressant drugs on monoamines such as norepinephrine and serotonin has been described for three decades. However, more-recent research has looked beyond cell surface receptors to transductional cascades and gene expression. Antidepressant drug therapies seem to share several mechanisms involved in either activating the adenylyl cyclase-protein kinase A cascade or inhibiting the
phospholipase C
-protein kinase C mechanisms. These effects, ultimately, combine to regulate the expression of target genes. Several specific genes are known to be activated or inhibited by antidepressant therapies. Steady-state levels of mRNA for glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and its receptor trkB, and preproenkephalin are enhanced, whereas those for
corticotropin
-releasing hormone, c-fos,N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunits, and nerve-growth factor 1A are reduced. New molecular genetic methods for identifying differentially expressed genes will aid in the development of targets for wholly new generations of antidepressant drug therapies.
...
PMID:Intracellular mechanisms of antidepressant drug action. 1103 41
In an attempt to investigate the role of alpha1-adrenoceptors in the regulation of opioid secretion from adrenal gland, phenylephrine was employed to investigate the effect on secretion of
beta-endorphin
-like immunoreactivity (BER) from adrenal medulla of rat in vitro. Phenylephrine enhanced the BER from isolated adrenal medulla in a concentration-dependent manner and this action was abolished by the antagonists of alpha1-adrenoceptors, prazosin and tamsulosin. Investigations of signal pathway further support that an activation of alpha1-adrenoceptors is responsible for the stimulatory effect of phenylephrine on BER secretion from adrenal medulla. In the presence of U73312, the specific inhibitor of
phospholipase C
(
PLC
), phenylephrine-induced change of BER was reduced in a concentration-dependent manner but it was not affected by U73343, the negative control of U73312. Moreover, chelerythrine and GF 109203X diminished the action of phenylephrine at concentration sufficient to inhibit protein kinase C (PKC). In conclusion, our results suggest that an activation of alpha1-adrenoceptors in adrenal medulla by phenylephrine may enhance the secretion of opioids from adrenal gland of rat via signals of
PLC
-PKC pathway.
...
PMID:Stimulatory effect of phenylephrine on the secretion of beta-endorphin from rat adrenal medulla in vitro. 1169 3
The effect of
beta-endorphin
on plasma glucose levels was investigated in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats (STZ-diabetic rats). A dose-dependent lowering of plasma glucose was observed in the fasting STZ-diabetic rat fifteen minutes after intravenous injection of
beta-endorphin
. The plasma glucose-lowering effect of
beta-endorphin
was abolished by pretreatment with naloxone or naloxonazine at doses sufficient to block opioid mu-receptors. Also, unlike wild-type diabetic mice,
beta-endorphin
failed to induce its plasma glucose-lowering effect in the opioid mu-receptor knock-out diabetic mice. In isolated soleus muscle,
beta-endorphin
enhanced the uptake of radioactive glucose in a concentration-dependent manner. Stimulatory effects of
beta-endorphin
on glycogen synthesis were also seen in hepatocytes isolated from STZ-diabetic rats. The blockade of these actions by naloxone and naloxonazine indicated the mediation of opioid mu-receptors. In the presence of U73312, the specific inhibitor of
phospholipase C
(
PLC
), the uptake of radioactive glucose into isolated soleus muscle induced by
beta-endorphin
was reduced in a concentration-dependent manner, but it was not affected by U73343, the negative control of U73312. Moreover, chelerythrine and GF 109203X diminished the stimulatory action of
beta-endorphin
on the uptake of radioactive glucose at a concentration sufficient to inhibit protein kinase C (PKC). The data obtained suggest that activating opioid mu-receptors by
beta-endorphin
may increase glucose utilization in peripheral tissues via the
PLC
-PKC pathway to lower plasma glucose in diabetic rats lacking insulin.
...
PMID:Plasma glucose-lowering effect of beta-endorphin in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 1243 85
Differential adaptive changes in serotonin2A [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)2A] receptor signaling during treatment may be one mechanism involved in the latency of therapeutic improvement with antidepressants, such as fluoxetine. We examined the effects of fluoxetine (2, 3, 7, 21, or 42 days) on hypothalamic 5-HT2A receptor signaling. The hormone responses to an injection of the 5-HT2A receptor agonist (+/-)-1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenyl)-2-amino-propane HCl (DOI) were used as an index of hypothalamic 5-HT2A receptor function. Treatment with fluoxetine for 21 or 42 days produced diminished
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
and oxytocin (but not corticosterone) responses to DOI injections (2.5 mg/kg i.p.; 15 min postinjection). Regulators of G protein signaling 4 and Galphaq protein levels in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus were not altered during fluoxetine treatment. Because previous studies indicate that treatment with fluoxetine for 21 days resulted in increased hormone responses to DOI when measured at 30 min after injection, we examined the effect of fluoxetine (21 days) on DOI-induced increase hormone levels at 15, 30, and 60 min after DOI injection. Fluoxetine decreased the oxytocin response at 15 but not at 30 min post-DOI injection, and potentiated the ACTH and corticosterone responses at 30 min post-DOI injection. For comparison, we examined the effect of fluoxetine on 5-HT2A receptor-mediated increase in
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) activity in the frontal cortex. 5-HT-stimulated, but not guanosine 5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate-stimulated
PLC
activity was increased after 21 days of fluoxetine-treatment. Overall, these results indicate that chronic fluoxetine treatment can potentiate 5-HT2A receptor signaling in frontal cortex but differentially alters 5-HT2A receptor signaling in oxytocin-containing neurons and corticotropin-releasing factor-containing neurons in the paraventricular nucleus.
...
PMID:Chronic fluoxetine differentially affects 5-hydroxytryptamine (2A) receptor signaling in frontal cortex, oxytocin- and corticotropin-releasing factor-containing neurons in rat paraventricular nucleus. 1272 28
The role of alpha 1A -adrenoceptors in the regulation of opioid secretion from the adrenal glands of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats (STZ-diabetic rats) was examined in an attempt to determine the mechanism of plasma glucose-lowering action of caffeic acid. In agreement with a previous report, we showed that caffeic acid produced a dose-dependent lowering of the plasma glucose concentration in STZ-diabetic rats along with an increase of plasma
beta-endorphin
-like immunoreactivity (BER). These actions of caffeic acid were abolished by pretreatment with WB 4101 or RS 17 056 at doses sufficient to block alpha 1A -adrenoceptors. In addition, naloxone and naloxonazine at doses effective for blocking opioid micro -receptors abolished the plasma glucose-lowering action of caffeic acid. Also, unlike that in wild-type diabetic mice, caffeic acid failed to produce a plasma glucose lowering effect in opioid micro -receptor knockout diabetic mice. We observed that caffeic acid could enhance BER release from isolated rat adrenal medulla in a concentration-dependent manner; inhibitors of alpha 1A -adrenoceptors such as WB 4101 and RS 1705 abolished this action. Investigations of the signal pathways further supported that activation of alpha 1A -adrenoceptor is responsible for the stimulatory effect of caffeic acid on BER secretion from the adrenal medulla. In the presence of U73312, a specific inhibitor of
phospholipase C
, the caffeic acid-induced increase of BER was reduced in a concentration-dependent manner, but it was not affected by U73343, the negative control of U73312. Chelerythrine and GF 109203X also diminished the action of caffeic acid at concentrations sufficient for inhibiting protein kinase C. Moreover, bilateral adrenalectomy in STZ-diabetic rats resulted in the loss of this plasma glucose-lowering effect of caffeic acid, and there was no increase in plasma BER with caffeic acid. Therefore,
beta-endorphin
release from the adrenal gland appears to be responsible for the lowering of plasma glucose in STZ-diabetic rats induced by caffeic acid, through the activation of alpha 1A -adrenoceptors.
...
PMID:Release of beta-endorphin by caffeic acid to lower plasma glucose in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 1277 69
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