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 this study we have examined the results of salmon calcitonin treatment on migraine pain. The mechanism by which calcitonin induces analgesia is still not understood. We observed the effect of a 5-day treatment with salmon calcitonin (IM 100 IU/day) on circulating levels of beta-endorphin, ACTH, and cortisol in 20 patients with migraine during the headache-free period. All 3 hormones were increased after the calcitonin administration and the maximum increase was obtained in beta-endorphin levels. There were significant statistical correlations between beta-endorphin, ACTH, and cortisol levels determined before and after calcitonin treatment.
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PMID:Treatment of migraine with salmon calcitonin: effects on plasma beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol levels. 256 Apr 8

The efferent neurons of the gerbil vestibular system were investigated by retrograde tracing techniques and cytochemical staining for acetylcholinesterase (AChE), choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and a number of peptides. The location, bilateral distribution, cell area and number of neurons in two identified groups of retrogradely labelled cells were described and quantified. The larger of the two groups was located dorsolateral to the facial nerve genu, ventral and medial to the vestibular nuclei. Unilateral tracer injection in the vestibular end organs labelled cells bilaterally in this and the smaller group, which was located immediately ventral to the genu. No cells were found that individually projected bilaterally to both labyrinths. After injections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in the utricle or saccule, significantly more cells were located on the contralateral side of the brainstem. The average (+/- SD) cross sectional area of labelled cell bodies associated with the otolith organs was 259.8 (+/- 75.2) microns 2. ChAT immunoreactive and AChE positive cells were found in an area coextensive with the location of the dorsal efferent group. In double-labelling studies, cell bodies in the same group that had been retrogradely labelled with a utricular injection of HRP, were immunocytochemically stained for calcitonin gene-related peptide and met-enkephalin. In contrast, the ventral group of efferents did not have cells that were cytochemically stained for either of the acetylcholine-related enzymes or either peptide. The significance of the existence of peptidergic vestibular efferent neurons is discussed.
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PMID:Identification of vestibular efferent neurons in the gerbil: histochemical and retrograde labelling. 259 41

Central administration of diverse peptides, such as dermorphin (100 ng), salmon calcitonin (250 ng), human-corticotropin-releasing-factor (10 micrograms) and human-calcitonin-gene-related-peptide (10 micrograms) inhibited gastric acid secretion in pylorus-ligated rats. With the exception of salmon calcitonin this suppressive effect was significantly reversed by the central administration of 400 micrograms indomethacin. These data suggest that the gastric inhibitory effect of dermorphin, human-corticotropin-releasing-factor and human-calcitonin-gene-related-peptide might be mediated by the central synthesis of a cyclooxygenase product(s).
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PMID:Indomethacin (i.c.v.) reverses the inhibitory action of peptides on gastric secretion. 261 66

Current investigations on the immunohistochemical occurrence and co-occurrence of biogenic polypeptides in the mammalian carotid body were reviewed and extended by our own recent findings. The family of chromogranins and related peptides in glomus cells appears to have a widespread interspecies distribution, whereas other peptides investigated occur in a species-specific pattern. Immunoreactivity to antisera against opioids, which derive from the proenkephalin sequence, appears to be present in glomus cells of the rabbit, cat, dog, and a shrew. Conversely, glomus cells of pig and guinea pig predominantly are immunoreactive to cleavage products of prodynorphin, which co-occur in some cells with substance P and met-enkephalin-arg-phe, respectively. In the rat and Callithrix jacchus, opioid immunoreactivity is present in nerve fibres but not in glomus cells. Immunoreactivity to other peptides, such as neurotensin, cholecystokinin, neuropeptide Y, and galanin, is found only in one or two particular species. Neurotensin immunolabelling occurs in beagle dog glomus cells, which are known to lack substance P. Cholecystokinin immunoreactivity is present in glomus cells of dog and Callithrix, and co-exists with chromogranin A, neuropeptide Y, and substance P. Substance P appears to exist in both carotid body glomus cells and nerve fibres. Substance P immunoreactivity is present in glomus cells of all species investigated, except dog. Coexistence of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is demonstrated in nerve fibres of the guinea pig carotid body, which originate in the petrosal and jugular ganglia. Other peptides visualized immunohistochemically in mammalian carotid body nerve fibres are vasoactive intestinal peptide and neuropeptide Y. The functional significance of the various peptides present in the carotid body is discussed.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical distribution and colocalization of regulatory peptides in the carotid body. 267 3

A 7-year-old spayed female Cocker Spaniel was hospitalized with a history of chronic vomiting, anorexia, and weight loss. Laboratory abnormalities included leukocytosis, metabolic alkalosis, hypoglycemia, hypoproteinemia, and hyperinsulinemia. Gastroscopy and ultrasonography revealed multiple gastric masses and a possible pancreatic mass, respectively. Examination of tissues obtained at necropsy showed a pancreatic adenocarcinoma with hepatic metastasis, gastric hypertrophy, and multiple duodenal ulcers. Immunocytochemical staining of the neoplasia was positive for pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and insulin and negative for gastrin, calcitonin, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), serotonin, L-enkephalin, chromagranin, glucagon, and somatostatin. Subsequent serum gastrin and PP assays showed a fasting hypergastrinemia with a normal response of gastrin to provocative testing and extremely increased PP values. The high PP values may have resulted in the vomiting and gastrointestinal ulceration. A PP-secreting tumor has not previously been reported in the dog.
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PMID:Pancreatic polypeptide and insulin-secreting tumor in a dog with duodenal ulcers and hypertrophic gastritis. 267 25

Sympathetic and parasympathetic influences on the airway resistance under physiological and pathophysiological conditions have long been known. In recent years, this classical view had to be extended due to mounting evidence of neurocrine and paracrine peptide mediators. The term non-adrenergic non-cholinergic (NANC) nervous system was coined. Besides other effects the non-adrenergic mediators (e.g. VIP and PHI/PHM) give rise to bronchodilation, while the non-cholinergic modulators (SP, neurokinin A, and CGRP) induce bronchospasm. The axon-reflex theory postulates liberation of non-cholinergic peptide substances by afferent C-fibers exposed by bronchial epithelial cell damage as one important cause of bronchial obstruction. In addition to biogenic amines, such peptides as bombesin, leu-encephalin, beta-endorphin, calcitonin, doctrine cells of the bronchial epithelium. Our knowledge of the biological relevance of these mediators is at present very sketchy. Platelet activating factor (PAF) is released by alveolar macrophages, granulocytes, blood vessel endothelium, and platelets. The inhalation of PAF induces bronchospasm in healthy subjects and asthmatics and also prolonged bronchial hyperreactivity. The many factors influencing bronchial reactivity need to be classified by further investigations of the mode of interaction and interdependence of known and new mediators.
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PMID:[The significance of endocrine, neurocrine and paracrine mediators in the regulation of bronchial reactivity]. 268 1

An immunoblotting method to detect low-molecular-weight peptides with monoclonal antibodies that normally fail to demonstrate immunoreactivity using conventional blotting techniques is described. Detection of neurophysin, insulin, calcitonin, vasopressin, and beta-endorphin electroblotted on nitrocellulose membranes was optimized after introducing four modifications into the conventional procedure. These include renaturing the gels after sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis, electroblotting the renatured gels in basic transfer buffer, fixing and/or heating the blots, and using avidin/alkaline phosphatase conjugates for antigen/antibody detection. This technique likely enables the denatured peptides to regain their native conformation and, therefore, restores antigenicity and recognition by highly structural specific monoclonal antibodies. Although the most dramatic improvement with this technique is with monoclonal antibodies, a modest improvement in sensitivity can be obtained when immunoblots are probed with polyclonal antibodies. The high resolution of this system will be useful in probing blots of partial proteolytic digests of proteins with both monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies.
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PMID:Detection of low-molecular-weight polypeptides on nitrocellulose with monoclonal antibodies. 269 85

The central nervous system effects of neuropeptides on gastric acid and duodenal bicarbonate secretions were examined. In freely moving rats, i.c.v. administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), human gastrin-17 (hG-17) and the somatostatin analogue, desAA 1,2,4,5,12,13 [D-Trp8]somatostatin (ODT8-SS), significantly increased gastric acid secretion, while vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) had no effect. In the order of potency and efficacy, the following peptides decreased acid secretion: bombesin (BOM) greater than calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) greater than calcitonin (CT) greater than corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) greater than beta-endorphin (beta-END) greater than neurotensin (NT). In anesthetized rats, none of these peptides significantly altered proximal duodenal bicarbonate secretion. In awake, freely moving rats, cerebroventricular administration of CGRP significantly decreased while ODT8-SS, TRH and CRF significantly increased duodenal bicarbonate secretion. beta-Endorphin, VIP, CT, BOM, NT and hG-17 given i.c.v. did not significantly alter the bicarbonate response. These results indicate that neuropeptides administered into the central nervous system modulate gastric acid as well as duodenal bicarbonate secretions in awake, freely moving rats in a differentiated fashion. CGRP inhibits both acid and bicarbonate secretions, a somatostatin analogue and TRH both stimulate acid and bicarbonate secretions and CRF inhibits gastric acid but stimulates duodenal bicarbonate secretions.
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PMID:Effects of neuropeptides on gastric acid and duodenal bicarbonate secretions in freely moving rats. 271 Sep 63

Fourteen null cell adenomas of the pituitary gland were examined immunohistochemically with antisera against three general neuroendocrine markers and 22 hormones. All cases showed positive immunostaining for neuron-specific enolase, ten cases for synaptophysin, and six cases expressed chromogranin immunoreactivity. Hormone immunoreactivity was detected in a few cells in ten of the 14 cases studied and the number of hormones demonstrated in each case was one or two. Thyroid-stimulating hormone was detected in five of the 14 cases, gastrin in four, beta-endorphin in two, calcitonin gene related peptide in one, prolactin in one, and follicle-stimulating hormone in one.
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PMID:Null cell adenomas of the pituitary gland. An immunohistochemical study. 276 82

The effects of intracerebroventricular or intracarotid injection of synthetic rat calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) on growth hormone (GH) secretion induced by various stimuli in male rats were examined. CGRP (2.5 or 5 micrograms/rat intracerebroventricularly, i.c.v.) was administered 10 min before beta-endorphin (0.5 microgram/rat i.c.v.) or morphine (1 mg/kg intracarotidly, i.a.) or clonidine (0.25 mg/kg i.a.) or GH-releasing hormone (GHRH1-40; 2 micrograms/kg i.a.). When injected peripherally, CGRP (10 micrograms/rat, i.a.) was administered 5 min before morphine or GHRH. To investigate the possible involvement of somatostatin (SRIF) in the inhibition of GH secretion by CGRP, the effect of the peptide on GHRH-induced GH release was also examined in rats with hypothalamic SRIF depletion obtained by pretreatment (4 h before) with cysteamine (300 mg/kg subcutaneously). Blood samples for hormone determination were drawn from freely moving rats at various times before and after drug treatment. The intracerebroventricular administration of CGRP (5 micrograms/rat) significantly inhibited GH secretion induced by all the stimuli used. In rats with SRIF depletion CGRP did not modify the stimulation of GH by GHRH. When CGRP was administered intracarotidly, even the dose of 10 micrograms/rat did not reduce the GH release induced by GHRH or morphine. The effects of intracerebroventricular CGRP on basal or beta-endorphin-induced prolactin release were also examined. When given intracerebroventricularly, the peptide did not modify prolactin secretion. The present results indicate that CGRP has a central inhibitory role in the control of GH secretion, probably through a stimulation of SRIF release.
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PMID:Evidence of a central inhibition of growth hormone secretion by calcitonin gene-related peptide. 278 61


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