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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The adenylate cyclase system present in a preparation enriched in plasma membranes derived from bovine adrenal cortex was investigated in considerable detail. This system is stimulated by
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
, by biologically active analogs of this hormone, and by fluoride ion. The preparation contains sodium-potassium- and magnesium-dependent ATPases that are markedly inhibited by 50 mM sodium fluoride. Incorporation of a pyruvate phosphokinase ATP generating system into the adenylate cyclase assay medium provided constant substrate levels. In the presence of the ATP generating system, the rate of cyclic AMP formation (basal, fluoride, and ACTH-activated) was proportional to enzyme concentration and was linear with time. Proportionality with respect to enzyme concentration as concerned the hormone-activated adenylate cyclase was achieved only when the ratio of hormone to enzyme protein was kept constant. The temperature optimum of the adenylate cyclase, basal or activated, was approximately 30 degrees. Michaelis-Menten kinetics were observed when the ratio of Mg2+ to ATP was approximately 6:1. Both calcium and
ethylene glycol
bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid completely inhibited the adenylate cyclase system at concentrations of 5 and 0.5 mM, respectively. GTP was inhibitory at concentrations of 10-2 M but had little effect at lower concentrations. Freezing in liquid nitrogen and storage at -60 degrees exerted little effect on the fluoride-stimulated enzyme but lowered hormone stimulated activity. Preincubation in the presence of ACTH afforded a high degree of stabilization of the enzyme system while preincubation with a biologically inactive analog afforded no protection.
...
PMID:Adenylate cyclase system of bovine adrenal plasma membranes. 16 47
A toxicology study was performed in mice given a superpotent alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH) analog. This 13 amino acid derivative, [Nle4, D-Phe7]
alpha-MSH
or NDP-MSH, is a melanotropin which is very slowly biodegraded in vivo and is active at 1/1,000 the concentration of natural
alpha-MSH
. Mice were administered up to 2 mg/kg of the analog daily and weekly over 4 or 12 weeks by both topical application (in 90% DMSO) or by IP injections (in physiologic saline). At the end of this period, no toxic effects were observed in various organs, on hematologic indices, or on weight gain. A slight increase in triglyceride and platelet levels were noted in mice given the analog weekly for 12 weeks. There was no evidence of an effect on behavior nor ACTH-like endocrine actions such as elevated serum cortisol levels. Transdermal drug delivery studies performed in vitro showed reproducible diffusion of the NDP-MSH analog through full-thickness mouse skin. Approximately 0.002% to 0.05% of a 10(-4) M preparation was transdermally delivered using a DMSO/water solution or a
PEG
/alcohol cream base, respectively. This superpotent analog is now entering a Phase I clinical trial with possible therapeutic applications for the treatment of hypomelanotic disorders such as vitiligo and for pharmacologic tanning without the need for sunlight exposure.
...
PMID:Toxicologic studies of a superpotent alpha-melanotropin, [Nle4, D-Phe7]alpha-MSH. 285 52
Using a rat tail-flick analgesic assay that uses a cold water-
ethylene glycol
mixture (-10 degrees C) as the noxious stimulus, we have been able to demonstrate a dose-related, naloxone-reversible analgesic effect for dynorphin A (1-17), the proposed endogenous ligand for the kappa receptor. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted surgically with cannulas in the right lateral ventricle at least 1 week before testing. Five microliters of either drug or saline, followed by a 3-microliter saline flush, were administered. Nociceptive threshold was measured as the latency for the rat to flick or remove its tail from the bath solution after immersion. Dynorphin produced a dose-related analgesia at doses of 1 to 50 micrograms i.c.v., reaching 100% maximum possible analgesia (compared to predrug base line) at the highest dose. We found similar dose-related analgesia when we tested the selective mu agonist [Try-D-Ala-Gly-NMe-Phe-Gly-ol] (0.01-1 microgram), the selective kappa receptor ligand U-50,488H (100-500 micrograms), the selective delta agonist [D-Pen2,5]-enkephalin (50-200 micrograms) and
beta-endorphin
(0.1-10 micrograms). Naloxone (1.0 mg/kg) was able to block the antinociceptive effect of all but the highest doses of dynorphin, which required 10.0 mg/kg of naloxone. When we compared the same dosages of dynorphin using hot water (55 degrees C) as the noxious stimulus, no antinociception was observed. Although we do not known the mechanisms responsible for the differences between the hot and cold water tests, it may be that the cold water tail-flick test, which is able to assess the antinociceptive activity of both opioid agonists and mixed agonist-antagonists, is a more sensitive measure of the type of analgesia mediated by kappa receptors.
...
PMID:Antinociceptive action of intracerebroventricularly administered dynorphin and other opioid peptides in the rat. 290 Mar 24
The Ca2+-dependent association of
beta-endorphin
and trifluoperazine with porcine testis calmodulin, as well as the effects of removing Ca2+ by
ethylene glycol
bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) treatment, were investigated by the procedure of differential kinetic labeling. This technique permitted determination of the relative rates of acylation of each of the epsilon-amino groups of the seven lysyl residues on calmodulin by [3H]acetic anhydride under the different conditions. In all cases, less than 0.52 mol of lysyl residue/mol of calmodulin was modified, thus ensuring that the labeling pattern reflects the microenvironments of these groups in the native protein. Lysines 75 and 94 were found to be the most reactive amino groups in Ca2+-saturated calmodulin. In the presence of Ca2+ and under conditions where
beta-endorphin
and calmodulin were present at a molar ratio of 2.5:1, the amino groups of lysines 75 and 148 were significantly reduced in reactivity compared to calmodulin alone. At equimolar concentrations of peptide and protein, essentially the same result was obtained except that the magnitudes of the perturbation of these two lysines were less pronounced. With trifluoperazine, at a molar ratio to calmodulin of 2.5:1, significant perturbations of lysines 75 and 148, as well as Lys 77, were also found. These results further substantiate previous observations of a commonality between phenothiazine and peptide binding sites on calmodulin. Lastly, an intriguing difference in Ca2+-mediated reactivities between lysines 75 and 77 of calmodulin is demonstrated. In the Ca2+-saturated form of the protein, both lysines are part of the long connecting helix between the two homologous halves of the protein (Babu, Y. S., Sack, J. S., Greenhough, T. G., Bugg, C. E., Means, A. R., and Cook, W. J. (1985) Nature 315, 37-40). Yet, Lys 75 increases in reactivity some 25-fold, compared to only a 2-fold change for Lys 77, in going from EGTA-treated to Ca2+-saturated calmodulin. Thus, the microenvironment of Lys 75 is markedly altered upon Ca2+ binding, and this linker region between the two globular lobes of the protein appears to be quite important in the interaction of calmodulin with inhibitory molecules and perhaps activatable enzymes.
...
PMID:Differential trace labeling of calmodulin: investigation of binding sites and conformational states by individual lysine reactivities. Effects of beta-endorphin, trifluoperazine, and ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. 293 37
The purpose of this study was to determine whether or not vasopressin release in response to various stimuli in the conscious rat is controlled by endogenous opioid peptides, in particular
beta-endorphin
. Naloxone (1 mg.kg-1 i.m.) promoted vasopressin release in response to both an angiotensin II infusion (500 ng . kg-1 . min-1) or an isosmolar, nonhypotensive hypovolaemia achieved by polyethylene glycol injection (
PEG
, 20% solution i.p.); however, naloxone was without effect when vasopressin release was induced by hypertonic saline injection (2.5% solution i.p.) or a severe fall in arterial blood pressure following trimethidinium (10 mg . kg-1 i.m.) induced ganglionic blockade. Vasopressin release was accompanied by an increase in plasma
beta-endorphin
-like immunoreactivity (beta-EI) following an angiotensin II infusion of
PEG
administration, but not after hypertonic saline or trimethidinium injection. Dexamethasone pretreatment (0.5 mg . kg-1 twice i.p.) prevented the increase in plasma beta-EI following an angiotensin II infusion or
PEG
administration. The simultaneous angiotensin II- or
PEG
-induced increase in vasopressin release was unaffected or potentiated, respectively, by the glucocorticoid. In contrast, vasopressin release in response to hypertonic saline or trimethidinium injection was significantly inhibited by dexamethasone. We conclude that an inhibitory control by endogenous opiates is involved in some, but not all of the different pathways leading to vasopressin release. The results obtained do not prove but can be reconciled with the proposal that hypophyseal
beta-endorphin
is the compound responsible.
...
PMID:Vasopressin and beta-endorphin release after osmotic and non-osmotic stimuli: effect of naloxone and dexamethasone. 627 72
We have developed a highly sensitive and quantitative, non-isotopic method of in situ hybridization in which the level of probe binding to intracellular mRNA is determined using an ELISA based detection method. Highly purified cell preparations or cells from a cultured cell line are centrifuged into 96 well microtiter plates. The cells are fixed with formalin and pre-treated with Triton X-100 and
Nonidet P40
before photobiotin labeled cDNA probes are applied. The biotin from the hybridization is detected using multiple applications of streptavidin and biotinylated alkaline phosphatase and then visualized by the p-
NPP
(p-nitrophenyl phosphate) conversion method. We have determined a number of the optimal parameters in the procedure including the effects of cell numbers per well, development times and standardization of data using ubiquitous beta-actin mRNA and poly-A+ RNA expression as controls. We have used the technique to study the level of expression of FcgR mRNA in platelets and precursors. We found that platelets and megakaryoblastic cell lines only express mRNA for Fc gamma RII. The presence of the Fc gamma RII molecules was confirmed by complementary studies using immunohistochemistry with specific monoclonal antibodies IV.3 and KB61.
...
PMID:Quantitation of Fc gamma RII mRNA in platelets and megakaryoblastic cell lines by a new method of in situ hybridization. 820 59
An analogue of human melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) suitable for radioiodination was designed in which Tyr13 and Val19 of the natural peptide were replaced by phenylalanyl and tyrosyl residues: [Phe13, Tyr19]-MCH. The peptide was synthesized by the continuous-flow solid-phase methodology using Fmoc-strategy and polyhipe PA 500 and
PEG
-PS resins. The linear MCH peptides with either acetamidomethyl-protected or free cysteinyl residues were purified to homogeneity and cyclized by iodine oxidation, yielding the final product with the correct molecular weight of 2434.61. Radioiodination of the C-terminal tyrosine was carried out enzymatically using solid-phase bound glucose oxidase/lactoperoxidase, followed by purification on a reversed-phase mini-column and by high-pressure liquid chromatography. The resulting [125I]-[Phe13, Tyr19]-MCH tracer was the first radiolabelled MCH peptide suitable for radioreceptor assay: saturation binding analysis using mouse G4F-7 melanoma cells demonstrated the presence of 1090 MCH receptors per cell. The dissociation constant (KD) was 1.18 x 10(-10) M, indicating high-affinity MCH receptors on these cells. MCH receptors were also found in other cell lines such as mouse B16-F1 and G4F and human RE melanoma cells as well as in PC12 and COS-7 cells. Competition binding analyses with a number of other peptides such as
alpha-MSH
, neuropeptide Y, substance P and pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide, demonstrated that the binding to the MCH receptor is specific. Atrial natriuretic factor was found to be a weak competitor of MCH, indicating topological similarities between MCH and ANF when interacting with MCH receptors.
...
PMID:Synthesis and iodination of human (phenylalanine 13, tyrosine 19) melanin-concentrating hormone for radioreceptor assay. 922 84
A photoreactive analogue of human melanin-concentrating hormone was designed, [D-Bpa13,Tyr19-MCH, containing the D-enantiomer of photolabile p-benzoylphenylalanine (Bpa) in position 13 and tyrosine for radioiodination in position 19. The linear peptide was synthesized by the continuous-flow solid-phase methodology using Fmoc-strategy and
PEG
-PS resins, purified to homogeneity and cyclized by iodine oxidation. Radioiodination of [D-Bpa13,Tyr19]-MCH at its Tyr19 residue was carried out enzymatically using solid-phase bound glucose oxidase/lactoperoxidase, followed by purification on a reversed-phase mini-column and HPLC. Saturation binding analysis of [125I]-[D-Bpa13,Tyr19]-MCH with G4F-7 mouse melanoma cells gave a K(D) of 2.2+/-0.2 x 10(-10) mol/l and a B(max) of 1047+/-50 receptors/cell. Competition binding analysis showed that MCH and rANF(1-28) displace [125I]-[D-Bpa13,Tyr19]-MCH from the MCH binding sites on G4F-7 cells whereas
alpha-MSH
has no effect. Receptor crosslinking by UV-irradiation of G4F-7 cells in the presence of [125I]-[D-Bpa13,Tyr19]-MCH followed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography yielded a band of 45-50 kDa. Identical crosslinked bands were also detected in B16-F1 and G4F mouse melanoma cells, in RE and D10 human melanoma cells as well as in COS-7 cells. Weak staining was found in rat PC12 phaeochromocytoma and Chinese hamster ovary cells. No crosslinking was detected in human MP fibroblasts. These data demonstrate that [125I]-[D-Bpa13,Tyr19]-MCH is a versatile photocrosslinking analogue of MCH suitable to identify MCH receptors in different cells and tissues; the MCH receptor in these cells appears to have the size of a G protein-coupled receptor, most likely with a varying degree of glycosylation.
...
PMID:(D-(p-benzoylphenylalanine)13, tyrosine19)-melanin-concentrating hormone, a potent analogue for MCH receptor crosslinking. 1036 6
Beta-endorphin
is the largest natural opioid peptide. The knowledge of its bioactive conformation might be very important for the indirect mapping of the active site of opioid receptors. We have studied
beta-endorphin
in a variety of solution conditions with the goal of testing the intrinsic tendency of its sequence to assume a regular fold. We ran NMR experiments in water, dimethylsulfoxide and aqueous mixtures of methanol,
ethylene glycol
, trifluoroethanol, hexafluoracetone trihydrate and dimethylsulfoxide. The solvent in which the peptide is more ordered is the hexafluoracetone trihydrate/water mixture. The helical structure detected for
beta-endorphin
in this mixture at 300 K extends for the greater part of its address domain, hinting at a possible mechanism of interaction with opioid receptors: a two-point attachment involving an interaction of the helical part of the address domain (PLVTLFKNAIIKNAY) with one of the transmembrane helices and a classical interaction of the message domain (YGGF) with the receptor subsite common to all opioid receptors.
...
PMID:Solution structure of human beta-endorphin in helicogenic solvents: an NMR study. 1052 84
Rat liver nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase I (
NPP
/PDE) catalysed efficiently the transfer of adenylate from ATP to alcohols (methanol, ethanol, propanol,
ethylene glycol
, glycerol, 2, 2-dichloroethanol and glycerol 2-phosphate), which acted as adenylate acceptors competing with water with different efficiencies.
NPP
/PDE kinetics in alcohol/water mixtures were accounted for by rate equations for competitive substrates, modified to include alcohol negative co-operativity and, depending on the nature of the alcohol, enzyme denaturation by high alcohol concentrations or activation by low alcohol concentrations. The correlation of alcohol efficiencies with alcohol acidities, the comparison of rat liver with snake venom
NPP
/PDE, and the different effects of ionic additives on the efficiencies of glycerol 2-phosphate and glycerol provided evidence for interaction of the alcohols with a base catalyst, a non-polar and a cationic subsite in the active centre of rat liver
NPP
/PDE. The enzyme thus appears to be well suited to act as transferase, and we propose that
NPP
/PDE could be an adenylylating agent in the membrane.
...
PMID:Rat liver nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase is an efficient adenylyl transferase. 1065 35
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