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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A radioimmunological method for the sensitive estimation of plasma
corticotropin
immunoreactivity (ACTH) using commercially available reagents is presented. The method involves silica extraction of
corticotropin
from plasma, desorption with acid protein solution, neutralization and subsequent radiomimmunoassay (RIA). [125I]
corticotropin
is added as internal standard to the plasma sample. The amounts of
corticotropin
extractable with silica differed considerably between the plasma samples of individual subjects. There were marked differences in the affinity of five different
corticotropin
standards to the antiserum used. The detection limit of the method was found to be 1.47 pmol/l. Blanks arising in water and in charcoal stripped serum were lower than the detection limit. Precision and accuracy were within the range commonly achieved for RIA-methods. Morning levels of normal subjects ranged from 6.5-10.9-18.5 pmol/l.
Hydrocortisone
infusion suppressed plasma
corticotropin
from 12.6 +/- 6.4 (S.D.) to 4.4 +/- 3.1 (S.D.) pmol/l. Infusion of metyrapone increased
corticotropin
levels from 7.3 +/- 4.2 (S.D.) to 15.3 +/- 6.0 (S.D.) pmol/l.
...
PMID:Evaluation of a sensitive radioimmunoassay of plasma corticotropin using commercial reagents. 626 Aug 90
Cortisol
and luteinizing hormone (LH) were measured in serum after the administration of
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
to suckled (S) and nonsuckled (NS) beef cows. Blood was sampled on 2 consecutive days every 2 weeks for four bleeding periods starting 14 days after calving. Cows were injected with 200 IU ACTH or saline in a 2-day switchback design. Serum was collected before ACTH or saline injection and at 30-min intervals thereafter for 8 hours. Average cortisol concentrations in serum were similar in S and NS cows (6.4 +/- .6 and 6.1 +/- .8 ng/ml, respectively) after saline. Average cortisol concentrations in serum collected during an 8-hr period after ACTH on days 14, 28, 42 and 56 postpartum were 24.7 +/- 2.4, 31.8 +/- 3.5, 36.4 +/- 4.2 and 40.7 +/- .5 ng/ml, respectively, for S cows, and 31.1 +/- 2.9, 44.7 +/- 5.2, 45.0 +/- 5.7 and 46.0 +/- 5.4 ng/ml, respectively, for NS cows.
Cortisol
response to ACTH, measured as area under the response curve, was greater (P less than .05) in NS than in S cows. Amount of cortisol released by 200 IU ACTH was maximal by days 28 to 29 postpartum in NS cows, but the response increased gradually between days 14 to 15 and days 56 to 57 in S cows. overall, LH in serum averaged .55 +/- .08 ng/ml for S cows and .92 +/- .06 ng/ml for NS cows after saline, and .49 +/- .07 ng/ml for S cows and .94 +/- .06 ng/ml for NS cows after ACth. Although mean and peak serum LH concentrations did not differ between cows given ACTH and those given saline, the number of LH peaks and the number of cows having LH after saline. Mean serum LH concentrations were lower (P less than. 05) in S than in NS cows at 28 days postpartum. The number of LH peaks was lower (P less than .05) and the magnitude of the largest LH peak tended to be lower (P less than .06) in S cows at all sampling periods.
...
PMID:Cortisol and luteinizing hormone after adrenocorticotropic hormone administration to postpartum beef cows. 626 2
The effect of acute fat feeding on the response of two fractions of lipoprotein lipase in heart was explored. In rats, previously fasted, lipoprotein lipase activity released into the perfusate by heparin increased approximately 50% 4 h after fat feeding. The lipase activity remaining in the heart tissue after heparin perfusion showed no significant difference. When rats maintained ad libitum were intubated with glucose 2 h before the fat dose, a relatively larger increase (5-10-fold) in the heparin-releasable lipase activity was observed. The capacity of these hearts to hydrolyze 14C-labeled chylomicrons was also increased 4-5-fold over the controls. Fat ingestion has been reported to elevated plasma corticosteroid levels in rats. When adrenalectomized rats were fed fat, no significant changes in the heparin-releasable lipase activity were observed
Hydrocortisone
and
corticotropin
treatment increased the heparin-releasable lipase activity to the same degree as observed with fat feeding. These data suggest that the increase in heart lipoprotein lipase activity following fat feeding is mediated via corticosteroids.
...
PMID:Hormonal mediation of rat heart lipoprotein lipase activity after fat feeding. 627 Dec 34
Milk cortisol and prolactin concentrations were measured in 12 lactating Holstein cows for 3 days (Experiment 1). On day 3, cows were divided randomly into groups: IV1, IV4, IM, and control. Group IV1 received one intravenous injection of 49 IU
adrenocorticotropin
, group IV4 the same dosage four times at 2-h intervals, group IM 240 IU
adrenocorticotropin
intramuscularly, and control cows were injected with saline.
Cortisol
concentrations in blood plasma were increased in all groups following
adrenocorticotropin
injection, while milk cortisol concentrations increased fourfold in groups IV4 and IM and remained unchanged in group IV1. In Experiment 2, infusion of 18% saline into the mammary gland of three cows increased the somatic cell count in the infused quarter but had no effect on prolactin and cortisol of milk or plasma. In Experiment 3, six cows each were assigned to treatment groups of saline controls, IV2-0 (40 IU
adrenocorticotropin
intravenously at 0 and 2 h post-milking) or IV2-8 (40 IU
adrenocorticotropin
intravenously at 8 and 10 h post-milking). Half udders of each cow were milked before treatment and 4 h later. Increases of cortisol in plasma increased cortisol concentrations of milk 4 h after each treatment (IV2-0 and IV2-8). However, by 12 h after treatment in IV2-0 cortisol concentrations of milk had returned to normal. Increases in adrenal cortisol secretion are followed rapidly (within 4 h) by increased cortisol concentrations in milk. However, these decline rapidly in the absence of sustained increments in blood cortisol. Increased cortisol concentrations in milk most likely represent sustained elevation in plasma cortisol.
...
PMID:Effect of adrenocorticotropin on milk and plasma cortisol and prolactin concentrations. 627 35
Increased
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
levels after bilateral adrenalectomy could be secondary to a pituitary tumor, under replacement with cortisol, or an abnormality in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal feedback loop. To distinguish between these possibilities, ACTH levels were measured before and after cortisol infusion (20 mg/h for 4 hours) in five groups: normal volunteers; patients with idiopathic adrenal insufficiency; and with bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome with no roentgenographic evidence of pituitary tumor, with pituitary tumors, and with equivocal roentgenographic studies (suspect pituitary tumors). Control ACTH levels in all groups of patients were higher than in normal volunteers but there was overlapping.
Cortisol
infusion suppressed ACTH in all subjects but the reductions in the last two groups were less than in the first three. The cortisol suppression test appears to be useful in determining whether increased ACTH level after adrenalectomy is due to a pituitary tumor.
...
PMID:Cortisol suppression test in patients with elevated adrenocorticotropic hormone levels. 627 20
Cortisol
concentrations in milk and blood plasma were measured in 12 lactating Holstein cows following administration of 40 IU
adrenocorticotropin
intravenously (groups 1 and 2) or 4 ml saline (control). Blood and milk samples were collected at 15 or 30-min intervals for 4 h from control and group 1 cows and at hourly intervals for 4 h from group 2.
Cortisol
concentrations in plasma and milk were increased 15 min after treatment and peaked by 1 h in group 1 but remained unchanged in controls. Group 2 cows were sampled less frequently but showed a pattern for plasma and milk cortisol concentrations similar to group 1. The profile of increased cortisol concentrations and of their decline 1 to 2 h later was similar for plasma and milk. These results suggest that cortisol concentrations in milk reliably indicate cortisol concentrations in blood and may be valuable in monitoring stress in dairy cows, depending upon duration of stress and its timing relative to milk removal.
...
PMID:Rapidity of cortisol transfer between blood and milk following adrenocorticotropin injection. 627 10
We examined the effects of synthetic human
beta-endorphin
(beta END) and a stable methionine (Met)-enkephalin analogue on aldosterone and cortisol secretion rates in anesthetized, hypophysectomized, and nephrectomized dogs and compared them to those of (1-39) ACTH. The circulation of the adrenal glands was completely isolated on the arterial and venous sides (Hilton Pouch). The peptides were infused to deliver 3 pmol/min into the aortic "pouch." Blood was collected from the vena caval pouch, which received blood only from the adrenal gland. Secretion rates of aldosterone and cortisol were calculated as the product of adrenal blood flow and venous steroid concentration. Duplicate steroid measurements were obtained during a control period, at 10, 30, and 50 min of peptide infusion and during a postcontrol period. BetaEND increased aldosterone secretion rate from 2.4 +/- 0.5 ng/min (mean +/- SEM) to 3.2 +/- 0.9 ng/ min at 10 min (N.S.), 8.2 +/- 2.5 ng/min (P less than 0.05) at 30 min and 11.0 +/- 3.7 ng/ min (P less than 0.05) at 50 min of infusion.
Cortisol
secretion rate was not affected by infusion of betaEND. Infusion of the stable Met-enkephalin analogue D-alanine2; Metphenylalanine4, Met(O)-enkephalin-ol or saline alone had no effect on aldosterone or cortisol secretion rates. ACTH infusion increased mean aldosterone secretion rate by approximately 215% and significantly stimulated cortisol secretion rate. These results indicate that beta END selectively stimulates aldosterone secretion with a potency similar to that of an equimolar dose of ACTH.
...
PMID:Beta endorphin selectively stimulates aldosterone secretion in hypophysectomized, nephrectomized dogs. 629 40
The plasma patterns of ACTH, beta-lipotropin (beta LPH) and
beta-endorphin
(beta EP), in addition to those of cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHAS), were studied in 139 prepubertal children (subdivided into different age groups) and 38 adolescents (subdivided according to Tanner's pubertal stages) aged 10-16 yr. The adult control group was composed of 23 females and 12 males aged 17-40 yr. No sex differences were found in ACTH, beta LPH, beta EP, and cortisol plasma levels. ACTH plasma levels were slightly lower in the 1- to 3-yr-old groups than in males at 4-5 yr and females at 8-9 yr. No further significant differences were observed in any of the age or pubertal groups, the concentrations being constantly in the adult range. beta LPH and beta EP plasma levels were lowest at 1-3 yr in both males (beta LPH: 2.1 +/- 0.25, beta EP: 1.85 +/- 0.59 fmol/ml, mean +/- SE) and females (beta LPH: 2.8 +/- 0.31; beta EP: 2.41 +/- 0.41 fmol/ml); plasma levels of both hormones increased progressively in both sexes until Puberty 1 stage of sexual maturation, at which time levels were 7.3 +/- 0.78 and 8.69 +/- 1.0 fmol/ml in males and 7.1 +/- 0.34 and 6.76 +/- 0.13 fmol/ml in females; these levels are similar to adult values. A highly significant linear correlation was found between both beta LPH and beta EP concentrations and the age of the subjects; this was not true for ACTH plasma levels.
Cortisol
plasma levels were similar in all groups. DHAS plasma levels increased progressively from 1-3 yr to the end of sexual maturation when adult values were reached. During prepuberty, DHAS levels were significantly correlated with both beta LPH and beta EP, but not ACTH. These data indicate that plasma beta LPH and beta EP concentrations, in contrast to ACTH levels, increase progressively throughout prepuberty and suggest that the processing of the parent proopiocortin molecule or secretion of the processed peptides from the anterior pituitary (or other sources) may change from early infancy to adulthood. Furthermore, the correlation between both beta LPH and beta EP with DHAS plasma levels in prepuberty suggests a role of proopiocortin-related peptides in adrenarche.
...
PMID:Proopiocortin-related peptide plasma levels throughout prepuberty and puberty. 630 36
Adrenocorticotropic hormone
(
ACTH
) levels were compared before and after submaximal and exhaustive isotonic exercise in six normally active college students (3 men and 3 women). Each subject participated in three experiments conducted at the same morning hour. Venous plasma was obtained before and immediately after 20-min runs at 65 and 80% of maximal O2 consumption (VO2 max) and after a run of gradually increasing work intensity which resulted in exhaustion (100% VO2 max) in 12.6 +/- 1.3 min.
ACTH
(mean +/- SE) was 48 +/- 15, 57 +/- 12, and 61 +/- 11 pg/ml before the 65, 80, and 100% VO2 max runs, and increased to 61 +/- 15 (NS), 128 +/- 18 (P less than 0.05), and 292 +/- 72 (P less than 0.05) pg/ml, respectively. Plasma glucose, growth hormone, cortisol, and lactic acid concentrations increased in a similar fashion.
Cortisol
and
ACTH
levels were significantly correlated at the higher levels of exertion: r = 0.18 (NS) for the 65% VO2 max run, r = 0.65 (P less than 0.05) for the 80% VO2 max run, and r = 0.64 (P less than 0.05) for the run to exhaustion. Both the change in
ACTH
with exercise and its postrun concentration were significantly related to the change in plasma lactic acid (r = 0.65, P less than 0.05) and the postrun plasma lactic acid (r = 0.64, P less than 0.05). We conclude that exercise-induced increases in plasma
ACTH
and their correlation with circulating cortisol depend on the intensity of isotonic exercise. Our observations also suggest that plasma lactic acid may influence
ACTH
release during exercise.
...
PMID:Plasma adrenocorticotropin and cortisol responses to submaximal and exhaustive exercise. 631 51
In eight experiments in which a paired crossover design was used, we studied the ability of physiologic levels of cortisol to block
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
and vasopressin responses to hypotension in fetal lambs. On different days, each fetus received a 4-hour infusion of cortisol or ethanol-saline solution vehicle, and then hypotension was induced with nitroprusside. Mean levels of ACTH before manipulation were 20 +/- 10 pg/ml and 18 +/- pg/ml in the saline solution- and cortisol-treated animals, respectively. Mean values of ACTH increased significantly to 70, 88, and 127 pg/ml at 2.5, 5, and 10 minutes of hypotension after pretreatment with saline solution.
Cortisol
pretreatment abolished the fetal ACTH response to hypotension. Mean levels of vasopressin during the control period were similar in the two groups of animals (5.7 +/- 1.5 pg/ml versus 5.9 +/- 1.3 pg/ml) and rose to comparable levels (69.4 +/- 15.6 pg/ml versus 65.2 +/- 7.7 pg/ml) during hypotension. Thus, increases in plasma cortisol levels within a physiologic range can suppress hypotension-induced ACTH but not vasopressin release in the fetus.
...
PMID:Cortisol infusion blocks adrenocorticotropic hormone but not vasopressin responses to hypotension in fetal lambs. 632 Jun 43
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