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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Results of immunocytochemical studies reported by several laboratories suggest that
gastrin
(G-) cells of the stomach show immunoreactivities for various pituitary hormones (ACTH,
met-enkephalin
,
beta-endorphin
and growth hormone) in addition to
gastrin
. By reinvestigating the immunocytochemistry of G-cells we found that these cells exhibited reactivities towards a variety of antisera against enteric, pancreatic and hypophyseal hormones.
Gastrin
cells can also be "immunostained" by antisera towards proteins unrelated to any peptide hormones (e.g. alpha-fetoprotein antiserum) and by nonimmune sera. Thus the specificity of immunocytochemical findings in G-cells seems to be uncertain. According to our findings the polyvalent immunoreactivities of G-cells may be caused by a distinct binding capacity for IgG molecules. This binding of IgG to G-cells seems to be mediated by the Fab fragments of the IgG molecules which may behave like a basic dye and therefore "immunostain" anionic components within G-cells. Thus the significance of the immunocytochemical proof of peptide hormones within G-cells is limited unless extended specificity controls have been performed. The results of specificity controls performed in this study (adsorption controls, use of ascending dilutions of the primary and secondary antisera, comparison of crude antisera and affinity chromatographically purified antibodies) suggest that
corticotropin
-lipotropin related peptides are not contained in G-cells.
...
PMID:Immunoreactivities of gastrin (G-) cells. I. dilution-dependent staining of G-cells by antisera and non-immune sera. 610 69
An endocrine pancreatic tumour that had not caused any endocrine symptoms was examined by histological, immunocytochemical and electron microscopic techniques. The majority of the tumour cells were argentaffin and contained secretory granules of the enterochromaffin cell type. Immunocytochemically a minority of tumour cells reacted to antisera against
beta-endorphin
, met- and leu-enkephalin,
gastrin
, somatostatin and ACTH. The tumour was thus multihormonal, and appeared to be more closely related to the classic Carcinoid tumours of the mid-gut than to most pancreatic endocrine tumours.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy of an argentaffin endocrine tumour of the pancreas. 611 99
Eighty-one primary ovarian carcinoids and intraovarian metastases from six mid-gut carcinoids were examined for the presence of tumor cells immunoreactive with antisera raised against various neurohormonal peptides, mostly of gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) origin. Twenty of the primary and two of the metastatic carcinoids contained such tumor cells. The incidence of tumors with any kind of neurohormonal peptide immunoreactive tumor cells was 53% in the trabecular carcinoids, and 42% in the strumal carcinoids, whereas the incidence was much lower (7%) in the insular type. Immunoreactive pancreatic polypeptide (PP), glucagon, enkephalin, and somatostatin were those neurohormonal peptides most commonly observed in the tumor cells of the primary carcinoids. Those less commonly found were substance P, calcitonin, VIP, neurotensin,
beta-endorphin
, and ACTH. Four metastatic carcinoids were nonreactive with all the antisera used. Cells storing immunoreactive insulin, glucagon, PP, VIP,
gastrin
, substance P, or enkephalin were found in one of the two remaining metastatic carcinoids; in the other only
gastrin
-immunoreactive tumor cells were observed. The occurrence and distribution of tumor cells storing the neurohormonal peptides in ovarian carcinoids are discussed in relation to their possible origin in the ovary and to carcinoids in the gut.
...
PMID:Neurohormonal peptides in ovarian carcinoids: an immunohistochemical study of 81 primary carcinoids and of intraovarian metastases from six mid-gut carcinoids. 611 50
Immunocytochemical methods for light and electron microscopy were used to demonstrate the regulatory peptides present in the endocrine pancreas of the alligator, Alligator mississippienses. The peptides studied included insulin, glucagon (pancreatic and enteric), somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide (avian, bovine and human), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, substance P, metenkephalin,
beta-endorphin
, C-terminal
gastrin
/CCK and gastric inhibitory polypeptide. Endocrine cells were detected using antisera to insulin, pancreatic glucagon, somatostatin and avian pancreatic polypeptide, whereas peptidergic nerves were stained with antisera to vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. All other antisera were unreactive in the alligator pancreas. The peptide-containing structures were identified ultrastructurally by both the semithin/thin and immuno-gold methods. The results showed that five of the regulatory peptides commonly detected in the mammalian pancreas were immunologically recognisable in the alligator. In addition, the ultrastructural appearance of the peptide-containing cells was clearly distinct from that reported in mammals.
...
PMID:The endocrine pancreas of Alligator mississippiensis. An immunocytochemical investigation. 612 17
A study was made of the effect of the low-molecular neuropeptides, leu- and met-enkephalins, thyroliberin (TRH), the C-end tripeptides,
gastrin
(MAF) and oxytocin (MIF) on the content of biogenic monoamines and their metabolites and on the production of humoral antibodies to sheep red blood cells. The action of the peptides enumerated was compared to that of the peptide immunostimulant, tuftsin. All the peptides (upon intraventricular administration) with the exception of tuftsin affect the content of brain biogenic monoamines or their metabolites. Moreover, upon intravenous injection the neuropeptides under study except
met-enkephalin
exert a modulating action on the immune response pattern and intensity Leu-enkephalin, MIF and MAF have immunostimulant activity similar to tuftsin. TRH given in high doses (100 and 150 mg/kg) provokes almost a two-fold decrease in the antibody titer. This peptide has an immunosuppressant effect when administered both intravenously and intracisternally. It is suggested that neuro- and immunomodulator effects have much in common at the level of cell receptors.
...
PMID:[Comparison of the neuro- and immunomodulator properties of low-molecular neuropeptides]. 612 28
A growth-hormone-releasing factor has been characterised and sequenced from a pancreatic tumour removed from a patient with acromegaly. It is a 40-residue linear peptide. Synthetic human pancreatic growth-hormone-releasing factor (hpGRF-40), 1 microgram/kg bodyweight, was administered as an intravenous bolus to six healthy men. hpGRF-40 selectively stimulated growth-hormone secretion. Serum growth-hormone concentrations were increased within 5 min, reaching a peak between 30 and 60 min (20 . 4 +/- 6 . 5 ng/ml compared with 2 . 1 +/- 0 . 1 ng/ml after placebo). Serum levels of prolactin, thyrotropin, luteinising hormone, and
corticotropin
(measured indirectly through plasma cortisol) were not increased after administration of hpGRF-40. Similarly, the concentrations of blood glucose, plasma insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, cholecystokinin,
gastrin
, gastric inhibitory peptide, motilin, and somatostatin were unaffected by hpGRF-40. There were no changes in blood pressure, pulse rate, or body temperature, and no side-effects were noted. The characteristics of this peptide fulfil many of the criteria required of the hypophysiotropic growth-hormone-releasing hormone. hpGRF holds promise for a new approach to the diagnosis and treatment of various disorders of growth-hormone secretion.
...
PMID:Human pancreatic growth-hormone-releasing factor selectively stimulates growth-hormone secretion in man. 612 70
The gastrointestinal tract of the alligator Alligator mississipiensis has been investigated for the presence of immunoreactivity to fourteen regulatory peptides all known to occur in the mammalian gut system. Mucosal endocrine cells reacting specifically with the antisera to neurotensin, C-terminal
gastrin
, somatostatin, bombesin, secretin, pancreatic glucagon and enteroglucagon were detectable, the distribution of these cells being, in general, similar to the mammalian pattern. Peripheral nerve cell bodies and nerve fibres were detected with the antisera to vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, substance P, bombesin and somatostatin again with a distribution similar to that seen in mammals. No immunoreactivity was observed with the available antisera to glicentin, motilin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide,
gastrin
34, cholecystokinin 9-20 and
met-enkephalin
.
...
PMID:Regulatory peptides in the gastrointestinal tract of Alligator mississipiensis. An immunocytochemical study. 613 28
In the brain of adult specimens of the tobacco hornworm moth, Manduca sexta (L), cells immunoreactive for several kinds of neuropeptides were localized by means of the PAP procedure, by use of antisera raised against mammalian hormones or hormonal peptides. In contrast, no such neurosecretory cells were found in the corpora cardiaca and corpora allata (CC/CA); in the CC/CA, however, immunoreactive nerve fibres were observed, reaching these organs from the brain. The neurosecretory cells found in the brain were immunoreactive with at least one of the following mammalian antisera, namely those raised against the insulin B-chain, somatostatin, glucagon C-terminal, glucagon N-terminal, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), secretin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP),
gastrin
C-terminus, enkephalin, alpha- and
beta-endorphin
, Substance P, and calcitonin. No cells were immunoreactive with antisera specific for detecting neurons containing the insulin A-chain, nerve growth factor, epidermal growth factor, insulin connecting peptide (C-peptide), polypeptide YY (PYY),
gastrin
mid-portion (sequence 6-13), cholecystokinin (CCK) mid-portion (sequences 9-20 and 9-25), neurotensin C-terminus, bombesin, motilin, ACTH, or serotonin. All the neuropeptide-immunoreactive cells observed emitted nerve fibers passing through the brain to the CC and in some cases also to the CA. In CC these immunoreactive nerve fibers tended to accumulate near the aorta. It was speculated that neuropeptides are released into the circulating haemolymph and act as neurohormones.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical investigations of neuropeptides in the brain, corpora cardiaca, and corpora allata of an adult lepidopteran insect, Manduca sexta (L). 613 31
The cell source of peptide hormone production and the morphological differentiation were investigated in 18 adenocarcinomas of the lung by immunohistochemistry and/or by electron microscopy. These tumors were found by radioimmunoassay of tumor extracts to contain either one or more of 7 peptide hormones, i.e.
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH), beta- and gamma-melanocyte stimulating hormones (MSH), somatostatin (SS), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP),
gastrin
releasing peptide (GRP) and calcitonin (CT). In a combined adeno- and small cell carcinoma, a considerable number of small tumor cells were positively stained for ACTH, beta- and gamma-MSHs and GRP. In a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with mucin and CT production, these products were localized in some single cells. Electron microscopy revealed secretory granules indistinguishable from exocrine or endocrine types. In another mucin-positive adenocarcinoma with high SS and CT contents, some tumor cells were stained for SS and/or CT. Two distinct exocrine and endocrine type secretory granules were found in the same cells. In tumors with 100 ng or less of the peptides/g tissue, most tumor cells were not stained for the peptides but a small number showed morphological endocrine differentiation. In conclusion, a considerable proportion of the adenocarcinomas of the lung may show heterogeneous differentiation in both endocrine and exocrine directions.
...
PMID:Peptide hormone production by adenocarcinomas of the lung; its morphologic basis and histogenetic considerations. 613 98
A group of the 24-26 paraldehyde fuchsin-positive median neurosecretory cells (MNC) in the pars intercerebralis of the brain of the blowfly, Calliphora vomitoria, has shown immunoreactivity towards three different antibodies to alpha-endorphin, a peptide that corresponds to the amino acid sequence present between residues 61 and 76 of the precursor molecule, beta-lipotropin (
beta-LPH
). The immunoreactive material could be followed in axons within the median bundle, the tract through which neurosecretory material from the MNC is passed down to the corpus cardiacum (CC). The alpha-endorphin-immunoreactive material was observed leaving the CC in the cardiac-recurrent nerve, dorsal to the proventriculus, in the direction of the abdomen. The cells that contain the alpha-endorphin-like material are different from those of the MNC that contain insulin-, pancreatic polypeptide-, and
gastrin
/CCK-like peptides. This finding demonstrates the considerable complexity and peptidergic nature of the MNC and constitutes further evidence that morphinomimetic-like peptides are present in the nervous system of invertebrates.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical identification of alpha-endorphin-like material in neurones of the brain and corpus cardiacum of the blowfly, Calliphora vomitoria (Diptera). 613 86
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