Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is regulated by stress-related excitatory inputs, and various inhibitory and negative-feedback controls by glucocorticoids and opioids, including pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived peptides. The role of POMC-derived peptides of pituitary origin in the modulation of brain POMC mRNA expression and opioid receptor binding was investigated using a line of transgenic mice that express a fusion gene composed of the pituitary expression-specific promoter region of the POMC gene driving the herpes simplex viral-1 thymidine kinase (TK). Male adult mice were treated with the antiherpes agent ganciclovir that selectively ablates cells expressing TK. Following treatment, POMC mRNA levels, measured by quantitative solution hybridization/RNase protection assays, were decreased by 48% in the pituitary of the TK+/+ mice, reflecting an expected loss of the pituitary corticotrope POMC cells. This treatment also significantly lowered pituitary beta-endorphin immunoreactivity content and plasma concentrations of corticosterone. In contrast, POMC mRNA levels were increased by 79% in the hypothalamus of the TK+/+ mice with pituitary POMC cell ablation. Binding of [(3)H]DAMGO to mu opioid receptors, as measured by quantitative autoradiography, was significantly reduced in several brain regions including the central grey, median raphe and superficial grey layer of the superior colliculus. These regions are innervated by hypothalamic POMC neurones. No significant differences in binding to either kappa or delta opioid receptors were found in the brain regions studied. These results suggest that POMC-derived peptides of pituitary origin may exert a tonic negative-feedback effect on hypothalamic POMC neurones. In turn, the downregulation of central mu opioid receptors in this model may be mediated through a mechanism related to hypothalamic POMC overexpression.
...
PMID:Ablation of pituitary pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) cells produces alterations in hypothalamic POMC mRNA levels and midbrain mu opioid receptor binding in a conditional transgenic mouse model. 1157 31

Cocaine administration increases activity at dopamine receptors, increases preprodynorphin (ppDyn) gene expression in the caudate-putamen (CPu), and activates the stress responsive hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. To examine the hypothesis that mu-opioid receptors (MOR) may play roles in these cocaine effects, we tested the effects of acute "binge" pattern cocaine administration in mice with targeted disruption of the MOR gene. Wild-type (+/+) and homozygous MOR-deficient (-/-) mice received three injections of 15 mg/kg cocaine at 1-h intervals. Mice were sacrificed 30 min after the last injection and mRNAs for ppDyn and preproenkephalin (ppEnk) in the CPu and nucleus accumbens (NAc), and for type I corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor (CRH(1) receptor) and pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) in the hypothalamus and pituitary, were measured by solution hybridization RNase protection assays. Cocaine elevated ppDyn mRNA in the CPu, but not NAc, of both the MOR -/- and wild-type mice. ppEnk mRNA in the CPu, but not NAc, was lower in MOR -/- mice than in wild-type mice following cocaine administration. Hypothalamic CRH(1) receptor and POMC mRNAs were expressed at similar levels in untreated and in cocaine-treated mice of each genotype. However, there were lower basal levels of CRH(1) receptor mRNA in the anterior pituitary of the MOR -/- mice than in wild-type mice and the MOR -/- mice failed to show the cocaine-induced decreases in CRH(1) receptor mRNA found in the wild-type mice. Cocaine activated the HPA axis similarly in MOR -/- and wild-type mice, as reflected in similar increases in plasma corticosterone levels in both genotypes. These results support a specific role for MORs in acute cocaine effects on striatal ppEnk gene expression and fail to support critical roles for these receptors in acute cocaine's effects on either ppDyn gene expression or HPA activation. MOR -/- mice are useful models for studying cocaine effects on ppEnk gene expression that could aid interpretation of the similar postmortem phenomena found in human cocaine addicts.
...
PMID:Effects of acute "binge" cocaine on preprodynorphin, preproenkephalin, proopiomelanocortin, and corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor mRNA levels in the striatum and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis of mu-opioid receptor knockout mice. 1212 43

It has been previously shown that corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) exerts antiproliferative activity on an estrogen-dependent tumor cell line, i.e. human endometrial adenocarcinoma Ishikawa (IK) cells. Here we have investigated the effects of CRH on another estrogen-dependent tumor cell line, human breast cancer MCF7 cells. In this paradigm, CRH given at a fixed concentration of 100 nM significantly inhibited cell growth induced by 100 nM estradiol (E2) after 48 and 72 h of incubation. This effect was not associated with the induction of apoptosis. CRH inhibition of cell proliferation was counteracted in a concentration-dependent manner by the non-selective CRH receptor antagonist, astressin, as well as by a CRH-R1 selective receptor antagonist, antalarmin. RNase protection assays carried out on MCF7 under basal conditions showed that these cells express in a constitutive manner the CRH-R1 receptor subtype. We have also investigated the putative source of CRH acting on breast cancer cells; we found that MCF7 cells express CRH mRNA under basal conditions and secrete sizable amounts of immunoreactive CRH, which leads to postulate the existence of paracrine-autocrine inhibitory mechanism operated by CRH in breast cancer cells.
...
PMID:Evidence that corticotropin-releasing hormone inhibits cell growth of human breast cancer cells via the activation of CRH-R1 receptor subtype. 1709 20


<< Previous 1 2 3