Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied the role of low plasma somatostatin (SRIF) levels in intestinal calcium absorption (CaA) in man. Plasma somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI; pg X ml-1) rose after a 600-cal test meal (from 22.9 +/- 2 basally to 30.6 +/- 3.6 at 45 min, p less than 0.05), but was not affected by an oral Ca load (264 mg). Under intravenous SRIF (0.15 microgram kg-1 h-1) plasma SLI rose from 3.3 +/- 0.4 basally to 24.5 +/- 3 at 45 min (p less than 0.001). CaA was not influenced under these conditions, whereas insulin levels fell significantly and the levels of PTH, calcitonin, glucagon and GH were not changed. A regulating role of SRIF in CaA seems therefore unlikely for human physiology, since neither SLI is influenced by an oral Ca load, nor is CaA changed under postprandial SLI. The fall in insulin under postprandial-like SLI levels favors the view of a hormonal role of SRIF in man.
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PMID:Low-dose infusion of somatostatin in man--no effect upon intestinal calcium absorption but a fall in blood insulin. 287 94

In six patients with pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP) who were deficient in guanine nucleotide-binding stimulatory protein (Ns) activity, the response to endogenous arginine vasopressin (AVP) was tested during water deprivation. Hourly plasma osmolality (Posm), urinary osmolality (Uosm), and urinary AVP (UAVP) values were compared to those in normal subjects. The Uosm vs. Posm and the UAVP vs. Uosm relationships of the patients were all within the normal range. Four patients with Ns-deficient PHP were subjected to maintained water loads and infused with AVP at three different rates for 1 h each to assess their responses to exogenous AVP. Urinary volume and osmolality values from the final 30 min of each infusion rate were measured. All volume values except 1 were within 1.6 SD of normal, and all osmolality values except 1 were within 1.1 SD of normal. In conclusion, these studies indicate that these six patients with Ns-deficient PHP are not resistant to the antidiuretic (cAMP-mediated) action of endogenous or exogenous AVP, in contrast to the previously documented resistance of patients with Ns-deficient PHP to the actions of PTH, TSH, glucagon, and gonadotropins.
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PMID:Evidence for normal antidiuretic responses to endogenous and exogenous arginine vasopressin in patients with guanine nucleotide-binding stimulatory protein-deficient pseudohypoparathyroidism. 299 79

Single or graded doses of glucagon (Eli Lilly) were given to patients with pseudohypoparathyroidism (PsHP) type I to examine the possible presence of hormone resistance. The doses of glucagon ranged from 0.25-15 micrograms/kg. The following individuals were studied: 13 normal subjects, 5 patients with low erythrocyte N-protein activity (PsHP type Ia), and 7 patients with normal erythrocyte N-protein activity (PsHP type Ib). Two additional patients with treated primary hypothyroidism who were relatives of a patient with PsHP type Ib were also studied. The patients with PsHP type Ia had blunted plasma cAMP responses to all glucagon doses. In contrast, the patients with PsHP type Ib had normal cAMP responses to glucagon infusion. However, the 2 relatives of the patient with PsHP type Ib had clearly decreased cAMP responses to glucagon infusion; both had normal renal responses to PTH and were clinically and biochemically euthyroid at the time of study. Glucose responses to glucagon were normal in both PsHP groups; the glucose response per unit cAMP response was slightly, but not significantly, enhanced in PsHP type Ia patients. Glucagon resistance appears to be a common finding in patients with PsHP type Ia, but not in those with PsHP type Ib. However, the observation of reduced glucagon responsivity in association with familial hypothyroidism in a kindred with PsHP type Ib suggests the possibility that this disorder may also cause disturbances in several hormone systems.
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PMID:Responses to glucagon infusion in pseudohypoparathyroidism. 302 20

Cathepsin-D has been previously reported to cleave intact PTH into PTH-(1-34) and -(35-84) in membranous fractions of rat and bovine kidney. Whether PTH degradation occurs by intact kidney cells, however, has not been examined in detail. We have, therefore, examined this possibility using an opossum kidney (OK) cell line which possesses the characteristics of proximal renal tubules and responds to PTH. PTH radioimmunoreactivity recovered in trichloroacetic acid-soluble products and in fractions eluted from reverse phase HPLC was measured using an antibody directed to the midregion and C-terminus of PTH. In this study, intact OK cells, but not extracellular enzymes, cleaved human (h) PTH-(1-84) into three discrete fragments which were released into the medium in a time- and temperature-dependent fashion. Half-maximal velocity of PTH-degrading activity (PTHDA) was observed at 9 nM hPTH-(1-84). A 1000-fold molar excess of PTH antagonists [hPTH-(3-34) and [Tyr34]hPTH-(7-34)amide] markedly inhibited PTHDA, whereas ACTH, glucagon, or big gastrin did not suppress it, suggesting an involvement of the PTH receptor in PTHDA. This PTHDA was strongly inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride and chymostatin, but not by trypsin inhibitor, elastatinal, or inhibitors of aspartic, cysteine, or metalloproteinases, suggesting that it is due to a seryl chymotrypsin-like endopeptidase. Analysis of chymotrypsin-digested products of hPTH-(1-84) eluted from HPLC exhibited five fragments detected by UV absorbance (210 nm), three of which were measurable by PTH RIA, and each corresponded to the three PTH fragments produced by OK cells. All three fragments were predominantly suppressed in the presence of chymostatin, suggesting that chymotrypsin-like activity is solely responsible for PTHDA in intact OK cells. To further explore the cleavage sites of PTH by chymotrypsin, amino acid analysis of chymotrypsin-cleaved products was performed. The results strongly support the conclusion that a chymotrypsin-like enzyme in OK cells cleaved the hormone between residues 23-24, and 34-35 to produce, at least, hPTH-(24-84) and -(35-84). Lysosomal blockers (chloroquine, ammonium chloride, or monensin) did not affect this PTHDA. Our present study indicates that chymotrypsin-like endopeptidase, but not other endopeptidase or lysosomal enzymes, is responsible for the limited hydrolysis of PTH by intact OK cells.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone degradation by chymotrypsin-like endopeptidase in the opossum kidney cell. 305 60

Phosphorus is the sixth most abundant element in the body after oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and calcium. It comprises about 1% of the total body weight of humans. Eighty-five percent of it is stored in the bone in the form of hydroxyapatite crystal; 14% is in the soft tissues in the form of energy-storing bonds with nucleotides (ATP, GTP), nucleic acids in chromosomes and ribosomes, 2,3-DPG in the red blood cells, and phospholipids in the cells' membranes. Less than 1% is in the extracellular fluids. Phosphate balance is maintained by multiple systems. The gut is responsible for the absorption of two thirds of the 4-30 mg/kg/day of phosphate intake. Absorption sites are all along the gut; in humans the most active site is the jejunum. The kidney filters 90% of the plasma phosphate and reabsorbs it in the tubuli. In states of hypophosphatemia the kidney can reabsorb the filtered phosphates very efficiently, reducing the amount excreted in the urine virtually to zero. The healthy kidney can excrete high loads of phosphate and rid the body of phosphate overload. Through the vitamin D-PTH axis the endocrine system regulates the phosphate balance by influencing the kidney, gut, and bone. Other hormones, including thyroid, insulin, glucagon, glucocorticosteroid, and thyrocalcitonin, play a lesser role in regulation of phosphate metabolism. Because of the complex control of phosphate homeostasis, various clinical conditions may lead to hypophosphatemia. These include nutritional repletion, gastrointestinal malabsorption, use of phosphate binders, starvation, diabetes mellitus, and increased urinary losses due to tubular dysfunction. The clinical picture of phosphate depletion is manifested in different organs and is due mainly to the fall in intracellular levels of ATP and decreased availability of oxygen to the tissues, secondary to 2,3-DPG depletion. The various manifestations of phosphate depletion are listed in Table 2. The treatment of hypophosphatemia consists of administering enteral or parenteral phosphate salts. An important aspect of dealing with the potentially serious effects of phosphate depletion is to prevent the depletion from happening in the first place. Hyperphosphatemia can occur in renal failure, hemolysis, tumor lysis syndrome, and rhabdomyolysis. The treatment of hyperphosphatemia usually consists of fluid administration (in the absence of kidney failure). In chronic hyperphosphatemia, phosphate binders such as aluminum and magnesium salts can reduce the phosphate load. The use of these phosphate binders is limited by their potential side effects.
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PMID:Consequences of phosphate imbalance. 306 Jan 61

The effects of the cytosol activator protein obtained from rat reticulocytes (RCAP) were investigated in a heterologous membrane system--partially purified cell membranes from dog renal cortex. RCAP enhanced the response of dog renal cortical adenylate cyclase to bovine parathyroid hormone (1-34) [bPTH (1-34)] from two- to three-fold. RCAP also enhanced the response to 5 microM arginine vasopressin, 10 microM glucagon, and 10 microM isoproterenol. Analysis of double-reciprocal plots of substrate concentration and enzyme activity indicated that bPTH (1-34) alone and together with RCAP increased the Vmax of the adenylate cyclase enzyme and did not alter the apparent Km of the enzyme for MgATP. Membranes from dog renal cortex contain 42K and 39K proteins that are ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin and pertussis toxin, respectively, and appear to be the stimulatory (Ns) and inhibitory (Ni) guanine nucleotide binding proteins described in many other hormone-responsive membrane preparations. Similar to its effects in rat reticulocytes, RCAP inhibited ADP-ribosylation of Ns and enhanced ADP-ribosylation of Ni. The muscarinic agonist, carbachol, inhibited PTH-responsive adenylate cyclase activity in dog renal cortical membranes and this inhibition was reversed by RCAP. These results indicate that RCAP enhances stimulation of adenylate cyclase by a variety of hormones in a heterologous membrane preparation and supports the hypothesis that RCAP's site of action is common to all adenylate cyclase systems. RCAP may facilitate coupling between Ns and the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase by a pertussis toxin-like effect to inactivate Ni. The dual effects of RCAP upon ADP-ribosylation of Ni and Ns alpha subunits suggest that a binding site for RCAP may exist at a site of homology between Ns alpha and Ni alpha.
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PMID:Enhancement of parathyroid hormone-responsive renal cortical adenylate cyclase activity by a cytosol protein activator from rat reticulocytes. 350 32

The effect of endogenous renal prostaglandins on calcium and magnesium reabsorption was investigated. Renal tubular handling of calcium and magnesium was studied by clearance methods in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley and Brattleboro rats, either intact or thyroparathyroidectomized (ATPTX), before and during prostaglandin synthesis inhibition by meclofenamate, indomethacin, or piroxicam infusion. These three inhibitors had similar effects on calcium and magnesium excretion: A significant decrease in absolute and fractional excretions of both cations was observed in intact Sprague-Dawley rats, and in ATPTX rats of both strains, but not in intact Brattleboro rats. These results suggest an inhibitory effect of prostaglandins on vasopressin-, glucagon-, but not PTH-mediated calcium and magnesium reabsorption. This effect is likely to occur in the thick ascending limb of Henle, which is both a target site for these polypeptidic hormones, and a segment where the bulk of calcium and magnesium is reabsorbed.
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PMID:Decreased calcium and magnesium urinary excretion during prostaglandin synthesis inhibition in the rat. 387 57

The effects of glucagon and PTH on electrolyte reabsorption in the distal tubule were investigated in rats deprived of vasopressin, calcitonin, PTH, and glucagon. Micropunctures of distal tubule, at a late and an early site of a same nephron, have been performed in 23 rats, nine control, seven infused with glucagon (5 ng X min-1 X 100 g-1 b.w.) and seven with PTH (5 mU X min-1 X 100 g-1 b.w.). The Ca and Mg reabsorptive capacity of the distal segment was increased by glucagon and by PTH. Moreover, fractional Na and Cl reabsorption was significantly higher than in control during PTH administration. A K secretion appeared during the administration of both hormones. No phosphate net transport was observed in any group. Finally, the data presented here, together with those previously reported, indicate that the increase of Ca and Mg renal reabsorption observed with glucagon and PTH results from an effect located in both Henle's loop, where the bulk of Ca and Mg is reabsorbed, and the distal tubule.
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PMID:Stimulation by glucagon and PTH of Ca and Mg reabsorption in the superficial distal tubule of the rat kidney. 398 56

We examined whether PTH could increase glucagon secretion in an in vitro system, the isolated perfused rat pancreas. Since the response of the A cell has been shown to be modulated by antecedent exposure to elevated concentrations of glucose, bovine PTH (Beckman 1-34) was superimposed upon 15-min infusions of glucose followed by arginine or upon infusions of arginine alone. In the presence of PTH (44 ng/ml) and when the ambient calcium concentration was 9.0 mg/dl, arginine (168 mg/dl)-induced glucagon secretion was augmented. This occurred regardless of whether arginine was preceded by glucose (150 mg/dl). The glucagonotropic effect of PTH was absent in the presence of a low ambient calcium concentration (3.0 mg/dl). PTH failed to affect glucose-induced glucagon suppression.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone enhances glucagon secretion from the isolated perfused rat pancreas preparation. 399 23

Two biologically active, 34 amino acid fragments of parathyroid hormone interact with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine to form lipoprotein particles. In the lipid-bound form these parathyroid hormone peptides exhibit an increased amount of folded secondary structure and the tryptophan residue of [Nle8, Nle18, Tyr34] b PTH (1-34) amide appears to become buried in a more hydrophobic environment. The lipoprotein particle which is formed has dimensions of approximately 65 X 7 nm but aggregates to larger structures with increasing temperature. Above the phase transition of the phospholipid the peptides no longer affect the morphology of the lipid and the spectral properties of the peptide are not perturbed by the lipid. This is similar to the behavior of glucagon with dimyristoylphatidylcholine. The results indicate that several nonhomologous peptide hormones have common features which allow them to fold into an amphipathic helix and solubilize phospholipid.
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PMID:Formation of water-soluble complex between the 1-34 fragment of parathyroid hormone and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine. 403 Feb 17


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