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

Three lambs were used in a repeated Latin square design to determine the influence of isoenergetic infusions of propionate or glucose on portal-drained visceral flux (PDV) of nutrients and concentrations of insulin, glucagon, growth hormone and prolactin. Lambs were fitted with appropriate catheters for blood sampling and maintained on total intragastric infusion of nutrients. Basal VFA, casein, mineral and vitamin infusions (isocaloric and isonitrogenous) were supplemented with an additional 22 +/- .5 kcal/h from propionate, glucose or a combination of propionate plus glucose. Ruminal fluid proportion and arterial blood concentration and PDV flux of propionate increased (P less than .10) by 17 mol/100 mol, .02 mM and 40 mmol/h, respectively, with infusion of an additional 61 mmol/h of propionate. Regression equations predicted that, on a net basis, 67% of ruminally infused propionate and 43% of abomasally infused glucose appeared in portal blood. Arterial L-lactate, beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetate concentrations, and beta-hydroxybutyrate flux were increased (P less than .10) by .34 mM, .20 mM, .50 mM and 4.2 mmol/h, respectively, with infusion of 33 mmol/h of added glucose. Net utilization of glucose by the PDV was approximately 4.4 mmol/h when no glucose was infused. Increased infusion of propionate resulted in a 22.2-micrograms/h increase in PDV flux of insulin (P less than .08) but had no effect on arterial insulin, glucagon and prolactin concentrations (P greater than .10). Arterial growth hormone increased by 3.8 ng/ml with increasing glucose infusion (P less than .08).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of isoenergetic infusions of propionate and glucose on portal-drained visceral nutrient flux and concentrations of hormones in lambs maintained by total intragastric infusion. 220 8

Insulin is the primary short-term hormonal regulator of metabolism in the resting ruminant. The concentration of plasma insulin is positively correlated with energy intake. Diets producing hyperinsulinaemia, direct the balance towards body gain (anabolic). However, in lactating animals, the postprandial rise in insulin is reduced, thereby favouring movement of nutrients to the mammary gland and promoting gluconeogenesis. Similar mechanisms balance the demands of foetal and maternal growth. Glucagon, on the other hand, stimulates both glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis in the liver from glucogenic amino acids, thereby indirectly diminishing protein synthesis in muscle. Homeorhetic hormones from both the pituitary and reproductive glands, play a major role in the long-term control of nutrient partitioning. Oestrogens appear to affect feed intake, promote RNA and protein synthesis and inhibit gluconeogenesis in the liver, thereby promoting the metabolic adaptations necessary for pregnancy. Progesterone, on the other hand, appears to block the action of the oestrogens at cellular level, and may actually increase feed intake. The pituitary hormones, prolactin and somatotropin, bring about significant improvements in production, especially in milk yield. The action of the somatomedins appears to be responsible for the paradoxical spectrum of effects attributed to somatotropin.
...
PMID:A review of energy metabolism in producing ruminants. 2. Control of nutrient partitioning. 228 91

This paper discusses hormonal and metabolic reactions of healthy volunteers exposed to 14-day starvation. This exposure led to many-fold increase of plasma and urinary epinephrine (E); drastic increase of ACTH and beta-endorphin (BE), morning and integrated concentrations of cortisol and STH, aldosterone, T3, glucagon, cAMP, cGMP, cAMP-cGMP, acetyl choline (AC), free fatty acids (FFA), lactate, metanephrine (MN) excretion; decrease of plasma norepinephrine (NE) and unchanged NE excretion; decrease of plasma concentrations of TTH, T4, T3, prolactin (PL), insulin (morning and integrated concentrations), C-peptide, FSH, LH, testosterone, histamine, prostaglandins (PG) A + E, PG F2, glucose and pH, as well as decrease of excretion of homovanillic acid (HVA), vanillyl mandelic acid (VMA), normetanephrine (NMN) and MN-E, NMN:NE. On recovery day 14 concentrations of E, NE, BE, STH, AC, cAMP, cGMP, FFA as well as E and dopamine excretion remained elevated while concentrations of T3, PL, FT, LT, testosterone PG A + E, PG 2 and excretion of MN, HVA, VMA, MN:E remained decreased, while other parameters returned to the normal.
...
PMID:[Hormonal and metabolic reactions in the human body during prolonged starvation]. 237 73

The cochleae of juvenile guinea pigs were investigated for the presence of several neuropeptides. Glucagon, insulin, CCK and beta-endorphin immunoreactive neurons and nerve fibers as well as hair cells were demonstrated by the peroxidase antiperoxidase technique. Small amounts of substance P were also found in different sites in the inner ear. In contrast, prolactin-like material could not be found at all. These findings have significance with regard to the putative role of neuropeptides in neuromodulation.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical detection of peptides in the guinea pig cochlea. 242 64

Galanin, a 29-aminoacid neuropeptide, was infused for 60 min into healthy volunteers at 7.8 pmol/kg/min (n = 4) or 33.2 pmol/kg/min (n = 6). During the infusion there was no change in heart rate or blood pressure and the only symptoms were a transitory bitter taste and slight hypersalivation. Plasma growth hormone levels rose during the high-dose galanin infusion from 2.8 +/- 0.8 mU/l to a mean peak of 48.5 +/- 19.8 mU/l; prolactin levels rose from 176 +/- 33 mU/l to 274 +/- 33 mU/l. A significant rise in growth hormone also occurred with the low-dose infusion (2.5 +/- 1.1 mU/l to a mean peak of 23.5 +/- 6.6 mU/l). There was no change in cortisol, thyroid-stimulating hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, or luteinising hormone at either dose. 20 min after the start of the infusion a 25 g glucose bolus was given intravenously. Galanin reduced glucose clearance without significantly affecting plasma insulin concentrations. Pancreatic polypeptide levels were suppressed by the galanin infusion but levels of glucagon and gastric inhibitory peptide were unchanged.
...
PMID:Growth hormone release in man induced by galanin, a new hypothalamic peptide. 242 4

A new continuous flow electrophoretic separator for cells and macromolecules was built and tested in laboratory experiments and in the microgravity environment of space flight. Buffer flows upward in a 120-cm long flow chamber, which is 6 cm wide X 1.5 mm thick in the laboratory version and 16 cm wide X 3.0 mm thick in the microgravity version. Electrophoretic subpopulations are collected in 197 fractions spanning 16 cm at the upper end of the chamber. The electrode buffer is recirculated through front and back cooling chambers, which are also electrode chambers. Ovalbumin and rat serum albumin were used as test proteins in resolution and throughout tests; resolution of these two proteins at 25% total w/v concentration in microgravity was the same as that found at 0.2% w/v concentration in the laboratory. Band spreading caused by Poiseuille flow and conductance gaps was evaluated using polystyrene microspheres in microgravity, and these phenomena were quantitatively the same in microgravity as in the laboratory. Rat anterior pituitary cells were separated into subpopulations enriched with cells that secrete specific hormones; growth-hormone-secreting cells were found to have high electrophoretic mobility, whereas prolactin-secreting cells were found to have low electrophoretic mobility. Cultured human embryonic kidney cells were separated into several electrophoretic subfractions that produced different plasminogen activators; a medium-high-mobility subpopulation and a medium-low-mobility subpopulation each produced a different molecular form of urokinase, whereas a high- and an intermediate-mobility subpopulation produced tissue plasminogen activator. Canine pancreatic islets of Langerhans cells were separated into subpopulations, which, after reaggregation into pseudoislets, were found to be enriched with cells that secrete specific hormones; insulin-secreting beta cells were found in lowest mobility fractions, whereas glucagon-secreting alpha cells were found in the highest mobility fractions. Results of particle electrophoresis experiments were comparable in microgravity and in the laboratory, since cell densities that overloaded the carrier buffer (resulting in zone sedimentation) were avoided, and a 500-fold increase in protein throughput was achieved without compromising resolution in microgravity.
...
PMID:Continuous flow electrophoretic separation of proteins and cells from mammalian tissues. 244 May 79

After burn trauma, a very marked endocrine response occurs. Almost all the known hormones take part in it. Their response influences very much the postburn metabolic changes and participates in the integration of the body's response with the nervous and immune systems. In this review, mainly the changes in various hormone levels are described, as well as the possible role of the acute phase response after burn trauma, and the communications between the endocrine and immune systems, the cells of the latter are able to respond to various hormonal stimuli and to secrete various hormones themselves. Some of the hormones are very sensitive indicators of the burn stress, e.g., the T3 levels (very low), testosterone in males (very low), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) (very low), ADH, catecholamines, renin and angiotensin II, cortisol (high), 17-beta-estradiol in males (usually elevated). Other hormones are usually elevated, but not always (ACTH, aldosterone, prolactin, glucagon, immunoreactive insulin, beta-endorphin, rT3, 11-beta-hydroxyandrostenedione), but there are hormones that are unually low (T4, FSH, androstenedione, progesterone--the latter especially in females). Calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, growth hormone are sometimes elevated, as well as LH (measured with RIA methods). TSH is usually normal, the biologically measured LH was reported to be low. The levels of the sensitive indicators of burn stress may be used to evaluate the effect of treatment: if the burn patient is properly treated, the indicators may become earlier normal.
...
PMID:Endocrine changes after burn trauma--a review. 251 73

An acquired partial pituitary insufficiency with selective ACTH and GH deficiency was demonstrated in two men aged 47 and 54, for which the clinical course over many years corresponds to Addison's disease. In one of the 2 cases, antibodies to anterior pituitary cell membrane, assayed by an immunofluorescence method with GH3 cells (rat GH and prolactin secreting cell) and AtT-20 cells (mouse ACTH secreting cell) as antigens, were positive. We also present a 55-year-old man with isolated ACTH deficiency associated with transient GH deficiency. In this case, hydrocortisone replacement corrected his subnormal, pre-therapy GH response to insulin tolerance and glucagon propranolol tests, although there was no response of serum GH to L-dops and arginine stimulation test before therapy. Selective ACTH and GH deficiency are very rare and the finding of transient GH insufficiency in a patient with isolated ACTH deficiency suggests that repeated testing while on hydrocortisone replacement therapy is of great diagnostic importance in order to distinguish between selective ACTH and GH deficiency and isolated ACTH deficiency accompanied by transient GH insufficiency.
...
PMID:Reports of two cases of selective adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and growth hormone (GH) deficiency: differential diagnosis from cases with isolated ACTH deficiency associated with transient GH insufficiency. 255 42

Data presented in this study suggest existence of hyperendorphinism in uraemic patients. This hyperendorphinism may be regarded both as a primary beneficial compensatory mechanism counteracting disturbances of the internal environment, while causing secondary harmful side effects, which contribute to the uraemic state. Erythropoietin treatment of uraemic, haemodialyzed patients is followed by marked endocrine alterations (suppression of plasma levels of STH, ACTH, prolactin, glucagon, aldosterone, cortisol and plasma renin activity, elevation of plasma insulin and atrial natriuretic levels, lack of influence on plasma PTH, CT and AVP). It remains to be clarified whether the erythropoietin induced endocrine alterations are due to correction of the existing anaemia or reflect a specific effect of this hormone.
...
PMID:Endocrine abnormalities in patients with endstage renal failure. 256 Mar 46

The development of anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies has been studied in a group of 165 patients who underwent external radiotherapy for tumours of the pituitary or closely related anatomical sites, and who have been observed for up to 10 years. One hundred and forty had undergone pituitary surgery before radiotherapy. All patients received external radiotherapy by a three-field technique, giving 3750-4250 cGy in 15 or 16 fractions over 20-22 days. A combined test of anterior pituitary function using insulin hypoglycaemia or glucagon stimulation in conjunction with thyrotrophin and gonadotrophin releasing hormone tests and basal estimations of prolactin, thyroid hormones and testosterone or oestradiol was performed before radiotherapy. This was repeated six and 12 months later and subsequently annually. Before radiotherapy, 18 per cent of patients had normal growth hormone secretion, 21 per cent had normal gonadotrophin secretion, 57 per cent had normal corticotrophin reserve and 80 per cent had normal thyrotrophin secretion. Life table analysis demonstrated increasing incidences of all anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies with time: by five years all patients were growth hormone deficient, 91 per cent were gonadotrophin deficient, 77 per cent were corticotrophin deficient and 42 per cent were thyrotrophin deficient. At eight years, respective incidences of deficiencies were 100, 96, 84 and 49 per cent. Radiation-induced hyperprolactinaemia was seen in 73 patients; mean serum prolactin concentration rose from 227 +/- 11 mU/l to a peak of 369 +/- 60 mU/l at two years and subsequently declined towards the basal value. The primary diagnosis, patient age, sex, irradiated tissue volume and previous surgery were examined as variables that might influence the rate of development of anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies, but none of these factors had a significant effect. The radiation induced hyperprolactinaemia was however more marked in female patients. Although anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies most commonly developed in the order growth hormone, gonadotrophin, corticotrophin, thyrotrophin (61 per cent of patients), other sequences were evident. Most notably corticotrophin deficiency occurred before gonadotrophin deficiency. There is a high incidence of anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies in patients treated surgically for pituitary tumours and the incidence increases after external radiotherapy. Deficiencies may occur in an unpredictable sequence and endocrine testing is recommended on an annual basis.
...
PMID:Hypopituitarism following external radiotherapy for pituitary tumours in adults. 259 55


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>