Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypoglycaemia increases hepatic glucose output; insulin release is suppressed and the secretion of counter regulatory hormones enhanced. Catecholamines and
glucagon
seem to play a major role. The brain energy content is initially preserved, but the neuronal activity exhibits a 40-60 % decrease. Neither cerebral blood flow, nor oxygen consumption are altered. In addition to glucose, other substrates are metabolized. Cerebral edema may occur. An insulin-storage defect seems to be the main abnormality in insulinoma beta cell function. The most accurate biological tests are the insulin/glucose ratio, stimulation tests and suppression tests such as fasting and insulin-induced hypoglycaemia. Ectopic release of ACTH, HCG, HLP,
glucagon
or gastrin, is observed in some malignant insulinomas. When inconclusive, classic localising procedures may be effected by selective venous-blood sampling. Hypoglycaemia of extra-pancreatic tumors results from glucose hyperconsumption and decreases in glucose hepatic output, lipolysis and ketogenesis, related to secretion of insulin-like peptides NSILAs or NSILAp. Rare cases of hypoglycaemia related to insulin auto-antibodies of unknown origin have been reported. Alcoholic hypoglycemia results from diminished hepatic glycogen content, alcohol dehydrogenase pathway blockade, reduction of gluconeogenesis defect in the alcohol catabolic
catalase
pathway and enhancement of peripheral glucose consumption.
...
PMID:[Mechanisms of spontaneous hypoglycaemia in the adult (author's transl)]. 22 19
A 34-year-old man presented with classic glucagonoma syndrome manifested by weight loss, dermatitis, stomatitis, anemia, and mild diabetes mellitus. The diagnosis of glucagonoma was made by light and electron microscopic demonstration of a metastatic alpha cell carcinoma in a liver biopsy specimen. Plasma
glucagon
concentration was abnormally high. The patient also had symptoms and signs of involvement of the central nervous system. Radionuclide and
CAT
scans of the brain, negative CSF cytology and myelography excluded the possibility of metastases or other space-occupying lesions.
Glucagon
was demonstrated in the CSF. We postulate that the neurologic symptoms were due to direct or indirect effect of this hormone on the brain. Following therapy with streptozotocin and 5-fluorouracil, the patient had a subjective and objective clinical and hormonal remission of his disease including amelioration of his neurological impairment.
...
PMID:Neurologic involvement in glucagonoma syndrome: response to combination chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil and streptozotocin. 22 32
Seventy patients admitted to Waikato Hospital between 1964-74 with acute pancreatitis have been reviewed. Biliary tract disease and alcohol are the most common aetiological agents. The disease is most common in middle age. Europeans and Polynesians have similar incidence rates. The diagnosis is frequently not made at admission and most admissions are in the afternoon or early evening. Radiology is helpful in the diagnosis although nonspecific. Abnormal biochemistry is discussed and related to mortality. Additional tests, serum
catalase
/methaemalbumin are promoted to assist in the diagnosis and indicating the severity of the disease.
Glucagon
and Trasylol are discussed as being beneficial in this disease and combination therapy is suggested. The role of surgery is discussed.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis ten years experience in the Waikato district. 108 Dec 8
Recently, it was shown that lipoprotein lipase (LPL) was produced in neonatal but not in adult rat liver. In an attempt to further define the mechanism involved in liver LPL expression, we identified a neonatal mouse hepatoma cell line, BWTG3, capable of producing LPL. The regulation of LPL expression by various extracellular stimuli was investigated in this cell line. Progesterone caused a rise in LPL production by BWTG3 cells. Other hormones tested, such as insulin,
glucagon
, adrenalin, testosterone, and thyroid hormone, had no effect on LPL production. The effects of progesterone on LPL production showed slow kinetics reaching a maximum 24 h after addition. Cotransfection of a progesterone receptor expression vector with a 5'-LPL-
CAT
reporter construct resulted in an induction of
CAT
activity, suggesting that the increase in LPL accumulation after progesterone was linked to transcriptional induction of the LPL gene. Stimuli causing an elevation of protein kinase A activity in the cells also increased LPL production. Three agents capable of elevating intracellular cAMP levels, i.e., forskolin, dBcAMP, and choleratoxin, caused an elevation of LPL production. The increase in LPL activity caused by forskolin and choleratoxin was paralleled by an elevation of LPL mRNA levels, while dBcAMP only induced a small elevation of LPL mRNA levels. The increase in LPL production was shown to be linked to the stimulation of the PKA signal transduction pathway and was apparently transmitted via the transcription factor CREB. No effect of the stimulation of protein kinase C or calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase on LPL production was detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lipoprotein lipase expression in undifferentiated hepatoma cells is regulated by progesterone and protein kinase A. 132 33
Administration of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) to rats results in alterations in liver and serum factors. This study was undertaken to determine the earliest metabolic change(s) associated with DHEA treatment. Serum cholesterol, triacylglycerol, glucose, insulin,
glucagon
, thyroid hormones and hepatic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity were, in general, unaltered in obese Zucker rats after 7 d and 24, 12 and 3 h of DHEA treatment. Malic enzyme, long-chain fatty acyl-coenzyme A hydrolase and
catalase
activities and peroxisomal beta-oxidation rates were elevated after 7 d and 24 h in DHEA treatment, but not after 12 h. Mitochondrial beta-oxidation was not altered. Hepatic mitochondrial state 3 respiration per g liver with glutamate-malate was elevated after 7 d and 24, 12 and 3 h in DHEA-treated rats and was elevated per mg protein except after 7 d. Succinate-supported state 3 respiration per g liver was also elevated after 7 d and 24 and 12 h of DHEA treatment. Mitochondria from rats treated for 7 d had lower levels of cardiolipin and phosphatidylethanolamine and an increase in phosphatidylcholine. Changes in fatty acid composition of these phospholipids occurred after 7 d and 24 h of DHEA treatment. In an additional study, rats were treated with DHEA or DHEA plus ethidium bromide for 3 d. Ethidium bromide inhibited the increase in mitochondrial protein and respiration associated with DHEA treatment. These findings indicate that mitochondrial respiration is the earliest factor affected by DHEA and may be associated with protein synthesis.
...
PMID:Short-term effects of dehydroepiandrosterone treatment in rats on mitochondrial respiration. 182 28
Isolation and culture techniques for hepatocytes from whole livers of the cynomolgus monkey, Macaca fascicularis, are described. Hepatocytes were isolated by two-step perfusion of livers, using collagenase with hyaluronidase; fructose and trypsin inhibitor were included to reduce cell loss. Yields from a single liver average 4 X 10(9) cells with viabilities of 90.8 +/- 5.7%. Cells, plated on collagen substrates, were assessed for changes in morphology and various marker enzyme activities over a period of 7 d in culture. Cells exhibited a morphology similar to that observed for this species in vivo; little change in attached and spread cells was observed over the length of time monitored. Enzyme activities for
catalase
, succinate dehydrogenase, and tyrosine aminotransferase were observed to decrease significantly (though considerable activity remained), whereas acid phosphatase and 5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase remained unchanged. Activity of cytochrome P-450 reductase was observed to increase slightly for the first 2 d, then decrease to about 60% of initial levels. Activity of alpha-mannosidase was stable for 4 d but was observed to be increased at Day 7. Cells were observed to retain metabolic responsiveness, demonstrated by glucose production by both gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis in response to
glucagon
stimulation. The monkey hepatocytes obtained by methods described here thus retain hepatocellular morphology and activity through at least 1 wk in culture without medium or culture modification.
...
PMID:Isolation and culture of hepatocytes from the cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis). 197 77
The effects of
glucagon
, heparin, urokinase, thromboxane synthetase inhibitor (OKY-046), and the free radical scavengers, superoxide dismutase and
catalase
(SOD +
CAT
), on the viability of ischemic intestine were evaluated based on various parameters measured. The mucosal blood flow, the fluorescence pattern, and the histopathological findings in a rabbit model with 3.5 hr total vascular occlusion of a short small intestine indicated that
glucagon
improved the ischemic intestine.
Glucagon
increased, tremendously, the mucosal blood flow by 112% in the ischemic intestine compared with that of 25% in the nonischemic intestine. This indicated that vascular spasm, not reperfusion injury or thrombosis, played the initial role in the progression of transmural bowel necrosis. In addition, the outcome in the viability of the ischemic intestine was not detected by the fluorescence technique but was able to be detected through the mitochondrial morphology under the electron microscope.
...
PMID:Does glucagon improve the viability of ischemic intestine? 226 88
Reactive oxygen species mediate injury and inflammation in many tissues. The addition of xanthine and xanthine oxidase to perfused rat lungs led to increases in peak airway pressure and perfusion pressure, pulmonary edema, and increased protein content in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Treatment with 1-10 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a widely distributed neuropeptide, markedly reduced or totally prevented all signs of injury. Simultaneously, VIP also diminished or abolished the associated generation of arachidonate products. Similar protection was provided by
catalase
(100 micrograms/ml) but not by the VIP-related peptides secretin or
glucagon
. The pulmonary vasodilator papaverine (0.15 mg/ml) was also ineffective. Injured lungs that were not treated with VIP released large amounts of this peptide in the perfusate. The results indicate that VIP has potent protective activity against injury triggered by xanthine/xanthine oxidase and may be a physiological modulator of inflammatory tissue damage associated with toxic oxygen metabolites.
...
PMID:Vasoactive intestinal peptide prevents lung injury due to xanthine/xanthine oxidase. 238 32
Culturing sympathetic ganglion neurons in vitro may modify phenotypic expression of some neurotransmitters. For dorsal root ganglia (DRG), contradictory results have been reported; most studies have used immature material. We have therefore performed a detailed immunocytochemical analysis of the transmitter content of cultured adult rat DRG neurons. To demonstrate possible modifications of neurotransmitter phenotypes, we have compared the results obtained with the same techniques on neurons cultured for 3 days and on freshly dissociated DRG cells. Also, the transmitter profile of cultured neurons was compared with that known from in situ studies. Out of 22 antigens studied, 20 were detected in cultured DRG neurons. All of them were expressed in small and/or intermediate-sized cells. Large neurons only contained CGRP, VIP, NPY, beta-END, ENK, and GABA. The percentage of immunostained neurons varied for the various antisera: less than 10% of cultured neurons were positive for ENK, beta-LPH, beta-END, DYN, VASO, and
OXY
; 10-30% for SOM, CCK,
CAT
, and SP; and greater than 30% for NPY, CRF, GLU, NT, VIP, GABA, GRP, CGRP, 5-HT, and TRH. In the latter two groups of transmitters (except CGRP), the proportion of immunoreactive neurons was by far larger in cultured than in freshly dissociated DRG. The most pronounced (greater than 25%) increase in the proportion of positively stained neurons after culturing was observed for the GRP, CRF, TRH, and 5-HT antisera. Serotonin was the only transmitter identified in cultured but not in freshly dissociated cells. These data indicate, on one hand, that various antigens, for example,
CAT
, GABA, NT, TRH, NPY, beta-LPH, and beta-END, which up to now have not been described in DRG in situ, can be detected immunocytochemically a few hours after dissociation of adult rat DRG. On the other hand, several transmitters, for example, VIP, NPY, SP, GABA, GLU, NT, GRP, CRF, TRH, and 5-HT, are expressed in a significantly higher proportion of cells in cultured than in freshly dissociated preparations. This might reflect a change in the phenotypic expression of transmitters due to the new environment generated by the culture conditions, a hypothesis that can be tested by measuring specific mRNA levels. Moreover, considering the plasticity and multipotentiality of their transmitter phenotype, cultured adult DRG neurons might represent an interesting material for autografts into the injured central nervous system.
...
PMID:Neurotransmitter phenotype plasticity in cultured dissociated adult rat dorsal root ganglia: an immunocytochemical study. 256 40
1. Two directly-acting stimulants of soluble guanylate cyclase, glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM) and sodium azide (10 microM), and a receptor-mediated stimulant of particulate guanylate cyclase, atriopeptin II (10 nM), each elevated the cyclic GMP content of primary cultures of pig aortic endothelial cells without affecting the cyclic AMP content. 2. Two receptor-mediated stimulants of adenylate cyclase,
glucagon
(1 microM) and isoprenaline (10 microM), had no effect on the cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP content of these cells, but the directly acting stimulant, forskolin (30 microM), induced a small increase in cyclic AMP content. 3. Three agents that release endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF); bradykinin (0.1 microM), ATP (10 microM) and ionophore A23187 (0.1 microM), each markedly elevated the cyclic GMP content of pig aortic endothelial cells, but acetylcholine (1 microM) had no effect. None of these agents had any effect on cyclic AMP content. 4. Two agents that potentiate the actions of EDRF; M & B 22948 (100 microM) and superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1), each elevated the cyclic GMP content of pig aortic endothelial cells without affecting the cyclic AMP content. Pretreating cells with
catalase
(100 units ml-1) did not affect the rise in cyclic GMP content induced by superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1). 5. Pretreatment of pig aortic endothelial cells with haemoglobin (10 microM) reduced the resting content of cyclic GMP and blocked the increase in cyclic GMP content induced by glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM), sodium azide (10 microM), bradykinin (0.1 microM), ATP (10 microM), ionophore A23187 (0.1 microM), M & B 22948 (100 microM) and superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1), but not that induced by atriopeptin II (10 nM). 6. Pretreatment of pig aortic endothelial cells with an inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase, methylene blue (20 microM), had no effect on the resting content of cyclic GMP. Methylene blue (20 microM) blocked the increase in cyclic GMP content induced by glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM), M & B22948 (100 microM) and bradykinin (0.1 microM), but not that induced by atriopeptin II (10 nM). 7. The data show that soluble guanylate cyclase, particulate guanylate cyclase and adenylate cyclase are present in pig aortic endothelial cells. They further suggest that EDRF, produced spontaneously or in response to vasoactive agents, elevates endothelial cyclic GMP content by stimulating soluble guanylate cyclase. It is possible that this may serve as a feedback loop by which the endothelial cell modulates EDRF production.
...
PMID:Endothelium-derived relaxing factor and atriopeptin II elevate cyclic GMP levels in pig aortic endothelial cells. 289 77
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>