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)

Fifty-two percent of patients with chronic heavy intake of ethanol had an abnormally low growth hormone (GH) response to propranolo-glucagon. The effect of ethanol is transient, since the GH response was normal in patients studied 2 wk or more after withdrawal of ethanol. The low GH response was not due to a difference in the levels of glucose or insulin. Ethanol probably suppresses the GH response by acting on the hypothalamus or pituitary gland. Along with previous data suggesting transient ACTH deficiency in chronic alcoholic patients, our findings suggest that these patients may have multiple hypothalamic-pituitary deficiencies.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1978 Jul
PMID:Transient suppression of growth hormone secretion after chronic ethanol intake. 35 54

An insulin radioreceptor assay (RRA) using human placental microsomal membranes was used to measure insulin-like activity (ILA) extracted from human plasma concentrates (Cohn fraction IV-4) by acid ethanol. The soluble activity (ILAs), chromatographed on Sephadex G-75 in 1 M acetic acid, migrated as a small molecule (fractional elution volume, 0.56) ahead of insulin (fractional elution volume, 0.70), whereas at neutral pH, ILAs migrated as a large molecular weight species. The ILAs peak from acid gel filtration on Sephadex was further purified by chromatography on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC). The ILAs peak from both Sephadex and CMC diluted parallel to the porcine insulin standard in the insulin RRA and was totally unreactive in an insulin RIA. The CMC-purified material was iodinated and purified by binding to and elution from human placental membranes. The binding of [125I]ILAs to human placental membranes was inhibited only minimally by insulin and proinsulin and not at all by epidermal growth factor, nerve growth factor, glucagon, or lactogenic hormones, including human growth hormone. Multiplication-stimulating activity (MSA) inhibited in a manner parallel to ILAs. A Scatchard plot of the binding data was nonlinear. Sephadex ILAs was subjected to isoelectric focusing. The fractions assayed in both insulin and ILAs RRAs yielded comparable results. Peaks of ILA were observed at pHs 5.3, 6.6, and 8.4. When CMC-ILA was subjected to isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide, a single peak of activity migrating between pH 6.2-6.8 was seen. [125I]ILAs focused at exactly the same pH. Electrophoresis of CMC-ILAs in acid-urea revealed a sharp peak of activity migrating with one of the five protein bands seen after staining. Again, [125I]ILAs comigrated with unlabeled ILAs. The molecular weight of ILAs, as determined on a calibrated Sephadex G-150 column at neutral pH, was 9,000-10,000 daltons. CMC-ILAs stimulated [14C]glucose incorporation into triglycerides of rat adipose tissue and augmented [3H]thymidine incorporation into human fibroblasts, chicken embryo fibroblasts, and BALB 3T3 cells as well as [35S]sulfate incorporation into macromolecules of rabbit chondrocyte culture medium. In summary, ILAs isolated on the basis of a RRA for insulin is a slightly acidic peptide with some of the biological activities expected of a somatomedin.
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PMID:Partial purification, characterization, and assay of a slightly acidic insulin-like peptide (ILAs) from human plasma. 40 Jul 41

Because in the dog, the gastric fundus contains the largest amount of glucagon immunoreactivity (IRG), the IRG of mucosal scrapes of 105 canine stomachs was extracted by acid-ethanol and then precipitated by ether-ethanol. The IRG recovered was measured by antisera 30K, specific for glucagon and K-4023, which cross-reacts with glucagon-like immunoreactivity. Extracts of mucosa of stomach fundus were further purified by gel filtration on Bio-Gel P-30 in 3M acetic acid. One pooled fraction corresponding to marker pancreatic glucagon in its elution volume was then gel-filtered on Bio-Gel P-30 in 0.05 M NH(4)HCO(3) and yielded one IRG peak, which, however, showed three immunoreactive components on polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis in urea. In addition, antiserum K-4023 reacted more strongly with that peak than antiserum 30K indicating the presence of glucagon-like immunoreactivity in this fraction. Subsequent ion-exchange column chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-25 and then CM-Bio-Gel A allowed purification to a single protein band on disc gel electrophoresis reacting equally to both antisera 30K and K-4023. 1.5 mug of purified gastric glucagon was obtained and its biological effects were compared to those of pancreatic glucagon in isolated rat hepatocytes. When immuno-equivalent amounts (300-2,500 pg/ml) of either type of glucagon were used, the same biological responses with respect to glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis as well as urea, lactate, and pyruvate production were observed. Liver cyclic AMP was also raised to the same extent by either one of these hormones. We conclude that this moiety of gastric IRG is apparently identical to pancreatic glucagon because (a) their molecular weights, elution properties in ion exchange chromatography, and their electrophoretic mobility are indistinguishable and (b) both hormones elicited identical biological effects in isolated rat hepatocytes.
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PMID:Identical biological effects of pancreatic glucagon and a purified moiety of canine gastric immunoreactive glucagon. 42 72

Acute oral administration of ethanol (150 and 750 mg/100g) to fasted rats produced dose-related inhibition of arginine-induced insulin (IRI) release, an elevation of plasma glucagon (IRG) levels and minor effects on blood glucose. In contrast, chronic consumption of ethanol for 10 weeks augmented arginine-induced hyperglycemia and hperinsulinemia. Thus, acute ethanol administration decreased plasma IRI levels at both doses, presumably by suppressing beta cell function; whereas, function of the alpha cell and plasma IRG levels were increased, but only by the high dose of ethanol. In these experiments the effects exerted by ethanol on the pancreatic endocrine responses to arginine infusion varied according to: dose of ethanol administered; duration of exposure to ethanol; and state of nourishment of the subjects.
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PMID:Alterations in arginine-induced pancreatic hormone release: influence of acute and chronic exposure to ethanol. 50 86

A reliable, sensitive, reproducible and specific radioimmunoassay for cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK) has been developed, using rabbit antisera to highly purified porcine hormone. The natural occurring variant of CCK (39-CCK), in which the ordinary CCK is lengthened from its N-terminus by a hexapeptide, labelled with 125J, and repurified by column chromatography on Sephadex G-10 and on SP-Sephadex C-25, was used as tracer. Separation from antibody-bound labelled 39-CCK was carried out using a double antibody procedure. Non-specific interference with the assay system was abolished by ethanol extractions. Highly purified porcine CCK was used as standard. No significant crossreaction was found with gastrin, motilin, vasoactive polypeptide (VIP), gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), natural and synthetic secretin, pancreatic glucagon or insulin. The sensitivity of the assay is approximately 40 pg/ml of test solution. The mean immunoreactive CCK concentration in 45 fasting normal subjects was 222 pg/ml increasing after food ingestion to 480 pg/ml. Somatostatin was able to abolish the stimulated CCK release. Elevated CCK concentrations were found in chronic pancreatitis. Immunohistochemical identification of pancreozymin cells was carried out either in surgical samples or in biopsy material. Approximately 1650 CCK cells per cross-section in the duodenum of humans have been found. The CCK cells usually appeared elongated, oval or pyramidal in shape and were observed to reach the lumen with their apical cell pole.
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PMID:Estimation of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK) in human plasma and tissue by a specific radioimmunoassay and the immunohistochemical identification of pancreozymin-producing cells in the duodenum of humans. 56 41

Since the small intestine contributes significantly to serum cholesterol and very low density lipoprotein levels, acute regulation of lipid synthesis was investigated in isolated rat intestinal cells incubated in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer with 5 mM glucose and [14c]acetate or 3H2O. Incorporation of [14c]acetate into cellular lipids was 6- to 8-fold greater in crypt than in villus cells. In both cell types the distribution of 14C among the various lipid classes was as follows: 52.5% in triglycerides, diglycerides, and monoglycerides; 22.3% in cholesterol; 8.3% in cholesteryl esters; 1.9% in fatty acids; and 15.0% in phospholidpids. In contrast, the medium lipids contained significantly higher amounts of tri-, di- and monoglycerides (61.1%) and lower amounts of cholesteryl esters (2.3%) and phospholipids (11.9%). After saponification, 2/3 of the recovered 3H2O was in fatty acids and 1/3 in cholesterol. Ethanol (10 mM) tripled 3H2O incorporation into cellular lipids but had no effect on [14c]acetate incorporation. Epinephrine and norepinephrine (10 micron), glucagon (10 micron), dibutyryl cyclic AMP (1MM), dexamethasone (1 mM and 1 micron), and cholera toxin (1 microgram/ml) did not affect [14c]acetate incorporation. We concluded that ehtanol stimulates intestinal lipid synthesis; however, in sharp contrast to their inhibition of lipid synthesis in hepatocytes and adipocytes, catecholamines, glucagon, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP do not inhibit lipid synthesis in intestinal cells.
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PMID:Lipid synthesis in isolated intestinal cells. 65 84

Gluconeogenesis by isolated hepatocytes resulted in glucose release but insignificant rates of glycogen synthesis. The effectiveness of precursors was similar for hepatocytes from fed and starved chickens except for impaired gluconeogenesis from pyruvate when compared to lactate in lactate starved chicken hepatocytes. The impairment was caused by limitations in cytosolic NADH production as a result of the mitochondrial location of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in chicken liver. The order of effectiveness of precursors on hepatic gluconeogenesis was generally similar to the effects of precursors on increasing the plasma glucose concentration in vivo. The exceptions were caused by interactions with other precursors in vivo. The alteration of the NADH/NAD+ ratio by ethanol and ATP/ADP ratio by adenosine could play significant roles in the control of precursor conversion to glucose. Physiological glucagon concentrations stimulated gluconeogenesis from precursors entering the pathway both above and below the level of triose phosphates, and its effect were mimicked by dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Previous results on the effects of precursor and glucagon injection on the plasma glucose concentration of chickens in vivo can largely be explained by effects at the hepatic level. Isolated chicken and rat hepatocytes share many common features. Qualitatively the ordering of gluconeogenic effectiveness was similar but quantitive differences existed as a result of differing activities and cellular locations of enzymes. Neither preparation readily synthesised glycogen and the sensitivity to glucagon was similar.
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PMID:Hepatic gluconeogenesis in chickens. 74 98

Different techniques for the extraction and initial purification of porcine gastrointestinal glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) were compared with reference to yield, and preservation of number and pattern of GLI components. The conventional acid-ethanol technique combined with ethanol-ether purification gave high yields and a reproducible pattern of components. Large amounts of tissue were more easily extracted using another technique, based on extraction by boiling, extraction and precipitation with acetone, and--if necessary--salting out. By means of the latter two techniques mucosal tissue from all of the porcine gastrointestinal tract was extracted and subjected to gel filtration. Glucagon-like peptides were searched for using: 1. a radioimmunoassay which quantifies gut type glucagon (GTG), as well as pancreatic type glucagon (PTG), 2. a radioimmunoassay highly specific for pancreatic type glucagon (PTG), and 3. a radioreceptor assay based on binding of glucagon to porcine liver cell membranes. The oesophageal, the fundic, and the antro-pyloric parts of the gastric mucosa contained very small amounts of GLI. The cardiac gland region contained small amounts of a peptide indistinguishable from "true" glucagon. The duodenal mucosa contained small amounts of "true" glucagon and may be a smaller, glucagon-like peptide. The mucosa of the small intestine contained large amounts of both high and low molecular weight GTG and, in addition, PTG of high molecular weight and "true" glucagon. The colon also contained these components with "true" glucagon in high concentrations. Only small GTG and "true" glucagon were receptor-active, the former with less than its immunometric potency.
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PMID:Extraction, gel filtration pattern, and receptor binding of porcine gastrointestinal glucagon-like immunoreactivity. 85 53

A pancreatic polypeptide with some hormonal properties has been purified from chicken and turkey pancreas using acid-ethanol extraction, gel filtration and anion-exchange chromatography. The material has been crystallised. The crystals are monoclinic with space group C2. Preliminary isomorphous replacement experiments have so far provided a single-site derivative with Hg(NO3)2. A low-resolution electron density map phased with this derivative using anomalous scattering considered together with Patterson function calculations suggest that the molecules are partly helical and are arranged as a compact dimer about the crystallographic two-fold axis. The structure and association of these molecules are compared with those of insulin and glucagon, pancreatic protein and polypeptide hormones respectively, which have been studied in great detail.
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PMID:Purification, crystallisation and preliminary X-ray studies on avian pancreatic polypeptide. 91 91

Radioimmunoassay of acid ethanol extracts of the rat intestinal tract showed the presence of glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) from the duodenum to the colon with maximal concentrations in the ileum and colon. Twenty percent glucose instilled in the duodenum at a dose of 2g/kg body weight stimulated a twofold increase in peripheral plasma GLI concentration. When the instilled glucose load was restricted to only the duodenum and jejunum, or to only the ileum and colon, the increase in peripheral plasma GLI was approximately half that seen when the entire gut was exposed to the glucose. It is concluded that the distal gut as well as the proximal gut releases GLI in the rat.
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PMID:The contribution of the distal gastrointestinal tract to glucagon-like immunoreactivity secretion in the rat. 96 99


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