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 surveyed retinas of Raja erinacea, Mustelus canis, and Squalus acanthias for neurotransmitter substances by using antisera directed against the substances themselves or against their synthesizing enzymes. Both the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) and indirect fluorescent techniques were employed to visualize the primary antisera. In all three species positive results were obtained with antisera directed against tyrosine hydroxylase (TOH), glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), serotonin (5-HT), and leucine enkephalin (Lenk). Antisera directed against glucagon, neurotensin, beta-endorphin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, or bombesin failed to show any specific staining. Immunoreactivity was located in amacrine, interplexiform, and horizontal cells as well as in axons of the optic fiber layer. The four antisera labelled different amacrine cell classes, distinguished on the bases of perikaryal morphology and the distribution of cell processes in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). Amacrine cells that labelled with the same marker were seen to have different morphologies in the species studied. Thus, TOH-like immunoreactivity was distributed in layers 1, 3, and 5 of the IPL in Mustelus but only in layers 1 and 3 in Raja retina. GAD-like immunoreactivity was found diffusely over all layers of the IPL in Raja, but in Mustelus it was confined primarily to layers 1, 3, and 5 of the IPL. Lenk- and 5-HT-like immunoreactivities showed similar species variations. Two neurochemical classes of interplexiform cell were identified in this study. In Mustelus GAD-like and Lenk-like immunoreactive interplexiform cells were seen whereas in Raja only GAD-positive interplexiform cells were detected. In squalus no unequivocal demonstration of any interplexiform cell was made with these antisera. The GAD antiserum also labelled a subset of the horizontal cells in the dorsal retina of Raja. TOH and 5-HT-antisera labelled axons in the optic fiber layer of all three species but reactive ganglion cell perikarya were not identified.
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PMID:Retinal neurochemistry of three elasmobranch species: an immunohistochemical approach. 286 65

Studies of brain monoamines and neuropeptides have provided extensive evidence in support of their role in the control of normal eating behavior. In this process, the medial and lateral portions of the hypothalamus, working in conjunction with forebrain and hindbrain sites and with peripheral autonomic-endocrine systems, have a critical responsibility in balancing signals for hunger and satiety. Via its rich and biologically active neurotransmitter substances, the hypothalamus monitors and integrates the complex sensory and metabolic input concerning the nutritional status of the organism and transduces this information into appropriate quantitative and qualitative adjustments in food intake. The specific neurotransmitters for which there is the most extensive evidence for a physiological function include the eating-stimulatory substances norepinephrine (alpha 2), opioid peptides, pancreatic polypeptides, growth hormone-releasing factor, and gamma-aminobutyric acid; the eating-inhibitory substances dopamine, epinephrine, serotonin, cholecystokinin, neurotensin, calcitonin, glucagon, and corticotropin-releasing factor; and possibly other gut-brain peptides. From biochemical, pharmacological, and anatomical studies, hypotheses have been generated to explain the role of these various monoamines and neuropeptides in controlling total energy intake, in determining the amount and pattern of macronutrient selection, and in maintaining normal energy and nutrient stores under fluctuating conditions within the external environment.
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PMID:Brain monoamines and peptides: role in the control of eating behavior. 286 77

A large number of antisera mainly raised against mammalian hormones are tested immunocytochemically on the GEP-endocrine system of mouse and fish (Barbus conchonius). The endocrine pancreas of mouse and fish appeared to contain the same four endocrine cell types; insulin-, glucagon-, PP- and somatostatin-immunoreactive cells. In mouse about 13 GEP endocrine cell types are distinguished: 1. insulin-, 2. somatostatin-, 3. glucagon-, 4. PP-, 5. (entero)glucagon-/PP-like, 6. CCK-like, 7. substance P-, 8. neurotensin-, 9. VIP-, 10. gastrin-, 11. secretin-, 12. beta-endorphin-, 13. serotonin-immunoreactive cells. Based on this and a previous study at least 13 GEP endocrine cell types seems to be present in stomachless fish: 1-9 as described for mouse, 10. (entero)glucagon-like, 11. met-enkephalin, 12. VIP-like, 13. unspecific immunoreactive endocrine cells. Coexistence of glucagon and PP-like peptides is found in the gut and pancreas of mice and in the gut of B. conchonius. In mouse pancreas and fish gut, endocrine cells showing only PP- or glucagon-like immunoreactivity are found too. In mouse stomach some endocrine cells showing only PP-immunoreactivity are demonstrated. In the same region coexistence of C-t-gastrin- and FMRF-amide-immunoreactivity is found in endocrine cells. The importance of these phenomena are discussed. Enteric nerves immunoreactive with antisera raised against substance P and GRP are found in mouse, against somatostatin and met-enkephalin in both mouse and fish and against VIP in fish.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical identification and localization of peptide hormones in the gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) endocrine system of the mouse and a stomachless fish, Barbus conchonius. 287 13

SMS 201-995 (5-100 micrograms) injected subcutaneously in normal and type-2 diabetic subjects 30 min before a test meal caused dose-related suppression of plasma concentrations of insulin, glucagon, and several regulatory gut peptide hormones (gastrin, gastric inhibitory peptide, pancreatic polypeptide, secretin, neurotensin, and motilin). Effective hormone suppression was achieved even at the lowest dose of 5 micrograms. In the normal subjects SMS caused postprandial hyperglycaemia, but there was no overall deterioration in glucose tolerance in the type-2 diabetic patients. This suggests that counterregulatory hormones play an important part in the metabolic disturbance of type-2 diabetes.
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PMID:Postprandial effects of SMS 201-995 on gut hormones and glucose tolerance. 287 9

The effects of various biologically active peptides on net jejunal water and electrolyte fluxes were studied in dogs in vivo. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), glucagon, gastrin, bombesin and neurotensin all had secretagogue activity, while methionine enkephalin stimulated net absorption. Somatostatin had no effect on net basal water and electrolyte transport, but inhibited glucagon-stimulated secretion. Secretin, calcitonin, substance P and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) did not have any effect on net water and electrolyte transport in the doses used in these experiments. The precise role played by these peptides in the control of intestinal transport has still to be determined. Studies in man have confirmed that food in the proximal small bowel stimulates secretion at sites remote from the application of food, and abnormal secretion of some peptides (e.g. VIP) has been associated with diarrhoea. Somatostatin has been used successfully to reduce the volume of certain types of secretory diarrhoea. Methods used in these experiments have been applied to the study of the composition and absorption characteristics of solutions used for oral rehydration in diarrhoea and in exercise-induced dehydration. Glucose polymers have been shown to be absorbed as rapidly as glucose from the jejunum.
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PMID:The effect of luminal and hormonal factors on small intestinal water and electrolyte transport. 287 15

The pre- and post-hatching development and differentiation of the endocrine cells in quail gizzard were examined histologically and immunohistochemically. A total of 158 heads (from 5th d of incubation to adult) were used in this study. The formation of gizzard tubular glands began from 11th d of incubation. 8 kinds of endocrine cells, argyrophil cells, and gastrin releasing polypeptide (GRP)-, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-, somatostatin-, glucagon-, avian pancreatic polypeptide (APP)-, neurotensin-, and gastrin-immunoreactive cells were detected in the gizzard. These endocrine cells began to appear from 10th d of incubation. Argyrophil cells and GRP-immunoreactive cells in the gizzard were increased with age. Other kinds of immunoreactive cells were found rarely and irregularly, and some of them were found transitory in the embryonic stage.
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PMID:Histological and immunohistochemical study on ontogeny of the endocrine cells in the quail gizzard. 288 69

The gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) endocrine system of a stomach-containing and of a stomachless teleost, Sparus auratus and Barbus conchonius, respectively, are studied immunocytochemically using different antisera against mammalian hormones. Insulin-, glucagon-, somatostatin-, and pancreatic polypeptide (PP)-immunoreactive cells are identified in the endocrine pancreas of both species. Only the distribution of PP-immunoreactive cells differed strongly; in the principal islet of both fishes, few PP-immunoreactive cells are present, whereas in the smaller ones many of them are observed in S. auratus and none in B. conchonius. In the digestive tract of S. auratus 10 endocrine cell types can be distinguished: neurotensin-, secretin-, serotonin-, somatostatin-, and two types of substance P-immunoreactive cells exclusively in the stomach, and C-t-gastrin/CCK-, glucagon-, Met-enkephalin-, PP-, and only one type of substance P-immunoreactive cells in the intestinal epithelium. With the exception of substance P-immunoreactive cells, the other four intestinal endocrine cells, as well as an unspecific immunoreactive cell, can also be found in B. conchonius. Coexistence of glucagon- and PP-like immunoreactivity is observed in the pancreas of S. auratus and in the gut of B. conchonius. Pancreatic and gut endocrine cells showing only PP- or glucagon-like immunoreactivity are found, too.
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PMID:A comparative immunocytochemical study of the gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) endocrine system in a stomachless and a stomach-containing teleost. 288 63

The immunocytochemical localization of several substances with putative neurotransmitter or modulator properties was investigated in the retinae of three urodele species. Gamma-aminobutyric acid-like immunoreactive labelling appeared in different types of amacrine and horizontal cells. In addition, labelled fibres in the optic nerve were detected. It was not possible to determine whether these fibres were ganglion-cell axons or part of an efferent projection. Endogenous serotonin was found in several populations of amacrine cells including stratified and diffuse types. Glucagon-like immunoreactivity appeared in one bistratified amacrine cell type, and neurotensin-like immunoreactivity was detected in a single monostratified amacrine cell type. Metenkephalin-like-immunoreactive labelling was type. Metenkephalin-like-immunoreactive labelling was rare but found in several sublaminae of the inner plexiform layer. Thus each peptide-like-immunoreactive cell type makes up a distinct and unique population of cells and probably has a special functional role in retinal processing. There are striking similarities in the peptide-like immunoreactive patterns of Triturus alpestris and Necturus maculosus whereas in Ambystomatidae the peptide-like-immunoreactive systems appear to be differently organized. This supports the hypothesis that Salamandridae and Proteidae are more closely related to each other than to the Ambystomatidae.
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PMID:Putative neurotransmitters in the retinae of three urodele species (Triturus alpestris, Salamandra salamandra, Pleurodeles waltli). 289 93

This study examined the effects of transmural nerve stimulation, acetylcholine, adrenoceptor agonists and several peptides on the contractility of strips of human gallbladder in vitro. Acetylcholine caused concentration-related contractions of the tissues and the sensitivity to acetylcholine was similar in gallbladders with mild and severe chronic cholecystitis. Noradrenaline and adrenaline relaxed gallbladder strips, probably via beta 2-adrenoceptor stimulation. Transmural nerve stimulation always caused contractions, but in the presence of atropine inhibitory responses were demonstrable and these were antagonized by propranolol. There was no evidence of non-adrenergic inhibitory neural responses. Of the peptides tested, only cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-OP), gastrin, pentagastrin, substance P and caerulein caused contractions. Responses to CCK-OP, gastrin and pentagastrin were antagonized by dibutyryl cyclic GMP. Hormones which had no effect upon human gallbladder strips included motilin, secretin, bombesin, neurotensin, glucagon, vasopressin, VIP and somatostatin. Considerable differences therefore exist between human tissues and those from experimental animals with respect to the direct actions of neural and hormonal stimuli on gallbladder contractility.
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PMID:Contractility of human gallbladder muscle in vitro. 297 88

Functional and specific receptors for vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) (determined by their capacity to bind 125I-VIP and activate adenylate cyclase) and cyclic AMP-dependent phosphodiesterase activities were characterized in enterocytes of human fetal small intestine between 18 and 23 weeks of gestation. Half-maximal stimulation of the cyclase and inhibition of 125I-VIP binding in membrane preparations were respectively observed at 1.4 and 5 X 10(-10) M VIP. The peptides structurally related to VIP activated the cyclic AMP generating system at pharmacological doses (10(-7) M and above) in the following order of potency: VIP greater than PHI greater than GRF greater than secretin. Other peptides or test substances, including GIP, pancreatic glucagon, somatostatin-14, gastrin, CCK, neurotensin, pancreatic polypeptide, PYY, substance P, histamine and isoproterenol are inactive in this system, while the ubiquitous adenylate cyclase activators NaF, forskolin and prostaglandins were effective. These results, combined with the appearance of intestinal VIP in nerve fibers at 8 weeks and with the morphological and enzymatic maturation at 9-12 weeks of the intestinal mucosa, indicate that this neuropeptide may regulate either the differentiation or function of enterocytes during the early development of human intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor activity in human fetal enterocytes. 298 18


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