Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pulmonary tumourlets are focal aggregates of neuroendocrine cells that occur in the periphery of the lung and may be associated with chronic inflammation and scarring. Six such lesions were seen in five lungs from a series of 35 pairs of lungs studied at necropsy. All were immunoreactive for neurone-specific enolase, protein gene product 9.5, and a range of neuroendocrine products. Of the peptides found in neuroendocrine cells in normal human lungs, gastrin releasing peptide was present in all tumourlets and calcitonin in all but one; none contained leucineenkephalin. Of a series of peptide and protein hormones not present in the neuroendocrine cells of healthy human lungs, growth hormone was present in all six tumourlets and adrenocorticotrophin in two. Identical patterns of peptide expression were displayed by neuroendocrine cells in the airway associated with the tumourlets in two cases. Such cells were increased in number and abnormally clustered. Aberrant expression of peptides might accompany the morphological changes in the pulmonary neuroendocrine cells seen in diseased lungs, their florid focal proliferation occasionally resulting in the formation of a tumourlet.
Thorax 1990 Sep
PMID:Appropriate and inappropriate neuroendocrine products in pulmonary tumourlets. 214 55

Plasma samples from 21 patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung were screened for pancreatic polypeptide, somatostatin, motilin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. One patient had severe impairment of both renal and liver function. In the 20 remaining subjects vasoactive intestinal polypeptide concentrations were normal, and only two patients had increased concentrations of somatostatin. Increases in pancreatic polypeptide were detected more commonly (7/20), but these may have been non-specific age related increases. The major finding was high concentrations of motilin (greater than 496 pg/ml) in 17 of 20 patients. Plasma motilin was subsequently assayed in 16 more patients with lung cancer, including 10 patients with non-small cell carcinoma of the lung. At concentrations over 900 pg/ml plasma motilin appears to be a tumour marker for small cell carcinoma of the lung with acceptable sensitivity (59%) and specificity (78%). The origin of increased plasma motilin in small cell carcinoma of the lung was investigated. Bombesin (gastrin releasing peptide), a peptide known to stimulate the release of motilin in man, was, as in previous studies, detected in tumour but not in plasma, except in one patient out of 21. Immunohistochemical studies failed to detect motilin antigen in biopsy samples. Motilin tumour content was found to be low in tumour tissue from three patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung who had appreciable hypermotilinaemia and from three patients with non-small cell carcinoma of the lung who had either normal or slightly raised plasma motilin concentrations. The stimulus to motilin secretion in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung remains unclear.
Thorax 1987 Oct
PMID:Increased plasma motilin concentrations in small cell carcinoma of the lung. 289 80

Pulmonary neuroendocrine cells, identified by their positive immunochemical reaction for neurone specific enolase, were readily demonstrable and uniformly distributed in 15 pairs of normal adult human lungs. About 65% contained gastrin releasing peptide and nearly all the rest contained calcitonin. Leucine-enkephalin was not found. Serotonin containing cells were few, and cells immunoreactive for adrenocorticotrophin and antidiuretic hormone were absent. About one in 10 cells was argyrophilic, and costorage of peptides was not seen.
Thorax 1988 Nov
PMID:Neuroendocrine cell populations in normal human lungs: a quantitative study. 306 73