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)

Non-radioactive in situ hybridization employing detection of biotin-labeled probes by an alkaline phosphatase-based procedure has proven useful for demonstrating a wide variety of mRNA species. With certain developers, the alkaline phosphatase reaction product is both light microscopically visible and fluorescent. We have exploited this to perform simple double-stainings for mRNA's and their corresponding peptide products in human insulin and gastrin cells and in rat ACTH, MSH and gastrin cells. Such stainings show that nearly all of these cells simultaneously contain both the peptide hormone and its corresponding mRNA. Human gastrin cells show a differentiated localization of gastrin mRNA and gastrin. Thus, while gastrin immunofluorescence predominates in secretory granules present in the basolateral region of the cells, gastrin mRNA is virtually restricted to the supranuclear region of the cells. Here it may be preferentially associated with granular endoplasmic reticulum. The strict subcellular localization of gastrin mRNA differs from that of general polyadenylated RNA in the G cells and raises questions whether specific transport routes or sites of accumulation for defined mRNA species exist.
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PMID:Combined non-radioactive detection of peptide hormones and their mRNA's in endocrine cells. 166 Aug 59

Gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) is the mammalian equivalent of bombesin. Bombesin has been shown to stimulate canine ACTH and cortisol secretion in a dose-related manner. In the present study, following a 30-40 min saline infusion, a progressively-increasing, stepwise infusion of GRP (60, 600, 1200 pmol/kg per h) or pentagastrin (PG) (2, 4, 8 micrograms/kg per h) was administered. Each drug dose was infused for 40-45 min and blood samples were drawn at 20-22.5 min intervals. GRP caused significant, dose-dependent increases in plasma ACTH (145 +/- 6%, 242 +/- 49%, 270 +/- 78% of control) and cortisol (158 +/- 16%, 218 +/- 26%, 250 +/- 62% of control). The dose of GRP required for a half-maximal cortisol response was 120 pmol/kg per h, while that for ACTH was 140 pmol/kg per h. PG had no effect on either ACTH or cortisol. While PG is apparently not involved in GRP/bombesin release of ACTH or cortisol, similar mechanisms of action for GRP and bombesin are suggested by their equimolar potencies.
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PMID:Gastrin releasing peptide, but not pentagastrin, stimulates ACTH and cortisol secretion in conscious dogs. 166 3

22 gastric carcinomas (13 intestinal type and nine diffuse type) were immunostained for neuron specific enolase, chromogranin, Leu-7 and a panel of fifteen different peptide hormones. Five out of the 13 tumours of intestinal type and four out of the nine diffuse carcinomas expressed immunoreactivity for one or more of the pan endocrine markers. Seven out of the 13 tumours of intestinal type and five out of the nine diffuse carcinomas also expressed immunoreactivity for gastrin (3), ACTH (3), serotonin (7) and calcitonin (7). Immunoreactivity for somatostatin (1) and substance P (1) were also seen in two tumours of intestinal type. Seven out of 18 cases with benign mucosa adjacent to the tumours expressed a focal immunoreactivity for chromogranin (6), serotonin (6), gastrin (5) and calcitonin (1). All hormone-producing tumours also expressed immunoreactivity for carcino-embryonic antigen. Our results confirm that a high proportion of gastric carcinomas are hormone producing.
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PMID:Endocrine profile in gastric carcinomas. An immunohistochemical study. 172 59

A single intake of mineral water Essentuki 17 by male Wistar rats (n-130, b. w. 180-250 g) leads to stress reactions. It is evident from elevated levels of ACTH, hydrocortisone, leuenkephaline, glucagon and gastrin. Course intake of the water brings about a rise in most of the hormones levels studied. However, single doses of Essentuki 17 inhibit production of hormones in the adrenals, hypophysis, hypothalamus, the system of endogenic opiates. The enhancement of relevant levels are noted in the gastroenteropancreatic system.
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PMID:[The adaptation reactions in hormonal systems to the internal use of mineral waters]. 183 21

This report details clinical and pathologic aspects of a patient with small cell undifferentiated carcinoma of the prostate and systemic hyperglucagonemia. A panel of potential serologic markers was evaluated in order to document additional evidence of ectopic hormonal production. Immunocytochemical markers were sought in tissue samples from the primary neoplasm and a lung metastasis. Stains were positive for corticotropin (ACTH) and gastrin in both the prostate and in the lung, but no evidence of excess secretion was documented. These findings are consistent with the notion that neuroendocrine activity is common in undifferentiated small cell carcinomas, regardless of their site of origin.
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PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the prostate. 184 67

Eleven hemodialyzed patients with uremia were examined for the effect of erythropoietin (EP) treatment carried out for 3 months on functions of different endocrine organs. EP treatment resulted in a decrease of the initial plasma levels of somatotropin, prolactin, follicle-stimulating and luteinizing hormones. EP treatment being over, there was a decrease in the plasma content of ACTH, cortisol and aldosterone. The treatment with EP was also associated with an insignificant rise of the plasma levels of parathyroid hormone and testosterone. EP treatment did not influence the plasma concentration of calcitonin and 25-OH-D. EP was found to exert no significant effect on the pituitary-thyroid reverse relationship. The 3-month treatment with EP eventuated in plasma renin activity inhibition as well as in an increase of the atrial level of natriuretic peptide in the plasma. EP treatment stimulated insulin secretion and reduced glucagon secretion. Finally, EP decreased the gastrin level and to a less degree the plasma level of pancreatic polypeptide.
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PMID:[The effect of erythropoietin treatment on endocrine organ function in patients with terminal-stage kidney failure on hemodialysis]. 194 56

Serotonin-producing pancreatic endocrine tumours are rare neoplasms which in most cases exhibit malignant biological behaviour. These tumours, in the majority of the well-documented cases, are composed of argyrophil- and argentaffin-positive cells which contain large pleomorphic neurosecretory granules. In contrast, argyrophilic non-argentaffin pancreatic endocrine tumours with tumour cells containing round neurosecretory granules are exceptional. In this study we describe such a tumour not associated with clinical evidence of carcinoid syndrome in a 60-year-old woman. Histological examination revealed tumour extension in pancreatic lymphatic vessels and veins but no evidence of locoregional or distant metastases. Ten months after surgery the patient showed no recurrence of the disease. Immunohistochemistry revealed cytoplasmic serotonin production in the tumour cells which were negative for anti-gastrin, insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and ACTH. This study emphasizes the usefulness of combined ultrastructural and immunohistochemical investigations in order to identify and characterize the rare pancreatic endocrine tumours with serotonin production.
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PMID:Serotonin-producing pancreatic endocrine tumour. Histological, ultrastructural and immunohistochemical study of a case. 196 80

Molecular characterization of neuroendocrine (Merkel cell) carcinoma of the skin. Review of the literature and report of three cases. Although neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin (NECS) is comparatively a rare clinical-histological entity, numerous morphological and ultrastructural studies have been carried out since the tumor was identificated by Toker (1972). Recently immunocytochemistry has allowed a better molecular characterization (immunophenotype) of this tumor and a more exact diagnosis. The main problem for the pathologist is the differential diagnosis between NECS and skin neoplasms--both primitive and metastatic--which require a more aggressive treatment. Often the classical morphological criteria do not distinguish NECS from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, amelanotic melanomas, cutaneous metastases of lung small cell carcinoma or of neuroblastoma. The co-expression of cytokeratins and neurofilaments constantly found in NECS, is surely the best differential criterion from non-neuroendocrine carcinomas. Furthermore, the typical paranuclear location of both the intermediate filaments in NECS is a distinctive peculiarity as opposed to lung microcytoma, where cytokeratins and neurofilaments, when present, show widespread perinuclear positivity. Chromogranin A is found only in a small percentage of tumor cells, whilst synthesis of calcitonin, somatostatin, gastrin, ACTH, is very rare. Finally, the lack of common leukocyte antigen (CLA), S-100 protein and vimentin in NECS rules out the diagnoses of lymphoma, melanoma and sarcoma respectively.
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PMID:[Molecular characterization of cutaneous neuroendocrine (Merkel cell) carcinoma. Review of the literature and presentation of a caseload]. 209 Oct 10

Syndromes involving peptide or nonsex steroid hormone secretion due to aberrantly located tumors are rare. We report a collected series of 16 patients with ectopic hormone production from ovarian neoplasms, including 3 patients recently encountered at our institution as well as 13 additional cases identified in the recent literature. These tumors included 2 insulin-producing ovarian carcinoids, 1 ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma within a benign ovarian cystic teratoma, 2 cortisol-producing ovarian neoplasms, 8 gastrin-producing ovarian cystadenomata or cystadenocarcinomata, and 3 thyroxine-producing ovarian strumal carcinoids. All patients presented with syndromes of hormone excess. Only 62% of all tumors were localized preoperatively. Following ovarian resection, 87% of patients remained disease-free with a median follow-up period of 1.5 years. In addition to ovariectomy, 8 additional unnecessary ablative procedures were performed in 7 patients. These included distal pancreatectomy, pancreaticoduodenectomy, adrenalectomy, total gastrectomy, selective vagotomy, and subtotal thyroidectomy. Failure to localize the ovarian neoplasm preoperatively was associated with a significantly higher risk of subsequent unnecessary ablative procedures. Because of the potential for the ovary to act as a source of aberrant hormone secretion, we recommend complete preoperative evaluation of the pelvis in female patients presenting with nonlocalizable endocrine tumors.
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PMID:Aberrant hormone production from ovarian neoplasms: strategies for diagnosis and therapy. 216 82

Twenty-two different humoral parameters including stress-, gastrointestinal- and volume-regulating hormones were measured before and within 45 min after parabolic flight maneuvers of twenty healthy adult subjects. We compared hormonal data of motion sickness-affected participants with those unaffected. Changes in cortisol and vasoactive intestinal peptide plasma levels were significantly different (p less than 0.002 and p less than 0.004) between the two groups with increasing plasma levels of both hormones during motion sickness but decreasing levels within the control group. Growth hormone and prolactin plasma levels increased by 400% and 115% within the motion sickness-affected group and to a smaller degree (120% and 40% increases, respectively) within the control group, while ACTH levels were almost unchanged within both groups. Pancreatic polypeptide and gastrin plasma levels as well as plasma levels of insulin and C-peptide were significantly decreased within both groups after the parabolic flight. Plasma renin, aldosterone, atrial natriuretic peptide and cyclic GMP levels were unchanged within the control group. Within the motion sickness-affected group, plasma renin and aldosterone levels were decreased and atrial natriuretic peptide levels increased after the flight. Humoral parameters of the thyroid gland were neither changed within the groups nor different between the groups. The present data confirm previous results that increases in plasma levels of certain stress hormones participate in motion sickness. Furthermore, increases in vasoactive intestinal peptide levels participate in motion sickness. These increases could explain some of the gastrointestinal symptoms in motion sickness and might serve as markers for a discrimination between regular stress and motion sickness.
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PMID:Hormonal changes after parabolic flight: implications on the development of motion sickness. 224 48


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