Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cardiac ultrasound investigation of 68 prospectively studied patients with histologically proven midgut
carcinoid
tumors showed right heart disease in 66%. The abnormal findings included morphologic and functional aberrations of the tricuspid valve in 52% and 83%, respectively, right atrial and ventricular enlargement in 53% and 30%, and paradoxical systolic septal contractions in 19%. The patients with the most pronounced right heart disease had significantly higher (p less than .01) plasma levels of the tachykinins
neuropeptide K
and
substance P
as well as higher (p less than .001) urinary excretion of the serotonin metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. These patients also had the most extensive tumor disease. The occurrence of echocardiographic abnormalities of the left heart was similar to that in healthy individuals of the same age, but abnormalities were less frequent among the patients with severe right heart disease. Electrocardiographic changes were nonspecific. Right heart disease thus seems to be present more often than previously reported in patients with malignant midgut
carcinoid
tumors. The severity of cardiac involvement does not seem to be related to the duration of
carcinoid
disease but more to the extent of the disease, i.e., higher plasma levels of serotonin and tachykinins.
...
PMID:Carcinoid heart disease: relationship of circulating vasoactive substances to ultrasound-detectable cardiac abnormalities. 244 62
A unique case of midgut
carcinoid
with advanced disease, engaging lymph nodes and liver but still accessible to curative surgery, is reported. Besides elevated urinary levels of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, the diagnosis was based on a positive provocation test with pentagastrin, i.e., basally elevated levels of serotonin in peripheral whole blood increased twofold 3 min postinjection related to the appearance of
carcinoid
symptoms. After removal of primary and secondary lesions in a two-step procedure
carcinoid
symptoms disappeared completely. Biochemically, urinary excretion of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid and serotonin levels in peripheral blood before and during provocation with pentagastrin were both normalized after surgery and have remained so during 27 months of follow-up. Computed tomographies of the abdomen at regular intervals do not indicate recurrent disease. Histologically, the
carcinoid
lesions displayed a mixed growth pattern and signs of local aggressiveness. Immunocytochemically, the majority of the tumour cells (positive against neuron specific enolase) showed a positive reaction with serotonin antisera.
Substance P
-like immunoreactivity was also found in a large proportion of these cells.
...
PMID:The pentagastrin test as an indicator of a cure in surgically treated patients with advanced carcinoid disease. 245 57
Carboxypeptidase H (CPH) is one of several processing enzymes required for the conversion of peptide hormone precursors into their smaller active forms. In this study, high levels of CPH activity was found in a liver metastasis of a human ileal
carcinoid
which expresses
beta-preprotachykinin
mRNA and the
tachykinin
neuropeptides,
substance P
and
substance K
. This human CPH showed properties of a zinc-metallopeptidase that is structurally similar to bovine and rat CPH. Immunoblots of the human ileal carcinoma with anti-bovine CPH showed that CPH activity is represented by two proteins of apparent molecular masses 57 and 55 kDa. Cell-free translation of poly(A)+ RNA followed by immunoprecipitation with anti-bovine CPH showed that human CPH mRNA encodes a precursor protein of apparent molecular mass 75 kDa. These data demonstrate that human CPH is synthesized as a zymogen, prepro-CPH, which must be cleaved to form catalytically active CPH.
...
PMID:Identification of zymogen and mature forms of human carboxypeptidase H. A processing enzyme for the synthesis of peptide hormones. 245 70
The carcinoid syndrome, a common feature of small intestinal
carcinoid
tumors with liver metastases, includes flushing, diarrhea, bronchoconstriction, and right heart failure. The etiology of the carcinoid syndrome is not well understood, but serotonin seems to be involved in the diarrhea, whereas tachykinins may play a role in the flush reaction. In a double blind placebo-controlled study, we studied the effect of octreotide in 20 patients with midgut
carcinoid
tumors and liver metastases. A sc injection of 50 micrograms octreotide caused a significant (P less than 0.001) decrease in median plasma tachykinins and serum pancreatic polypeptide, GH, and insulin for up to 4 h. Administration of octreotide (50 micrograms, twice daily, sc) caused a 26% decrease in urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetia acid excretion, but the number of flushing attacks or bowel movements did not change significantly. A typical flush was provoked by pentagastrin, and plasma
tachykinin
and serotonin levels were measured. The flush reaction was graded on a 10-point visual analog scale. Octreotide (50 micrograms, sc) given 45 min before flush stimulation prevented
tachykinin
release completely and significantly reduced the median flushing score from 8.5 to 2. Placebo administered in the same way did not prevent
tachykinin
release after pentagastrin administration. Thus, octreotide prevents pentagastrin-induced flushing and the related hormonal changes in patients with the carcinoid syndrome.
...
PMID:The effects of octreotide on basal and stimulated hormone levels in patients with carcinoid syndrome. 246 45
Twenty patients with malignant
carcinoid
tumors were treated for 6 months with recombinant interferon alfa-2b (IFN alpha-2b; Intron-A; Schering Corp., Bloomfield, NJ) at a mean dose of 5.9 megaunits three times per week. Eleven of the 20 patients (55%) had a greater than 50% reduction of tumor markers (urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid or plasma
neuropeptide K
), showing objective tumor response. Six patients (30%) had stable disease with no significant change in tumor markers or tumor size, and three (15%) had progressive disease with an increase in tumor markers and size. These results are similar to those reported earlier for treatment with natural leukocyte IFN in patients with
carcinoid
tumors. Only two patients (35%) had a slight reduction of tumor size after 6 months of treatment. Three patients developed neutralizing antibodies to IFN alpha-2b. Two of these patients initially showed an objective response, which lasted until IFN antibodies developed. In one of these patients, a change to human leukocyte IFN resulted in normalization of antibody titers within 3 months, and the patient had a second objective clinical response. There was no correlation between development of IFN antibodies and development of autoimmune phenomena such as increased titers of antinuclear antibodies or thyroid autoantibodies. IFN alpha-2b seems to be as potent as human leukocyte IFN in the treatment of patients with malignant
carcinoid
tumors, but it is important to recognize that antibodies neutralizing IFN may develop in some patients, with concomitant loss of antitumor effects. A change to natural leukocyte IFN might be beneficial in these patients.
...
PMID:Treatment of malignant carcinoid tumors with recombinant interferon alfa-2b: development of neutralizing interferon antibodies and possible loss of antitumor activity. 246 28
We report three cases of multicentric
carcinoid
tumors of the stomach in patients with long-standing pernicious anemia and severe atrophic gastritis (type A). The tumor nodules arose in nonantral gastric mucosa showing marked intestinal metaplasia. Diffuse endocrine cell hyperplasia was present in both fundus and antrum. Antral G-cell hyperplasia was observed. A widely accepted pathogenesis of this syndrome suggests that the proliferating cell type is the argyrophilic, enterochromaffinlike cell native to the gastric body and fundus. Our findings conflict with this view, in that focal argentaffin staining was also present within tumor cells, as well as immunoreactivity for serotonin and
substance P
(more characteristic of small-intestinal enterochromaffin or Kulchitsky's cells and small-intestinal carcinoids). Findings in these cases at least suggest an alternative possibility: the tumors may derive from small-intestinal-type metaplastic endocrine cells within the atrophic mucosa, rather than the hypertrophic native endocrine cell population.
...
PMID:Multicentric gastric carcinoids complicating pernicious anemia. Origin from the metaplastic endocrine cell population. 246 22
Cutaneous flushing was provoked in seven patients with metastatic
carcinoid
tumours and the carcinoid syndrome by an intravenous injection of pentagastrin (0.6 micrograms.kg-1 body weight). The patients were studied before and 1 h after a subcutaneous injection of the long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide 50 micrograms (Sandostatin). The severity of the
carcinoid
flush in all the patients was reduced by administration of the analogue. The rise in facial temperature was 1.3 (0.3) degree C before and 0.8 (0.2) degree C after octreotide. Six patients responded to pentagastrin with a rise in the circulating
neurokinin A
-like immunoreactivity (NKA-LI) and five patients with a rise in circulating
substance P
-like immunoreactivity (SP-LI). No cutaneous flushing or rise in
tachykinin
concentration was observed in healthy subjects (n = 6) after injection of pentagastrin. The rise in NKA-LI in the patients was decreased by 61 (14)% and the rise in SP-LI by 54 (13)% after octreotide. Although flushing still occurred, the
tachykinin
response in two patients was completely abolished. The data demonstrate that the release of tachykinins from
carcinoid
tumours during pentagastrin-induced flushing is subject to partial inhibition by octreotide. However, the occurrence of a flush in some patients in the absence of a detectable rise in circulating tachykinins indicates that the latter peptides cannot be the sole causative agent of the
carcinoid
flush.
...
PMID:Effect of a long-acting somatostatin analogue (octreotide) on circulating tachykinins and the pentagastrin-induced carcinoid flush. 247 May 92
The levels of 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin, 5-HT) and
substance P
(SP) were assayed (using high performance liquid chromatography-electron capture and radioimmunoassay methods) in the peripheral blood of 17 patients with known mid-gut carcinoids, 16 of whom had hepatic metastases. All patients had supranormal basal levels of 5-HT and SP. The clinical and hormonal changes induced by two provocation tests, intravenous pentagastrin (PG) and calcium infusion, were compared. Pentagastrin caused flushing in all the patients, induced gastrointestinal symptoms in all but one of the patients with hepatic involvement, and universally elevated circulating 5-HT levels. Pretreatment with a 5-HT2-receptor blocking agent, ketanserin, abolished the gastrointestinal effects but had virtually no influence on either 5-HT levels or flushing induced by intravenous pentagastrin. In contrast, calcium infusion induced
carcinoid
symptoms in only two of six patients, and this was consistently associated with stimulation of circulating serotonin levels. The authors conclude that 1) 5-HT may be responsible for the gastrointestinal symptoms in
carcinoid
patients, but it does not seem to play any role in flushing; 2) ketanserin may be a useful therapeutic agent in alleviating gastrointestinal symptoms in
carcinoid
patients; 3) differential responses to PG suggests that SP is released from a site different from that of 5-HT; 4) it is possible that SP may contribute to the mediation of flushing, but it cannot be the sole agent causing this symptom; and 5) the pentagastrin test with measurements of 5-HT levels in peripheral blood seems to be superior to calcium infusion as a provocative test in documenting the diagnosis of
carcinoid
disease.
...
PMID:The pentagastrin test in the diagnosis of the carcinoid syndrome. Blockade of gastrointestinal symptoms by ketanserin. 257 77
Mid-gut
carcinoid
tumors have been shown to produce
substance P
, a
tachykinin
. A recent addition to this family of peptides is
neurokinin A
which is cleaved from the same precursor as
substance P
; beta-pre-pro-
tachykinin
. The authors have examined mid-gut and pulmonary
carcinoid
tumors for the presence of the two tachykinins, using immunocytochemical study and radioimmunoassay, and have applied the techniques of in situ hybridization and Northern blot analysis to investigate the expression of mRNA for beta-pre-pro-
tachykinin
. All gut tumors (n = 8) and three of the six lung tumors examined were found by immunocytochemical study to contain both tachykinins or
neurokinin A
alone. Chromatographic analysis of tumor extracts suggests that this peptide is being detected as a separate molecule and/or as the C-terminal portion of a larger, uncleaved form. Three of the cases positive for tachykinins showed no detectable serotonin immunoreactivity. Strong hybridization signals for beta-pre-pro-
tachykinin
mRNA were seen in all but one of the cases studied which contained
tachykinin
immunoreactivity. Intact mRNA and positive hybridization was found by Northern blot analysis in two mid-gut tumors. Concentrations of tachykinins were found by radioimmunoassay to be higher in mid-gut tumors (
substance P
27.2 +/- 19.7 pmol/g;
neurokinin A
31.8 +/- 24.2 pmol/g; mean +/- SEM, n = 5) than in lung cases (
substance P
mean 0.8, range 0.5-1.0 pmol/g;
neurokinin A
mean 11.0, range 10.0-12.0 pmol/g; n = 3). These results show that mid-gut and pulmonary
carcinoid
tumors produce tachykinins, which are detected, in some cases, where no serotonin immunoreactivity can be found, possibly because of a high rate of amine secretion. Screening for tachykinins may prove to be a useful diagnostic adjunct for these tumors.
...
PMID:Expression of tachykinins by ileal and lung carcinoid tumors assessed by combined in situ hybridization, immunocytochemistry, and radioimmunoassay. 264 37
Tumour cells from a hepatic metastasis of a midgut
carcinoid
tumour were studied during 240 days of culture. A cell line could not be established, but the cells regularly formed large clusters and islets. The spontaneous release of serotonin (5-HT) and
neuropeptide K
-like immunoreactivity from cultures were followed. The amine and the peptide levels were unstable without evident covariation. The response to stimulation with noradrenaline and isoprenaline was studied during the culture period. The tumour cells released 5-HT selectively at stimulation with isoprenaline. This responsiveness also showed considerable variation with long periods of quiescence. Ultrastructurally the tumour cells showed a certain degree of polarization with apical microvilli and a supranuclear Golgi apparatus. When studied by confocal laser scanning the tumour cells were demonstrated to be cylindrical in shape with a cytoplasmic attachment to the matrix.
...
PMID:Serotonin-producing carcinoid tumour cells in long-term culture. Studies on serotonin release and morphological features. 266 47
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