Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (substance P)
21,176 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Six cases of intestinal ganglioneuromatosis (GN) included in this study reveal the occurrence of two morphologic patterns. Transmural GN was characterized by neural hyperplasia in all layers of the bowel wall with predominant involvement of the myenteric plexus. It was found in three patients affected by multiple endocrine neoplasia IIb. Mucosal GN, having predominant involvement of the mucosa without concomitant hyperplasia of the myenteric plexus, was associated with von Recklinghausen's disease, adenocarcinoma of the colon, and multiple adenomas with megacolon in one case each. Clinicopathologic correlations and review of the literature suggest that mucosal GN might represent a distinct entity with a lower morbidity rate than the transmural variant. Immunohistochemical stains reveal considerable heterogeneity. S-100 protein, neuron-specific enolase, and synapto-physin immunostaining followed the distribution of the nervous hyperplasia in the different intestinal layers as identified morphologically and allowed precise determination of the proliferating cells. Increased reactivity for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, opioid peptides leu-enkephalin and met-enkephalin, and substance P was present in all cases with transmural involvement; mucosal GN showed normal reactivity for opioid peptides and focal increased staining for substance P (one case) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (two cases) in the lamina propria. Mild increased immunoreactivity for tyrosine hydroxylase was present in the myenteric plexus of four out of four cases. Histochemical determination of acetylcholinesterase, performed in one case of transmural type, demonstrated hyperplasia of parasympathetic fibers and neurons. Electron microscopic study of another case suggested the presence of several neurotransmitters. These results indicate that the physiopathology of GN is related to a complex hyperplasia of several peptidergic, cholinergic, and probably adrenergic nerve fibers instead of a selective overgrowth of one type of nerve fiber.
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PMID:Intestinal ganglioneuromatosis: mucosal and transmural types. A clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of six cases. 170 7

Localization of acetylcholinesterase positive neurons and substance P and enkephalin fibers were studied by histochemistry and immunohistochemistry in the intermediate sympathetic zone of the spinal cords of 39 human embryos/fetuses from gestation ages five to 40 weeks. Acetylcholinesterase positive neurons were observed in the nucleus intermediolateralis pars principalis as early as the fifth week of gestation. By the ninth to 13th weeks of gestation, positive neurons were also seen in the nuclei intermedialis pars funicularis, intercalatus spinalis and intercalatus pars paraependymalis. Increase in amount of these positive acetylcholinesterase neurons was demonstrated till term. Substance P and enkephalin fibers were initially observed by the eighth gestation week in the intermediolaterlis pars principalis nucleus and positive fibers were then detected in the nucleus intermedialis pars funicularis as well as the nucleus intercalatus spinalis by the 14th week of gestation. By the 26th week of gestation, all the major nuclei intermediolateralis par principalis, intermedialis pars funicularis, intercalatus spinalis and intercalatus pars paraependymalis has substance P and enkephalin fibers. Initial demonstration of acetylcholinesterase positive neurons appeared to be at an earlier stage than that of our substance P and enkephalin positive fibers.
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PMID:Localization of acetylcholinesterase positive neurons and substance P and enkephalin positive fibers by histochemistry and immunohistochemistry in the sympathetic intermediate zone of the developing human spinal cord. 170 69

The mechanism by which substance P induces contraction of airway smooth muscle has been the subject of numerous reports. It has been suggested that in rabbit airways the action of substance P is indirect, via the release of endogenous acetylcholine, whereas this is not so in other species. The present detailed study investigated whether substance P-induced contraction in rabbit isolated bronchus and trachea is due to the release of endogenous acetylcholine or in bronchus is due to histamine release and whether substance P is metabolized by the enzymes enkephalinase and acetylcholinesterase. Isometric contraction to cumulative addition of substance P was measured in the presence of 10(-6) and 10(-4) M atropine, 10(-6) M pyrilamine, 10(-5) M phosphoramidon, or 3 x 10(-7) M neostigmine. Neither atropine nor pyrilamine had any effect on the substance P responses. Phosphoramidon, however, produced a 12-fold shift to the left in the response curve with a decrease in the 50% effective concentration from 7.0 x 10(-8) to 6.1 x 10(-9) M (n = 4 control and 5 treated; P less than 0.05). In contrast, neostigmine at a concentration that produced a sixfold shift to the left in the acetylcholine response curve had no effect on substance P responses. We conclude that, in rabbit airways in vitro, substance P-induced contraction is not mediated by release of endogenous acetylcholine or histamine. In addition, endogenous enkephalinase but not acetylcholinesterase may be involved in the degradation of substance P. Our results show that, in contrast to previous studies in rabbits, the mechanism of action of substance P may resemble that described in humans.
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PMID:Substance P-induced contraction of rabbit airways: mechanism of action. 170 58

1. Contractile responses and acetylcholine release evoked by nicotine in guinea-pig detrusor strips were determined by isotonic transducer and radioimmunoassay, respectively. Nicotine stimulated acetylcholine release and a contractile response in guinea-pig detrusor strips treated with the cholinesterase inhibitor, methanesulphonyl fluoride (MSF). Both actions evoked by nicotine were antagonized by the nicotinic receptor antagonist, hexamethonium but were insensitive to tetrodotoxin. 2. A sympathetic nerve blocker, guanethidine and a tachykinin antagonist, [D-Arg1, D-Pro2, D-Trp7,9, Leu11]-substance P (rpwwL-SP) partially inhibited the acetylcholine release evoked by nicotine to much the same degree. The inhibitory effects of guanethidine and rpwwL-SP on acetylcholine release were significantly greater than corresponding effects on the contraction evoked by nicotine. 3. In preparations treated with rpwwL-SP to block the tachykinin receptors, guanethidine had no effect on the response to nicotine. Conversely, after treatment with guanethidine to block release of a mediator from sympathetic nerve endings, nicotine-induced responses were not affected by rpwwL-SP. 4. Nicotine-induced contraction was reduced to 30% by the muscarinic cholinoceptor antagonist, atropine and completely abolished after desensitization of P2-purinoceptors with alpha,beta-methylene ATP in the presence of atropine. 5. A concentration-contractile response curve to neurokinin A (NKA) was shifted to the left after cholinesterase inhibition with MSF. Atropine abolished the facilitatory effect of MSF and partially inhibited contractions induced by NKA at 100 nM to 1 microM. The contractile responses to substance P methyl ester (SPOMe) and Tyr0-neurokinin B (Tyr0-NKB) were not influenced by MSF or atropine. 6. After desensitization of NK, tachykinin receptors with SPOMe or preincubation with senktide, the cholinergic component of the nicotine-induced contraction was the same as the control value (100%). 7. Our findings give further support to our previous results: nicotine stimulates acetylcholine release in a tetrodotoxin-resistant manner in guinea-pig bladder and acetylcholine release evoked by nicotine is increased by the coordinated action of sympathetic nerves and tachykinin(s). It is suggested that the tachykinin receptor subtype involved in acetylcholine release is NK,.
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PMID:Contrasting effects of tachykinins and guanethidine on the acetylcholine output stimulated by nicotine from guinea-pig bladder [corrected]. 171 27

The vascular architecture and innervation of the cerebral arteries in the robin-billed leiothrix, Leiothrix lutea, were studied using catecholamine fluorescence, acetylcholinesterase active staining, and immunohistochemical techniques. The cerebral arteries in Leiothrix lutea consisted of the cerebral carotid and the basilar systems. The cerebral carotid artery can be divided into the anterior and posterior rami. Due to poor development of the posterior ramus, the posterior cerebral artery originated from the anterior ramus, and an anterior communicating artery between the cerebroethmoidal arteries formed the circle of Willis. The cerebral carotid system was supplied with aminergic nerve fibers (Amn), cholinergic nerve fibers (Chn) and peptides [substance P (SP), neurokinin A (NKA), calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)]-like immunoreactive (LI) nerve fibers in all regions. These nerve fibers were abundant in the cerebral carotid system, but were few and scattered in the basilar system. Only neuropeptide Y (NPY)-LI nerve fibers were recognized in moderate numbers in the cerebral carotid system, but were not found in the basilar system. Innervation of the small blood vessels of the cerebral parenchyma differed from that of the cerebral superficial arteries, SP-, NKA-, CGRP- and VIP-LI nerve fibers showed a dense distribution, but Amn and NPY-LI nerve fibers showed a sparse distribution, and almost no Chn was observed. Double staining in the cerebral arteries for SP-, NKA- and CGRP-LI nerve fibers demonstrated exactly the same distribution. This suggests that SP, NKA and CGRP co-exist in the same fiber.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The vascular architecture and innervation of the cerebral arteries in Leiothrix lutea. 171 82

Immunocytochemical analysis with antibodies raised against aspartate, glutamate, gamma-aminobutyrate (GABA), choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), and substance P (SP) have allowed the transmitter characterisation and distribution of cells of the lateralis medialis-nucleus suprageniculatus (LM-SG) complex to be made at the level of the light microscope. We have found that the intranuclear distributions of aspartate and glutamate differed substantially from that of GABA, as well as there being specific and, in some cases, major differences in the respective populations of cells labelled with all three amino-acid-sensitive antibodies. ChAT-labelled elements were disposed very similarly to acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-positive subregions of the nuclear complex, while SP labelling was comparatively weak, albeit present, throughout the region. These data provide an important first step towards the further understanding of the details of the neurochemical and functional identity of the LM-SG complex.
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PMID:Disposition of amino acid synaptic transmitters, acetylcholine and substance P in the LM-suprageniculate nuclear complex of the cat's thalamus. 171 4

Different regions of the prostate gland, namely prostatic capsule, peripheral prostate and central prostate (subdivided into proximal (near the bladder neck), distal (near the verumontanum) and midway between these areas) were obtained from 32 obstructed (stable obstructed, n = 8; unstable obstructed, n = 13; acute retention, n = 11) and five control patients. The innervation of these tissues was studied both histochemically to localise acetylcholinesterase activity and immunohistochemically for dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, 5-hydroxytryptamine, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, neuropeptide Y, leu- and met-enkephalin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, substance P and somatostatin. In control patients the greatest density of nerves was found in the proximal central prostate, followed by the anterior capsule and distal central prostate, with the least density in the peripheral prostate. The greatest density of nerves were acetylcholinesterase positive and immunoreactive to neuropeptide Y followed (in decreasing order) by nerves immunoreactive to: vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and dopamine beta-hydroxylase; leu-enkephalin and 5-hydroxytryptamine; calcitonin gene-related peptide; met-enkephalin; substance P; somatostatin. In addition a group of periacinar 5-hydroxytryptamine-immunoreactive cells and ganglia containing acetylcholinesterase, dopamine beta-hydroxylase and all of the peptides studied except somatostatin were identified. In the prostate gland from obstructed patients there was a significant reduction in the density of acetylcholinesterase-positive nerves (p less than 0.001) when compared with the controls. A similar trend was found for dopamine beta-hydroxylase, 5-hydroxytryptamine and all of the putative neuropeptides in most areas of the prostate, the most notable exceptions being in the peripheral prostate, with an increase in dopamine beta-hydroxylase- and leu-enkephalin-immunoreactive nerves in all three groups of obstructed patients an an increase in vasoactive intestinal polypeptide- and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive nerves in those presenting in urinary retention. The functional significance of these findings is discussed.
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PMID:The innervation of the human prostate gland--the changes associated with benign enlargement. 171 53

Adult monkey sensorimotor cortex consists of several structurally and functionally distinct areas. The developmental sequence through which the characteristic architectonic features and the borders of these areas become resolved was examined in a series of fetal, postnatal and adult monkeys by using Nissl staining, cytochrome oxidase and acetylcholinesterase histochemistry, and immunocytochemistry for GABA and the neuropeptides somatostatin, neuropeptide Y, substance P and cholecystokinin. At the youngest fetal age examined (E110), the pre- and postcentral gyri possess six clearly delineated cellular layers; populations of GABA- and neuropeptide-immunoreactive cells can be identified, but their somatic sensory cortex at E110 lacks areal cytoarchitectonic parcellation. Despite the apparent homogeneity in the cytoarchitecture of the somatic sensory cortex, incipient areal borders are revealed by staining for cytochrome oxidase and acetylcholinesterase activity, and by staining immunocytochemically for several neuropeptides. The motor cortex at E110 differs from that in adults by the presence of a prominent layer IV; a clear cytoarchitectonic border between areas 3a and 4 is detectable at E110, which is also revealed by chemoarchitectonic markers. With increasing age, the characteristic architectonic features gradually emerge and areal cytoarchitectonic borders appear, becoming adult-like by early postnatal ages. The gradual changes in cytoarchitecture are paralleled by redistributions of GABA- and neuropeptide-immunoreactive cells and fiber plexuses. The data demonstrate that the progressive refinement in cytoarchitectonic features and in the distributions of neurotransmitter- and peptide-containing cells occurs primarily during the latter third of gestation. The major changes are temporally coincident with the ingrowth of afferent axonal systems, suggesting that the establishment of connectivity may be capable of modulating finer details of structural or molecular phenotype, particularly intra-areal cytoarchitectonic features and neurotransmitter or peptide expression.
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PMID:The emergence of architectonic field structure and areal borders in developing monkey sensorimotor cortex. 171 47

The cutaneous nerves of rat, cat, guinea pig, pig, and man were studied by immunocytochemistry to compare the staining potency of general neural markers and to investigate the density of nerves containing peptides. Antiserum to protein gene product 9.5 (PGP 9.5) stained more nerves than antisera to neurofilaments, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), and synaptophysin or histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Peptidergic axons showed species variation in density of distribution and were most abundant in pig and fewest in man. However, the specific peptides in nerves innervating the various structures were consistent between species. Nerve fibers immunoreactive for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and/or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) predominated in all the species; those immunoreactive to tachykinins (substance P and neurokinin A [NKA]) and neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY) were less abundant. Neonatal capsaicin, at the doses employed in this study, destroyed approximately 70% of CGRP- and tachykinin-immunoreactive sensory axons; whereas 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) at the doses employed resulted in a complete loss of NPY and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactivity without affecting VIP, CGRP, and tachykinins. Thus, this study confirms that antiserum to PGP 9.5 is the most suitable and practical marker for the demonstration of cutaneous nerves. Species differences exist in the density of peptidergic innervation, but apparently not for specific peptides. Not all sensory axons immunoreactive for CGRP and substance P/NKA are capsaicin-sensitive. However, all sympathetic TH- and NPY-immunoreactive axons are totally responsive to 6-OHDA; but no change was seen in VIP-immunoreactive axons, suggesting some demarcation of cutaneous adrenergic and cholinergic sympathetic fibers.
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PMID:An immunocytochemical study of cutaneous innervation and the distribution of neuropeptides and protein gene product 9.5 in man and commonly employed laboratory animals. 171 91

Pieces of hairy skin tissue of fetal rat were transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of adult rats. The ability of autonomic and sensory nerve fibers from the host iris to innervate the grafted skin tissue was immunohistochemically and enzyme-histochemically examined using antisera against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), substance P (SP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and a reaction medium for acetylcholinesterase (AchE). The grafted tissue was successfully implanted and connected with the host iris. Epidermis, dermis, subcutaneous tissue, hairs, hair follicles, sebaceous glands, and piloerector muscles developed in the graft. Two weeks after transplantation, TH-, SP-, and CGRP-immunoreactive fibers were observed in association with the blood vessels in the graft. Four weeks after transplantation, TH-immunoreactive fibers were distributed in the piloerector muscles, whereas SP- and CGRP-immunoreactive fibers were present around the hair follicles. VIP-immunoreactive and AchE-positive fibers were restricted to the host iris at all survival times. These results suggest that the outgrowth of autonomic and sensory nerve fibers from the host iris show target specificity for the grafted skin tissue.
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PMID:Target-specific innervation by autonomic and sensory nerve fibers in hairy fetal skin transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of adult rat. 172 32


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