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)

This study investigated the effects of two putative bombesin antagonists, [D-Arg1,D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]substance P and [Leu13-psi-CH2NH-Leu14]bombesin, on bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from isolated canine G cells following short-term culture. Canine antral tissue was dispersed by sequential collagenase and EDTA treatment, and counterflow elutriation was used to enrich for G cells. Plates were seeded with 2 x 10(6) cells/mL in each well and cultured for 2 days prior to testing. Gastrin-containing and somatostatin-containing cells were identified by immunocytochemistry using the biotin-avidin-peroxidase method and accounted for 8.5 and 1%, respectively, of adhered cells. Basal gastrin secretion was 1.91 +/- 0.48% of total cell content. After a 2-h incubation period, bombesin (0.01-100 pM) stimulated gastrin release in a concentration-dependent fashion. The substance P analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, modestly inhibited bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from canine G cells. This analog also produced weak stimulation of basal gastrin release. In contrast, the bombesin analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, did not affect basal gastrin secretion. The bombesin analog completely blocked bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from 0.01 to 1 pM and produced greater than 50% inhibition at higher doses. The ability of the bombesin analog to directly inhibit bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from cultured canine G cells underscores its usefulness in studies involving the role of bombesin and its mammalian counterpart, gastrin-releasing peptide, in the control of gastrin cell function.
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PMID:Inhibition of bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from isolated canine G cells by bombesin antagonists. 248 58

Preprotachykinins, the products of one gene, are the precursor molecules of three mammalian tachykinins called substance P (SP), substance K (SK), and neuropeptide K. An additional mammalian tachykinin, neurokinin B, has also been described. SP and possibly other tachykinins may modulate immunologic responses. Granulomas that form around parasite ova in murine schistosomiasis were examined for tachykinins. Tachykinins were extracted from granulomas by boiling or with detergent. Extracts examined by RIA and HPLC contained only immunoreactive SP. Granulomas were dispersed with collagenase and cultured in vitro for up to 4 h. Only immunoreactive SP appeared in the culture medium. SP immunoreactivity localized solely to granuloma eosinophils as demonstrated by a sensitive immunohistochemical technique. An antiserum that recognized SK, neuropeptide K, and neurokinin B, but which possessed low reactivity to SP, also stained these cells. Only prior absorption of each antiserum with the appropriate synthetic neuropeptide would abrogate the immunostaining. This suggested that tachykinins other than SP were present within these cells. However, results of in situ hybridization experiments intimated that eosinophils produced predominantly preprotachykinin mRNAs which encode SP but are devoid of the SK/neuropeptide K sequence. It is concluded that granuloma eosinophils make predominantly SP in deference to other tachykinins, and that tachykinins other than SP are unlikely to be important in the regulation of the early granulomatous response of murine schistosomiasis.
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PMID:Tachykinin production in granulomas of murine schistosomiasis mansoni. 249 64

Longitudinal muscle strips adhered with myenteric plexus were subjected to enzyme digestion under controlled conditions in a Krebs-bicarbonate buffer solution containing a mixture of collagenase, deoxyribonuclease, protease, choline chloride, and bovine serum albumin for 30 min at 37 degrees C. Myenteric ganglia, singly or in multiple aggregates, were harvested with micropipette and labeled with [3H]choline for [3H]acetylcholine (ACh) release studies. When examined by light or electron (transmission or scanning) microscopy, the ganglia exhibited their normal structural characteristics with axon bundles, dendrites, cell bodies, and vesiculated processes. Depolarization with elevated potassium or veratrine hydrochloride significantly elevated the efflux of [3H] ACh. Perfusion with tachykinins (substance P and substance K), vasoactive intestinal peptide, forskolin, or serotonin also significantly increased the release of [3H]ACh. This study demonstrated that enzyme-dissociated myenteric ganglia, notably free of muscle or connective tissue components, were structurally well preserved and were amenable to functional studies targeted specifically for the enteric plexus neurons.
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PMID:Characterization of acetylcholine release from enzyme-dissociated myenteric ganglia. 253 38

The enteric nervous system is a major division of the autonomic nervous system and is responsible for the regulation of gastrointestinal function. The objective of the present study was to develop a simple and effective technique for isolating and culturing neurons of the enteric nervous system that would permit characterization of their development and regulatory peptide content. This was accomplished using a dispersed intestinal cell preparation cultured under conditions designed to support the growth and differentiation of neurons and neuroendocrine cells. Newborn hamster intestine was digested in 0.1% collagenase, mechanically dispersed, and cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 2.5% serum and other additives. Phase and bright-field microscopy demonstrated neuronal cells and fibers after the second day in culture. This was confirmed by immunohistochemistry using antibodies directed against neurofilament and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Acetic acid extracts of the culture indicated that during the first 4 days of the culture the content of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide increased, whereas the content of substance P, mammalian bombesin, and neurotensin declined. High-performance liquid chromatography and fast protein liquid chromatography confirmed that the immunoreactive vasoactive intestinal polypeptide coeluted with synthetic and iodinated forms of the peptide. This study describes a technique for primary culture of intestinal tissue that supports the survival of enteric neurons and permits analysis of the development and synthetic and secretory characteristics of the enteric nervous system.
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PMID:Primary culture of the enteric nervous system from neonatal hamster intestine. Selection of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-containing neurons. 341 Feb 13

In the mouse, arthritis was induced by a single sub-patellar intraarticular injection of bacterial collagenase. This procedure induces also patellar malalignment. A rich innervation of thin varicose calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P (SP) immunoreactive fibers was found in the joint capsule, in the periosteum of the patella, in the synovial tissues at the lateral border of the patella, in the femoral groove, and in the subchondral bone of the patella and femur. Moreover, fibers were found in plica tissues between the quadriceps and patellar tendon, and the femoral groove. After the collagenase treatment, the general innervation pattern was comparable to that of the controls, but CGRP and SP innervation was no longer detectable with the antibodies in the plica tissues, and was to a lesser extent detectable in the fat pad of the patella, in the lateral borders of the patella and in the proliferated synovial tissues. Signs of degenerated axonal profiles were observed in these locations with a polyclonal antibody to the growth-associated protein GAP-43/B-50. At all the other peripheral locations, such as the muscles, the GAP-43/B-50 distribution was normal.
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PMID:Innervation of the patella. An immunohistochemical study in mice. 751 3

We have isolated and characterized the human cardiac mast cell (CMC) and compared this novel mast cell (MC type with MC obtained from uterus, skin, and lung. Heart tissue was obtained from 14 patients with cardiomyopathy (CMP, heart transplantation). CMC were isolated by enzymatic digestion using collagenase, pronase-E, hyaluronidase, and DNAse. Substantial amounts of CMC (0.5% to 1.5% of isolated cells) were found in the atrial appendages but not in ventricular digests or other sites of the heart (< 0.1%). In situ staining of atrial tissue revealed the presence of CMC in the myocardium (2.16 +/- 0.7 MC/mm2), endocardium (2.24 +/- 0.9 MC/mm2), and epicardium. As assessed by combined toluidine blue/immunofluorescence staining with monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs), isolated CMC expressed surface IgE, the receptor for stem cell factor (c-kit receptor/CD117), the p24 antigen (CD9), the Pgp-1 homing receptor (CD44), the pan leukocyte antigen (CD45), and the ICAM-1 antigen (CD54). CMC were not recognized by MoAbs to lymphocyte function associated antigen 2 (LFA-2; CD2), T-cell receptor (TcR; CD3), T4 antigen (CD4), LFA-1 alpha-chain (CD11a), C3biR alpha-chain (CD11b), CR4 alpha-chain (CD11c), LPS-R related Ag (CD14), 3-FAL/x-hapten (CD15), Fc gamma RIII (CD16), lactosylceramid (CDw17), the B-cell antigen CD19, or CR1 (CD35). In situ expression of leukocyte antigens on CMC was demonstrable by indirect immunoperoxidase staining technique and double-labeling immunohistochemistry. Almost all CMC (90%) reacted with MoAbs against tryptase and chymase and thus were MCTC. Cardiac mast cells were also stained by the heparin-binding dye Berberine sulfate and expressed measurable amounts of histamine (4.6 +/- 1.4 pg per cell). Cross linking of either IgE receptor or SCF receptor (c-kit) on CMC resulted in histamine secretion (non-specific release: < 6% of total histamine, alpha IgE induced: 12% to 52%; SCF-induced release: 9% to 18%), whereas neither substance P (a skin MC agonist) nor the basophil agonist FMLP showed an effect on CMC. Together, the CMC is an MCTC primarily located in the appendage of the atrium. This novel type of MC exhibits surface membrane antigen and functional properties similar to those of lung and uterus MC.
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PMID:The human cardiac mast cell: localization, isolation, phenotype, and functional characterization. 752 50

The Wistar fat-storing cells were isolated by perfusion with collagenase and centrifugation with metrizamide density cushion technique and cultured in vitro. The fat-storing cells were confirmed by the presentation of the lipid drop in the cytoplasm and the visualization of dismin with anti-dismin antibody by using indirect immunofluorescence method. By the videotape recorder (VIR) and the imagine analysis system, we observed the wandering immigration, the abrupt contraction of fat-storing cells with spike, then becoming a ball-like shape in its division phase. After that the cell began to extend and the contraction of these cells can be induced by the presence of 10(-2) mmol/L endothelin-1, 1 mmol/L of substance P and 2 x 10(-5) mmol/L noradrenalin. After removal of these agents the contracted cells would become extended. All these findings indicate that the fat-storing cells have ability of contraction and movement.
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PMID:Observations on the contraction and movement of fat-storing cells in culture. 752 80

The interaction between endothelial cells and immune/inflammatory cells plays an important role in the pathogenesis of vascular diseases. Inflammatory cells also activate endothelial cells and release both proliferative and cytotoxic mediators. In order to examine the interaction between leukocytes and endothelial cells and the effect of various drugs, we established the methodology for isolating and culturing the endothelial cells from human umbilical vein. Endothelial cells were harvested by using 0.1% collagenase within 48 hr of collecting the cord. Cells were grown to confluency in 96-well plates in Medium 199 containing 20% fetal calf serum, endothelial cell growth supplement, heparin, and antibiotics. Using this method, we obtained a confluent layer of the cells in all the 96 wells within 48 hr. We then examined the effect of peptides, endothelin-1, substance P, and neurokinin-A on the adherence of human blood neutrophils (purity and viability > 98%) to endothelial monolayers. All the peptides enhanced (p < 0.05) the adherence of neutrophils to endothelial cells in a time-dependent manner. This method of endothelial cell culturing is reliable, reproducible, and effective in evaluating the role of various mediators and drugs on the adherence of various white blood cells to endothelium.
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PMID:Technique for assessment of leukocyte adherence to human umbilical vein endothelial cell monolayers. 753 69

We have isolated, partially purified, and characterized the mast cells from human heart tissue. The histamine content of left and right ventricles and septum of hearts obtained from 25 patients undergoing heart transplantation was 5.4 +/- 0.6, 5.3 +/- 0.5, and 5.6 +/- 0.5 micrograms/g of wet tissue, respectively. Ultrastructural study of cardiac mast cells revealed scroll, crystal, and mixed granules, homogeneously dense granules, and lipid bodies in the cytoplasm. A mild collagenase digestion was used to disperse the heart mast cells; the average yield was 3.2 +/- 0.6% (range: 0.8 to 13.6%). The average histamine and tryptase content/heart mast cells was 3.3 +/- 0.2 pg (n = 25) and 24.2 +/- 4.3 micrograms/10(6) cells (n = 11), respectively. Survival of cardiac mast cells after overnight culture was 71.9 +/- 5.4% (n = 23). The purification of human heart mast cells can be brought from less than 0.1 to 12% by a combination of low-speed centrifugation over albumin (2%) solution and Percoll gradient. Viability as shown by trypan blue exclusion was greater than 90%. Heart mast cells released histamine in response to immunologic (anti-IgE, anti-Fc epsilon RI, and C5a) and nonimmunologic stimuli (recombinant human stem cell factor, A23187, and compound 48/80) but did not respond to substance P, FMLP, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, or acetylcholine. There was a linear correlation between the percentage of release caused by anti-IgE and anti-Fc epsilon RI, whereas there was no correlation between the release caused by C5a and anti-IgE-mediated stimuli. Cross-linking with anti-IgE of IgE on heart mast cells induced the release of tryptase (10.1 +/- 2.1 micrograms/10(7) cells; n = 10) and the de novo synthesis of PGD2 (17.3 +/- 4.3 ng/10(6) cells; n = 10) and of leukotriene C4 (19.1 +/- 4.5 ng/10(6) cells; n = 10). There was a linear correlation between the percentage of histamine secretion and tryptase release (r = 0.67; p < 0.001) induced by cross-linking of Fc epsilon RI. similarly, there was a significant correlation between percentage of histamine secretion and PGD2 (r = 0.63; p < 0.001) and LTC4 (r = 0.64; p < 0.001) release. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated the presence of chymase in cardiac mast cells. Mast cells isolated from human heart can be a useful model with which to study the role of these cells and their mediators in cardiac anaphylaxis and cardiovascular diseases.
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PMID:Human heart mast cells. Isolation, purification, ultrastructure, and immunologic characterization. 753 85

1. The kinetics of the degradation of the kinins bradykinin and Met-Lys-bradykinin, angiotensins I and II and the tachykinin substance P by PMNL-collagenase (MMP 8), PMNL-gelatinase (MMP 9) and by the recombinant catalytic domain of MMP 8 (rcd-PMNL-c) was examined by RP-HPLC. The resulting fragments were identified by automated Edman degradation or by amino acid analysis. 2. The initial degradation rates of substance P at a substrate concentration of 25 microM were 5 min-1 for MMP 9 and 150 min-1 for MMP 8. The kinetic constants KM and kcat were determined by concentration-dependent measurements. For MMP 8/substance P the constants were KM = 78 +/- 14 microM and kcat = 412 +/- 67 min-1. For MMP 9/substance P the constants were KM = 91 +/- 15 microM and kcat = 25 +/- 4 min-1. Both enzymes cleaved substance P between Gln6 and Phe7 and between Gly9 and Leu10. 3. Under the same conditions, MMP 8 degraded angiotensin I at an initial rate of 20 h-1, resulting mainly in the vasoactive fragments angiotensin II and angiotensin(1-7). At a substrate concentration of 25 microM and an enzyme/substrate ratio of 1:100, angiotensin II was degraded very slowly (19% in 24 h) by MMP 8. Under these conditions, MMP 9 degraded angiotensin I to a lesser extent than MMP 8 (25% in 24 h) and was unable to cleave angiotensin II. 4. Under the same conditions, bradykinin and Met-Lys-bradykinin were cleaved by PMNL-collagenase at a rate of 20% in 24 h, producing BK(1-7) and BK(1-8). PMNL-gelatinase was unable to cleave the kinins under these conditions. 5. In all cases, rcd-PMNL-c produced the same fragments as wild type PMNL-collagenase, but at a significantly lower rate.
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PMID:Degradation of kinins, angiotensins and substance P by polymorphonuclear matrix metalloproteinases MMP 8 and MMP 9. 753 73


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