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)

The effect of acute and chronic ovariectomy and the substitutive treatment with 17-beta estradiol and/or progesterone on anterior pituitary levels of neurokinin A (NKA) was studied in female rats. Acute ovariectomy did not result in significant changes of NKA in the anterior pituitary gland as compared with the levels in diestrous intact rats, but a single injection of 5 micrograms of estradiol in ovariectomized rats significantly decreased NKA levels in the anterior pituitary gland. Progesterone was without effect and did not modify the decrease of NKA in the anterior pituitary gland induced by estradiol. In rats examined 11 to 17 days after ovariectomy, NKA in the anterior pituitary gland was significantly higher than in diestrous intact rats. In the hypothalamus, ovariectomy resulted in decreased levels of NKA in the median eminence-arcuate nucleus. Estradiol significantly reduced NKA stores in the anterior pituitary gland but increased them in the whole hypothalamus and in the median eminence-arcuate nucleus. Thus, estradiol seems to be a powerful regulator of NKA stores in the adenohypophysis and also in the hypothalamus.
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PMID:Neurokinin A in the anterior pituitary of female rats: effects of ovariectomy and estradiol. 133 83

The relationship between maternal hormones and factors secreted by the implanting embryo is still controversial. We have analysed the in-vitro effect of oestradiol and human embryo-derived histamine-releasing factor (EHRF) on histamine release from rat uterine mast cells. Rat uterine mast cells which were preincubated with oestradiol and then challenged with human EHRF gave histamine release values two- to threefold higher than those without preincubation. The enhancement observed was time- and temperature-dependent. A similar enhancement was obtained with human sensitized basophils but not with rat peritoneal mast cells. Oestradiol, used as a direct challenge, did not induce any histamine release from either rat uterine or peritoneal mast cells, or from human sensitized basophils. Oestradiol preincubation also enhanced the histamine release induced by anti-IgE but did not enhance the histamine release induced by substance P or compound 48/80, two secretagogues that are not mediated by IgE. Moreover, uterine fragments derived from rats at various oestrus phases, with different amounts of endogenous oestrogen, were challenged in vitro with EHRF. The release of histamine by mast cells was higher at the proestrus and preimplantation phases than at dioestrus. All these findings suggest that the interaction of oestradiol with rat uterine mast cells was capable of enhancing in vitro the histamine releasing effect of EHRF.
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PMID:Oestradiol enhances in vitro the histamine release induced by embryonic histamine-releasing factor (EHRF) from uterine mast cells. 138 60

The effects of gonadectomy and of the administration of gonadal steroids on the content of substance P in the anterior pituitary (AP-SP) were studied in adult rats. The effect of gonadal status on the AP-SP content of thyroidectomized (TX) rats was also studied. We have confirmed that the AP-SP content in adult males is higher than that in adult females. Ovariectomy (OVX) caused an increase in AP-SP content which was apparent 6 days after surgery. Estradiol (E2; 2 micrograms/rat daily) administered for 13 days beginning the day after OVX prevented the increase in AP-SP content induced by OVX. Orchiectomy of adult rats had no effect on AP-SP content 14 and 45 days after surgery. E2 administered to adult female rats for 13 days caused a reduction in the AP-SP content, whereas dihydrotestosterone (0.2 mg/rat daily for 13 days) caused an increase that was even more pronounced in TX rats. E2 administration to TX adult female rats caused a significant decrease in the AP-SP content both when treatment was begun on the day after surgery or 2 weeks later. Administration of T4 (1.5 and 25 micrograms/100 g BW daily for 7 days) to rats made hypothyroid by thyroidectomy 2 weeks earlier abolished the increase in AP-SP content seen in TX animals. Neither E2 nor dihydrotestosterone had an effect on the substance P content of any of the brain regions examined. The AP-SP content of pregnant or lactating rats was not different from that of age-matched controls. The content of substance P in the AP and median eminence did not vary significantly throughout the estrous cycle. The data indicate that AP-SP content is dependent on the gonadal status of the animal and that gonadal steroids interact with thyroid hormones in the regulation of substance P turnover in the AP.
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PMID:The effects of gonadal steroids on the content of substance P in the rat anterior pituitary. 620 22

The effect of progesterone on SP- and NKA-like immunoreactive substances in the hypothalamus and anterior pituitary was studied in ovariectomized and in ovariectomized, estrogen treated Siberian hamsters. Neither ovariectomy nor progesterone or estradiol treatment resulted in apparent changes in the tachykinin concentration in the hypothalamus. No effect of the treatments was seen on the release of tachykinins by hypothalami incubated in vitro in presence of high KCl concentrations. Ovariectomy resulted in a significant increase in the concentrations of both tachykinins in the anterior pituitary, as compared with intact animals. Progesterone (5 mg/animal) significantly reduced tachykinin concentrations in the anterior pituitary, as compared with the values found in ovariectomized animals. Estradiol completely suppressed the post-ovariectomy increase in anterior pituitary tachykinins, and progesterone did not significantly modify the response to estradiol. Lower doses of progesterone (250 microg or 1 mg/animal) significantly reduced NKA concentrations in the anterior pituitary of ovariectomized Siberian hamsters, but SP concentrations, although showing a similar tendency, were not significantly different in progesterone-treated as compared with ovariectomized, control animals. These results suggest that progesterone may modulate tachykinin stores in the anterior pituitary gland of Siberian hamsters.
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PMID:Effect of progesterone on tachykinin concentrations in the hypothalamus and anterior pituitary of female siberian hamsters. 1044 93