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

Since substance P (SP) has been demonstrated to coexist with serotonin (5-HT) in the same population of neurons in the descending raphe system, we have studied the possibility of interactions between these neurotransmitters in other brain areas. Brain nuclei were punched from frozen 300-micron slices of rat brain and extracted with 0.1 M HCIO4 or 2 M acetic acid prior to assay, respectively, of 5-HT content by HPLC with electrochemical detection or SP content by specific radioimmunoassay. Ten days after injection of rats with the 5-HT neurotoxin P-chloroamphetamine (PCA, 10 mg/kg, B.W., i.p.) or 3 days after 5-HT synthesis blockade with p-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA, 300 mg/kg, B.W., i.p.), the 5-HT content of all brain nuclei studied was reduced by means of, respectively, 50% and 81%. In PCA-treated animals, the SP content of the periaqueductal grey matter was significantly increased; PCPA treatment caused, in addition, large increases in the SP content of five other brain nuclei. Blockade of 5-HT receptors by methysergide (15 mg/kg for 5 days) did not significantly change 5-HT levels or turnover, but resulted in 50-200% increases in the SP content of 10 of the 28 brain nuclei studied. Significant decreases in the SP content of numerous areas were seen following treatments (pargyline 30 mg/kg, alone or in combination with 5-hydroxytryptophan, 60 mg/kg) that simultaneously increased 5-HT levels. These results illustrate the modulation of distinct SP-containing systems of the rat brain by perturbation of central serotoninergic pathways and indicate a reciprocal relationship between the SP and 5-HT concentrations of numerous brain nuclei, in particular n. striae terminalis, n. raphe dorsalis, n. accumbens, n. septi, substantia grisea centralis, and n. raphes medianus.
...
PMID:Perturbation of rat brain serotonergic systems results in an inverse relation between substance P and serotonin concentrations measured in discrete nuclei. 619 16

The measurements of peptides of the enkephalin, dynorphin and substance P systems is complicated by the number of possible precursor fragments and degradation products that might cross-react with the antisera. By using an ion-exchanger step before radioimmunoassay we can reduce the possibility that observed peptide levels are due to precursors or metabolites. The ion-exchanger method runs with good recovery and its main advantage is that many samples can be run in parallel. The recovery from the ion-exchanger was similar using two different homogenizing media, whereas the measured endogenous levels of [Met] and [Leu]enkephalin were 3-4 fold higher with 1M acetic acid than when a 1:1 MeOH/HCl mixture was used for tissue extraction.
...
PMID:An ion exchange chromatography and radioimmunoassay procedure for measuring opioid peptides and substance P. 619 1

Two distinct carboxy-terminus-directed anti-substance P (SP) sera (R-1C and R-6G) were used to characterize immunoreactive SP (I-SP) in acetic acid extracts of anterior pituitary (AP) and posterior pituitary (PP) glands of adult male rats. The tissue concentrations of I-SP measured by R-1C and R-6G were comparable. The contents of I-SP were 600-1150 pg/AP and 25-52 pg/PP. I-luteinizing hormone releasing hormone and I-somatostatin (I-SOM) were undetectable in AP extracts, but PP extracts contained the equivalents of 325-785 pg I-SOM/gland. Serial dilutions of AP and PP extracts produced displacement curves with both SP antisera that were parallel to the respective synthetic SP standard and hypothalamic extract displacement curves. Gel filtrations of AP and PP extracts on a Sephadex G-25 column produced I-SP peaks eluting in the same fractions as synthetic SP and hypothalamic I-SP. However, the AP I-SP profile also revealed a side peak migrating between the void volume and the major I-SP peak. Neither immunoreactive species in the AP extract were eliminated when eluted with 6.0 M guanidine HCl, a strong denaturing agent. In vitro incubation of paired anterior hemipituitaries for 30 min in the presence of a 56 mM K+ concentration resulted in a significant (p less than .0001), 25-fold increase in the release of I-SP into the incubation medium above the mean control value. Radiofrequency lesions placed in the median eminence-arcuate region of male rats caused a significant (p less than .001) reduction of I-SP in both the AP and PP. These reductions were inversely related to the plasma prolactin values. The elevation in plasma prolactin was taken as an index of completeness of lesions. We conclude that: 1) the rat pituitary contains I-SP as assessed by its immunologic and chromatographic behavior, 2) K+ depolarization is a potent stimulator of the release of AP I-SP in vitro, 3) the ME-arcuate region is important for the maintenance of pituitary I-SP levels in the rat.
...
PMID:Partial characterization of immunoreactive substance P in the rat pituitary gland. 619 79

Substance P is present in sensory nerves in the lung and we report here its actions on the lung strip. Substance P was shown to produce rapid, small contractions of trhe lung strip at doses from 10(-9) to 10(-5) M, and there was no apparent dose-response relationship. In the presence of a mixture of three inhibitors of substance P breakdown: bacitracin, 1,4-dithio-L- threitol and ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid all at 10(-4) M, the responses to substance P were greatly increased and dose-response curves could be established. The concentrations producing half maximal effect in the presence of these inhibitors were 6 X 10(-6) M +/- 4 X 10(-6) M. The inhibitors of substance P breakdown were found to have no effect on the histamine dose-response curve: any small shifts obtained were not significant. Chlorpheniramine 10(-6) M and 10(-5) M shifted the histamine dose-response curve to the right producing dose ratios of 100 and 900 respectively. At these doses chlorpheniramine had no effect on the dose-response curve to substance P. A dose of substance P not itself producing a response (5 X 10(-8) M) caused an increase in the size of the responses to histamine. The histamine dose-response curve was shifted to the left in the presence of substance P producing an average dose ratio of 1.4 +/- 0.2. In the presence of the peptidase inhibitors, dose-response curves have also been produced for physalaemin (10(-7) - 10(-5) M) and eledoisin (10(-7) - 10(-5) M).
...
PMID:The effect of substance P and related peptides on the guinea-pig lung strip. 620 63

The feasibility of extracting neuropeptides from rat knee joints for quantitation by radioimmunoassay was tested. The investigation, based on 25 adult Lewis rats, focused on substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neuropeptide Y, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. The relative recovery of the peptides in different extraction media was assessed Both knee joints including the articulating epiphysis were dissected and cut into small pieces. The series was divided into five subgroups, 10 joints in each, for extraction in five different media: 1) 1 M acetic acid in 4% EDTA, 2) 2 M acetic acid in 4% EDTA, 3) neutral water in 4% EDTA, 4) 2 M acetic acid in 4% EDTA and 95% alcohol, and 5) 2 M acetic acid without EDTA. Measureable concentrations of the four neuropeptides were reproducibly assessed by RIA. Although all extraction media provided measurable concentrations, 2 M acetic acid in 4% EDTA was found to give the highest overall yield of the four neuropeptides analyzed. Reverse-phase HPLC confirmed that the immunoreactivities assessed by RIA corresponded to the four neuropeptides of interest. Experimental and clinical evidence suggest a neurogenic involvement in the pathophysiology of inflammatory joint disease, e.g., rheumatoid arthritis. The extraction procedure described offers a means of determining neuropeptide concentrations in joint tissue under normal and pathologic conditions by RIA.
...
PMID:Extraction of neuropeptides from joint tissue for quantitation by radioimmunoassay. A study in the rat. 751 57

Substance P, a putative neurotransmitter or neuromodulator of nociception or pain in the spinal cord, exhibits both antinociceptive and hyperalgesic properties. Investigators have shown that the N-terminal metabolite of substance P, substance P(1-7), produces naloxone-reversible antinociception when given supraspinally and systemically in mice and hyperalgesia when injected intrathecally in rats. The goal of our investigation was to identify the receptors mediating these actions of substance P(1-7) at the initial site of release of substance P, i.e. in the spinal cord. Thirty minutes after intrathecal injection, substance P(1-7) produced naloxone-reversible antinociception in a dose-dependent manner in the abdominal stretch assay. When administered with naloxone, substance P(1-7) produced hyperalgesia 5 and 10 min after injection, which was inhibited by dizocilpine (MK-801), a phencyclidine ligand and non-competitive antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate. Antinociception was inhibited by the mu-selective opioid antagonist beta-funaltrexamine, but not by the mu 1-selective opioid antagonist naloxonazine or the delta-selective antagonist naltrindole, indicating a mu 2-opioid receptor-mediated effect. These findings suggest that the N-terminal portion of substance P may modulate nociception or pain, as demonstrated in the acetic acid abdominal stretch (writhing) assay, via activation of two different receptor systems. Substance P(1-7)-induced hyperalgesia is mediated by a phencyclidine-sensitive mechanism and antinociception involves activity at mu-opioid, most likely mu 2, receptors.
...
PMID:Activity at phencyclidine and mu opioid sites mediates the hyperalgesic and antinociceptive properties of the N-terminus of substance P in a model of visceral pain. 752 Oct 22

The substance P (SP) analogues [D-Arg1, D-Phe5, D-Trp7,9, Leu11]-SP and [Arg6, D-Trp7,9, MePhe8]-SP (6-11) (antagonists D and G, respectively) are under consideration as new anticancer drugs. In this report, the stability and in vitro metabolism of both antagonists in up to seven different media (water, 1 M acetic acid, human plasma, nude mouse liver and WX 322 human SCLC xenograft homogenized in either 1 M acetic acid or phosphate buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4) have been characterized by both isocratic and gradient elution reversed-phase HPLC. Antagonist D was stable (never > 13% degradation over 24 h, at 37 degrees C) in water, 1 M acetic acid and plasma but was metabolized by PBS liver homogenates (10%, w/v) sequentially to two stable metabolites with a half life of 0.98 h at a concentration of 500 micrograms ml-1. The major pathway of degradation of antagonist G appeared to be C-terminal methionine oxidation (particularly in plasma) as well as hydrolysis, with even aqueous solutions being significantly affected at low concentrations of peptide (0.1 micrograms ml-1, half life 20.9 h at 37 degrees C). Stable metabolites of antagonist G were also detected in incubations with PBS liver homogenates (half life 1.53 h at 500 micrograms ml-1, 37 degrees C). Overall, the data presented indicate that the modifications made to SP have been relatively successful in preserving chemical and biological stability.
...
PMID:Stability and in vitro metabolism of the mitogenic neuropeptide antagonists [D-Arg1,D-Phe5, D-Trp7,9, Leu11]-substance P and [Arg6, D-Trp7,9, MePhe8]-substance P (6-11) characterized by high-performance liquid chromatography. 752 85

The feasibility of extracting and quantifying neuropeptides in bone by radioimmunoassay was investigated in a study including 60 diaphyseal rat femora. Substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, previously identified in bone by immunohistochemistry, were extracted from separate homogenates of bone, periosteum and bone marrow in a solution of 4% EDTA and 2 M acetic acid. Measurable amounts of all four neuropeptides in bone, periosteum and bone marrow were obtained by radioimmunoassay in a reproducible manner. The neuropeptide immunoreactivities were characterized by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. Among the four neuropeptides analyzed, neuropeptide Y consistently exhibited the highest concentrations in the different tissues. Overall, cortical bone showed the lowest neuropeptide concentrations. The concentration of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide was higher in periosteum than in bone marrow, whereas that of calcitonin gene-related peptide was uniform in these tissues. The distributional differences observed in bone tissue may be explained by a variety of physiological roles attributed to neuropeptides such as regulation of nociception, vasoactivity, immune function and local bone metabolism. The described methodology offers a new means of investigating a neuropeptidergic involvement in various disorders of the skeleton.
...
PMID:Extraction and quantitation of neuropeptides in bone by radioimmunoassay. 752 16

Various procedures for extraction at acid, neutral and alkaline pH were compared with regard to the yield of different tachykinins and tachykinin-like substances from rat spinal cord. Reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and radioimmunoassay with various C-terminally directed tachykinin antisera and a newly developed N-terminally directed substance P (SP)-antiserum (SPN 1) were used. Antiserum SPN 1 fully reacts with SP-analogues modified at the C-terminal end (SP free acid and SP-Gly-Lys) and also (77%) with SP(1-9) but not with C-terminal SP-fragments lacking 2 or more N-terminal amino acids. The highest levels of SP-like immunoreactivity (LI) and neurokinin A (NKA)-LI were measured after combined water and acetic acid extraction procedures. Also when measuring cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity the highest level was obtained following this extraction procedure. RP-HPLC revealed a major component of SP-LI at the position of synthetic SP irrespectively of the extraction method and if the C- or N-terminally directed antiserum was used. Neutral water extracts contained a late eluting component detected with the C-terminally, but not with the N-terminally, directed antiserum. Acid and alkaline extracts, in contrast, contained components which could be detected with the N-terminally, but not with the C-terminally, directed SP-antiserum. Immunoreactive components eluting at the position of NKA and NKB were found in all types of extracts with NKA-, kassinin- and eledoisin-antisera. The NKB- and neuropeptide K (NPK)-components were more prominent in acid than in neutral and alkaline extracts. In conclusion, the present results indicate that rat spinal cord may contain molecular forms of tachykinin-like immunoreactivity in addition to those previously described and illustrate the importance of the choice of extraction method in immunochemical studies. Combined extraction in water and acetic acid appears to be a suitable method when the content of peptides with different chemical properties are to be measured in a tissue sample.
...
PMID:Multiple molecular forms of tachykinins in rat spinal cord: a study comparing different extraction methods. 752 21

The present investigation describes the antinociceptive effect of capsaicin in the acetic acid-induced abdominal stretch assay and its mediation by substance P(1-7) fragment [SP(1-7)] and nitric oxide (NO). When injected intrathecally 24 hr before testing, SP(1-7) produced a dose-related decrease in the number of abdominal stretches induced by an i.p. injection of acetic acid. The antinociceptive effect of SP(1-7) (10 nmol) persisted for 62 hr after its injection, a time course that was similar to that produced by a dose of capsaicin (2.6 nmol) that produced an effect of similar magnitude. Antinociception induced by 10 nmol of SP(1-7) was completely reversed by coadministration of 10 nmol of D-SP(1-7); the equivalent antinociception produced by capsaicin was reversed by as small a dose as 1 nmol of D-SP(1-7). The guanylate cyclase inhibitor, methylene blue, at a dose of 10 nmol, prevented both SP(1-7)- and capsaicin-induced antinociception. Capsaicin-induced, but not SP(1-7)-induced, antinociception was prevented by Nw-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, an NO synthase inhibitor. This inhibition of capsaicin was reversed by coadministration of 120 nmol of L-arginine. Reduced hemoglobin did not prevent capsaicin-induced antinociception. These findings suggest NO is produced and acts within capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent fibers in the dorsal spinal cord to mobilize substance P, resulting in N-terminal induced-antinociception.
...
PMID:Substance P N-terminal metabolites and nitric oxide mediate capsaicin-induced antinociception in the adult mouse. 752 54


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>