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)

When canine tracheal explants were incubated in culture medium 199 in the presence of D-glucosamine labeled with carbon-14 for 24 hours, a significant amount of radioactivity was found in the secreted macromolecules. When kallidin was present in the culture medium, the amount of radioactivity associated with a portion of these macromolecules was increased. A met-lys-bradykinin derivative had a similar effect, but bradykinin did not. When hexadimethrine, an inhibitor of kinin formation, was present in the culture medium, the amount of radioactivity in the macro-molecular fraction was decreased. Substance P and the structurally related polypeptides, physalaemin and eledoisin, also enhanced the production of tracheal macromolecules; they were several-fold more active than kallidin. The effect of polypeptides on the activities of glycosyltransferases was also investigated. One of the enzymes present in a microsomal fraction prepared from the mucosal lining of canine trachea was uridine diphosphate (UDP)-galactose:mucin galactosyltransferase, which required a 25 mM concentration of maganese ions to be present in the assay mixture to obtain maximal enzymatic activity. When the concentration of manganese ions was decreased to 2.5 mM, there was less than one third of the maximal enzymatic activity, but full activity could be restored by the addition of kallidin. Several other basic polypeptides had a similar effect on the enzymatic activity. Kallidin had little or no effect on the activities of several other glycosyltransferases. The results suggest that basic polypeptides may be important in controlling the synthesis and/or release of respiratory glycoproteins.
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PMID:Effect of kallidin, substance P, and other basic polypeptides on the production of respiratory macromolecules. 85 19

To study the regulation of mucous cell secretion, we have developed an in vitro cell model consisting of enzymatically dispersed mucous acinar structures (cell aggregates) from rat sublingual glands. Histological and ultrastructural evidence demonstrates that the cell aggregates are highly enriched in mucous cells, retain the morphological and ultrastructural features observed in intact glands, and undergo transition to an extensive secretory state when stimulated by 10 microM carbachol. The secretory responsiveness of the cell aggregates was verified in pharmacological studies. Carbachol stimulated secretion in a dose-dependent manner with high affinity (concentration causing half-maximal response = 0.3 microM) and was completely inhibited by atropine. Secretion was also stimulated by vasoactive intestinal peptide and substance P but not by alpha- or beta-adrenergic agonists. Biochemical characterization of secretion during nonstimulated and carbachol-stimulated conditions (after preincubation in [3H]glucosamine) demonstrated that, in response to carbachol, cell aggregates synthesized and secreted mucins which were similar to mucin glycoproteins isolated from whole glands. Collectively, our results establish that the rat sublingual cell aggregate model is a viable and pharmacologically responsive cell system to study the regulation of mucous cell secretion.
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PMID:Rat sublingual gland as a model to study glandular mucous cell secretion. 205 54

We have investigated certain aspects of the mechanism whereby substance P triggers secretion of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) from rat peritoneal mast cells in vitro. Substance P-induced release of 5-HT was inhibited following pretreatment of rat peritoneal cells with 0.01-1.0 units/ml neuraminidase; secretion induced by anti-IgE antibody was inhibited by pretreatment with 1.0 units/ml but not by lower concentrations of enzyme. Addition of the sialic acid-rich substances N-acetyl-neuraminlactose (up to 1.0 mM) and mucin (up to 1.0 mg/ml) to substance P in free solution failed to block the activity of the neuropeptide. Limulin, a sialic acid-specific lectin, failed to block substance P-induced secretion of 5-HT, but was found to possess intrinsic non-lytic secretory activity (at 5-20 micrograms/ml). Release of 5-HT induced by limulin was independent of that induced by substance P. A range of octapeptides incorporating the C-terminal sequence Gly-Ser-Phe-Phe, but differing in degree of cationicity and positioning of cationic residues in the four N-terminal positions, were tested for their capacity to antagonise the mast cell-triggering activity of substance P. A peptide incorporating two lysine residues at the N-terminus was found to have partial substance P antagonist activity; no effects on IgE-mediated secretion were observed.
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PMID:The mast cell response to substance P: effects of neuraminidase, limulin, and some novel synthetic peptide antagonists. 242 85

Three classes of agonists associated with Ca2+-mobilization--alpha 1-adrenergic (methoxamine), muscarinic (carbachol) and peptidergic (substance P, SP)--significantly stimulated the secretion of mucin from enzymatically-dispersed rat submandibular gland acinar cells. The same three secretagogues also caused the hydrolysis of membrane inositol phospholipids, resulting in elevated cellular levels of inositol phosphates, particularly inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3). Exogenous IP3 elicited the dose-dependent release of mucin in dispersed cells suggesting that agonist-generated endogenous IP3 may provoke a secretory response. IP3 and the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in combination, stimulated an additive secretion of mucin in the model. The potential use of these two agents as specific probes of the IP3- and diacylglycerol-associated legs of the polyphosphoinositide (PPI) breakdown pathway is indicated. Although all three agonists shared a common action in stimulating PPI hydrolysis, their effects on the beta-adrenergic mucosecretory response were inconsistent. A brief preincubation of cells with carbachol or SP significantly reduced the subsequent isoproterenol (IPR)-provoked secretion of mucin, whereas methoxamine plus IPR stimulated an additive response. The mechanisms underlying these opposite effects are not known. Failure of IP3 or TPA to modify IPR responses suggests that modulation of the beta response may operate at a locus before the generation of diacylglycerol and IP3, possibly at the level of signal transduction. The study indicates a role for Ca2+-mobilizing agonists in controlling submandibular mucin secretion and provides evidence that receptor-linked phosphoinositide hydrolysis is an early stage in their stimulus-secretion coupling mechanism.
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PMID:Muscarinic, alpha 1-adrenergic and peptidergic agonists stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis and regulate mucin secretion in rat submandibular gland cells. 244 9

Eighty colon carcinomas reflecting the histologic spectrum were studied immunohistochemically; their epithelial characteristics had been established by demonstrating cytokeratin polypeptides. Paraffin sections were immunostained with monoclonal antibody (Mab) A-80 that recognizes a mucin-like glycoprotein related to exocrine differentiation. Sequential sections were immunostained with neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation antibodies: NSE, human chromogranin A, serotonin, somatostatin, substance P and VIP. Twenty-one/80 carcinomas immunoreacted exclusively with Mab A-80; these included adenocarcinomas with variably defined glands, colloid, "solid", and linitits plastica carcinomas. Eleven/80 carcinomas immunoreacted only with antibodies to NE markers. Twenty-nine/80 carcinomas of histologically variable patterns expressed both exocrine and NE antigens. A notable group of 19 adenocarcinomas immunostaining with Mab A-870 included a minority NE cell subpopulation. We tentatively conclude that given a limited battery of immunoprobes, colon carcinomas comprise 4 groups: 1) pure exocrine carcinomas, 2) pure NE carcinomas, 3) mixed exocrine and NE carcinomas, and 4) exocrine carcinomas with occasional NE cells. Thus, phenotypically mixed exocrine and NE carcinomas comprise the largest group while the second largest group exhibited exclusively features of exocrine phenotype. Preliminary clinical correlative data indicate that pure NE colon carcinomas behave more aggressively than their exocrine counterparts; moreover, colon carcinomas containing a NE subpopulation, even if small, also seem to behave worse than their counterparts without an NE subpopulation.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of colon carcinomas applying exocrine and neuroendocrine markers. 246 47

The effects of the undecapeptide, substance P(SP), on the secretion of mucin and proteolytic enzymes from dispersed cells of the rat submandibular gland were studied. The peptide, at a concentration of 1 X 10(-7) M, stimulated the release of 31.9 +/- 3.0% (mean +/- SEM) of intracellular mucin over 40 min, compared with 12.5 +/- 1.5% in untreated controls (p less than 0.01). This effect was duplicated by the homologous peptides, physalaemin, and eledoisin-related peptide. Substance P action was not affected by pre-incubation of cells with phentolamine or propranolol and was therefore independent of adrenergic stimulation. Furthermore, SP did not enhance the intracellular concentrations of cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP, confirming that cyclic nucleotides were not involved in its stimulus-secretion coupling mechanism. The isoproterenol-stimulated secretion of mucin from dispersed cells was reduced to 75.7% of the normal response (p less than 0.01) after a brief exposure to SP. This inhibitory effect was probably mediated by intracellular events rather than by direct effects on cell surface receptors. However, mucin release after treatment with SP followed by norepinephrine (NE) was 161% of that caused by NE alone (p less than 0.01) and may reflect an additive response to the independent stimulation of SP and NE receptors. Substance P and related peptides had no effect on arginine esterase secretion in the experimental model, although a response was elicited by alpha- and beta-adrenergic agonists. It is, therefore, proposed that serous cells of the granular convoluted tubule in the rat submandibular gland lack substance P receptors.
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PMID:Effect of substance P on exocrine secretion by rat submandibular gland cells. 620 29

Many in vitro and in vivo models have been used to study the modulation of intestinal mucosecretion. In such studies, quantification of mucus secretion is usually difficult, due to several technical problems. Whether sensory mechanisms participate in the modulation of intestinal mucosecretion remains unknown. The development and assessment of a morphometric method with computer assisted image analysis that allows to detect and quantitate mucin secretion by duodenal goblet cells are reported. Using this method, the secretory effect of pilocarpine on villus and crypt goblet cells was confirmed. We also determined whether sensory neurons can regulate intestinal mucosecretion by using capsaicin, a vegetal neurotoxin specific of a subpopulation of afferent primary sensory neurons. Intravenous capsaicin administration (10 micrograms/kg) increased mucus secretion by the goblet cells of the duodenal crypts. This suggests that sensory neurons may modulate duodenal mucin secretion. The "local effector function" of these neurons might be involved, in part through the release of substance P because exogenous substance P was able to increase mucin excretion by goblets cells of duodenal villi. Substance P, however, did not exactly mimic the capsaicin effects, suggesting that other factors were involved.
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PMID:[Sensory fibers sensitive to capsaicin can modulate secretion of the duodenal mucus. A morphometric study in rats]. 750 42

We determined the effects of immobilization stress on rat colonic mucus release and mast cell degranulation and examined whether corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) was involved in these responses. After 30-min immobilization, rats were killed, colonic mucosal explants were cultured, and levels of rat mast cell protease II (RMCP II) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) were measured. Mucin release from explants was assayed by incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into colonic mucin and by histological evaluation of goblet cell depletion. Stress caused significant increases of colonic RMCP II, PGE2, and mucin release and fecal pellet output and caused an approximately 10-fold increase in colonic mucosal levels of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) mRNA. These stress-associated changes were reproduced by intravenous or intracerebral injection of CRF in conscious, nonstressed rats. Pretreatment of rats with the CRF antagonist alpha-helical-CRF9-41, hexamethonium, atropine, or bretylium, or the mast cell stabilizer lodoxamide inhibited stress-induced release of RMCP II, PGE2, and mucin, whereas indomethacin prevented mucin release but not mast cell degranulation. Hexamethonium and CP-96,345, a substance P antagonist, inhibited fecal pellet output caused by stress. We conclude that CRF released during immobilization stress increases colonic transit via a neuronal pathway and stimulates colonic mucin secretion via activation of neurons and mast cells.
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PMID:Acute stress causes mucin release from rat colon: role of corticotropin releasing factor and mast cells. 894 4

A rat model of colitis [dextran sulfate (DSS)] was used to study the permeation of Evans blue (EB) from the lumen into the wall of proximal and distal colonic loops after exposure to the dye for 2 hr. Topical application of drugs used in human ulcerative colitis (lidocaine, mesalazine, prednisolone, or sucralfate) was given daily during induction of colitis to protect the mucosa. The mucosal changes were evaluated with special regard to peptidergic innervation [substance P (SP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY)], invasion of antigen-presenting polydendritic cells, and mucin-containing goblet cells. DSS-treatment caused a significantly increased permeation of EB. In the proximal loops a significant inhibition was obtained after treatment with lidocaine, prednisolone, or sucralfate. In the distal loops only treatment with lidocaine had a preventive effect. Immunocytochemically there was a clear hyperplasia of both mucosal SP- and NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibers in regions with crypt abnormalities. In these regions also most of the goblet cells were devoid of mucus. Like the changes in permeation, these morphological changes were most prominent in the distal loops. With induction of colitis, the mucosa and lamina propria were invaded by polydendritic cells; the visual score was markedly decreased in the proximal loops treated with lidocaine, prednisolone, or sucralfate. In the distal loops similar effects were obtained after treatment with lidocaine or prednisolone. Prevention of the influx of antigens in both loops after lidocaine treatment with reduced recruitment of polydendritic cells into the lamina propria is suggested. The nerve hyperplasia may thus be secondary to luminal challenge with antigens during induction of colitis. The discrepancy between increased permeation and absence of polydendritic cell response in the distal loops after prednisolone may reflect separate actions of steroids on the intestinal epithelium and the immune cells.
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PMID:Influence of topical rectal application of drugs on dextran sulfate-induced colitis in rats. 912 57

Numerous respiratory diseases increase mucin secretion from human airways. Several investigators hypothesize that mucin secretion from airway epithelium is NK(1)-receptor mediated. We have developed a mucin secretion assay using CHO-K1 cells transfected with the human NK(1)receptor (CHO-K1-hNK(1)R) that respond to NK(1)-specific agonists. Cells were labeled with [(3)H]-glucosamine and stimulated with agonists including Ac-[Arg(6), Sar(9), Met(O(2))(11)] Substance P(6-11) (ASMSP; NK(1)-specific), [beta-Ala(8)]-Neurokinin A(4-10) (BANK; NK(2)-specific), or human neutrophil elastase (HNE). Basal mucin secretion from CHO-K1-hNK(1)R and non-transfected cells was similar. Stimulation of CHO-K1-hNK(1)R, but not CHO-K1, with ASMSP or BANK concentration-dependently increased mucin secretion (pD(2)value[Emax] = 8.9(1)+/-0.1(3)[175%] and 7.56+/-0.05[100%], respectively). SR140333 (NK(1)antagonist), but not SR48968 (NK(2)antagonist), decreased ASMSP- and BANK-induced mucin release from CHO-K1-hNK(1)R. In these cells, endothelin-1, angiotensin II, serotonin, phenylephrine, senktide, and methacholine showed negligible effects on mucin secretion. A similar lack of effect of these agonists was observed in non-transfected CHO-K1 cells. HNE increased mucin release four to five fold in both cell types. These studies demonstrate that stimulation of CHO- K1-hNK(1)R with ASMSP and BANK causes robust and NK(1)-selective mucin release.
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PMID:Pharmacological characterization of mucin secretion from CHO-K1-hNK(1)R cells. 1065 98


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