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)

The presence and distribution of the presumed pan-neural marker protein gene product 9.5 (PGP)- and peptide-immunoreactive (ir) nerve fibers in alveolar walls of various species was investigated by light microscopic single and double staining immunohistochemistry. PGP-, tachykinin (TK)-, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CRGP)-ir fibers were sparsely distributed in a similar pattern in alveolar walls of all species investigated. No vasoactive intestinal peptide-, peptide histidine isoleucine-, galanin-, and opioid-ir nerve fibers could be detected. PGP-ir fibers outnumbered those staining for TKs and CGRP. There was partial coexistence of PGP and TK as well as of TK and CRGP. PGP-, TK-, and CGRP-ir fibers were in close spatial relationships to the cells building up the alveolar walls and to alveolar capillaries. The function of PGP is unknown. TK- and CGRP-ir nerves in alveolar walls may be sensory and function as chemo-, stretch-, and/or immuno-receptors. TKs and CGRP released from alveolar fibers may influence the alveolar epithelium and the various non-epithelial alveolar cells, including immune cells. The alveolar TK and CGRP innervation may be of unrecognized importance in physiological and pathophysiological regulation of lung functions.
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PMID:Tachykinin-, calcitonin gene-related peptide-, and protein gene product 9.5-immunoreactive nerve fibers in alveolar walls of mammals. 184

Membranes isolated from a murine fibroblast B82 cell line (SKLKB82#3) transfected with the bovine stomach cDNA pSKR56S exhibited binding of [His(125I)1]neurokinin A (125I-NKA) to a single population of sites with a Bmax of 147 fmol/mg of protein and a Kd of 0.59 nM. Control cell lines had little or no specific binding. The ligand binding in SKLKB82#3 cells was reversible and was inhibited by peptides in the potency rank of neuropeptide gamma greater than neuropeptide K greater than neurokinin A greater than [10-norleucine]neurokinin A-(4-10) greater than substance P much greater than senktide (succinyl-Asp-Phe-MePhe-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2). Specific binding was enhanced by Mn2+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ and was inhibited by guanine nucleotide analogues. Thus, SKLKB82#3 cells have been transfected with NK2 receptors that have become associated with an endogenous guanine nucleotide-binding protein. In comparison with membranes from the hamster urinary bladder, a tissue enriched in NK2 receptors, NK2 receptor antagonists displayed markedly different potencies, either more or less potent, in inhibiting specific binding in membranes of the transfected cells. Furthermore, inhibition of 125I-NKA binding by nucleotide analogues was markedly different in SKLKB82#3 cells compared with hamster bladder tissue. The different binding profile in the cells is not due to an artefact introduced during cDNA transfection because a similar profile was also observed in bovine stomach membranes. These results may indicate the existence of two distinct NK2 receptors.
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PMID:Characterization of a tachykinin peptide NK2 receptor transfected into murine fibroblast B82 cells. 184 6

This lecture summarizes studies on the effects of some of the neuropeptides which seem to be present in somatosensory and autonomic nerves in the uvea. Release of these peptides is likely to explain nerve induced effects in the eye which are not due to classical transmitters. Trigeminal nerve fibres in the eye seem to contain substance P (SP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and cholecystokinin (CCK), parasympathetic nerve fibers from the facial nerve seem to contain vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), and peptide with histidine and isoleucine terminals (PHI), and sympathetic nerves seem to contain neuropeptide Y (NPY). Retrograde trigeminal nerve stimulation in rabbits causes hyperemia, miosis, a breakdown of the blood-aqueous barrier to plasma proteins and a rise in intraocular pressure (IOP). There is release of SP and CGRP or related peptides. The miosis seems to be due to SP and the other effects to CGRP and small amounts of arachidonic acid metabolites released by the peptides. SP has no miotic effect in monkeys and cats. However, CCK is a potent miotic in monkeys and causes contraction of the human pupillary sphincter muscle. It has no such effect in the lower species. The effect of CCK in primates seems to derive from the presence of CCK receptors of the A-type on the pupillary sphincter muscle, and can be blocked by lorglumide. Miosis can be produced in cats by the peptide endothelin; this effect is due to release of arachidonic acid metabolites. Facial nerve stimulation causes vasodilation in the uvea of rabbits, cats and monkeys. The effect cannot be abolished by muscarinic blocking agents.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The 1990 Endre Balazs Lecture. Effects of some neuropeptides on the uvea. 187

Various peptide derivatives of the C-terminal decapeptide of gastrin releasing peptide (GRP-10) and neuromedin B (NMB), i.e., carboxyl terminal fragments, amino terminal fragments and substituted analogues, were chemically synthesized and the structure-activity relationships of the peptides were investigated by comparing their contractile activities on the rat uterus. Peptides with chain lengths of 8 and 9 amino acid residues from the C-terminus of GRP-10 and NMB, respectively, had considerable contractile activities. At position 6 of both decapeptides, Val seems to be more favourable than Thr for inducing contraction of the rat uterus. The substitution of His at position 3 and Leu at position 9 of GRP-10 by Leu and Phe, as in NMB leads to a decrease in activity. Moreover, Trp at position 4 and -Met-NH2 at the C-terminus are essential for activity. Furthermore, in order to characterize the bombesin-receptor profile of rat uterus, the inhibitory effect of two peptide antagonists, [D-Arg1, D-Pro2, D-Trp7,9, Leu11]-substance P and [Leu13-phi (CH2NH)-Leu14]-bombesin on the contraction of rat uterus were examined.
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PMID:Structure-activity relationships of mammalian bombesin-like neuropeptides in the contraction of rat uterus. 192 98

The localisation and distribution of the cholinergic, serotoninergic and peptidergic components of the nervous system of the frog-lung fluke Haplometra cylindracea have been determined by the application of standard enzyme cytochemical and immunocytochemical techniques to cryostat sections and whole-mount preparations. Cholinesterase activity (ChE), as indicative of acetylcholine, has been demonstrated cytochemically in the CNS and PNS; however, the anterior ganglia were notably unreactive. The occurrence of serotonin was examined by an indirect immunofluorescence technique, and immunoreactivity (IR) was demonstrable in small, paired anterior ganglia and in fine nerve fibres associated with the somatic muscle, cirrus and gonopore. The peptidergic portion of the nervous system was investigated using antisera to 17 mammalian regulatory peptides and the invertebrate peptide FMRFamide, and was visualised by both indirect immunofluorescence and confocal scanning laser microscopy. Positive immunostaining occurred with antisera raised against pancreatic polypeptide (PP), peptide tyrosine tyrosine (PYY), substance P (SP), peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI) and FMRFamide. Immunoreactivity to PP, PYY and FMRFamide was widespread throughout the nervous system and was evident in large, paired anterior ganglia, the dorsal commissure, main nerve tracts and the extensive array of small fibres that constitute the PNS. In contrast, the distribution of nerves immunoreactive to SP and PHI was less apparent, with PHI-IR occurring exclusively within the fibrous neuropile of the ganglia and in fibres of the ventral nerve cord. Results are discussed with respect to the distribution of the various neurochemical elements and their roles as putative neurotransmitters and/or regulatory molecules.
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PMID:Occurrence and distribution of putative neurotransmitters in the frog-lung parasite Haplometra cylindracea (Trematoda: Digenea). 197 50

Blood flow in the tracheobronchial airways is regulated by three main nervous pathways: 1) sympathetic motor nerves (adrenergic and nonadrenergic); 2) parasympathetic motor nerves (cholinergic and noncholinergic); and 3) afferent or sensory nerves (peptidergic). Noradrenaline is the main adrenergic mediator which produces short-lasting constrictions in both tracheal and bronchial vascular beds and in both arteries and veins. These responses are mediated via alpha-adrenoceptors. The nonadrenergic mediator neuropeptide Y is a vasoconstrictor which produces long-lasting responses with larger doses. Acetylcholine is the principal mediator of the cholinergic nerves and causes short-lasting dilations at all levels of the tracheobronchial circulation (arteries, veins and bronchopulmonary anastomoses). These responses are mediated via muscarinic receptors. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and peptide histidine isoleucine (in man peptide histidine methionine) are the main mediators of the noncholinergic nerves. Both of them produce vasodilation in the tracheobronchial circulation; VIP can cause longer-lasting responses with larger doses. The afferent or sensory nerves contain tachykinins, i.e. substance P and neurokinins A and B, which are potent vasodilators in the tracheobronchial circulation and also potent inducers of postcapillary permeability. Calcitonin gene-related peptide is another sensory neuropeptide with ability to produce long-lasting vasodilations without affecting microvascular permeability.
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PMID:Effects of neurotransmitters on tracheobronchial blood flow. 198 76

The cerebral circulation is supplied with two vasodilator systems: the parasympathetic system storing vasoactive intestinal peptide, peptide histidine isoleucine, acetylcholine and in a subpopulation of nerves neuropeptide Y, and the sensory system, mainly originating in the trigeminal ganglion, storing substance P, neurokinin A and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). Recent knowledge of the innervation and effects of the dilator neuropeptides in the cerebral circulation is reviewed. Their role in the pathophysiology of subarachnoid hemorrhage and migraine has now received attention, with documentation of a clear linkage with the release of CGRP. In subarachnoid hemorrhage, other perivascular peptides are, to a lesser extent, involved.
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PMID:Innervation and effects of dilatory neuropeptides on cerebral vessels. New aspects. 200 78

A 21-amino-acid residue tachykinin-related peptide, carassin, was isolated in pure form from an extract of the brain of the goldfish, Carrassius auratus, by reversed-phase HPLC. The primary structure of the peptide was established as the following: Ser-Pro-Ala-Asn-Ala-Gln-Ile-Thr-Arg-Lys-Arg-His-Lys-Ile-Asn- Ser-Phe-Val-Gly-Leu-Met.NH2. This amino acid sequence is the same length as and shows structural similarity (57% homology) to the mammalian tachykinin, neuropeptide-gamma, which is a product of the posttranslational processing of gamma-preprotachykinin. The mammalian tachykinins, substance P and neurokinin B, were not detected in the extract by using specific antisera directed against the NH2-termini of the peptides, but an antiserum directed against the COOH-terminal region of substance P did detect a low concentration of immunoreactive material.
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PMID:Carassin: a tachykinin that is structurally related to neuropeptide-gamma from the brain of the goldfish. 200 52

The occurrence and distribution of an array of neuropeptides and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase in the fungiform papillae of pigs and rats were studied by immunocytochemistry. Structural differences between the fungiform papillae of the two species were correlated to differences in the occurrence and distribution of neuropeptides. Calcitonin gene-related peptide-, substance P- and neurokinin A-containing fibers were numerous in the fungiform papillae of both species, although their distribution within the papilla differed. In the pig, the majority of these fibers ended within the taste buds, while in the rat numerous fibers also penetrated the adjacent epithelium. Galanin- and bombesin-immunoreactive nerve fibers could not be detected in the rat fungiform papillae, while in the pig many, but not all, of the fungiform papillae contained bombesin- and galanin-positive nerve fibers. Vasoactive intestinal peptide- and peptide histidine isoleucine-immunoreactive fibers occurred in the fungiform papillae of both species. A few neuropeptide Y-containing fibers and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase-positive (presumably adrenergic) fibers could be observed in the porcine papillae only.
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PMID:Peptide-containing nerve fibers in the fungiform papillae of pigs and rats. 203 20

In a survey for unknown bioactive peptides in frog (Rana catesbeiana) brain and intestine, we isolated four novel peptides that exhibit potent stimulant effects on smooth muscle preparation of guinea pig ileum. By microsequencing and synthesis, these peptides were identified as Lys- Pro- Ser- Pro- Asp- Arg- Phe- Tyr- Gly- Leu- Met- NH2 (ranatachykinin A), Tyr- Lys- Ser- Asp- Ser- Phe- Tyr- Gly- Leu- Met- NH2 (ranatachykinin B), His- Asn- Pro- Ala- Ser- Phe- Ile- Gly- Leu- Met- NH2 (ranatachykinin C) and Lys- Pro- Ans- Pro- Glu- Arg- Phe- Tyr- Ala- Pro- Met- NH2 (ranatachykinin D). Ranatachykinin (RTK) A, B and C conserve the C- terminal sequence, Phe- X- Gly- Leu- Met- NH2, which is common to known members of the tachykinin family. On the other hand, RTK-D has a striking feature in its C-terminal sequence, Phe- Tyr- Ala- Pro- Met- NH2, which has never been found in other known tachykinins, and may constitute a new subclass in the tachykinin family.
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PMID:Isolation of four novel tachykinins from frog (Rana catesbeiana) brain and intestine. 204 43


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