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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An extract of the brain of the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss contained high concentrations of both
neurokinin A
-like immunoreactivity (corresponding to 90 pmol mammalian
neurokinin A
/g wet tissue) and substance-P-like immunoreactivity (corresponding to 50 pmol mammalian
substance P
/g wet tissue) measured by radioimmunoassay using antisera directed against the C-terminal regions of the mammalian peptides. In contrast, an extract of the Atlantic cod. Gadus morhua contained only neurokinin-A-like immunoreactivity (151 pmol/g). This apparent paradox was resolved by determination of the primary structures of the fish tachykinins. Trout
substance P
(Lys-Pro-
Arg
-Pro-His-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-MetNH2) has the same amino acid sequence in its C-terminal region as that in the corresponding region of mammalian
substance P
. Cod
substance P
(Lys-Pro-
Arg
-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Ile-Gly-Leu-MetNH2), however, contains a substitution at position 8 (Phe----Ile) that abolishes reactivity with the antiserum to
substance P
but permits reactivity with the antiserum to
neurokinin A
. The amino acid sequence of cod and trout
neurokinin A
is the same (His-Lys-Ile-Asn-Ser-Phe-Val-Gly-Leu-MetNH2) and shows two substitutions (Thr3----Ile and Asp4----Asn) compared with mammalian
neurokinin A
. The data indicate that nervous tissue of teleost fish contain tachykinins that are analogous to the peptides found in mammalian tissues.
...
PMID:Substance-P-related and neurokinin-A-related peptides from the brain of the cod and trout. 137 87
1. Electrical stimulation (2.5-10 Hz, 80 V, 1 ms for 15 s) within the spinal canal of the pithed guinea-pig pretreated with atropine, D-tubocurarine and pentolinium caused a bronchoconstrictor response, indicated by a rise of insufflation pressure. 2. The magnitude of these non-cholinergic neuronal bronchoconstrictor responses were frequency-dependent, capsaicin-sensitive and temperature-dependent. 3. Responses could be inhibited by the alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonist B-HT920 (3 mg/kg, i.v.) and the mu-opioid agonist H-Tyr-D-
Arg
-Phe-Lys-NH2 (DALDA; 1 mg/kg, i.v.) and the attenuation observed could be overcome by use of the respective antagonists idazoxan (3 mg/kg, i.v.) and naloxone (3 mg/kg, i.v.). 4.
Substance P
-induced bronchoconstriction (0.3 micrograms/kg, i.v.), but not that due to electrical stimulation, was attenuated by indomethacin (3 mg/kg, i.v.), indicating an indirect action of
substance P
via a product of arachidonic acid metabolism. 5. The prostanoid product of the
substance P
response was probably thromboxane A2. 6. Hence, novel drug development could be directed towards
tachykinin
receptors or to the synthesis, release and degradation of neuropeptides.
...
PMID:Sensory nerves in the airways as a target for drug development. 137 96
1. The aim of this study was to characterize the neurokinin receptor which mediates relaxation of dog isolated middle cerebral artery by the use of selective agonists and antagonists and to establish whether
substance P
is involved in the neurogenically mediated relaxant response in this vessel. 2.
Substance P
caused concentration-related, endothelium-dependent relaxations of dog isolated middle cerebral artery, contracted with prostaglandin F2 alpha. The selective NK1 receptor agonists, GR73632 and
substance P
methyl ester (SPOMe), also caused relaxation with similar maximum effects to those of
substance P
. GR73632 and SPOMe were approximately 20 times and 6 times less potent respectively than
substance P
. The selective NK2 and NK3 receptor agonists, GR64349 and senktide, were only weakly active in causing relaxation being at least 425 times and 245 times less potent respectively than
substance P
. 3. The selective NK1 receptor antagonist, GR82334, was a potent, specific, competitive antagonist of the relaxant effects of
substance P
. In contrast, the selective NK2 receptor antagonist, R396 (10 microM) had no effect on the response to
substance P
. 4. Electrical field stimulation of dog isolated middle cerebral artery, contracted with prostaglandin F2 alpha, caused neurogenically mediated, non-adrenergic non-cholinergic (NANC) relaxations. These NANC relaxations were unaffected by endothelium removal, GR82334 (10 microM) or by capsaicin (10 microM) treatment. However, the nitric oxide synthesis inhibitor, L-NG-monomethyl
arginine
methyl ester (L-NMMA) (100 microM) markedly attenuated the response to electrical stimulation. 5. These results suggest that
substance P
causes relaxation of dog isolated middle cerebral artery via activation of NK1 receptors. However,
substance P
does not appear to be involved in NANC neurotransmission. In contrast, the marked inhibitory effect of L-NMMA on NANC relaxations implicates nitric oxide in NANC neurotransmission in this vessel.
...
PMID:Characterization of the receptor mediating relaxation to substance P in canine middle cerebral artery: no evidence for involvement of substance P in neurogenically mediated relaxation. 138 Mar 74
Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IRA) is a secretory product of human monocytes or related cell lines that acts as a pure interleukin-1 (IL-1) antagonist in several bioassays. IRA administration was reportedly a life-saving intervention in rabbits injected with lethal doses of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We report the inhibitory effect of IRA on three distinct types of vascular responses to IL-1 in rabbit isolated blood vessels. The rabbit isolated superior mesenteric artery, when precontracted with phenylephrine, relaxed in a sustained manner in less than 30 min following application of recombinant interleukin-1 beta (12-290 pM), and this was a prostaglandin (PG)-dependent and endothelium-independent process. IRA (human recombinant sequence; 0.9-15 nM) behaved as an antagonist of IL-1 alpha or IL-1 beta, based on the surmountability and the concentration dependence, but could only prevent the effect of IL-1, not reverse it. IRA had no direct effect on the preparation and did not influence the acute relaxing effect elicited by
substance P
or iloprost, a PGI2 mimetic. Exposure to IL-1 beta depressed the response to noradrenaline (NA) in several hours in rabbit aorta rings. The inhibitory effect of IL-1 beta was endothelium and prostaglandin independent, but was prevented by a treatment with NG-nitro-L-
arginine
(a nitric oxide synthesis inhibitor), cycloheximide, dexamethasone, or IRA. Using the residual NA-induced contraction as a quantification of the IL-1 agonist effect, IRA was a very potent antagonist of IL-1 beta but was not totally surmountable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist on three types of responses to interleukin-1 in rabbit isolated blood vessels. 138 81
We studied the effects of aerosolized DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidino-ethylthiopropanoic acid (MGTA) (10(-4) M, 90 breaths), a specific inhibitor of carboxypeptidase B-type enzymes, on changes in total pulmonary resistance (RL) induced by aerosolized capsaicin (10(-7) to 10(-4) M; 10 breaths at each concentration) and vagus nerve stimulation (5 V, 5 ms, for 20 s at frequencies varying from 2 to 10 Hz) in anesthetized, atropinized, and ventilated guinea pigs. We also studied the effect of aerosolized MGTA on the bronchoconstrictor response to either aerosolized
substance P
,
neurokinin A
(10(-7) to 10(-4) M; 10 breaths at each concentration), and carbachol (10(-5) to 2 x 10(-4) M; 10 breaths at each concentration) or to i.v. administration of
neurokinin A
(10(-11) to 10(-8) mol/kg), bradykinin (10(-10) to 10(-7) mol/kg), and histamine (10(-8) to 10(-6) mol/kg). Although aerosolized MGTA caused no change in basal RL (P > 0.5), it did potentiate the noncholinergic bronchoconstrictor response to capsaicin (n = 5; P < 0.001) as well as to vagus nerve stimulation (n = 5; P = 0.001). In contrast, MGTA did not potentiate the bronchoconstrictor response to either aerosolized
substance P
,
neurokinin A
, and carbachol or to i.v. administration of
neurokinin A
, histamine, and bradykinin. Carboxypeptidase activity cleaving C-terminal
arginine
or lysine was found in the membrane preparations of trachea and lung from guinea pigs. The membrane-bound carboxypeptidase activity was maximal at pH 7.0 and was enhanced by the presence of CoCl2 (1 mM) in both the tracheal and lung tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Carboxypeptidase M-like enzyme modulates the noncholinergic bronchoconstrictor response in guinea pig. 138 81
1. The effect of an acetly-coA lysolecithin acyltransferase inhibitor, thimerosal, on the release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) was examined in the greyhound isolated coronary artery. 2. Thimerosal (1-10 microM) relaxed fully, ring segments of coronary artery which were contracted with the thromboxane A2-mimetic, U46619 (30 nM). The response was endothelium-dependent, slow in both onset and time to reach maximum. The maximum relaxation to the highest concentration of thimerosal (10 microM) was maintained for 10-20 min before the tissue slowly regained active force (1-2 h) to the same or higher level as that prior to the addition of thimerosal. At this time the endothelium-dependent relaxation responses to acetylcholine (ACh),
substance P
(SP), bradykinin (BK) and the calcium ionophores, ionomycin and A23187 were abolished. The endothelium-dependent contractions to the nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, NG-nitro-L-
arginine
(L-NNA; 10-100 microM) and NG-monomethyl-L-
arginine
(L-NMMA: 10-100 microM), however, were unaffected. 3. Thimerosal (10 microM) did not affect the relaxation curve to sodium nitroprusside (SNP) nor the contraction curve to the thromboxane A2-mimetic, U46619. 4. Both the relaxation response to thimerosal and the selective block of the relaxation responses to stimulated EDRF release were unaffected by either indomethacin (10 microM) or superoxide dismutase (150 u ml-1). 5. L-NNA (100 microM) significantly blocked the relaxation curves to thimerosal and A23187 but not that to SNP.6. Abolition of stimulated EDRF-mediated responses with thimerosal was unlikely to result from maximal and maintained stimulation of EDRF release even when active U46619-induced force had returned to pre-thimerosal levels, since the relaxation curves to glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) and SNP were markedly attenuated in the presence of SNP and GTN respectively when active force was restored with endothelin-1 (ET-1).7. Melittin (1 microM), ionomycin (1 microM) and A23187 (1 microM) each had selective effects on stimulated but not basal EDRF responses, similar to those of thimerosal.8. We propose that stimulated but not 'basal' release of EDRF is dependent on the release of arachidonic acid or one of its non-cyclo-oxygenase metabolites, possibly by Ca2'-dependent activation of phospholipase A2.
...
PMID:Thimerosal blocks stimulated but not basal release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) in dog isolated coronary artery. 138 15
The structure of the gene encoding the bovine type B endothelin receptor (ETB) has been established and compared with those of other heptahelical receptors. The gene is present as a single copy in the bovine genome, as demonstrated by Southern blot analysis, and spans at least 36 kb. The coding region is divided into 7 exons separated by 6 introns, one of which is more than 23 kb in length. The exons correspond well to the structural domains of the receptor: the first exon encodes the first and second transmembrane domains, and each of the following transmembrane domains is encoded by a separate exon. The portion of the ETB protein sequence encoded by exon 3 is quite different from the corresponding ETA sequence, suggesting that this region is responsible for the distinct ligand specificities of the two receptor subtypes. The second intron interrupts the canonical Asp-
Arg
-Tyr sequence, which is located at the end of the third transmembrane domain of the heptahelical receptors, as with the
substance P
,
substance K
, dopamine D2 and dopamine D3 receptor genes. To map the 5' region of the gene and determine the start of transcription, primer-extended cDNAs were cloned and sequenced: multiple start sites were deduced with no apparent TATA box in the expected upstream region. Similar results were obtained by ribonuclease protection analysis.
...
PMID:Structure of the bovine ETB endothelin receptor gene. 141 82
Recent studies suggest endothelium to be involved in the vasorelaxation of calcium antagonists of the 1,4-dihydropyridine type, which may at least in part be mediated by endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF = NO). To study this effect further, the influence of L-NG-nitro
arginine
(L-NNA), a specific inhibitor of EDRF-synthesis, on nitrendipine-induced vasorelaxation was examined in different isolated porcine arteries. Coronary, basilary, and tail arteries were bathed in Krebs-Henseleit solution and endothelial function was verified by means of
substance P
, an EDRF releasing neuropeptide. Vasorelaxation of nitrendipine in PGF2 alpha-precontracted arteries was studied in the presence and absence of L-NNA. Nitrendipine-induced vasorelaxation was markedly reduced by the addition of L-NNA in all vessels studied. Tachyphylactic effects of nitrendipine could be excluded. The obtained results may be explained by an enhancement of nitrendipine action by basally released EDRF, alternatively, by an increased EDRF-release induced by this calcium antagonist. Therefore, in a second series of experiments the release of EDRF was studied in isolated coronary arteries under cumulative application of nitrendipine. Using the nitric oxide scavenging properties of oxyhemoglobin, EDRF release was measured spectrophotometrically by means of methemoglobin formation. The application of nitrendipine resulted in a concentration-dependent increase in the extinction rate, indicating an increased release of NO which could be inhibited by preincubation with L-NNA. It may be concluded that, in functionally intact vessels, vasorelaxation induced by nitrendipine may additionally be mediated by an increased release of EDRF.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide (EDRF) enhances the vasorelaxing effect of nitrendipine in various isolated arteries. 146 29
To probe the specificity of the metalloendoproteinase stromelysin toward peptide substrates, we determined kc/Km values for the stromelysin-catalyzed hydrolyses of peptides whose design was based loosely on the structure of a known SLN substrate,
substance P
(
Arg
-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-MetNH2, hydrolysis at Gln-Phe, kc/Km = 1700 M-1 s-1). Several noteworthy points emerge from this study: (i) Catalytic efficiency is dependent on peptide chain length with N-terminal truncation of
substance P
resulting in more pronounced rate-constant reductions than C-terminal truncation. These results suggest the existence of an extended active site for stromelysin. (ii) Preferences at positions P3, P2, P1, P1', and P2' are for the hydrophobic amino acids Pro, Leu, Ala, Nva, and Trp, respectively. (iii) Investigation of specificity at P3' supports our earlier hypothesis that SLN has a requirement for a hydrogen-bond donor at this position in its substrates. Based on these observations, we designed and had synthesized the fluorogenic substrate N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)
Arg
-Pro-Lys-Pro-Leu-Ala-Nva-TrpNH2, whose stromelysin-catalyzed hydrolysis can be monitored continuously (kc/Km = 45,000 M-1 s-1).
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of the human matrix metalloproteinase stromelysin and the development of continuous fluorometric assays. 147 98
The ability of Acetylcholine (ACh) and A23187 to induce endothelium-dependent relaxation was compared in the isolated perfused mesenteric arterial bed of untreated adult rats, adult rats treated neonatally with capsaicin, and adult rats treated as adults with capsaicin. Following neonatal capsaicin treatment, the response to both agents was reduced. Following adult treatment, the response to both agents was reduced seven days following capsaicin treatment. The same results were obtained in the presence of L-
arginine
or indomethacin. Tissues from all rats responded equally to sodium nitroprusside. Following capsaicin treatment no change in the structural relationship of the arterial intima was detected but no perivascular nerve fibres immunoreactive to
substance P
(SP) or calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) could be demonstrated. It is suggested that the reduced response to ACh and A23187 does not involve a change in endothelial muscarinic receptors or a structural change in the arterial intima, but is directly related to the absence of immunohistochemically demonstrable CGRP/SP-containing perivascular innervation.
...
PMID:Peptidergic nerve involvement in the control of endothelium-dependent vascular relaxation. 152 74
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