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)

Regulated exocytosis requires both calcium and MgATP. Although the biochemical events responsible for ATP-dependent calcium-activated secretion have not been elucidated yet, some progress has been made in determining the relative order of the ATP- and calcium-dependent steps. Studies on permeabilized secretory cells have shown that MgATP acts before calcium and maintains the secretory apparatus in a "primed" state. In this paper, we examine the possible role of heterotrimeric G-proteins in these two steps of exocytosis in permeabilized chromaffin cells. We show that mastoparan and other activators of heterotrimeric G-proteins inhibit the MgATP-dependent reaction, but stimulate the late calcium-dependent step of exocytosis. Non-hydrolyzable GTP analogues (GTP-gamma-S and GMP-PNP) mimic the dual effects of mastoparan on secretion, but with different potencies, suggesting the involvement of two distinct heterotrimeric G-proteins in regulated exocytosis. GPAnt-2, a substance P related peptide known to inhibit the stimulation of Gi and Go by mastoparan, reverses, in a dose-dependent manner, both the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of mastoparan on secretion. These results indicate that two distinct heterotrimeric G-proteins from the Gi/o family may act in series in the exocytotic pathway in chromaffin cells: one controls the ATP-dependent priming step, whereas the second is involved in the late calcium-dependent fusion step which does not require ATP.
...
PMID:Distinct heterotrimeric GTP-binding-proteins act in series to control the exocytotic machinery in chromaffin cells. 752 20

Purposes of this study were to determine whether: (1) nitric oxide is involved in endothelium-dependent relaxation in helical strips of dog cerebral arteries; (2) relaxing factor distinct from NO is also involved, and (3) susceptibility to NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NA), an NO synthase inhibitor, of the response to mediators liberating NO from the endothelium and nerve differs. Changes in isometric tension were recorded. In the strips contracted with prostaglandin F2 alpha, substance P and arginine vasopressin produced a relaxation which was abolished or reversed to a contraction by endothelium denudation. The relaxations were not influenced by indomethacin but were suppressed dose-dependently by L-NA, as was the response to nicotine that stimulates the non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic vasodilator nerve and liberates NO. The inhibitions were reversed by L- but not D-arginine. NO (acidified NaNO2)-induced relaxations were not reduced by L-NA. The inhibitory effect was greater in the responses to vasopressin than substance P; however, there was no significant difference in the response to nicotine vs. the peptides. Substance P increased the level of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (GMP) in the artery strips with the intact endothelium, the effect being abolished by endothelium denudation, L-NA and oxyhemoglobin. Relaxations caused by adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) were dependent partially on the endothelium. Treatment with L-NA attenuated the ATP-induced relaxation in the strips with endothelium but did not alter the response of denuded strips.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cerebroarterial relaxations mediated by nitric oxide derived from endothelium and vasodilator nerve. 768 37

It is considered that cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) plays a pivotal role in mediating the relaxation of vascular and nonvascular smooth muscles. cGMP steady state levels are regulated by guanylyl cyclase, cGMP phosphodiesterases and its flux from cells. The present study examines the possible relation between cerebrovascular vasodilator agents and generation of cGMP in guinea pig cerebral vessels. Acetylcholine, substance P, nitroglycerine and sodium nitroprusside significantly increased the generation of cGMP. The application of acetylcholine, substance P, nitroglycerine and sodium nitroprusside elicited concentration-dependent relaxation of basilar artery segments. Neuropeptide Y increased the generation of cGMP by 2%-46% of control levels (at 10(-7)-10(-6)M of neuropeptide Y; *P < 0.05). In addition, neuropeptide Y (10(-6)M) induced a transient relaxation of the precontracted guinea pig basilar arteries with endothelium. This transient relaxation was blocked by nitro-L-arginine (10(-4)M). alpha-Trinositol does not alter the formation of cGMP nor the neuropeptide Y-induced relaxation. In the presence of alpha-trinositol neuropeptide Y (10(-7)-10(-6)M) did not significantly elevate the production of cGMP as compared with controls. The rise in cGMP induced by acetylcholine, substance P and nitroglycerine was slightly increased by the addition of neuropeptide Y (3 x 10(-7) M). Acetylcholine and substance P induced an endothelium-dependent relaxation of the precontracted guinea pig basilar arteries, while sodium nitroprusside and nitroglycerine induced an endothelium-independent relaxation. Acetylcholine, substance P and nitroglycerine induced concentration-dependent relaxations of basilar artery, respectively. The relaxation elicited by acetylcholine or substance P, but not nitroglycerine, was markedly attenuated by neuropeptide Y (3 x 10(-7) M).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Relation between cyclic GMP generation and cerebrovascular reactivity: modulation by NPY and alpha-trinositol. 853 12

Nitric oxide released by cardiac endothelial cells modulates myocardial contractile function through elevation of intracellular 3',5'-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). In the absence of agonist stimulation, nitric oxide typically enhances myocardial relaxation and reduces diastolic tone, without significantly altering the rate of force or pressure development. This pattern of effect is observed with nitric oxide or with cGMP analogues in isolated rat cardiac myocytes, isolated ferret papillary muscle preparations, and isolated ejecting guinea-pig hearts. In human subjects studied at cardiac catheterisation, low-dose bicoronary infusions of sodium nitroprusside or of substance P induce similar effects on left ventricular systolic and diastolic function. These changes may benefit from cardiac filling and coronary perfusion by increasing the diastolic interval, reducing extravascular compressive forces and increasing the driving pressure for filling, e.g., during exercise. Nitric oxide may also modulate inotropic and chronotropic responses to beta-adrenergic stimulation. Under pathological conditions, overproduction of nitric oxide by an inducible nitric oxide synthase may be detrimental for contractile function. Dysfunction of the constitutive nitric oxide pathway could also contribute to pathophysiology, e.g., in conditions characterised by diastolic dysfunction. The paracrine nitric oxide pathway is likely to be an important regulator of cardiac contractile function, acting in concert and interacting with other regulatory pathways.
...
PMID:The influence of endothelium-derived nitric oxide on myocardial contractile function. 853 45

The neuroendocrine nature of a subset of Leydig cells has already been established. The present investigation deals with neuroendocrine characteristics of Leydig tumour cells. A number of neuroendocrine and neuronal markers were demonstrated in Leydig cell tumours of 7 men aged 25-41 years. The following substances were immunocytochemically tested in Leydig tumour cells: the monoamine-synthesizing enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase, the indoleamine serotonin, the calcium-binding protein parvalbumin, the microtubule associated protein-2, neurofilament protein 200, synaptophysin, neuron specific enolase, substance P and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS). Compared to the normal interstitial cells beyond the tumours, all neoplastic cells showed a significantly weaker immunoreactivity for nerve cell markers as well as for testosterone and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which is usually accumulated by nitric oxide (NO). This provides evidence for a certain dedifferentiation of Leydig tumour cells. However, these results suggest that tumourous development of Leydig cells does not include loss of neuronal phenotype. Moreover, on the assumption that 'neuronal' Leydig cells exist beside 'non-neuronal' ones in normal testicular tissue, we propose the hypothesis that 'neuronal' Leydig cells can transform to tumour cells.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine characteristics of human Leydig cell tumours. 859 7

The endothelium takes part in the regulation of vascular tone through the production of endothelium-derived relaxing and contracting factors. The L-arginine pathway within endothelial cells in the blood vessel wall is the source of production of the endogenous nitrovasodilator, nitric oxide (NO). The NO molecule has one unpaired electron and readily reacts with oxygen, superoxide radicals, or transition metals. Therefore the measurement of the concentration of NO in biological systems is a challenging analytical problem. NO is formed from L-arginine via constitutive NO synthase. It is released under basal conditions and in response to mechanical stimuli such as shear stress and in response to receptor-operated agonists such as bradykinin, serotonin, ADP/ATP, thrombin, histamine and substance P. NO is the mediator of endothelium-dependent relaxation in the circulation and exerts its effects by activating soluble guanylyl cyclase in vascular smooth muscle, which in turn leads to the formation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cyclic GMP) and to relaxation. In addition to its effect on vascular smooth muscle, NO is also released albuminally to interact with circulating platelets. Increases in cyclic GMP in platelets are associated with a decreased adhesion and aggregation. In endothelial cells, NO inhibits its own production as well as that of the vasoconstrictor peptide endothelin-1. Thus, endothelium-derived NO, through its vasodilator and anti-aggregatory properties, prevents vasospasm and thrombus formation in the circulation and thereby helps to maintain blood flow to vital organs such as the heart. Under certain conditions such as inflammation, NO may also be formed via inducible nitric oxide synthase by smooth muscle cells, endothelium and monocytes. Therapeutic nitrates also exert their effects by releasing NO from their molecules and activating soluble guanylyl cyclase. Their effects are particularly pronounced in arteries in which the release of NO is inhibited or impaired or in the absence of the endothelium. Thus, the endothelial L-arginine pathway plays an important protective role in the local regulation of blood flow and through its vasodilator and antiplatelet properties. Nitrates can at least in part substitute the endogenous nitrovasodilator in disease states with impaired formation of NO.
...
PMID:[Nitric oxide: the endogenous nitrate in the cardiovascular system]. 876 25

To investigate substance P (SP) receptors on an established human astrocytoma cell line (U-87 MG), [3H][Sar9,Met(O2)11]-SP, a selective SP receptor agonist, was used to identify and characterize the cell membrane binding sites for SP. SP receptor mRNA was examined by solution hybridization analysis, and the existence of SP binding protein on the surface of membranes was evaluated by flow cytometry using an anti-SP binding protein antibody. In U-87 MG and U-373 MG RNA preparations, transcripts were identified that corresponded to both mature and partially spliced receptor forms. In U-87 MG cell membrane-enriched preparations, the binding of [3H][Sar9,Met(O2)11]-SP was found to be time and cell number dependent, specific, saturable, and of high affinity. Equilibrium binding analysis revealed a single class of binding sites with an apparent KD of 1.15 +/- 0.15 nM and a Bmax of 108 +/- 9.8 fmol/mg of protein. [3H][Sar9, Met(O2)11]-SP binding was basically not influenced by addition of mono (Na+, Li+) or divalent (Mg2+, Mn2+, Ca2+) cations; only high doses of divalent cations decreased the binding. GTP and guanylyl-5'-imidodiphosphate, but not GDP and GMP, reduced the Bmax without changing the affinity of [3H][Sar9,Met(O2)11]-SP. We also examined the effects of pretreatment with three lectins [concanavalin A (con A), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA)] to determine the nature of carbohydrate chains on the U-87 MG cell. Of three lectins analyzed for effects on agonist binding, WGA and LCA had an inhibitory effect, whereas con A was ineffective. These results suggest that SP receptors on the human astrocytoma cell line U-87 MG have either a biantennary complex-type or a high mannose-type of carbohydrate chain and may be regulated by GTP-binding protein(s).
...
PMID:Human astrocytoma cells (U-87 MG) exhibit a specific substance P binding site with the characteristics of an NK-1 receptor. 886 85

Aromatase in the diencephalic neurons, the level of which increases transiently during the prenatal to neonatal period, has been suggested to be involved in control of sexual behavior and differentiation of the CNS. Effects of neurotransmitters on levels of aromatase mRNA in cultured neurons were investigated to determine factors regulating the developmental increase that occurs in level of fetal brain aromatase. The expression of aromatase in diencephalic neurons of fetal mice at embryonic day 13, cultured in vitro, was significantly affected by alpha 1-adrenergic receptor ligands. Aromatase mRNA levels were higher in neurons treated with the alpha 1-agonist phenylephrine than in control neurons, whereas prazosin, an alpha 1-antagonist, suppressed this increase, and ligands for alpha 2- or beta-adrenergic receptors did not exert any influence. The profile of alpha 1-adrenergic receptor subtypes during actual development in vivo suggested that the alpha 1B subtype is in fact responsible for the signal transduction. Substance P, cholecystokinin, neurotensin, and brain natriuretic peptide also increased the level of expression along with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate and dibutyrylcyclic GMP, whereas forskolin and dibutyryl-cyclic AMP caused a decrease. These data indicate that stimulation via alpha 1 (possibly alpha 1B)-adrenergic receptors, as well as receptors of specific neuropeptides, controls the expression of aromatase in embryonic day 13 diencephalic neurons through activation of protein kinase C or G. beta-Adrenergic receptors would not appear to participate in the regulation, judging from their developmental profile, although cyclic AMP might be a suppressive second messenger.
...
PMID:Neurotransmitter-mediated regulation of brain aromatase: protein kinase C- and G-dependent induction. 886 18

Coordinated release of relaxing and contracting factors from the endothelium modulates arterial distensibility. Recently, a similar release of the same and other factors from the coronary endothelium was shown to modulate myocardial performance in humans. This paracrine modulation of left ventricular (LV) performance by substances released from the coronary endothelium mainly affects diastolic LV function. This was evident from the reduction in end-systolic LV pressure, the earlier onset of LV relaxation and the increased LV diastolic distensibility observed in normal subjects during bi-coronary infusion of substance P. In experimental preparations, substance P elicited similar effects on diastolic LV function, which were attributed to a paracrine myocardial action of nitric oxide (NO) because they were absent after addition of hemoglobin. In normal subjects, the myocardial effects of NO were investigated during bi-coronary infusion of the NO-donor sodium nitroprusside and resembled the effects observed during bi-coronary infusion of substance P. This paracrine control of diastolic LV function by the coronary endothelium is influenced by substrate availability and by many neurohumoral substances, whose plasma levels are raised in heart failure. In transplant recipients, bi-coronary co-infusion of substance P and of L-arginine, the substrate for NO production, potentiated the fall in LV filling pressures. Pretreatment with intravenous dobutamine augmented the drop in LV end-systolic pressures observed during bi-coronary infusion of substance P. In isolated papillary muscles, a higher baseline myocardial c-GMP level, as induced by atrial natriuretic peptide, potentiates the negative inotropic and relaxation hastening effects of NO. In isolated ejecting guinea-pig hearts, an endothelin receptor antagonist improved diastolic LV function and this improvement implies paracrine myocardial action on diastolic LV function not only of NO but also of endothelin. Coronary endothelial control of myocardial function affects LV performance both acutely and chronically. An acute increase in heart rate augments release of NO because of coronary reactive hyperemia, lowers LV filling pressures thereby promoting subendocardial perfusion, and hastens LV relaxation thereby prolonging the diastolic time interval for coronary perfusion. Chronic changes in coronary endothelial function could also influence diastolic LV performance. Enhanced coronary endothelial NO release, as occurs during chronic exercise or pacing, could explain increased LV diastolic distensibility observed in athlete's heart and in tachycardia cardiomyopathy. Reduced endothelial NO release, as occurs with aging or after transplantation, could contribute to reduced LV diastolic distensibility in the elderly or in allograft recipients.
...
PMID:Paracrine coronary endothelial modulation of diastolic left ventricular function in man: implications for diastolic heart failure. 895 74

Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) has been proposed to mediate peripheral arterial vasodilation in liver cirrhosis. Nitric oxide and natriuretic peptides are the main signals for cGMP generation. Variation in urinary cGMP excretion parallels changes in plasma cGMP levels. Our aim was to determine urinary excretion of cGMP (UcGMPV) and to investigate its relationship to systemic hemodynamics, neurohumoral activity and renal sodium excretion in cirrhosis. Urinary excretion of cGMP was measured in 19 healthy subjects and 20 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. Systemic hemodynamic parameters, blood volume (BV), plasma atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), and the endothelium-dependent vasodilator substance P (SP) were determined in all patients and in five healthy subjects. Urinary cGMPV was higher in the group of patients (736 pg/min; 50-3229 pg/min) than in controls (126 pg/min; 0-1657 pg/min) (P < 0.01). In addition, UcGMPV inversely correlated with the systemic vascular resistance and directly with cardiac output, blood volume, SP, ANF, and Pugh's score. By Cox regression analysis, only systemic vascular resistance remained inversely associated with UcGMPV. In conclusion, urinary cGMP excretion is increased in cirrhosis. It is suggested that increased cGMP generation may be related to the hyperkinetic circulation in human cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Enhanced urinary excretion of cGMP in liver cirrhosis. Relationship to hemodynamic changes, neurohormonal activation, and urinary sodium excretion. 924 39


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>