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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Arousal at birth is likely to be accompanied by changes in gene expression patterns in the brain. We analyzed the expression levels of genes that may be involved in neonatal adaptation. We have also tried to dissect the effect of hypoxia and hypothermia, two components that may play a role in gene expression at birth. Therefore, we analyzed the expression patterns of the
c-fos
, tyrosine hydroxylase, enkephalin,
preprotachykinin
-A, and neuropeptide Y genes in various brain regions of rat pups at various time points after cesarean section under normal conditions and after exposure to hypoxia and hypothermia. We found that
c-fos
RNA was up-regulated transiently after birth in neocortex, midbrain, and pons-medulla with a maximum of 30 min after cesarean section, and that this transient increase was not further augmented by hypoxia and hypothermia. The expression patterns of the other genes were not significantly altered, with the exception of a very slight increase in tyrosine hydroxylase RNA levels. We discuss tentative mechanisms for the transient increase in
c-fos
expression and the possible involvement of catecholamines in this process.
...
PMID:Expression of c-fos, tyrosine hydroxylase, and neuropeptide mRNA in the rat brain around birth: effects of hypoxia and hypothermia. 770 Jul 28
Direct brain injections of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor agonist quinolinic acid (QA) trigger an excitotoxic cascade characterized by rapid neuronal death and glial/immune cell activation. The present study compared the timing of immediate early gene (IEG;
c-fos
, c-jun, jun-B, and zif/268) induction with the response of neuronal transcripts during the first 24 hr of a QA lesion within the rodent striatum. Following QA exposure, IEG mRNA induction periods extended from 30 min to 24 hr. Several characteristics of this prolonged transcriptional response suggest that separate cell populations (neuronal vs. glial) originate individual IEG phases during the first day of the lesion. The first IEG phase was rapid and peaked at 60 min. This initial IEG phase, likely neuronal in origin, was dominated by robust increases in the expression of
c-fos
, jun-B, and zif/268 mRNAs in contrast to small increases in c-jun expression. A second, delayed IEG phase was initiated after the first hour and extended to 24 hr. This IEG phase was more intense and continued beyond the period of neuronal survival as detected by the loss of neurotransmitter-specific mRNAs (
preprotachykinin
, preproenkephalin, and glutamic acid decarboxylase). During this phase, c-jun mRNA levels coordinately increased with
c-fos
. Interestingly, the transcriptional peak of the delayed IEG phase occurred between 4 and 12 hr, the time which corresponded to the rapid decline of neuronal transcripts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Immediate early gene activation during the initial phases of the excitotoxic cascade. 814 90
The effects of neuromedin B (NMB) on C6 glioma cells were investigated. NMB bound with high affinity (IC50 = 1 nM) to C6 cells whereas BN and GRP were less potent (IC50 = 40 and 100 nM). NMB (1 nM) elevated cytosolic Ca2+ in individual C6 cells and the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ was reversed by 1 microM [D-Arg1, D-Pro2,D-Trp7.9,Leu11]
substance P
[APTTL]SP, a broad spectrum antagonist. NMB stimulated [3H]arachidonic acid release from C6 cells and the increase in [3H]arachidonic acid release was reversed [APTTL]SP. NMB increased transiently
c-fos
gene expression in C6 cells. NMB increased the number of C6 colonies in soft agar and the increase in growth caused by NMB was reversed by [APTTL]SP. These data suggest that NMB receptors may regulate the proliferation of C6 cells.
...
PMID:Neuromedin B stimulates arachidonic acid release, c-fos gene expression, and the growth of C6 glioma cells. 853 98
Chemical irritation of the urinary bladder with formalin in the rat induced
c-fos
protein-like immunoreactivity in more than 80% of substance P receptor-like immunoreactive (SPR-LI) neurons of the dorsal commissural nucleus, sacral parasympathetic nucleus and lamina I in the 6th lumbar and 1st sacral cord segments. These neurons with SPR-LI may receive noxious information from the urinary bladder through the primary afferent fibers with
substance P
.
...
PMID:Expression of c-fos protein in substance P receptor-like immunoreactive neurons in response to noxious stimuli on the urinary bladder: an observation in the lumbosacral cord segments of the rat. 859 40
A cortical infarct of 2 mm diameter was obtained in the parietal cortex after a craniotomy, disruption of the dura mater and topical application of 3 M KCl. It has been shown previously that the presence of a small cortical infarct induces an increase in immediate early gene messenger RNA expression followed by an increase in neuropeptide and glutamic acid decarboxylase messenger RNA expression. Glutamate, acting at N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, is held responsible for these changes, since they are blocked by pretreatment with dizocilpine. In the present study, we have analysed the consequences of the dramatic changes in messenger RNA expression on the level of immediate early gene products
c-fos
and zif 268, and on that of neuropeptides by using immunohistochemistry. After just 1 h, an increase in
c-fos
- and zif 268-like immunoreactivity is observed in the entire cortical hemisphere homolateral to the infarct, and is no longer detected after 6 h. An increase in cholecystokinin octapeptide-,
substance P
-, neuropeptide Y- and somatostatin-like immunoreactivity is observed in the entire cortical hemisphere homolateral to the infarct after three days, and is no longer detected after 30 days. To investigate if these dramatic increases in neuropeptide immunoreactivities may have functional consequences, we studied the level of cholecystokinin receptors by autoradiographic binding using [125I]cholecystokinin-8S and in situ hybridization for the detection of cholecystokinin-b receptor messenger RNA. A decrease in cholecystokinin binding sites and cholecystokinin-b receptor messenger RNA is observed in the entire cortical hemisphere homolateral to the infarct after three days, and is no longer detected after nine days. This study shows that a topical stimulation has diffuse effects, reaching regions far from the site of the lesion, and some of them are still strongly present after nine days. The increase in neuropeptide messenger RNAs is followed by an increase in the protein products of these genes, which may modify the neurotransmission. As a corollary to this, a decrease in cholecystokinin binding sites occurs. This may have further consequences on signal transduction pathways. This decrease in cholecystokinin binding sites is associated with a decrease in the cholecystokinin-b receptor messenger RNA, and this is the first example of a decrease in messenger RNA levels in this experimental model.
...
PMID:Homolateral cerebrocortical changes in neuropeptide and receptor expression after minimal cortical infarction. 859 53
Substance P
(SP) is a candidate neurotransmitter or neuromodulator for conveying light information from the retina to the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) where a circadian oscillator(s) is located in mammals. Immediate early gene
c-fos
has been demonstrated to be induced in the SCN with a brief light exposure at the subjective night, and suggested to play an important role in the photic entrainment of the oscillator. To clarify the possibility of an involvement of the SP receptor in the photic-induction of
c-fos
in the SCN, we examined effects of a SP receptor antagonist, spantide, on the light-induced Fos-like protein immunoreactivity (Fos-lir) in the SCN of Syrian hamster. The light-induced Fos-lir was inhibited with the pretreatment of spantide in a dose-related manner and in an anatomically distinctive way. The higher dose of spantide (8 nmol) blocked light-induced Fos-lir substantially in the rostral and central areas of the SCN, and in the dorsal portion of the caudal SCN. However, it blocked Fos-lir only slightly in the ventral portion of the caudal SCN. These results suggest that the SP is involved in conveying light information to induce Fos protein in the hamster SCN, and that different neurotransmitter systems are involved in the light-induced Fos-lir in the different portions of hamster SCN.
...
PMID:Substance P receptor regulates the photic induction of Fos-like protein in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of Syrian hamsters. 872 Aug 69
Psychomotor stimulants such as cocaine alter gene expression in neurons of the striatum. Whereas many of these effects are mediated by D1 dopamine receptors, the involvement of other dopamine receptor subtypes or neurotransmitters is likely. To distinguish between these possibilities, regulation by cocaine of immediate-early genes and genes encoding neuropeptides was analysed in mice that lack functional D1 receptors. Gene expression was examined with in situ hybridization histochemistry. In these animals, cocaine failed to induce the immediate-early genes
c-fos
and zif 268. In contrast,
substance P
expression was abnormally increased by this drug. These results demonstrate that some of the effects of cocaine on gene regulation are mediated via D1 receptor-dependent mechanisms, as evidenced by the absence of immediate-early gene induction in D1-deficient mice, whereas others also involve additional, non-D1 receptor mechanisms, as shown for
substance P
expression.
...
PMID:D1 dopamine receptor-deficient mouse: cocaine-induced regulation of immediate-early gene and substance P expression in the striatum. 888 77
This study has investigated the effect of stimulating the region of origin of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system, the ventral tegmental area (VTA), with the
substance P
analogue DiMe-C7 on the regional expression of
c-fos
in the rat forebrain. We have previously shown this treatment produced a prolonged increase in blood pressure and heart rate which was mediated by both dopaminergic mechanisms and vasopressin release. Stimulation of the VTA resulted in increased levels of c-Fos immunostaining in several target regions of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system (such as the frontal cortex, olfactory tubercle, islands of Calleja and amygdala), with the notable exception of the nucleus accumbens. A marked increase in
c-fos
expression was also found in the supraoptic nucleus but not the paraventricular nucleus in the hypothalamus. These results support a role for a number of target areas of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system and vasopressin release in the increase in blood pressure and heart rate produced by stimulation of the VTA.
...
PMID:Regional expression of c-fos in rat brain following stimulation of the ventral tegmental area. 897 38
Activation of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic system by psychostimulants such as amphetamine increases c-Fos expression in the striatum, mostly in the striatonigral
substance P
-ergic pathway. This effect is greatly reduced in the neostriatum deprived of dopaminergic afferents. Dopaminergic grafts implanted into the denervated neostriatum restore the reactivity of the striatum to amphetamine. However, the number of striatal neurons expressing c-Fos is greatly increased in the graft-bearing striatum compared with the normal striatum. We examined whether this increase in the number of c-Fos-expressing neurons corresponds to the recruitment of a new neuron population, or whether it reflects an increase in the proportion of
substance P
-ergic neurons exhibiting activation of c-Fos. Adult rats received a unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesion of the ascending dopaminergic mesotelencephalic pathway, and a suspension of embryonic mesencephalic neurons was subsequently implanted into the denervated neostriatum. Three months after implantation, animals were injected with d-amphetamine (5 mg/kg) and killed 2 h later. In the first experiment, striatal sections were processed to visualize both c-Fos protein, by immunohistochemistry, and preproenkephalin A or
substance P
, by in situ hybridization. In the second experiment, c-Fos and neuropeptide Y were visualized on the same sections. In addition, some sections incubated with anti-c-Fos antibody were counterstained with toluidine blue in order to determine whether cholinergic neurons were expressing c-Fos following amphetamine treatment. The density of neurons expressing c-Fos following amphetamine treatment was three-fold higher in the graft-bearing striata than in the striata of control animals. Approximately 75% of the c-Fos expressing cells were
substance P
-ergic in control animals whereas 6% were enkephalinergic and only a few were neuropeptide Y-ergic or cholinergic. Similar proportions were found in the graft-bearing striatum, signifying that the pattern of activation of
c-fos
following amphetamine administration is not changed by the graft. Thus, the increased expression of c-Fos predominantly reflects a graft-induced increase in the proportion of neurons expressing c-Fos within the same population of neurons which normally expresses c-Fos in the striatum, i.e. the striatonigral
substance P
-ergic neurons; there is no recruitment of a new neuronal population. This increased activation of the striatonigral
substance P
-ergic pathway may underlie the abnormal behavioural reactions brought about by amphetamine-induced stimulation of the implanted dopaminergic neurons.
...
PMID:Phenotype of striatal cells expressing c-Fos following amphetamine treatment of rats with intrastriatal dopaminergic grafts. 899 1
The in vivo activity of GR205171, a novel, highly potent non-peptide
tachykinin
NK1 receptor antagonist, has been investigated in the trigeminovascular system in order to assess its potential as an acute therapy for migraine headache. In anaesthetised rabbits, GR205171 attenuated reductions in carotid arterial vascular resistance evoked by the
tachykinin
NK1 receptor agonist,
substance P
methyl ester (SPOMe), injected via the lingual artery (DR30 (i.e., the dose producing a dose-ratio of 30) = 0.4 microgram/kg, i.v.). In anaesthetised rats, GR205171 (0.1 and 1 mg/kg, i.v.) produced a dose-dependent inhibition of plasma protein extravasation (PPE) in dura mater, conjunctiva, eyelid and lip in response to electrical stimulation of the trigeminal ganglion. In anaesthetised guinea-pigs, GR205171 (1.10 and 100 micrograms/kg, i.v.) inhibited, by up to approximately 60%, expression of
c-fos
in the trigeminal nucleus caudalis in response to electrical stimulation of the trigeminal ganglion. It is concluded that GR205171 is a potent antagonist of NK1 receptor-mediated cranial vasodilatation, dural PPE and expression of
c-fos
in the trigeminal nucleus caudalis. Such a profile of action suggests that GR205171 may have potential as a novel therapeutic agent in the treatment of migraine headache.
...
PMID:The activity of GR205171, a potent non-peptide tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonist, in the trigeminovascular system. 909 51
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