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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The main somatostatin-degrading proteases were purified from rat and pig brain homogenates and characterized as thiol- and metal-dependent endoproteases. Two types of proteases with apparent native and subunit molecular masses of 70 kDa and 68 kDa could be differentiated in both species. Beside somatostatin, both hydrolyzed several other neuropeptides with chain lengths between 8 and 30 amino acid residues. Cleavage sites were generally similar or identical, but some clear exceptions were observed for enzymes from both species which could be used to differentiate between the two proteases. The 68-kDa protease cleaved somatostatin at three bonds (Asn5-Phe6, Phe6-Phe7 and Thr10-Phe11) and neurotensin only at the Arg8-Arg9 bond, whereas the 70-kDa protease digested somatostatin at only two bonds (Phe6-Phe7 and Thr10-Phe11) and neurotensin as well as acetylneurotensin-(8-13) additionally (pig protease) or almost exclusively (rat protease) at the Pro10-Tyr11 bond. Relative rates for the digestions of various peptides were, however, more dependent on the species than on the type of protease. Cleavage sites for angiotensin II, bradykinin,
dynorphin
, gonadoliberin and
substance P
were, apart from different rates, identical for both proteases. In both species the 68-kDa protease was found to be mainly, but not exclusively, soluble and not membrane-associated, whereas the inverse was detected for the 70-kDa protease. Based on distinct molecular and catalytic properties, the 68-kDa protease is supposed to be congruent with the endopeptidase 24.15 (EC 3.4.24.15), the 70-kDa protease with endopeptidase 24.16 (EC 3.4.24.16, neurotensin-degrading endopeptidase). This investigation demonstrates that both proteases hydrolyze various neuropeptides with similar cleavage sites, but with species-dependent activity. Species-independent distinctions are the exclusive action of endopeptidase 24.16 on acetylneurotensin-(8-13) and liberation of free Phe from somatostatin only by endopeptidase 24.15.
...
PMID:Purification of the main somatostatin-degrading proteases from rat and pig brains, their action on other neuropeptides, and their identification as endopeptidases 24.15 and 24.16. 135 47
4-Methylaminorex is an amphetamine analog which has recently gained attention due to its potential as a stimulant of abuse and the ease with which it is synthesized. Administration of acute and multiple doses of 4-methylaminorex caused rapid (3-h) and long-term (7-day) declines in striatal tryptophan hydroxylase activity with few changes in other serotonergic parameters. The acute response by tryptophan hydroxylase to this drug was reversed by incubating the tissues in a reducing environment suggesting that 4-methylaminorex alters this enzyme through oxidative mechanisms. The 4-methylaminorex-induced long-term reduction in tryptophan hydroxylase activity might be due to neurotoxic action on serotonergic systems. In contrast, although a decline in striatal tyrosine hydroxylase occurred 3 h following a single dose of 4-methylaminorex, no changes in this enzyme were observed at 7 days after acute or multiple dosing with this drug. This result suggests that 4-methylaminorex is not neurotoxic to the dopaminergic neurons. Even though this amphetamine analog apparently does not have long-term effects on dopaminergic systems, it does appear to enhance substantially dopaminergic activity. Evidence for increased dopamine activity resulting from 4-methylaminorex administration included dramatic but temporary rises in the levels of nigral neurotensin,
dynorphin
A and
substance P
following multiple drug administration. Similar peptide changes have been observed with other amphetamine-related stimulants and are mediated by increases in dopaminergic activity. In summary, 4-methylaminorex has significant impact on monoaminergic pathways. In general, its spectrum of effects on these systems is like that of the ring-substituted amphetamines, such as methylenedioxymethamphetamine.
...
PMID:Response of monoaminergic and neuropeptide systems to 4-methylaminorex: a new stimulant of abuse. 135 36
The effects of intracerebroventricular administration of morphine, the selective mu-agonist DAMGO, the delta-agonist DPDPE, the kappa-preferring peptide
dynorphin
A(1-13) and the kappa-agonist U50,488H on locomotor behaviour in the guinea pig were investigated. Morphine (total dose = 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 200 nmol), DAMGO and DPDPE (total dose = 0.1, 1, 10, 100 nmol of each) produced piloerection and sedation, indicating that the responses of guinea pigs to mu- and delta-opioid agonists differed from those of rats and mice. In contrast, U50,488H (total dose = 10, 100 nmol) and
dynorphin
A(1-13) (total dose = 100 nmol) produced increased locomotor activity which was attenuated by pretreatment with naloxone and norbinaltorphimine, thus confirming the involvement of kappa-opioid receptors. Furthermore, pretreatment with spantide, baclofen, muscimol, bicuculline, MK-801, raclopride and atropine also inhibited the U50,488H-induced locomotor activity, suggesting the involvement of GABA, dopamine, excitatory amino acids,
substance P
and acetylcholine in this response.
...
PMID:Effects of intracerebroventricularly administered mu-, delta- and kappa-opioid agonists on locomotor activity of the guinea pig and the pharmacology of the locomotor response to U50,488H. 135 40
Previous studies by other investigators have shown that neonatal administration of high doses of L-cysteine produces within 6 hrs morphological damage to neurons in many areas of the brain including the striatum; the damage could be blocked by NMDA antagonist MK-801. These studies implicated a potential involvement of this amino acid in neurodegenerative processes including Parkinsonism. The present study attempted to elucidate whether L-cysteine produces long-term changes in neurotransmitter (dopamine; 5-hydroxytryptamine) or neuropeptide (Met5-enkephalin;
dynorphin
A (1-8);
substance P
) systems as a corollary to neonatal treatment with L-cysteine. L-cysteine (0.5 or 1 g/kg, s.c.) was administered to 4-day old rat pups and sacrificed 35 days later. The striatal levels of amines and neuropeptides were determined by HPLC and radioimmunoassay respectively. L-Cysteine treatment alone or after a pretreatment with MK-801 (1 mg/kg, s.c.) failed to produce any significant changes in the parameters studied. The results indicate that neonatal administration of L-cysteine does not appear to produce long-term effects on major neuroregulator systems of the striatum.
...
PMID:Neonatal administration of L-cysteine does not produce long-term effects on neurotransmitter or neuropeptide systems in the rat striatum. 135 16
Patients with medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) undergo medial temporal lobectomy with hippocampectomy for one of two reasons. (1) A lesion (tumor or arteriovenous malformation) adjacent to, but not invasive of, the hippocampus, results in the removal of the lesion and adjacent hippocampus in order to ensure a tumor-free margin. This group will be referred to as tumor-related TLE (TTLE) patients. (2) The operation is performed when depth electrode recordings and other evaluative techniques point to the hippocampus as the focus of seizure initiation. This group will be referred to as cryptogenic TLE (CTLE) patients. Analysis of the hippocampi of these two groups of patients reveals that the TTLE hippocampus is quite similar to that of autopsy subjects in its chemical neuroanatomy. However, the dentate gyrus of the CTLE patients shows considerable morphological and cytochemical reorganization. This reorganization is characterized by a number of features. (1) There is a loss of granule cells which occurs either as a patchy loss and/or a thinning of the granule cell layer. (2) Remaining granule cells which contain
dynorphin
appear to produce recurrent collaterals into the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. (3) In the subgranular region of the hilus (the polymorphic layer) there is a selective loss of interneurons immunoreactive for somatostatin, neuropeptide Y and
substance P
. (4) There appears to be an increase in fibers immunoreactive for somatostatin and neuropeptide Y which extend throughout the dentate molecular layer. Somatostatin fibers being less numerous than neuropeptide Y fibers (5). The distributions of a number of neurotransmitter receptors also show striking reorganization in the dentate gyrus of the CTLE hippocampus. (6) Second messenger systems protein kinase C and adenylate cyclase, and Na+, K(+)-ATPase activity, as determined by ouabain binding, is increased in the molecular layer of CTLE. This remodeling of the CTLE hippocampus may hold the key to the mechanisms of hyperexcitability of the granule cells in the hippocampus of this group, and consequently the generation of seizures. The removal of the hippocampus in CTLE patients results in good control of seizures, whereas removal of hippocampi that do not show such reorganization, in a group of patients classified as atypical CTLE patients, results in inadequate seizure control. These findings suggest a complex series of processes in converting the properly regulated granule cells into hyperexcitable ones.
...
PMID:Neurotransmitters and their receptors in human temporal lobe epilepsy. 136 31
In the dentate gyrus, the synthesis of the opioid peptide,
dynorphin
, is modulated by a variety of stimuli. In order to elucidate the cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating the synthesis of
dynorphin
in the hippocampus, we have established a routine primary cell culture of dentate granule neurons and identified granule-like neurons by a characteristic marker,
dynorphin
, in these cultures. Cultures were prepared from 7-day-old rat pups and maintained in medium with 2% fetal bovine serum. These cultures contained approximately 20% neurons and survived for over 4 weeks. After 2 weeks in culture, neurons expressing
dynorphin
-A and its messenger RNA were detected using immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization, respectively. In dentate cultures, enkephalin-, cholecystokinin-, neuropeptide Y- and
substance P
-positive cells were observed in addition to
dynorphin
-positive cells with immunocytochemistry. The results suggest that dentate gyrus cell cultures provide a valid in vitro model for studying molecular mechanisms regulating prodynorphin gene expression.
...
PMID:Characterization of dynorphin-containing neurons on dissociated dentate gyrus cell cultures. 136 9
Specimens of the sigmoid colon were obtained from male and female patients (n = 11) with carcinoma of the colon or rectum and studied immunohistochemically for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-, somatostatin-,
substance P
-, neuropeptide Y-, calcitonin gene-related peptide-, met- and
leu-enkephalin
-, 5-hydroxytryptamine-, and dopamine beta-hydroxylase-containing nerves. In the subdivisions of the submucous plexus (namely, Schabadasch's, Meissner's, and the intermediate plexuses),
substance P
- and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-immunoreactive nerve fibers were the most numerous, and equal densities of these nerves were found in all three layers. In contrast, few neuropeptide Y-, met-enkephalin-,
leu-enkephalin
-, calcitonin gene-related peptide-, somatostatin-, 5-hydroxytryptamine-, and dopamine beta-hydroxylase-immunoreactive nerves were found in these regions. The nerve cell bodies of the submucous plexus contained vasoactive intestinal polypeptide,
substance P
,
leu-enkephalin
, somatostatin, and 5-hydroxytryptamine but not neuropeptide Y, met-enkephalin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, and dopamine beta-hydroxylase. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-containing nerve cell bodies were found in all three subdivisions.
Substance P
-,
leu-enkephalin
-, and somatostatin-immunoreactive nerve cell bodies were found in Schabadasch's plexus and the intermediate region of the submucous plexus, but they were absent from Meissner's plexus; 5-hydroxytryptamine-containing nerve cell bodies were only observed in Schabadasch's plexus. The possible function of the neuropeptide-, dopamine beta-hydroxylase-, and 5-hydroxytryptamine-containing neurons in the different layers of the submucous plexus is discussed.
...
PMID:Peptide-containing neurons in different regions of the submucous plexus of human sigmoid colon. 848 77
We examined the effects of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and depolarization, two environmental signals that influence noradrenergic and cholinergic function, on neuropeptide expression by cultured sympathetic neurons. Sciatic nerve extract, a rich source of CNTF, increased levels of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP),
substance P
, and somatostatin severalfold while significantly reducing levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY). No change was observed in the levels of
leu-enkephalin
(L-Enk). These effects were abolished by immunoprecipitation of CNTF-like molecules from the extract with an antiserum raised against recombinant CNTF, and recombinant CNTF caused changes in neuropeptide levels similar to those of sciatic nerve extract. Alterations in neuropeptide levels by CNTF were dose-dependent, with maximal induction at concentrations of 5-25 ng/ml. Peptide levels were altered after only 3 days of CNTF exposure and continued to change for 14 days. Depolarization of sympathetic neuron cultures with elevated potassium elicited a different spectrum of effects; it increased VIP and NPY content but did not alter
substance P
, somatostatin, or L-Enk. Depolarization is known to block cholinergic induction in response to heart cell conditioned medium and we found that it blocked the induction of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and peptides by recombinant cholinergic differentiation factor/leukemia inhibitory factor (CDF/LIF). In contrast, it did not antagonize the effects of CNTF on either ChAT activity or neuropeptide expression. Thus, while CNTF has effects on neurotransmitter properties similar to those previously reported for CDF/LIF, the actions of these two factors are differentially modulated by depolarization, suggesting that the mechanisms of cholinergic and neuropeptide induction for the two factors differ. In addition, in contrast to CDF/LIF, CNTF did not alter levels of ChAT, VIP,
substance P
, or somatostatin in cultured dorsal root ganglion neurons. These observations indicate that CNTF and depolarization affect the expression of neuropeptides by sympathetic neurons and provide evidence for an overlapping yet distinct spectrum of actions of the two neuronal differentiation factors, CNTF and CDF/LIF.
...
PMID:Effects of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and depolarization on neuropeptide expression in cultured sympathetic neurons. 137 70
Increases in neuronal activity in response to tissue injury lead to changes in gene expression and prolonged changes in the nervous system. These functional changes appear to contribute to the hyperalgesia and spontaneous pain associated with tissue injury. This activity-dependent plasticity involves neuropeptides, such as
dynorphin
,
substance P
and calcitonin gene-related peptide, and excitatory amino acids, such as NMDA, which are chemical mediators involved in nociceptive processing. Unilateral inflammation in the hindpaw of the rat results in an increase in the expression of preprodynorphin and preproenkephalin mRNA in the spinal cord, which parallels the behavioral hyperalgesia associated with the inflammation. Cellular intermediate-early genes, such as c-fos, are also expressed in spinal cord neurons following inflammation and activation of nociceptors. Peripheral inflammation results in an enlargement of the receptive fields of many of these neurons. Dynorphin applied to the spinal cord also induces an enlargement of receptive fields. NMDA antagonists block the hyperexcitability produced by inflammation. A model has been proposed in which
dynorphin
,
substance P
and calcitonin gene-related peptide enhance excitability at NMDA receptor sites, leading first to dorsal horn hyperexcitability and then to excessive depolarization and excitotoxicity.
...
PMID:Activity-dependent neuronal plasticity following tissue injury and inflammation. 137 25
The effect and mode of action of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), a peptidergic neuromodulator in the gastrointestinal nervous system, were investigated in isolated muscle strips of the guinea-pig ileum. VIP induced concentration-dependent (20 nM-1 microM) contractions of longitudinal ileal strips. TTX (1 microM), a mixture of atropine (3 microM) and spantide (30 microM), a mixture of atropine (3 microM) and omega-conotoxin GVIA (100 nM), somatostatin (60 nM) and
dynorphin
(100 nM) abolished the effect of VIP. In most cases a small relaxation became evident. Desensitization to
substance P
in the presence of atropine prevented VIP-induced contraction. A partial inhibition was observed in the presence of atropine (3 microM), spantide (30 microM), omega-conotoxin GVIA (100 nM), beta-endorphin (265 nM), met-enkephalin (1100 nM) and a mixture of spantide (30 microM) and omega-conotoxin GVIA (100 nM). The action of VIP was not significantly modified by guanethidine (3 microM) or hexamethonium (150 microM). In circular ileal strips VIP (10-300 nM) caused concentration-dependent relaxations through a direct myogenic effect. These results indicate that the VIP produced contractions of the guinea-pig ileum are exclusively neurally mediated and involve a cholinergic as well as a noncholinergic-nonadrenergic (NANC) pathway. It is concluded that besides acetylcholine (Ach) VIP releases the peptidergic transmitter
substance P
from postganglionic nerve fibers of myenteric plexus. Opioid peptides and somatostatin modulate the activity of cholinergic and peptidegic nerves in the guinea-pig ileum. The release of
substance P
appears to depend completely on N-type voltage sensitive calcium channels.
...
PMID:Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide induces neurogenic contraction of guinea-pig ileum. Involvement of acetylcholine and substance P. 137 93
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