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)

Growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF), a linear peptide that exists in a number of different molecular forms (GRF-44, -40, -37, and-31) has been shown to be responsible for the acromegaly associated with certain endocrine tumors of the pancreas and other foregut-derived structures. With the use of two anti-sera (#1A850 and G59/901) directed against different segments of the GRF molecule, a series of 24 pancreatic and 35 gastrointestinal endocrine tumors, not associated with acromegaly, were surveyed systematically for immunocytochemical localization of GRF in the tumor cells. Strong immunoreactivity for GRF was encountered in 10 tumors (6 pancreatic and 4 gastrointestinal). While all ten tumors were immunoreactive against G59/901, which recognizes GRF-44, -40, and -37, two jejunal carcinoids showed additional immunostaining with 1A850 that is specific for GRF-44. Seven of these ten tumors were also immunoreactive for a variety of other regulatory peptides and neurotransmitters, including gastrin, insulin, glucagon, serotonin, substance P, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). No consistent pattern of association between GRF and the other regulatory substances was evident. These findings indicate that, even in the absence of associated acromegaly, up to 17% of endocrine tumors of the gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) axis show immunoreactivity for GRF and that such reactivity is associated more frequently with pancreatic (25%) than with gastrointestinal (11%) endocrine tumors.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical demonstration of growth hormone-releasing factor in gastrointestinal and pancreatic endocrine tumors. 300 Jan 64

Low concentrations of six peptide hormones; glucagon, vasoactive intestinal peptide, substance P, angiotensin II, lysine-vasopressin, arginine-vasopressin, and the chemotactic peptide fMet-Leu-Phe, activated the capacity for pinocytosis in starved Amoeba proteus. Competitive inhibitors of the chemotactic peptide in leucocytes inhibited activation by fMet-Leu-Phe, suggesting that its action in the amoeba is mediated by specific receptors. The opioid peptides, beta-endorphin, dynorphin (1-13) and leu-enkephalin abolished through a naloxone-sensitive mechanism activation by hormones and several other activating agents. Also, low concentrations of beef and pork insulin inhibited activation by peptide hormones. An insulin analogue of low potency in mammalian cells was inactive in the amoeba. These results support the hypothesis that besides opioid receptors, there may be insulin receptors and possibly receptors for several other peptide hormones in Amoeba proteus.
...
PMID:Peptides as modifiers of Na+-induced pinocytosis in starved Amoeba proteus. 300 25

The rapid growth (0.8 +/- 0.3 g/day) of a transplantable insulinoma, which also contained substance P (2.9 +/- 2.3 pmol/g) and gastrin-releasing peptide (3.2 +/- 2.1 pmol/g), resulted in the development of hyperphagia, hyperinsulinaemia and hypoglycaemia in rats (n = 8). After a 14-day growth period, the insulinoma-bearing rats showed an increase (49%; p less than 0.01) in the weight of the small intestine but no significant change in stomach weight compared with control animals. The content (pmol/organ) of somatostatin, substance P, neurokinin A and vasoactive intestinal peptide in the stomachs of the tumour rats was unchanged. A depletion in the content (53% p less than 0.01) and concentration (57%; p less than 0.01) of gastrin-releasing peptide, however, suggested either hypersecretion, possibly mediated through hypoglycaemia-induced vagal stimulation, or inhibition of synthesis. The concentration and content of glucagon-like immunoreactivity (enteroglucagon) in the small intestine of the insulinoma rats increased markedly (47%; p less than 0.01 and 120%; p less than 0.01). This increase is consistent with a proposed role of this peptide as a factor trophic to the intestinal mucosa. No significant changes in the concentrations of somatostatin, substance P, neurokinin A, vasoactive intestinal peptide and gastrin-releasing peptide in the small intestine were observed. However, the increase in gut weight resulted in a greater content of vasoactive intestinal peptide (40%; p less than 0.01) and substance P (37%; p less than 0.05) in the insulinoma rats.
...
PMID:Effects of a transplantable insulinoma upon regulatory peptide concentrations in the gastrointestinal tract of the rat. 301 8

A 54 year old woman suffered from acromegaly due to a pancreatic islet cell tumour producing GHRH. The tumour was demonstrated on CT scan. The diagnosis was established from elevated plasma levels of GHRH, GH and prolactin, and by the lack of signs of a pituitary adenoma in trans-sphenoidal surgery. Acromegaly was cured by tumour removal. Light microscopically, the tumour showed a medullary and microlobular pattern. The cells were large and often cuspidal. Small granules were found in semi-thin sections. Small aggregations of amyloid fibres were seen, mostly around capillaries. Immunocytochemistry revealed GHRH, NSE, neurotensin, serotonin, VIP and PP. S 100 was positive only in nerve fibres. Staining for GH, ACTH, calcitonin, alpha-HCG, beta-HCG, insulin, glucagon, gastrin, substance P, bombesin and somatostatin was negative. Ultrastructure showed oval partly lobulated nuclei with small nucleoli, moderate amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum, many free ribosomes, some large Golgi fields and small numbers of secretory granules measuring 150 nm or, in a few cells, 650 nm. Only 4 other cases of pancreatic endocrine tumours causing acromegaly by ectopic GHRH secretion are described in the literature and these were similar to our case in many respects.
...
PMID:Morphology of a GHRH producing pancreatic islet cell tumour causing acromegaly. 301 79

Peptide immunoreactivity was studied in grafts of endoderm from chick or quail embryos (19 hours, corresponding to stage 4- to 5 according to Hamburger and Hamilton) in the coelom of a 48 hour host embryo. The presence of gastrin, glucagon, cholecystokinin, VIP, substance P, somatostatin, bombesin, motilin, secretin, pancreatic polypeptide, neurotensin and insulin was demonstrated. The nature of the peptide(s) generally matched the regional differentiation of the enteric epithelium and the underlying mesodermal components. The findings are compatible with the concept of heterogeneity of the endoderm due to migration of epiblast derived cells.
...
PMID:The synthesis of peptides in enteroendocrine cells developing in explanted presumptive endoderm. 315 May 67

An extensive array of nerve fibers ramify around the afferent blood vessels of the liver and the extrahepatic and intrahepatic biliary pathways, and are thought to be involved in regulation of blood flow. Although the role of sympathetic innervation is established, little is known about the location or role of regulatory peptidergic innervation in the liver. We examined the anatomic distribution of a wide variety of regulatory peptides and several neural antigens by in situ immunohistochemistry in the rat and in man. A rich peptidergic plexus of nerve fibers and ganglion cells was observed around the arterial vessels in both species, with intense immunoreactivity for neuron-specific enolase, neurofilaments, neuropeptide Y, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. S-100 protein immunoreactivity was seen principally in large nerve bundles, suggesting that the majority of nerves in this area were unmyelinated. In contrast, the portal vessels revealed very little peptidergic innervation. No staining was observed with antibodies directed against insulin, glucagon, gastrin, serotonin, met-enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu, cholecystokinin, or growth hormone. These findings indicate the presence of a rich, although selective, peptidergic plexus surrounding afferent hepatic blood vessels. This plexus may play an important role in regulation of hepatic blood flow.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine innervation of the hepatic vessels in the rat and in man. 318 22

The endocrine cells in the gut of Mugil saliens Risso, 1810 (leaping grey mullet) were investigated by immunocytochemical and electron microscopic techniques. Gastrin-, glucagon-, and somatostatin-immunoreactive cells were identified in the cardiac and cecal stomach regions, located mainly in the lower part of the gastric folds and in the upper part of the glands. Substance P-, somatostatin-, and pancreatic polypeptide (PP)-immunoreactive cells were found between epithelial cells in the pyloric stomach region. Gastrin-, cholecystokinin (CCK)-, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP)-, substance P-, Met-enkephalin- and PP-immunoreactive cells were observed throughout the intestine while only the last three of these appeared in the posterior intestine. Nine types of gastroenteroendocrine cells were ultrastructurally characterized; some of them were related to the cell types immunocytochemically identified.
...
PMID:The endocrine cells in the gut of Mugil saliens Risso, 1810 (Teleostei): an immunocytochemical and ultrastructural study. 329 46

This paper presents data showing that the sympathetic autonomic areas of the cat thoracolumbar spinal cord contain nerve terminals and fibres with immunoreactivity for at least seven neuropeptides. The distribution in the intermediolateral cell column of the terminals and fibres which contain enkephalin-, neuropeptide Y-, neurotensin-, substance P-, and neurophysin II-like immunoreactivity (ENK, NPY, NT, SP, and NP2, respectively) suggests that these peptides are involved in more generalized functions of the autonomic nervous system. On the other hand, peaks in density of immunoreactivity at certain levels suggest that different levels of influence of sympathetic preganglionic neurons by the various peptides may occur along the length of the thoracolumbar cord. The distribution of terminals and fibres containing somatostatin- and oxytocin-like immunoreactivity (SS and OXY) suggests that these peptides may be part of specific pathways to particular sympathetic preganglionic neurons. The possible sources of the terminals and fibres containing ENK, NPY, NT, SS, and SP include the spinal cord and supraspinal areas, whereas the source of these structures with OXY and NP2 is most likely supraspinal. The data suggest that coexistence of peptides and interactions between structures containing different neuropeptides occur in the spinal autonomic areas. It is speculated that neuropeptides have an important role to play in the regulation of the cardiovascular division of the autonomic nervous system.
...
PMID:Peptidergic inputs to sympathetic preganglionic neurons. 331 10

Calmodulin, a ubiquitous Ca2+-binding regulatory protein, is phosphorylated exclusively on tyrosine-99 in an insulin-dependent manner by wheat germ lectin-purified preparations of insulin receptors from rat adipocyte plasma membranes. Calmodulin is phosphorylated in the presence of polylysine, histone Hf2b, and protamine sulfate, but not in the absence of these cofactors or in the presence of other basic compounds known to interact with calmodulin, such as mellitin, myelin basic protein, chlorpromazine, trifluoperazine, substance P, glucagon, polyarginine, mastoparin, beta-endorphin, spermine, spermidine, and putrescine. The incorporation of 32P into calmodulin, expressed in terms of moles of phosphate per moles of calmodulin and assayed at calmodulin concentrations of 1.2 and 0.06 microM, is 0.023 + 0.002 and 0.046 + 0.006, respectively. This low stoichiometry is likely due to the relative impurity of the receptor preparation, as similar studies not shown here, using highly purified human insulin receptors, yield a stoichiometry of 1 mol phosphate/mol calmodulin. The time course of phosphorylation is characterized by a short initial lag phase of approximately 5 min, a rapid linear rate from approximately 5 to 40 min, with a steady state of 32P incorporation being approached at approximately 60 min. The K0.5 for ATP is 104 + 18 microM. Phosphorylated calmodulin is partially purified by HPLC on a C4 column using a trifluoroacetic acid/acetonitrile gradient solvent system. Phosphoamino acid analysis and limited thrombin digestion were used to determine that the site of insulin-induced phosphorylation of calmodulin is exclusively on tyrosine-99 regardless of the basic protein cofactor used. Phosphorylated calmodulin does not exhibit the characteristic Ca2+ shift normally observed with calmodulin in electrophoretic gels, an observation that is consistent with this modification affecting the biological activity of the molecule. Thus, the tyrosine phosphorylation of calmodulin represents a potentially important post-translational modification altering calmodulin's ability to regulate a variety of enzymes involved in growth, differentiation, and metabolic regulation.
...
PMID:The in vitro phosphorylation of calmodulin by the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase. 341 47

The gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) endocrine cells of the Japanese field vole were studied immunohistochemically. Somatostatin-, 5-hydroxytryptamine-, glicentin-, glucagon-, bovine pancreatic polypeptide-, gastrin-, gastric inhibitory polypeptide-, cholecystokinin-, substance P-, secretin-, neurotensin- and insulin-immunoreactive cells were revealed. The characteristic findings of the regional distribution and relative frequency of these immunoreactive cells in the GEP system of the vole were as follows. Somatostatin-immunoreactive cells were more numerous in the oxyntic glands than in the pyloric glands. Some somatostatin-immunoreactive cells were found in small clusters in the oxyntic glands. Gastrin-immunoreactive cells were detected not only in the pyloric glands and small intestine but also in the caecum and spiral colon. Gastric inhibitory polypeptide-immunoreactive cells were also detected in the pyloric glands and no motilin-immunoreactive cell was found in the gastroenteropancreatic system.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical study of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine cells of the herbivorous Japanese field vole, Microtus montebelli. 353 46


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>