Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (substance P)
21,176 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We investigated a possible link between galanin expression and evoked pain accompanying painful partial sciatic nerve lesions. Increased galanin immunoreactivity (IR) in the dorsal horn, in gracile nucleus, and in sensory neurons following chronic constriction injury (CCI) compared to complete sciatic transection suggested a facilitatory role in thermal and mechanical hypersensitivity (allodynia). We therefore investigated the effects of endogenous interleukin-6 (IL-6) and nerve growth factor (NGF) on allodynia and neuropeptide expression. IL-6 knockout mice showed decreased allodynia and galanin-IR compared to wild-type mice, but also decreased substance P (SP)-IR in the dorsal horn. Anti-NGF-treated rats with CCI also showed decreased allodynia and SP-IR, but increased galanin-IR in the dorsal horn. These results suggest that evoked pain is more tightly linked to SP than to galanin expression. If galanin's effects are inhibitory as the bulk of the literature suggests, its effects are subordinate to those of SP and to other changes following CCI.
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PMID:Galanin expression in neuropathic pain: friend or foe? 992 85

Partial nerve injury is a potential cause of distressing chronic pain for which conventional analgesic treatment with opiates or anti-inflammatory agents is not very effective. Constriction nerve injury, widely used to study neuropathic pain, was shown here to induce interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNA in a subset of rat primary sensory neurons. When we inflicted chronic nerve constriction on mice with null mutation of the IL-6 gene, the hypersensitivity to cutaneous heat and pressure that is induced in wild-type mice was not evident, the loss of substance P in sensory neurons was excessive and the induction of galanin in central sensory projections was reduced. In additional experiments, intrathecal infusion of IL-6 in rats was shown to stimulate synthesis of galanin in approximately one-third of lumbar dorsal root ganglion neurons. The results of these experiments indicate that endogenous IL-6 mediates some of the hypersensitive responses that characterize peripheral neuropathic pain, and influences two neuropeptides that have been implicated in pain transmission.
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PMID:Endogenous interleukin-6 contributes to hypersensitivity to cutaneous stimuli and changes in neuropeptides associated with chronic nerve constriction in mice. 1038 13

Reports on patients with hemiparalysis indicate the importance of the nervous system for the pathophysiology of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or osteoarthritis (OA). Norepinephrine (NE) and opioids seem to be more antiinflammatory neurotransmitters whereas substance P is proinflammatory. The study aimed to investigate the direct noradrenergic nerve-immune cell interaction in human synovial membrane. We used a recently developed superfusion technique with electrical stimulation of synovial membrane to elicit local NE from synovial membrane slices. The readout parameter of synovial immune cells was interleukin-6 (IL-6). IL-6 was spontaneously secreted from RA and OA synovial membranes. Electrical field stimulation intensively reduced IL-6 secretion. In patients with OA or RA, this electrically induced reduction of IL-6 secretion was not significantly changed by alpha- or beta-adrenergic antagonists. The study demonstrates that local endogenous NE seem to play a minor role, which may be due to a depletion of NE or loss of noradrenergic fibers during chronic RA and OA.
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PMID:In vitro superfusion method to study nerve-immune cell interactions in human synovial membrane in long-standing rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis. 1041 20

Binding characteristics and functional antagonism exerted by two structurally related tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists, MEN 11467 ((1R,2S)-2N[1(H)indol-3-yl-carbonyl]-1-N-{Nalpha(p-tolylacetyl+ ++)-Nalpha(methyl)-D-3-(2-naphthyl)alanyl}diaminocyclohexane) and FK888 (N2-[(4R)-4-hydroxy-1-(1-methyl-1H-indol-3-yl)carbonyl-L-prolyl]-N-methy l-N-phenylmethyl-L-3-(2-naphthyl)alaninamide), were investigated in the human astrocytoma cell line U373 MG. In radioligand binding studies, conducted with [3H]substance P and intact cells at 37 degrees C, MEN 11467 bound to tachykinin NK1 receptors in an irreversible manner with a Ki value of 1.2+/-0.5 nM while FK888 bound in competitive manner with a Ki value of 4.6+/-2.2 nM. Receptor blockade by both antagonists resulted in a powerful and complete inhibition of functional responses induced by substance P, such as accumulation of the second messenger inositol monophosphate or interleukin-6 release. However, MEN 11467 showed a greater potency for blocking functional responses than FK888 despite their similar affinity for human tachykinin NK1 receptors. Moreover, MEN 11467 was more potent in inhibiting late rather than early phases of substance P-induced inositol monophosphate accumulation and its antagonism was enhanced by drug preincubation and barely affected by removal of unbound drug from the external medium, suggesting that MEN 11467 bound in a tight manner to the receptor. Such behaviour was not observed with the competitive and rapidly reversible antagonist FK888. These data indicate that the small differences in the chemical structure of MEN 11467 and FK888 determine the different binding characteristics at the tachykinin NK1 receptor and which are responsible for the greater potency of MEN 11467 for blocking functional responses. The Ki value obtained in binding studies may be inadequate to reveal the real potency of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists.
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PMID:Correlation between binding characteristics and functional antagonism in human glioma cells by tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists. 1042 88

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a cytokine implicated as a key mediator of immune and inflammatory responses in psoriasis. Recent studies have shown that neuropeptides, substance P (SP) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), can modulate a production of IL-6 from cells, such as monocytes and astrocytes, participating in an immune reaction. The aim of this study was to assess the role of the neuropeptides on cytokine production of keratinocytes in physiologic or pathologic conditions. Cultured human keratinocytes derived from normal foreskin and psoriatic lesions were treated with various concentrations of SP or VIP, in the presence or absence of fetal bovine serum. The secretion of IL-6 by the treated keratinocytes was analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Although neither SP nor VIP, by itself, was able to induce IL-6 synthesis in cultured human keratinocytes, we have found that SP, not VIP, significantly reduced 5% fetal bovine serum-induced IL-6 production in time- and dose-dependent fashion. This down-regulatory effect of SP was reversed by spantide, a SP antagonist. Lesional psoriatic keratinocytes showed a similar, but weaker, response when compared with normal keratinocytes. These data suggested that SP might modulate IL-6 synthesis of keratinocytes in either physiologic or pathologic conditions such as psoriasis.
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PMID:The effects of substance P and vasoactive intestinal peptide on interleukin-6 synthesis in cultured human keratinocytes. 1065 Dec 25

The expression of Interleukin-6 (IL-6) was studied in normal dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of juvenile and foetal humans, using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization techniques. There was an expression of IL-6-like immunoreactivity in more than 75% out of neuronal cells in the juvenile ganglia with a peripheral localization, and also an expression in the foetal ganglion cells. There was a co-localization of IL-6 with substance P (SP) and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in more than 60% of the DRG cells, respectively. By in situ hybridization 0.9% of the cells in the juvenile ganglia and 1.1% of the cells in the foetal ganglia showed a positive signal for IL-6. In addition, expression of IL-6 was found in juvenile medulla spinalis, preferentially in the white matter.
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PMID:Expression of interleukin-6 in human dorsal root ganglion cells. 1068 97

The importance of inflammatory processes in the pathology of Mg deficiency has been recently reconsidered but the sequence of events leading to the inflammatory response remains unclear. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to characterize more precisely the acute phase response following Mg deficiency in the rat. Weaning male Wistar rats were pair-fed either a Mg-deficient or a control diet for either 4 or 8 days. The characteristic allergy-like crisis of Mg-deficient rats was accompanied by a blood leukocyte response and changes in leukocytes subpopulations. A significant increase in interleukin-6 (IL-6) plasma level was observed in Mg-deficient rats compared to rats fed a control diet. The inflammatory process was accompanied by an increase in plasma levels of acute phase proteins. The concentrations of alpha2-macroglobulin and alpha1-acid glycoprotein in the plasma of Mg-deficient rats were higher than in control rats. This was accompanied in the liver by an increase in the level of mRNA coding for these proteins. Moreover, Mg-deficient rats showed a significant increase in plasma fibrinogen and a significant decrease in albumin concentrations. Macrophages found in greater number in the peritoneal cavity of Mg-deficient rats were activated endogenously and appeared to be primed for superoxide production following phorbol myristate acetate stimulation. A high plasma level of IL-6 could be detected as early as day 4 for the Mg-deficient diet. Substance P does not appear to be the initiator of inflammation since IL-6 increase was observed without plasma elevation of this neuropeptide. The fact that the inflammatory response was an early consequence of Mg deficiency suggests that reduced extracellular Mg might be responsible for the activated state of immune cells.
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PMID:Inflammatory response following acute magnesium deficiency in the rat. 1083 83

Intra-arterial desmopressin caused dose and time dependent increases (p <0.001 for all) in forearm blood flow (all doses) and plasma tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) concentrations (desmopressin > or = 70 ng/min). Although plasma t-PA concentrations rose in both forearms, there was a modest local release of t-PA in the infused forearm (14 ng/100 mL of tissue/min, p <0.05). At desmopressin doses > or = 300 ng/min, plasma von Willebrand factor (vWf) and Factor VIII:C concentrations rose in both forearms (p <0.001) and correlated with the rise in interleukin-6 concentrations (r = 0.92, p <0.001: r = 0.85, p = 0.002 respectively). Neither desmopressin nor substance P caused t-PA, vWf or Factor VIII:C release in the patients, although desmopressin increased plasma interleukin-6 concentrations as in healthy volunteers. We conclude that desmopressin releases t-PA, vWf and Factor VIII:C predominantly via systemic mechanisms, possibly mediated by cytokine release. Patients with type 3 vWD appear to have a generalised failure to release t-PA acutely despite a normal interleukin-6 response to desmopressin infusion.
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PMID:Local and systemic effects of intra-arterial desmopressin in healthy volunteers and patients with type 3 von Willebrand disease. Role of interleukin-6. 1095 89

To know whether cultured human mast cells raised from umbilical cord blood cells in the presence of stem cell factor (SCF) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) can be a model of human skin mast cells, the cells were stimulated, and intracellular calcium ion ([Ca(2+)](i)) mobilization was analyzed by fluorescence microscopic techniques in parallel with a measurement of histamine released from the cells. When IgE-sensitized mast cells were activated by anti-IgE, [Ca(2+)](i) elevation began at the periphery and subsequently proceeded toward the center of the cells. The increase in [Ca(2+)](i) in calcium ionophore A23187-stimulated mast cells began at the center and spread to the periphery of the cells. Significant histamine release was observed by each stimulation. However, either compound 48/80 or substance P failed to increase [Ca(2+)](i) with no appreciable histamine release. This study shows that there is heterogeneity of [Ca(2+)](i) mobilization in the activated human mast cells, and that cultured human mast cells derived from umbilical cord blood cells in the presence of SCF and IL-6 can not be a model of human skin mast cells.
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PMID:Cultured human mast cells derived from umbilical cord blood cells in the presence of stem cell factor and interleukin-6 cannot be a model of human skin mast cells: fluorescence microscopic analysis of intracellular calcium ion mobilization. 1106 51

We evaluated the effects of 50 Hz pulsed electromagnetic fields (EMFs) with a peak magnetic field of 3 mT on human astrocytoma cells. Our results clearly demonstrate that, after the cells were exposed to EMFs for 24 h, the basal [Ca(2+)](i) levels increased significantly from 124+/-51 nM to 200+/-79 nM. Pretreatment of the cells with 1.2 microM substance P increased the [Ca(2+)](i) to 555+/-278 nM, while EMF exposure caused a significant drop in [Ca(2+)](i) to 327+/-146 nM. The overall effect of EMFs probably depends on the prevailing Ca(2+) conditions of the cells. After exposure, the proliferative responses of both normal and substance P-pretreated cells increased slightly from 1.03 to 1.07 and 1.04 to 1.06, respectively. U-373 MG cells spontaneously released about 10 pg/ml of interleukin-6 which was significantly increased after the addition of substance P. Moreover, immediately after EMF exposure and 24 h thereafter, the interleukin-6 levels were more elevated (about 40%) than in controls. On the whole, our data suggest that, by changing the properties of cell membranes, EMFs can influence Ca(2+) transport processes and hence Ca(2+) homeostasis. The increased levels of interleukin-6 after 24 h of EMF exposure may confirm the complex connection between Ca(2+) levels, substance P and the cytokine network.
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PMID:The effect of pulsed electromagnetic fields on the physiologic behaviour of a human astrocytoma cell line. 1111 42


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