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)

The responsiveness of isolated guinea pig lung parenchymal strips to substance P was enhanced by at least 100-fold in the presence of the endopeptidase inhibitors phosphoramidon (1 microM) or thiorphan (1 microM), but not with the converting enzyme inhibitor, captopril, or an inhibitor of serum carboxypeptidase N (both 1 microM). Responses of guinea pig tracheal rings to substance P were also markedly potentiated by phosphoramidon. The increase in tissue responsiveness by these inhibitors was relatively specific for substance P among several other spasmogenic peptides, including formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine and the complement peptides C3a and C5a. The enhanced responses appear to result from a decrease in the rate of substance P degradation in the presence of neutral endopeptidase inhibitors. Specific binding of substance P to its receptor on bronchial membranes was increased by three- to fourfold in the presence of phosphoramidon. These data demonstrate an enhanced potential for substance P to contract lung tissues when degradation by a neutral endopeptidase-like enzyme is blocked.
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PMID:Neutral endopeptidase-like enzyme controls the contractile activity of substance P in guinea pig lung. 243 6

We have examined pulmonary effects of bradykinin (Bk) in vivo and in vitro in guinea pigs and their potential inhibition by antagonists of Bk B1 and B2 receptors. Bk was a potent bronchoconstrictor in vivo and caused contractions of isolated, epithelium-denuded trachealis. D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7]-Bk (NPC567) and D-arg[Hyp3,Thi5,8,D-Phe7]-Bk (NPC349), B2 receptor antagonists, were weak inhibitors of Bk-induced bronchoconstriction in vivo and were virtually inactive as antagonists of Bk-induced airway smooth muscle contraction. Several other B2 antagonists as well as B1 antagonist, des-Arg9-[Leu8]-Bk, did not inhibit Bk-induced tracheal contraction. The B1 receptor agonist des-Arg9-Bk was without effect on tracheal tone. Tracheal responses to Bk were unaffected by antagonists of muscarinic, histamine, serotonin, and catecholamine receptors. The inability of the antagonists to inhibit Bk is unlikely to be due to their degradation, because NPC567 was only weakly active in the presence of inhibitors of kininase I (EC 3.4.11.2), kininase II (EC 3.4.15.1), and neutral endopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.11). These studies were corroborated by ligand binding experiments in guinea pig and ovine airways. In [3H]Bk binding, the Bk antagonists had no effect in guinea pig trachea, slightly displaced [3H]Bk in ovine trachea, and inhibited approximately 60% of total specific binding in lung. des-Arg9-[Leu8]-Bk and several other agents, including atropine, neurokinin A, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide, had no effect on lung Bk binding. Bk and its analogs were not degraded during the binding assay. These data suggest that pulmonary tissue, particularly in the large airways, contains a novel Bk binding site, a B3 receptor, which may be involved in Bk-induced bronchoconstriction.
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PMID:Evidence for a pulmonary B3 bradykinin receptor. 254 44

A kinin-potentiating peptide (KPP) generated from human plasma proteins on trypsin incubation was partially purified by ultrafiltration and ion-exchange chromatography and was characterized through some of its pharmacological properties. KPP itself was devoid of any action but it potentiated the guinea-pig ileum contractions elicited by several kinins, including an analog resistant to angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE). In contrast, contractions induced by angiotensin II, histamine, acetylcholine, barium chloride and substance P were not potentiated. Not only did KPP have high specificity towards kinins, but its action started immediately and induced kinin potentiation in a dose-dependent and reversible manner. Furthermore KPP potentiated the bradykinin contracting effects on the rat uterus, a preparation with very poor ACE activity, and on guinea-pig ileum previously incubated with 1.10-phenanthroline, a metal chelator able to inhibit ACE and kininase I activities and with phosphoramidon, a specific inhibitor of neutral endopeptidase (NEP). The results suggest that the potentiating effect of KPP is due to a mechanism different from the inhibition of kinin metabolism by ACE, NEP and kininase I.
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PMID:Pharmacological properties of a new kinin-potentiating peptide generated from human serum proteins. 260 51

The complement anaphylatoxin C3a causes acute bronchoconstriction after intravenous infusion in guinea pigs. At doses of 6 to 600 micrograms/kg, the peptide causes significant and dose-dependent increases in resistance (RL) and decreases in dynamic compliance (Cdyn). Inhibition of serum carboxypeptidase N, the enzyme thought to be responsible for control of C3a activity in blood, by pretreating animals with DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid (MGPA), resulted in a 4-fold potentiation of the response to 200 micrograms/kg C3a. Responses to lower C3a doses were not significantly affected. Pretreating animals intravenously with histamine prior to administration of C3a resulted in potentiation of C3a-induced bronchoconstriction at all doses tested, decreasing the amount of C3a required to double RL by 15-fold, from 110 to 7 micrograms/kg. The effect appears to be relatively specific for C3a since histamine pretreatment did not alter airway responsiveness to methacholine. Similarly, pretreatment with methacholine at a dose that caused an increase in RL comparable to histamine did not alter subsequent responses to C3a. Administration of capsaicin, under conditions that elicit acute release of endogenous substance P, also resulted in potentiation of C3a responses, to an extent similar to that observed for histamine. These data are consistent with an increase in pulmonary vascular permeability facilitating accessibility of C3a for its receptor to cause bronchoconstriction before it is inactivated by serum carboxypeptidase N. Further, when C3a is generated in the presence of histamine-and/or substance-P-releasing agents, it may be responsible for a greater fraction of altered pulmonary mechanics than has previously been appreciated.
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PMID:Synergism between inflammatory mediators in vivo. Induction of airway hyperresponsiveness to C3a in the guinea pig. 327 62

We have investigated the contractile effect of bradykinin (BK) in guinea pig lung in vitro. BK induces a dose-related contraction of lung parenchymal strips which is increased significantly in the presence of 10(-5) M captopril (an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor) or 10(-5) M DL-thiorphan (a neutral endopeptidase inhibitor). The kininase I inhibitor, DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidino-ethylthiopropionic acid (MGTPA), has no effect on the BK-induced contraction. BK is more potent in contracting parenchymal lung strips than other contractile agents (histamine, carbachol and substance P), however the BK-induced maximal contraction is lower than those obtained with histamine and carbachol. The B1 agonist, des-Arg9-BK, does not contract lung parenchymal strips. The new BK B2 receptor antagonists (Hoe 140, NPC 17731 and NPC 17761), which possess binding affinities in the nanomolar range, inhibit the BK-induced contractile response in a dose-dependent manner. The BK-induced contraction was unaffected by propranolol, atropine, tetrodotoxin, capsaicin pre-treatment, triprolidine, methysergide, Ro 19-3704 and N omega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME), excluding the involvement of nervous pathways, preformed mast cell mediators, platelet-activating factor and nitric oxide. However, indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, AA-861, a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, and furegrelate, a thromboxane A2 synthase inhibitor, decreased the contractile response to BK, suggesting that both cyclooxygenase and 5-lipoxygenase products are involved in this contraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bradykinin-induced contraction of guinea pig lung in vitro. 799 Sep 78

Bradykinin and substance P have been implicated as mediators in angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI)-associated angioedema. Studies investigating the metabolism of bradykinin in sera from patients with a history of ACEI-associated angioedema and controls suggest that there is a defect in a non-ACE, non-kininase I pathway of bradykinin degradation, such as the aminopeptidase P (APP)/dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV) pathway. This study tested the hypothesis that serum APP or DPPIV activity is decreased in patients with ACEI-associated angioedema. APP and DPPIV activity were measured in sera collected from patients during ACEI-associated angioedema, from patients with a remote history of ACEI-associated angioedema, and from normotensive and untreated hypertensive controls. The effects of acute and chronic ACEI and corticosteroid treatment on serum DPPIV activity were also assessed. DPPIV activity was similar in normotensive volunteers (37.8 +/- 6.3 nmol/mL per min), in untreated hypertensive subjects who had been exposed previously to ACEI without angioedema (36.2 +/- 4.3 nmol/mL per min), in hypertensive patients with a remote history of angioedema (35.1 +/-8.5 nmol/mL per min), and in chronically ACEI-treated hypertensive subjects (36.1 +/- 5.6 nmol/mL per min). DPPIV activity decreased with increasing age (R(2)=0.10, P=0.016). Subject group significantly affected DPPIV activity (F=6.208, P=0.016) such that DPPIV activity was significantly lower in patients with ACEI-associated angioedema (26.9 +/- 4.1 nmol/mL per min) than in normotensive controls, in previously ACEI-exposed untreated hypertensive volunteers, or in ACEI-treated hypertensive volunteers, even after controlling for age. There was no effect of acute ACE inhibition or corticosteroids on DPPIV activity. With respect to APP activity, there was no difference between groups. These results suggest that DPPIV activity is depressed in individuals with hypertension during acute ACEI-associated angioedema.
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PMID:Dipeptidyl peptidase IV activity in patients with ACE-inhibitor-associated angioedema. 1188 90

Our investigations started when synthetic bradykinin became available and we could characterize two enzymes that cleaved it: kininase I or plasma carboxypeptidase N and kininase II, a peptidyl dipeptide hydrolase that we later found to be identical with the angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE). When we noticed that ACE can cleave peptides without a free C-terminal carboxyl group (e.g., with a C-terminal nitrobenzylamine), we investigated inactivation of substance P, which has a C-terminal Met(11)-NH(2). The studies were extended to the hydrolysis of the neuropeptide, neurotensin and to compare hydrolysis of the same peptides by neprilysin (neutral endopeptidase 24.11, CD10, NEP). Our publication in 1984 dealt with ACE and NEP purified to homogeneity from human kidney. NEP cleaved substance P (SP) at Gln(6)-Phe(7), Phe(7)[see text]-Phe(8), and Gly(9)-Leu(10) and neurotensin (NT) at Pro(10)-Tyr(11) and Tyr(11)-Ile(12). Purified ACE also rapidly inactivated SP as measured in bioassay. HPLC analysis showed that ACE cleaved SP at Phe(8)-Gly(9) and Gly(9)-Leu(10) to release C-terminal tri- and dipeptide (ratio = 4:1). The hydrolysis was Cl(-) dependent and inhibited by captopril. ACE released only dipeptide from SP free acid. ACE hydrolyzed NT at Tyr(11)-Ile(12) to release Ile(12)-Leu(13). Then peptide substrates were used to inhibit ACE hydrolyzing Fa-Phe-Gly-Gly and NEP cleaving Leu(5)-enkephalin. The K(i) values in microM were as follows: for ACE, bradykinin = 0.4, angiotensin I = 4, SP = 25, SP free acid = 2, NT = 14, and Met(5)-enkephalin = 450, and for NEP, bradykinin = 162, angiotensin I = 36, SP = 190, NT = 39, Met(5)-enkephalin = 22. These studies showed that ACE and NEP, two enzymes widely distributed in the body, are involved in the metabolism of SP and NT. Below we briefly survey how NEP and ACE in two decades have gained the reputation as very important factors in health and disease. This is due to the discovery of more endogenous substrates of the enzymes and to the very broad and beneficial therapeutic applications of ACE inhibitors.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) and neprilysin hydrolyze neuropeptides: a brief history, the beginning and follow-ups to early studies. 1513 71

The effects of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors result from the inhibition of the ACE (kininase II) to ultimately influence both the renin-angiotensin system and the degradation of the bradykinin (BK) metabolism. ACE inhibitors block the degradation of BK and substance P by ACE. In addition, an active metabolite of BK (Des-Arg9-BK) is catalysed by kininase I and its degradation is controlled in part by the conversion enzyme. These molecules have been associated with increased plasma extravasation associated with ACE inhibitors. ACE inhibitors are the leading cause of drug-induced Angioedema (AE). Symptoms of AE mainly occur after the first month of treatment by ACE. However, very late onset cases, sometimes after several years of stable therapy, are also described in the literature. It has been observed that patients previously stable under ACE inhibitor will most likely develop AE soon after the addition of another medication, including the combination of aspirin or non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs with ACE inhibitor which has proved to be the most common cause, accounting for close to 50% of all AE cases related to ACE inhibitors. This side effect of ACE inhibitors, sometimes very late and rare, deserves to be recalled.
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PMID:Angioedema: a rare and sometimes delayed side effect of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. 3032 86