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)

Periodontal disease is a common multifactorial chronic inflammatory disease in humans. In inflammatory conditions that are known to be associated with changes in nociception, such as arthritis, the neuronal expression of the proinflammatory neuropeptides, substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide is altered. In this study the expression of these neuropeptides' mRNAs has been studied in an inflammatory model that shows no behavioural evidence of altered nociception. Periodontitis was induced in male rats by intragingival injection of lipopolysaccharide adjacent to the second right mandibular molar. The animals were killed at various times after lipopolysaccharide injection and right and left trigeminal ganglia and brain were processed for in situ hybridization for beta-preprotachykinin and alpha-calcitonin gene-related peptide mRNAs. Expression of both neuropeptide mRNAs was significantly increased only in small neurons in the mandibular division of the trigeminal ganglion ipsilateral to the LPS injection from 3 to 10 days postinjection. Neuropeptide mRNA expression was also significantly increased in the contralateral trigeminal ganglion at day 10. No significant changes in neuropeptide mRNA levels were seen in the maxillary and ophthalmic divisions of the trigeminal ganglia or in the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus. The up-regulation of substance P and CGRP mRNAs in periodontal disease suggests that this is associated with the inflammatory process rather than nociception, as this disease does not appear to result in altered nociception in either rats or humans. The contralateral alteration in neuropeptide mRNA expression suggests a role for neurogenic mechanisms in the development of periodontal disease.
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PMID:Sensory neuropeptide mRNA up-regulation is bilateral in periodontitis in the rat: a possible neurogenic component to symmetrical periodontal disease. 1498 15

Psoriasis, a TH1-induced disorder, is not more common in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection than in the general population. However, it may appear for the first time or pre-existing psoriasis may worsen and be difficult to treat in HIV disease. The paradoxical exacerbation of psoriasis in AIDS has not been fully explained. Various explanations have been proposed including (a) the reduction of Langerhans' cells (LCs) in HIV disease, (b) the direct epidermal proliferative effect of HIV, (c) the altered cytokine profile in HIV disease, (d) HIV-induced macrophage nitric oxide (NO) production, (e) the increased CD8/CD4 T-cell ratio in HIV infection and (f) the increased colonization of skin by Staphylococcus aureus. However, the observations that (a) LCs cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and a variety of topical and systemic psoriasis treatments cause a reversible decrease in LC function, (b) psoriasis may improve in end-stage HIV infection, (c) overproduction of some TH2 cytokines and underproduction of IL-2 in HIV infection, and (d) the presence of NO favors a TH2 response over a TH1 response make the first four explanations difficult to interpret. Since psoriasis is exacerbated in HIV infection possibly due to the increased staphylococcal colonization, and psoriatic keratinocytes could aggravate HIV infection through production of TNF-alpha, it could be reasoned that in HIV-positive psoriatics a strong vicious cycle is present between the degree of immune deficiency and the staphylococcal colonization, explaining the poor prognosis of both AIDS and psoriasis in these patients. With reference to the studies which indicate significant involvement of substance P (SP) in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and on the other hand increased release of this agent by HIV-infected immune cells it is proposed that SP plays an important role in creating the paradox. Since in HIV-positive psoriatics the source of SP is largely immune cells not neurons, capsaicin, which exerts its action selectively on a subpopulation of neurons, could not be of significant therapeutic value. As SP significantly enhances HIV-1 replication in latently infected immune cells, psoriatic lesions, being heavily infiltrated with immune cells and having high concentrations of SP, could serve as high HIV-replication foci, with the resultant rapid progression of the infection towards AIDS. Additionally, given that lipopolysaccharide is supposed to exacerbate psoriasis, increase of gram-negative infections or cutaneous colonization with these organisms in AIDS may partly explain the paradox. Understanding the HIV-induced immunodysregulation that is associated with psoriasis in some HIV-seropositive patients may assist in the delineation of the immunopathogenesis of the disease in HIV-seronegative psoriatics.
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PMID:Paradoxical exacerbation of psoriasis in AIDS: proposed explanations including the potential roles of substance P and gram-negative bacteria. 1511 14

Cytokine hypersecretion might be involved in the onset and maintenance of depressive disorders and it has been suggested that St. John's wort extracts (Hypericum perforatum, SJW) might exert their antidepressant-like effects by affecting peripheral interleukin-6 (IL6) expression. We found that hyperforin, one putative active principle of SJW, and its dicyclohexylammonium salt (hyperforin-DCHA), inhibited the substance P (SP)-induced [L6 release inhuman astrocytoma cells (U373MG) with an Cs50 of 1.6 pM, indicating that hyperforin is likely to account for the inhibitory effect previously found in the same experimental model with SJW ex-tracts. [3H]SP binding experiments in parallel on the same intact cells indicate that hyperforin-DCHA does not interact with neuro-kinin-I receptors but very likely interacts with some intracellular steps leading to the synthesis and/or release of IL6. Hyperforin-DCHA also inhibited, with a similar IC50, the IL6 release induced in U373MG cells by two other classic proinflammatory stimuli,ILl and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), as well as the LPS-induced IL6 release in whole rat blood. Hyperforin-DCHA was less active in whole human blood. The concentrations required in vitro to inhibit LPS-induced IL6 release from rat and human whole blood are about one order of magnitude higher than the hyperforin levels measured in the plasma of rats or humans treated with pharmaco-logically active doses of SJW or hyperforin-DCHA.
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PMID:In vitro effects of the dicyclohexylammonium salt of hyperforin on interleukin-6 release in different experimental models. 1530 61

1. Several observations suggest that tachykinins are involved in the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary alterations. We have investigated the effect of antagonists for tachykinin NK1 (SR 140333), NK2 (SR 48968) or NK3 (SR 142801) receptors on inflammatory cell recruitment, tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and interleukin (IL)-6 release and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 activity in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of mice exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100 microg/mL aerosol for 30 min). 2. Treatment of mice with a combination of SR 140333 and SR 48968 (10(-6) mol/L, aerosol) significantly reduced the increase in the number of total cells and neutrophils and MMP-9 activity in the BALF of mice 2.5 h after LPS exposure. Treatment with the NK3 antagonist SR 142801 (10(-6) mol/L, aerosol) did not inhibit the influx of neutrophils, but markedly reduced the increase in TNF-alpha and IL-6 levels at 2.5 h and MMP-9 activity at 20 h. 3. These results show that the three tachykinin receptor antagonists may interfere with the development of airway inflammation, namely neutrophilia, TNF-alpha release or MMP-9 activity in the BALF of mice exposed to LPS and suggest that not only NK1 and NK2 receptors, but also NK3 receptors are involved in the modulation of the inflammatory response and airway remodelling.
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PMID:Interactions of tachykinin receptor antagonists with lipopolysaccharide-induced airway inflammation in mice. 1547 72

To examine how substance P (SP) is related with dental pulp inflammation, we examined the effects of SP on expression of genes for inflammatory factors in human dental pulp cell cultures. Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, we found that Prevotella intermedia lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced expression of SP and SP-receptor mRNAs, and that somatostatin inhibited the LPS-induced expression of SP mRNA. We also found that SP enhanced LPS-induced stimulation of NF-kappaB binding activity. In addition, SP induced expression of cyclooxygenase-2 and interleukin-10 receptor mRNAs. In contrast, SP inhibited expression of interferon-gamma receptor mRNA. These results suggest that SP may play a regulatory role in the immunological response of dental pulp tissue to pathogenic bacteria.
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PMID:Substance P enhances expression of lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammatory factors in dental pulp cells. 1550 7

The proinflammatory and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-inducible cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) has been shown to enhance primary sensory nociceptive signaling. However, the precise cellular sites of TNFalpha and TNF receptor synthesis are still a matter of controversy. Therefore, we differentiated the neuronal and non-neuronal sites of TNFalpha, TNFR1, and TNFR2 mRNA synthesis in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) of control rats and evaluated how their expression is altered under systemic challenge with LPS. In situ hybridization (ISH), RT-PCR analysis of laser-microdissected cells, and immunocytochemistry revealed absence of TNFalpha from DRG neurons and LPS-induced expression of TNFalpha exclusively in a subpopulation of non-neuronal DRG cells. Using RT-PCR and Northern blotting TNFR1 and TNFR2 mRNAs were found to be constitutively expressed and increased after LPS. TNFR1 mRNA was expressed in virtually all neurons and in non-neuronal cells with increased levels after LPS in both. TNFR2 was exclusively expressed and regulated in non-neuronal cells. RT-PCR analysis of microdissected DRG neurons and of the sensory neuronal cell line F11 confirmed the neuronal expression of TNFR1 and excluded that of TNFR2. Double ISH revealed varying levels of TNFR1 mRNA in virtually all DRG neurons including putative nociceptive neurons coding for calcitonin gene-related peptide, substance P, or vanilloid receptor 1. Taken together, we provide evidence that non-neuronally synthesized TNFalpha may directly act on primary afferent neurons via TNFR1 but not TNFR2. This is likely to be relevant under conditions of inflammatory pain and infections accompanied by widespread TNFalpha synthesis and release and may drive sickness behavior.
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PMID:Cell-specific expression and lipopolysaccharide-induced regulation of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and TNF receptors in rat dorsal root ganglion. 1550 49

This study was undertaken to clarify the mechanisms by which C-fiber degeneration at neonatal stages exacerbates the inflammatory responses of rat airways. Rats were treated with capsaicin at neonatal stages and immunized with ovalbumin (OVA) at adult ages. Challenge of capsaicin-pretreated rats with OVA promoted a higher influx of neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid compared with the vehicle group. No significant differences were found for the other cell types. The increased adhesion of N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP; 0.1 microM)- and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA; 1 microM)-treated neutrophils to fibronectin-coated wells did not differ among vehicle- and capsaicin-pretreated rats. Additionally, fMLP (10 microM), platelet-activating factor (0.1 microM), and substance P (50 microM) induced a significant neutrophil chemotaxis, but no differences were found among vehicle and capsaicin groups. Increased levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-10, and leukotriene B4 in BAL fluid as well as higher expression of cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant (CINC)-3 in lung homogenates were detected in the capsaicin group compared with vehicle group. In the capsaicin group, chronic treatment with compound 48/80 restored the TNF-alpha levels to control values and prevented the neutrophil influx in BAL fluid. The enhanced production of TNF-alpha, superoxide anion, and nitrite by isolated alveolar macrophages in response to lipopolysaccharide (3 microg/ml), PMA (10 nM), and/or zymosan (100 particles/cell) did not differ between vehicle- and capsaicin-pretreated rats. In conclusion, chronic neuropeptide depletion promoted by neonatal capsaicin treatment up-regulates airways mast cells, which upon activation by antigen at adult ages, release large amounts of cytokines such as TNF-alpha and CINC-3 that accounts for the massive airways neutrophil infiltration.
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PMID:Mechanisms involved in the enhancement of allergic airways neutrophil influx by permanent C-fiber degeneration in rats. 1557 95

Parotid secretory protein (PSP) and palate-lung-nasal epithelium clone (PLUNC) are novel secretory proteins that are expressed in the oral cavity and upper airways. Both proteins are related to bactericidal/permeability increasing protein (BPI). Cationic peptides derived from BPI exhibit anti-inflammatory activity. To test if PSP (C20orf70 gene product) also contains anti-inflammatory peptides, we designed 3 cationic peptides based on the predicted structure of PSP and known active regions of BPI. Each peptide inhibited the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated secretion of TNFalpha from RAW 264.7 macrophage cells. At 200 microg/mL, the peptide GK-7 exhibited inhibition similar to that achieved with 10 microg/mL of polymyxin B. PSP peptides directly inhibited the binding of LPS to LPS-binding protein. The cationic peptide Substance P had no inhibitory effect in these assays, confirming the specificity of the PSP peptides. These findings suggest that PSP peptides can serve as templates for the design of novel anti-inflammatory peptides.
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PMID:Design and validation of anti-inflammatory peptides from human parotid secretory protein. 1566 32

The underlying mechanism involved in the interaction between neutrophil elastase inhibitors and tachykinins has not been elucidated. In this study we have examined the effects of sivelestat, a neutrophil elastase inhibitor, on the in vitro responses of airways from lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-untreated or -treated guinea-pigs to substance P. Substance P (0.01-30 micromol/l) produced concentration-dependent contractions of both tracheal and bronchial ring preparations of LPS-untreated or -treated guinea-pigs. Responsiveness to substance P in these isolated airway preparations was augmented by either epithelium removal or LPS treatment. In epithelium-intact tracheal ring preparations isolated from LPS-untreated guinea-pigs, sivelestat (100 micromol/l) significantly inhibited substance P-induced contractions. The inhibitory action was markedly attenuated by pretreatment with L-NAME (100 micromol/l) or indomethacin (2 micromol/l), and was almost undetected following removal of the epithelium. On the other hand, in bronchial ring preparations isolated from LPS-untreated guinea-pigs, sivelestat had only a very slight effect on substance P-induced contraction of the epithelium-intact preparation, whereas sivelestat greatly inhibited contraction in epithelium-removed bronchial ring preparations. In LPS-treated guinea-pigs, whether the epithelium was intact or not, sivelestat significantly inhibited the substance P-induced contraction of bronchial ring preparations. Pretreatment with L-NAME (100 micromol/l) or indomethacin (2 micromol/l) did not affect the inhibitory effect of sivelestat in bronchial ring preparations. In conclusion, epithelium removal or LPS treatment induced hyperreactivity to substance P in the guinea-pig airway. Sivelestat caused epithelium-, nitric oxide- and prostaglandin-dependent inhibition of the substance P-induced contraction of isolated guinea-pig tracheal ring preparations. In contrast, the inhibitory effect of sivelestat on substance P-induced contraction of guinea-pig bronchial ring preparations is mediated by epithelium-, nitric oxide- and prostaglandin-independent mechanisms. Sivelestat may be effective in reducing the airway hyperresponsiveness to tachykinins induced by epithelial injury as occurs in LPS-mediated inflammatory lung diseases.
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PMID:Epithelium-dependent and -independent inhibitory effects of sivelestat, a neutrophil elastase inhibitor, on substance P-induced contraction of airway smooth muscle in lipopolysaccharide-treated guinea-pigs. 1642 65

Pfaffia glomerata is used in southern American countries against inflammatory diseases. We have explored the ability of a crude hydroalcoholic extract of P. glomerata root (HEPG) to prevent the oedematogenic action of several inflammatory agents in mice. We have examined also the duration of its effects and the mechanisms involved. The oral or intraperitoneal treatment of mice with HEPG (1, 10, 30, 100 or 300 mg kg(-1)) reduced, in a dose-dependent manner, carrageenan-induced paw oedema in the early (1-4 h) and late (48 h) periods. In the early period, the ID50 value (the median dose that caused 50% inhibition) of HEPG was 60.5 (28.5-128.71) and 20.4 (14.8-28.3) mg kg(-1) after oral and intraperitoneal administration, respectively. This effect was still evident when HEPG was administered up to 6 h before carrageenan. HEPG inhibited also paw oedema induced by histamine, serotonin, bradykinin, substance P and bacterial lipopolysaccharide. In addition, oral administration of HEPG increased the levels of nitrate and nitrite in the blood of mice. Further, its anti-oedematogenic action against carrageenan was prevented fully by N(G) nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (10 mg kg(-1), s.c.), as well as by methylene blue (20 mg kg(-1), s.c.) or 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-alpha]quinoxalin-1-one (2 mg kg(-1), s.c.). The results indicated that stimulation of endogenous production of nitric oxide, followed by soluble guanylate cyclase activation, was implicated in the anti-oedematogenic action of HEPG.
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PMID:Involvement of the nitric oxide/soluble guanylate cyclase pathway in the anti-oedematogenic action of Pfaffia glomerata (Spreng) Pedersen in mice. 1664 Aug 36


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