Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH), synthesized in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN), is released in response to physiological stimuli through median eminence nerve terminals to control thyrotropin or prolactin secretion from the pituitary. 2. Several events participate in the metabolism of this neuropeptide: regulation of TRH biosynthesis and release as well as modulation of its inactivation by the target cell. 3. Upon a physiological stimulus such as
cold
stress or suckling, TRH is released and levels of TRH mRNA increase in a fast and transient manner in the PVN; a concomitant increase in cfos is observed only with
cold
exposure. 4. Hypothalamic cell cultures incubated with cAMP or phorbol esters show a rise in TRH mRNA levels; dexamethasone produces a further increase at short incubation times. TRH mRNA are thus controlled by transsynaptic and hormonal influences. 5. Once TRH is released, it is inactivated by a narrow specificity ectoenzyme, pyroglutamyl peptidase II (PPII). 6. In adenohypophysis, PPII is subject to stringent control: positive by thyroid hormones and negative by TRH; other hypothalamic factors such as dopamine and
somatostatin
also influence its activity. 7. These combined approaches suggest that TRH action is modulated in a coordinate fashion.
...
PMID:Multifactorial modulation of TRH metabolism. 953 92
Cold
exposure increases TRH gene expression in hypothalamic and raphe nuclei and results in a vagal activation of gastric function. We investigated the role of medullary TRH receptors in
cold
(4-6 C, 90 min)-induced stimulation of gastric motor function in fasted conscious rats using intracisternal injections of TRH receptor (TRHr) antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (100 microg twice, -48 and -24 h). The gastric emptying of a methyl-cellulose solution was assessed by the phenol red method. TRH (0.1 microg) or the
somatostatin
subtype 5-preferring analog, BIM-23052 (1 microg), injected intracisternally increased basal gastric emptying by 34% and 47%, respectively. TRHr antisense, which had no effect on basal emptying, blocked TRH action but did not influence that of BIM-23052.
Cold
exposure increased gastric emptying by 64%, and the response was inhibited by vagotomy, atropine (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.), and TRHr antisense (intracisternally). Saline or mismatched oligodeoxynucleotides, injected intracisternally under similar conditions, did not alter the enhanced gastric emptying induced by
cold
or intracisternal injection of TRH or BIM-23052. These results indicate that TRH receptor activation in the brain stem mediates acute
cold
-induced vagal cholinergic stimulation of gastric transit, and that medullary TRH may play a role in the autonomic visceral responses to acute
cold
.
...
PMID:Intracisternal antisense oligodeoxynucleotides to the thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptor blocked vagal-dependent stimulation of gastric emptying induced by acute cold in rats. 972 24
Chemodectomas, or glomus tumours, are unusual head and neck paragangliomas. A non-invasive imaging technique, 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (123I-MIBG) scintigraphy, has long been used for the diagnosis of all types of paraganglioma. The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare classic 123I-MIBG scintigraphy with the more recent 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy in the diagnosis and location of chemodectomas. We performed 123I-MIBG and 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy in eight patients (7 females, 1 male) with histologically or radiologically confirmed chemodectomas (five carotid body and three jugulotympanic chemodectomas). 123I-MIBG uptake was visualized in four patients on planar views and SPET images (sensitivity 50%); uptake was low in three patients. Using 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy, all chemodectomas in eight patients were visualized (sensitivity 100%) and 111In-pentetreotide uptake was high in all cases. In conclusion, our results indicate that 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy is superior to 123I-MIBG scintigraphy in the diagnosis and location of chemodectomas. In-pentetreotide or 123I-MIBG uptake suggests a neuroendocrine origin, providing important functional information in the diagnosis of chemodectomas. Moreover, 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy permits a good classification of patients with or without
somatostatin
receptors in the chemodectoma in the application of pharmacological therapy with
somatostatin
analogues to inoperable tumours. The main therapeutic action of
cold
somatostatin
analogues is to inhibit hormonal hypersecretion in different neuroendocrine tumours. In chemodectomas, however, the most important effect of
somatostatin
analogues is to reduce tumour volume or inhibit growth progression.
...
PMID:111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy is superior to 123I-MIBG scintigraphy in the diagnosis and location of chemodectoma. 975 27
Most neuroendocrine tumours and several other tumours, such as breast carcinoma and malignant lymphoma, express
somatostatin
receptors (SS-Rs). Lesions expressing these receptors can be visualised by receptor scintigraphy using a low radioactive dose of the radiolabelled SS analogue [111In-DTPA0]octreotide. This radioligand is internalised and transported to the lysosomes with a long residence time of 111In. The aim of this experimental study in rats was to investigate whether the same agent, given in a high radioactive dose, can be used for therapy of hepatic metastases of different tumour cell lines. The development of hepatic metastases was determined 21 days after direct injection of SS-R-positive or -negative tumour cells into the vena porta in rats. On day 1 and/or 8, animals were treated with 370 MBq (0.5 microg) [111In-DTPA0]octreotide. In one experiment, using SS-R-positive tumour cells, animals were pre-treated with a high dose of
cold
octreotide to block the SS-R by saturation. The number of SS-R-positive liver metastases was significantly decreased after treatment with [111In-DTPA0]octreotide. Blocking the SS-R by octreotide substantially decreased the efficacy of treatment with [111In-DTPA0]octreotide, suggesting that the presence of SS-R is mandatory. This was confirmed by the finding that the number of SS-R-negative liver metastases was not affected by treatment with [111In-DTPA0]octreotide. Therefore, we conclude that (i) high radioactive doses of [111In-DTPA0]octreotide for PRRT (peptide receptor radionuclide therapy) can inhibit the growth of SS-R-positive liver metastases in an animal model, (ii) PRRT is effective only if SS-Rs are present on the tumours, (iii) the effect of PRRT with [111In-DTPA0]octreotide can be reduced by pre-treatment with
cold
octreotide, which indicates that receptor binding is essential for PRRT. Our data suggest that PRRT with radiolabelled octreotide might be a new promising treatment modality for SS-R-positive tumours.
...
PMID:Anti-proliferative effect of radiolabelled octreotide in a metastases model in rat liver. 1032 31
Somatostatin
(SRIH) and its analog have been reported to act within the central nervous system to suppress the hyperglycemic response to a variety of neural stimuli. On the other hand, the hyperglycemic response to 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG) injection or
cold
-swim stress is well demonstrated to be closely associated with an increase in hypothalamic noradrenergic neuronal activity (NNA). To evaluate whether the suppression of the hypothalamic NNA response could be involved in the central mechanism whereby a SRIH analog inhibits the hyperglycemic response, octreotide, a clinically used long-acting octapeptide SRIH analog, was administered into the third cerebral ventricle of awake rats prior to the intraperitoneal injection of 2-DG or
cold
-swim stress. Hypothalamic noradrenaline (NA) and its neuronal metabolite, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethyleneglycol (DHPG), were analyzed, and the ratio of DHPG to NA was used as an index of NNA. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) pretreatment with octreotide suppressed the 2-DG-induced increase in hypothalamic NNA, accompanied by the inhibition of the serum glucose, NA and adrenaline responses. This suppressive effect of octreotide was dose-dependent. Similarly, i.c.v. pretreatment with octreotide prevented the hypothalamic NNA response to
cold
-swim stress, accompanied by a blockade of the increases in serum glucose, NA and adrenaline. A close relationship between hypothalamic NNA and serum glucose emerged from these studies. Intraperitoneal pretreatment with octreotide had no significant effect on the hyperglycemic or hypothalamic NNA response to 2-DG injection. These findings suggest that the inhibitory effect of octreotide on the hypothalamic NNA response to 2-DG injection or
cold
-swim stress is associated with the simultaneous suppression of the hyperglycemic response. Supporting the concept that hypothalamic NNA contributes to the modulation of blood glucose in stressful conditions, it is suggested that the suppression of the hypothalamic NNA response is, at least in part, involved in the central mechanism by which octreotide inhibits the hyperglycemic response to 2-DG injection or
cold
-swim stress.
...
PMID:Central suppressive effect of octreotide on the hyperglycemic response to 2-deoxy-D-glucose injection or cold-swim stress in awake rats: possible mediation role of hypothalamic noradrenergic drive. 1125 71
Current therapeutic approaches in neuroendocrine tumours include surgery, radiotherapy and polychemotherapy. Different metabolic patterns of neuroendocrine tumours allow the use of a wide range of diagnostic options in nuclear medicine, due to the presence of a wide spectrum of radiotracers electively concentrating in these neoplasms. Nuclear medicine, and in particular 111In Octreotide (OCT) scintigraphy, 123I Methaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) and pentavalent 99mTc-DMSA (V-DMSA), together with biohumoral markers, are currently able to locate tumours also not detectable using traditional diagnostic techniques.
Somatostatin
analogs, such as octreotide have become increasingly important over the years in the treatment of patients with neuroendocrine tumours. At present the therapeutic use of
somatostatin
analogs can be schematised as 1) pharmacological treatment (with
cold
octreotide); 2) surgical treatment (radioguided surgery); 3) radiometabolic treatment (with marked octreotide). The development of new synthetic molecules and new radiocompounds will probably open up interesting scenarios in the near future.
...
PMID:[Role of somatostatin analogs in the treatment of neuroendocrine tumours]. 1175 36
We investigated the effect of acute
cold
exposure, leptin, and the
somatostatin
analog octreotide (OCT) on thyroid type I (D1) and II (D2) deiodinase activities. Microsomal D1 and D2 activities were measured by the release of (125)I from (125)I-reverse triiodothyronine (rT(3)) under different assay conditions. Rats exposed to 4 degrees C (15, 30, 60, and 120 min) showed progressive reduction in thyroidal D1 and D2, reaching approximately 40% at 2 h (P < 0.05) despite increased circulating TSH (P < 0,05) associated with the higher thyroid D1 and D2 in hypothyroid rats. A single injection of leptin (8 microg/100 g body wt sc) induced increased thyroid and liver D1 (P < 0.05), but not thyroid D2, activities at 30 and 120 min, independently of the serum TSH rise shown only at 2 h. OCT (1 microg/kg body wt sc) increased D1 and D2 activity significantly 24 h after a single injection, with no changes in serum TSH. Therefore, leptin and
somatostatin
are potential physiological upregulators of thyroid deiodinases, and their low secretion during acute
cold
exposure may be a potential mechanism contributing to
cold
-induced reduction in thyroid deiodinase activity.
...
PMID:Acute cold exposure, leptin, and somatostatin analog (octreotide) modulate thyroid 5'-deiodinase activity. 1260 8
We present a family of human sst(4)-selective, high-affinity (IC(50) = 2-4 nM) cyclic
somatostatin
(SRIF) octapeptides. These peptides result from the substitution of dTrp(8) in H-c[Cys(3)-Phe(6)-Phe(7)-DTrp(8)-Lys(9)-Thr(10)-Phe(11)-Cys(14)]-OH (SRIF numbering) (ODT-8) by one of the four conformationally biased stereoisomers of beta-methyl-3-(2-naphthyl)alanine (beta-Me2Nal). Whereas H-c[Cys-Phe-Phe-DNal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH (ODN-8, 2) has high affinity and marginal selectivity for human sst(3) (Reubi et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2000, 97, 13973-13978), H-c[Cys-Phe-Tyr-D-threo-beta-Me2Nal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH (5) has high affinity for all sst's except for sst(1); H-c[Cys-Phe-Tyr-L-threo-beta-Me2Nal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH (6) has high affinity for sst(4) (IC(50) = 2.1 nM), with more than 50-fold selectivity toward the other receptors. Analogues 7 and 8, containing d- and l-erythro-beta-Me2Nal instead of the corresponding threo derivatives at position 8, are essentially inactive at all receptors. Substitution of Tyr(7) in 5 and 6 by Aph(7) resulted in 9 and 10 with similar affinity patterns overall yet lowered affinity. The substitution of DCys(3) for Cys(3) in 5 and 6 yielded H-c[DCys-Phe-Tyr-D-threo-beta-Me2Nal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH (11) and H-c[DCys-Phe-Tyr-L-threo-beta-Me2Nal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH (12), with biological profiles almost identical to those of their parents 5 and 6 (i.e., high affinity for sst(2-5) for 11 and high affinity and selectivity for sst(4) for 12). Analogue 12, with high sst(4) affinity combined with the highest sst(4) selectivity among all tested compounds, is an agonist in the cAMP accumulation assay (EC(50) = 1.29 nM).
Cold
monoiodination of 12 yielded 14, with loss of sst(4) selectivity and loss of high affinity (IC(50) = 21 nM). Introduction of Tyr(2) in 9 and 10 and substitution of Cys(3) by dCys(3), to yield 15 and 16 (IC(50) = 9.8 and 61 nM, respectively, for sst(4) and limited selectivity), failed to generate a high-affinity (125)iodinatable sst(4)-selective ligand. Substitution of Phe by Tyr at position 11 in H-c[DCys-Phe-Phe-L-threo-beta-Me2Nal-Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys]-OH yielded 18 (IC(50) = 11.8 nM at sst(4)), with limited sst(4) selectivity (30-fold or greater at the other receptors) yet only slightly improved affinity over that of 14.
Cold
monoiodination of 18 yielded 20 (IC(50) = 30 nM at sst(4) and high selectivity). Whereas we were able, in this study, to identify a new family of sst(4)-selective, high-affinity compounds, our additional goal, to identify highly potent and sst(4)-selective ligands amenable to (125)iodination, could not be achieved satisfactorily. On the other hand, some of the diastereomers identified in this study, such as 5, 11, 17, and 19, are very potent ligands at all receptors but sst(1).
...
PMID:Novel sst(4)-selective somatostatin (SRIF) agonists. 2. Analogues with beta-methyl-3-(2-naphthyl)alanine substitutions at position 8. 1466 13
In patients with acromegaly, the exact incidence of thyroid disorders is still controversial and less is known about the impact of disease activity and successful treatment. To address this issue, we investigated 73 acromegalic patients (age 55 +/- 13 yr; mean +/- SD) by ultrasonography in comparison to an age-matched control group (54 +/- 1 yr) in the same moderate iodine deficient area (retrospective study). These non-acromegalic volunteers (n = 199) were examined in the same clinic during a thyroid screening test. At the time of examination, 52 (71.2 %) of the acromegalic patients were active, 17 (23.3 %) were cured, and 4 (5.5 %) were controlled with
somatostatin
analogues. The prevalence of goiter (normal range < 18 ml female, < 25 ml male) was significantly higher (82.2 %) in the mixed group of acromegalics (active, well controlled, cured; n = 73) and in the active group (90.4 %) than in the control group (n = 199, 18.1 %, p < 0.001). Thyroid nodules were found in 63.0 % of the mixed group of acromegalics and in 71.2 % of patients with active disease (33.1 % in controls, p < 0.001). (99 m)Tc scintigraphy revealed thyroid autonomy in 9/73 (12.3 %) and
cold
nodules in 19/73 (26.0 %) patients. Thyroid cancer was diagnosed in 4 (5.5 %) of acromegalic patients (3 papillary and 1 follicular carcinoma). We found a weak correlation between the disease duration and the initial thyroid volume (r = 0.54, p < 0.0056). Thirty-seven newly diagnosed acromegalics were followed over a period of 7.3 +/- 4.1 years. 5 (13.5 %) of these patients remained active, 8 (21.6 %) were controlled with
somatostatin
analogues, and 24 (64.9 %) were cured. The mean age, sex distribution, disease duration, prevalence of TSH-deficiency, and initial thyroid volume (46 +/- 11 ml in active, 42 +/- 7 ml in controlled, and 45 +/- 5 ml in cured patients) did not differ statistically between the three groups. In patients with active acromegaly, thyroid volume increased by 19.5 +/- 8.1 %. In contrast, thyroid volume decreased in the group of medically controlled and cured acromegalics (- 21.5 +/- 7.1 %; p < 0.005 and - 24.2 +/- 5.7 %; p < 0.002, respectively). No correlation was found between thyroid volume and TSH levels, levothyroxine and/or iodide administration neither in TSH sufficient nor in TSH insufficient patients. In conclusion, successful treatment of patients with active acromegaly decreases thyroid volume.
Cold
nodules and thyroid cancer frequently occur in acromegalic patients.
...
PMID:Impact of disease activity on thyroid diseases in patients with acromegaly: basal evaluation and follow-up. 1514 66
Somatostatin
receptors are expressed in selected human cancers. They are particularly frequently expressed in gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP NET), including both primaries and metastases. The density is often high, the distribution is usually homogeneous. While various somatostatin receptor subtypes can be expressed in these tumors, sst2 is clearly predominant. These receptors represent the molecular basis for a number of clinical applications, including symptomatic therapy with
cold
octreotide in hormone-secreting GEP NET, in vivo diagnostic with Octreoscan to evaluate the extend of the disease, and 90Y-DOTATOC radiotherapy. GEP NET can, however, express peptide receptors other than
somatostatin
receptors: insulinomas have more glucagon-like peptide 1 receptors than
somatostatin
receptors, gut NET (carcinoids) may also express cholecystokinin 2, bombesin or vasoactive intestinal peptide receptors. Often, several of these peptide receptors are expressed simultaneously in GEP NET, providing a molecular basis for in vivo multireceptor targeting of those tumors.
...
PMID:Somatostatin and other Peptide receptors as tools for tumor diagnosis and treatment. 1547 18
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>