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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 33-year-old woman with a 2 month history of vague ill health was admitted to hospital in hypoglycaemic coma. Preoperative investigation suggested malignant
insulinoma
as the probable cause of illness, but immunohistological examination of the tumour showed it to consist mainly of
somatostatin
-containing cells but sparse insulin-secreting cells were also present. Plasma immunoreactive
somatostatin
levels were from fifty to 200 times the upper limit of normal and rose in response to arginine and fell during diazoxide infusion. The hypoglycaemia was unusually sensitive to the hyperglycaemic effects of diazoxide and chlorothiazide and, with 5-fluorouracil as the only specific anti-tumour agent, there has been clinical, biochemical and radiological evidence of tumour regression.
...
PMID:Pancreatic somatostatinoma presenting with hypoglycaemia. 610 26
1. An insulin-producing cell line, RINm5F, derived from a rat
insulinoma
was studied. 2. The cellular content of immunoreactive insulin was 0.19 pg/cell, which represents approx. 1% of the insulin content of native rat beta-cells, whereas that of immunoreactive glucagon and
somatostatin
was five to six orders of magnitude less than that of native alpha- or delta-cells respectively. 3. RINm5F cells released 7-12% of their cellular immunoreactive-insulin content at 2.8 mM-glucose during 60 min in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer. 4. Glucose utilization was increased by raising glucose from 2.8 to 16.7 mM. There was, however, no stimulation of immunoreactive-insulin release even when glucose was increased from 2.8 to 33.4 mM. A small stimulation of release was, however, found when glucose was raised from 0 to 2.8 mM. 5. Glyceraldehyde stimulated the release of immunoreactive insulin in a dose-dependent manner. 6. At 20 mM, leucine or arginine stimulated release at 2.8 mM-glucose. 7. Raising intracellular cyclic AMP by glucagon or 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine stimulated release at 2.8 mM-glucose with no additional stimulation at 16.7 mM-glucose. 8. Stimulation of immunoreactive-insulin release by K+ was dose-related between 2 and 30 mM. Another depolarizing agent, ouabain, also stimulated release. 9. Adrenaline (epinephrine) inhibited both basal (2.8 mM-glucose) release and that stimulated by 30 mM-K+. 10. Raising Ca2+ from 1 to 3 mM stimulated immunoreactive-insulin release, whereas a decrease from 1 to 0.3 or to 0.1 mM-Ca2+ lowered the release. 11. These findings could reflect a relatively specific impairment in glucose handling by RINm5F cells, contrasting with the preserved response to other modulators of insulin release.
...
PMID:Regulation of immunoreactive-insulin release from a rat cell line (RINm5F). 613 20
We studied the release of insulin, glucagon, and
somatostatin
in response to glucose, glyceraldehyde (GA), and alpha-ketoisocaproate (KIC) from rat kidneys containing transplanted insulinomas. Kidneys were perfused about 11 wk after transplantation when the plasma glucose concentration of the fed animals had decreased from 180 +/- 7 to 95.1 +/- 9.9 mg/dl and plasma insulin concentrations had increased from 2.6 +/- 0.5 to 14.2 +/- 2.0 ng/ml. The insulin content of the tumor-containing kidney ranged from 40 to 679 micrograms; the glucagon and
somatostatin
concentrations ranged from undetectable levels to 3.7 micrograms and 248 ng, respectively. The average response to 30 mM glucose and 10 mM GA was a four- to fivefold increase in insulin secretion, whereas 30 mM KIC caused a 16- to 28-fold increase. In vitro stimulation of the
insulinoma
with 30 mM glucose primed the beta-cell response to a second stimulus following a short rest period. Cytochalasin B did not enhance this primed glucose response. Diazoxide inhibited glucose, GA, and KIC-stimulated insulin release. Glucose, GA, and KIC stimulated glucagon release in 2 of 17 insulinomas studied here.
Somatostatin
release was not seen in any of the experiments. These findings show that this islet cell tumor transplanted under the kidney capsule releases insulin in response to physiologic and model fuel substances. Thus, this particular transplantable tumor offers an opportunity to study the biochemistry and biophysics that underlie fuel-stimulated insulin release.
...
PMID:Fuel-induced insulin release in vitro from insulinomas transplanted into the rat kidney. 614 Jan 99
The response of
insulinoma
tissue to glucose, alpha-ketoisocaproate, and the modifiers of insulin release, tolbutamide, isoproterenol, and acetylcholine, was studied. Tumor tissue was transplanted under the kidney capsule of 14 rats, and the tumor-bearing kidneys were perfused in vitro about 8 weeks later. The plasma glucose concentration of these animals was 85.0 +/- 7.0 mg/dl, while the plasma insulin concentration was 13.8 +/- 1.5 ng/ml (normal, 180.5 +/- 7.0 mg/dl and 2.6 +/- 0.5 ng/ml, respectively; n = 26). Glucose (30 mM) evoked a 3- to 5-fold increase in insulin secretion, similar to the increase seen when either 100 micrograms/ml tolbutamide or 0.5 micrograms/ml isoproterenol were added to the perfusion medium containing 5 mM glucose. Propranolol at 50 micrograms/ml, but not at 20 micrograms/ml, inhibited insulin release stimulated by isoproterenol. Acetylcholine (10 or 100 microM) did not stimulate insulin secretion. alpha-Ketoisocaproate caused the highest insulin release of all stimuli studied. Glucagon or
somatostatin
release was not seen in any of the experiments. These results show that the tumor tissue transplanted under the kidney capsule responds not only to model fuels, but also to the sulfonylurea class of drugs and to adrenergic agents.
...
PMID:Pharmacological modifications of insulin release in vitro from fuel-responsive transplantable insulinomas. 614 33
A subline of an x-ray-induced transplantable rat
insulinoma
has been studied in vivo and in vitro. Tumors grew rapidly after sc transplantation and were rich in insulin, but contained only small amounts of glucagon and
somatostatin
. Despite marked basal hyperinsulinemia, iv glucose administration caused a further increase in plasma insulin in tumor-bearing rats. When the pancreas was functionally excluded by ligation of supplying arteries, glucose still elicited a clear insulin response. In vitro, insulin release from perifused tumor fragments was stimulated by the combination of glucose and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, but not by glucose alone. In contrast, there was a clear stimulation of insulin release by glucose in primary monolayer cultures of tumor cells. This suggests a better functional capacity of the cultured cells compared to that of the tumor fragments. The results indicate that this transplantable rat islet cell tumor is a convenient source of large quantities of functional beta-cells.
...
PMID:Stimulation of insulin release by glucose in a transplantable rat islet cell tumor. 618 10
An 8-year-old boy with a convulsive disorder for 3 1/2 years remined seizure free for 20 months while being treated with phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin) sodium, and then he had a relapse. He first demonstrated hypoglycemia when he fasted prior to being placed on a ketogenic diet. An oral glucose tolerance test indicated fasting and postglucose hypoglycemia and substantial hyperinsulinemia.
Somatostatin
infusion resulted in a modest increase in plasma glucose levels and a decrease in serum insulin concentrations. A discrete pancreatic mass was demonstrated preoperatively by celiac angiography that on surgical extirpation, proved to be a benign intrapancreatic
insulinoma
. Evaluation for islet cell tumors is of importance in children with seizure disorders unresponsive to anticonvulsant medication. Furthermore,
somatostatin
may be useful preoperatively in maintaining normal blood glucose concentrations in patients with islet cell adenomas.
...
PMID:Metabolic studies in a child with a pancreatic insulinoma. 624 3
A 71-year-old woman with
insulinoma
was studied. Preoperatively, using the glucose controlled insulin infusion system (GCIIS) for glucose clamping at various blood glucose levels, autonomous insulin production was demonstrated and intravenous glucose needs for maintenance of normoglycaemia were evaluated. The results of a
somatostatin
suppression test, guided by the GCIIS, supported the postulation of a well differentiated beta cell adenoma with reduced storage capacity. These assumptions were later confirmed by histochemical and ultrastructural investigations. Hypoglycaemia during surgery was avoided by means of the GCIIS. Upon clamping of the plasma glucose at 90 mg/dl, 15.5 g dextrose had to be given until resection of the tumour. Immediately thereafter, a sharp rise in plasma glucose to 140 mg/dl together with a need for 4.1 U insulin showed that the
insulinoma
tissue had been removed completely.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and surgery of an insulinoma using a glucose-controlled insulin infusion system]. 632 14
A patient with biopsy-proved biliary cirrhosis and previous gastrojejunostomy and portacaval anastomosis experienced episodes of severe hypoglycemia. She was found to have hyperinsulinemia and hyperglucagonemia. An oral glucose tolerance test showed postgastrectomy hypoglycemia. Results of the intravenous tolbutamide test were diagnostic for
insulinoma
, but results of the intravenous glucagon test and prolonged fast (96 hours) were not. Failure, on two occasions, to suppress C-peptide normally during insulin-induced hypoglycemia led to a diagnosis of pancreatogenous hyperinsulinemia. The pancreas showed a 10-fold increase in islet volume, with intensely positive staining with anti-insulin and anti-glucagon antiserums in addition to anti-
somatostatin
and anti-pancreatic polypeptide antiserums. Incidental findings at pancreatic exploration were a mesothelioma, which did not stain with anti-insulin antiserum, and, at autopsy one year later, a hepatoma.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of pancreatic islet hyperplasia causing hypoglycemia in a patient with portacaval anastomosis. 699 72
Gastropancreatic neuroendocrine cells synthesize large amounts of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). This amino acid neurotransmitter appears to be stored in and released from, vesicles similar to small synaptic vesicles. So far, the function of GABA in gastropancreatic, neuroendocrine cells has not been clarified. Previous work suggested that only pancreatic, glucagon-producing alpha 2 cells contain functional GABAA receptors. Using subunit-specific antibodies in sections of human antral mucosa, a human gastrinoma and rat pancreas, we show that expression of GABAA receptors is abundant in gastropancreatic, neuroendocrine cells. Using the patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell mode we demonstrate that both the rat
insulinoma
cell line RIN 38 and the amphicrine cell line AR42J express functional GABAA receptors, which are characterized by a relatively low benzodiazepine and Zn2+ sensitivity and by an insensitivity to the inverse benzodiazepine agonist 6,7-alpha-methoxy-4-ethyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylate (DMCM). In contrast to neurons, activation of GABAA receptors leads to a membrane depolarization. This depolarization presumably activates voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, resulting in an increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, as shown with the fluorimetric dye fura-2. The combination of GABA release, GABAA receptor activation and the [Ca2+]i increase could constitute an autocrine mechanism, modulating the release of hormones such as gastrin, insulin and
somatostatin
.
...
PMID:Expression of functional GABAA receptors in neuroendocrine gastropancreatic cells. 749 Dec 62
Requisites for preoperative and intraoperative tumor localization with [111In]diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-D-[Phe1]-octreotide scanning were explored in 23 patients with endocrine tumors (15 carcinoids, 4 insulinomas, and single cases of gastrinoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, aldosteronoma, and paraganglioma). The patients were subjected to Octreoscan single photon emission computed tomographic examination prior to surgery and well counter investigation of nuclide uptake in tumors and normal tissues sampled at surgery.
Somatostatin
receptor-positive tumors demonstrated efficient nuclide accumulation with mean tumor:blood radioactivity ratios of 180-370 (for carcinoids and
insulinoma
), compared with tissue:blood ratios of 302 for spleen, 42 for liver, and < 10-15 in other normal tissues (pancreas, small intestine, and mesenteric fat). Inefficient preoperative visualization of lesions was related to inconspicuous size, as for primary intestinal carcinoids, tiny liver metastases, and a single small
insulinoma
. High background activity, pronounced tumor fibrosis, and meager accumulation of tracer also interfered with visualization. Tumor deposits in organs with low background activity (such as carcinoid mesenteric metastases and endocrine pancreatic tumors) were generally most readily detected. Intraoperative investigations with hand-held gamma detector probes were disturbed by obvious high background activity. These investigations revealed two preoperatively unrecognized primary intestinal carcinoids, which, however, were both palpable during surgery. These studies, therefore, had little impact on the surgical strategy.
...
PMID:Human biodistribution of [111In]diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-(DTPA)-D-[Phe1]-octreotide and peroperative detection of endocrine tumors. 749 48
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