Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The discovery of the peptide hormone ghrelin, an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) receptor, yielded the surprising result that the principal site of ghrelin synthesis is the stomach and not the hypothalamus. Although ghrelin is likely to regulate pituitary growth hormone (GH) secretion along with GH-releasing hormone and somatostatin, GHS receptors have also been identified on hypothalamic neurons and in the brainstem. Apart from potential paracrine effects, ghrelin may thus offer an endocrine link between stomach, hypothalamus and pituitary, suggesting an involvement in regulation of energy balance. Here we show that peripheral daily administration of ghrelin caused weight gain by reducing fat utilization in mice and rats. Intracerebroventricular administration of ghrelin generated a dose-dependent increase in food intake and body weight. Rat serum ghrelin concentrations were increased by fasting and were reduced by re-feeding or oral glucose administration, but not by water ingestion. We propose that ghrelin, in addition to its role in regulating GH secretion, signals the hypothalamus when an increase in metabolic efficiency is necessary.
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PMID:Ghrelin induces adiposity in rodents. 1105 70

Ghrelin (Ghr), a 28 amino acid gastric peptide with an n-octanoylation on Ser 3, has recently been identified as an endogenous ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) receptor. A cDNA was also isolated from a mouse stomach library encoding a protein named prepromotilin-related peptide (ppMTLRP) which shares sequence similarities with prepromotilin. Mouse and rat ppMTLRP sequences (rGhr) are identical and show 89% identity with human ghrelin (hGhr). By analogy with promotilin, cleavage of proMTLRP into an 18 amino acid endogenous processed peptide can be assumed on the basis of a conserved dibasic motif in position 9-10 of its sequence. In the present work, we compared the GH-releasing activity of rGhr28/MTLRP and of hGhr28/MTRLP with that of a shorter form of the peptide, hGhr18. A short peptide devoid of Ser-3 n-octanoylation hGhr18[-] was also tested. Addition of rGhr28, hGhr28 and hGhr18 stimulated GH release to the same extent from superfused pituitaries. The effect was dose dependent in a 10(-8) to 10(-6) M concentration range. In contrast, hGhr 18[-] was inactive. In freely moving animals, both rGhr28 and hGhr28 (10 microg, i.v.) stimulated GH release, whereas the same dose of hGhr18 or of hGhr18[-] was ineffective. After rGhr28, GH plasma levels increased as early as 5 min after injection and returned to basal values within 40-60 min. Expressed as percent stimulation, administration of rGhr28 was equally effective when injected during troughs or peaks of GH. Plasma concentrations of prolactin, adrenocorticotropin and leptin were not modified. Spontaneous GH secretory episodes were no longer observed within 3 h of rGhr28 treatment, but repeated administration of the secretagogue at 3- to 4-hour intervals resulted in a similar GH response. Activation of somatostatin (SRIH) release by ether stress did not blunt the GH response to rGhr28. This suggests that the secretagogue acts in part by inhibiting endogenous SRIH, as further substantiated by the ability of rGhr28 (10(-6) M), to decrease the amplitude of 25 mM K+-induced SRIH release from perifused hypothalami. In conclusion, (1) n-octanoylation of Ghrs and the shorter form hGhr18 is essential for the direct pituitary GH-releasing effect of this new family of endogenous GHSs; (2) only the longer forms are active in vivo and (3) inhibition of SRIH release appears involved in the mechanism of Ghr action.
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PMID:In vivo and in vitro effects of ghrelin/motilin-related peptide on growth hormone secretion in the rat. 1117 17

Antagonism between GH secretagogues (GHS) and somatostatin (SRIH) has been postulated and demonstrated, but SRIH does not bind to GHS receptors (GHS-R) and potent synthetic peptidyl GHS (GHRP6, hexarelin) do not displace radiolabeled SRIH from its receptors. However, non-natural SRIH octapeptide agonists (mainly lanreotide and vapreotide) displace 125I-Tyr-Ala-hexarelin from pituitary binding sites suggesting that an endogenous factor related to SRIH might exist and interact with GHS-R. Our aims were to investigate the ability of different SRIH-like peptides such as various SRIH fragments (SRIH 3-14, SRIH 7-14, SRIH 3-10, SRIH 7-10, SRIH 2-9) and a natural neuropeptide that shows a high structural homology with SRIH such as cortistatin-14 (CST) to compete with 125I-Tyr-Ala-hexarelin for human pituitary binding sites and to compare their binding affinity with that of hexarelin and ghrelin, a gastric-derived peptidyl GHS that has been proposed as a natural ligand of GHS-R. While the binding of 125I-Tyr-Ala-hexarelin to pituitary membranes was completely displaced by unlabelled hexarelin, ghrelin and CST, none of the SRIH fragments tested inhibited this binding. Ghrelin and CST exhibited a similar affinity (4.6-5.4 x 10(-7) mol/l) for the binding while hexarelin was more effective by about four orders of magnitude in displacing 125I-Tyr-Ala-hexarelin. Our data demonstrate for the first time that cortistatin, a natural peptide related to SRIH, binds to GHS-R and suggest that this factor may play a role in modulating the activity of these receptors.
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PMID:Cortistatin, but not somatostatin, binds to growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) receptors of human pituitary gland. 1122 37

Long-lasting problem on the differentiation of adenohypophyseal cell, which prepares them for their specific tasks (somatotropic, lactotropic ect.), becomes elucidated after recognition of the differentiational effect of transcription factor Pit-1. Expression of that factor in somatotrops results in STH secretion, contrary to lactotrops producing prolactin. Subclinical hypothyreosis (increased TSH with normal T3 and T4) endangers vessel not because of hypercholesterolemia, but because of changes in the dynamics of the blood flow. The idea of cardiotropic effect of thyroidal hormones is supported by the finding that administration of trijodthyronine to children after the surgical correction of heart malformations (cardiopulmonary bypass) improves myocardial function--it elevates cardiac output and decreases requirements on the intensive care. Receptors for hormones in tissues are flexible, they can be "heterooligomers" for dopamine and somatostatin. Mutations of mineralocorticoid receptor may cause hypertension in pregnancy and progesterone receptors have several isoforms. Receptors can be also activated by short exposition to a hormone. Glucocorticoids have probably also membrane receptors. Diabetes mellitus "type I" needn't to be immunogenic and DM type II not only results from down-regulation of receptors and subsequent insulin resistance, but it can be also caused by defects in insulin secretion. Insulin has receptors in the brain and participates in the appetite regulation. The attempt to use "desensibilisation" by peroraly administered insulin in patients with immunogenic DM had no effect. Stress affects memory mechanisms, heavy emotional stress during gravidity can bring congenital malformations. The decrease of mental functions in aged women depends on the level of free estradiol (the fraction, which is not bound to plasma proteins). Activation of dopaminergic neurons can be achieved by neurotropic growth factors. Nesiritide is a recombinant brain natriuretic hormone successfully tested in heart failure. The role of leptin in the appetite regulation in man is still not clear, other signalling molecules may have also an effect, e.g., ghrelin, which primarily stimulates STH secretion and brings about weight gain. Sildenafil influences nitrergic neurons elsewhere than in penis, for example it has positive effects in patients with oesophageal achalasia.
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PMID:[Endocrinology 1999-2000]. 1128 21

The class of novel synthetic compounds termed growth hormone secretagogues (GHSs) act in the hypothalamus through, as yet, unknown pathways. We performed physiologic and histochemical studies to further understand how the GHS system interacts with the well-established somatostatin (SRIF)/growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) neuroendocrine system for regulating pulsatile GH secretion. Comparison of the GH-releasing activities of the hexapeptide growth hormone-releasing peptide-6 (GHRP-6) and GHRH administered intravenously to conscious adult male rats showed that the pattern of GH responsiveness to GHRP-6 was markedly time-dependent, similar to that observed with GHRH. Immunoneutralization of endogenous SRIF reversed the blunted GH response to GHRP-6 at trough times, suggesting that GHRP-6 neither disrupts nor inhibits the cyclical release of endogenous hypothalamic SRIF. By striking contrast, passive immunization with anti-GHRH serum virtually obliterated the GH responses to GHRP-6, irrespective of the time of administration. These findings suggest that the GHSs do not act by altering SRIF release but, rather, stimulate GH release via GHRH-dependent pathways. Our dual chromogenic and autoradiographic in situ hybridization experiments revealed that a subpopulation of GHRH mRNA-containing neurons in the arcuate (Arc) nucleus and ventromedial nucleus (VMN) of the hypothalamus expressed the GHS receptor (GHS-R) gene. These results provide strong anatomic evidence that GHSs may directly stimulate GHRH release into hypophyseal portal blood, and thereby influence GH secretion, through interaction with the GHS-R on GHRH- containing neurons. Altogether, these findings support the notion that an additional neuroendocrine pathway may exist to regulate pulsatile GH secretion, possibly through the influence of the newly discovered GHS natural peptide, ghrelin.
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PMID:Interactions of growth hormone secretagogues and growth hormone-releasing hormone/somatostatin. 1132 98

Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin are the most important hypothalamic neurohormones controlling growth hormone (GH) secretion. Several neurotransmitters and neuropeptides also play an important role in the control of GH secretion, mainly acting via modulation of GHRH and somatostatin. In the past two decades, particular attention has been given to a new family of substances showing a strong GH-releasing effect: GH secretagogues (GHSs). GHSs increase GH secretion in a dose- and age-related manner after iv and even oral administration. The endocrine effects of GHSs, are not fully specific for GH; they show, in fact, prolactin- (PRL), adenocorticotropic hormone- and cortisol-releasing effects. Specific GHS receptors are present in both the central nervous system and peripheral tissues, where they mediate several extraendocrine effects of GHSs. The isolation of these "orphan" receptors suggested the existence of an endogenous GHS-like ligand that could be represented by a recently discovered gastric peptide, named ghrelin. The interaction between GHSs and GHRH at the central level and in the pituitary gland, but not at peripheral level, has clearly been shown. Because GHRH and GHS receptors share the same localization in some peripheral tissues, they may have some interactions even at this level.
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PMID:Growth hormone-releasing hormone and growth hormone secretagogue-receptor ligands: focus on reproductive system. 1132

Growth hormone secretagogues (GHSs) are synthetic peptidyl and nonpeptidyl molecules with strong, dose-dependent, and reproducible growth hormone (GH)-releasing activity even after oral administration. GHSs release GH via actions on specific receptors (GHS-R) at the pituitary and, mainly, at the hypothalamic levels. GHSs likely act as functional somatostatin antagonists and meantime enhance the activity of GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-secreting neurons. The GH-releasing effect of GHSs is independent of gender but undergoes marked age-related variations. Estrogens play a major role in enhancing the GH response to GHSs at puberty, which GHRH hypoactivity, somatostatinergic hyperactivity and impaired activity of the putative GHS-like ligand and receptors probably explain the reduced GH-releasing effect of GHSs in aging. The activity of GHSs is not fully specific for GH. Their slight prolactin-releasing activity probably comes from direct pituitary action. In physiological conditions, the ACTH-releasing activity of GHSs is dependent on central actions; a direct action on GHS-R in pituitary ACTH-secreting tumors likely explains the peculiar ACTH and cortisol hyperresponsiveness to GHSs in Cushing disease. GHSs have specific receptor subtypes in other central and peripheral endocrine and nonendocrine tissues mediating GH-independent biologic activities. GHSs influence sleep pattern, stimulate food intake, and have cardiovascular activities. GHs have specific binding in normal and neoplastic follicular derived human thyroid tissue and inhibit the proliferation of follicular-derived neoplastic cell lines. The discovery of ghrelin, a 28 amino acid peptide synthesized in the stomach but also in other tissues, has opened new fascinating perspectives of research in this field.
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PMID:Biologic activities of growth hormone secretagogues in humans. 1132 6

One of the most active topics in the growth hormone-IGF-1 field is that of the so-called growth hormone secretagogues (GHS). At a time when the isolation of GHRH had not occurred, the GHS were developed as artificial tools to release GH. The interest in these groups of compounds was rekindled when it was realized that they were not surrogates of GHRH nor were they acting through the modulation of the release of either GHRH or somatostatin. With the subsequent cloning of the specific receptor of GHS, and today of the natural ligand for that receptor, named ghrelin, it soon become clear that GHS and the GHS-receptor were part of a new physiological system involved in GH regulation. The dual control of GH secretion became a trinity. GHS releases GH when administered by any route--oral, iv, sc, and even transdermally-with a surprising potency and reproductivity. In addition, GHS when administered together with GHRH exert a synergistic action on GH secretion and that combined administration is the most potent GH releaser to date. Clinical studies have demonstrated that the GHS-GHRH administration may be considered the new "gold standard" test of GH reserve in humans, as the GH secretion so elicited is not altered by gender, adiposity, or age. The combined administration of GHRH plus GHS is able to discriminate between healthy subjects and patients with adult GH deficiency, suggesting a considerable utility in the clinical setting.
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PMID:Growth hormone secretagogues as diagnostic tools in disease states. 1132 8

Ghrelin is a 28 a.a. gastric peptide, recently identified as a natural ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (orphan receptor distinct from the receptor for growth hormone releasing hormone). In the present study, radioimmunoassay demonstrated ghrelin-like material in the rat oxyntic mucosa with moderate amounts also in antrum and duodenum. Small amounts were found in the distal intestines and pancreas. Northern blot analysis revealed abundant ghrelin mRNA in the oxyntic mucosa. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated ghrelin-immunoreactivity in endocrine-like cells in the oxyntic mucosa. Such cells occurred in low numbers also in the antrum and duodenum. The rat oxyntic mucosa is rich in endocrine (chromogranin A/pancreastatin-immunoreactive) cells, such as the histamine-rich ECL cells (65-75% of the endocrine cells), the A-like cells (20-25%) and the D cells (somatostatin cells) (10%). The ghrelin-immunoreactive (IR) cells contained pancreastatin but differed from ECL cells and D cells by being devoid of histamine-forming enzyme (ECL cell constituent) and somatostatin (D cell constituent). Hence, ghrelin seems to occur in the A-like cells. The ghrelin-IR cells in the antrum were distinct from the gastrin cells, the serotonin-containing enterochromaffin cells and the D cells. Conceivably, ghrelin cells in the antrum and distally in the intestines also belong to the A-like cell population. The concentration of ghrelin in the circulation was lowered by about 80% following the surgical removal of the acid-producing part of the stomach in line with the view that the oxyntic mucosa is the major source of ghrelin. The serum ghrelin concentration was higher in fasted rats than in fed rats; it was reduced upon re-feeding and seemed unaffected by 1-week treatment with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole, resulting in elevated serum gastrin concentration. Infusion of gastrin-17 for 2 days failed to raise the serum ghrelin concentration. Omeprazole treatment for 10 weeks raised the level of HDC mRNA but not that of ghrelin mRNA or somatostatin mRNA in the oxyntic mucosa. Hence, unlike the ECL cells, ghrelin-containing A-like cells do not seem to operate under gastrin control.
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PMID:A-like cells in the rat stomach contain ghrelin and do not operate under gastrin control. 1138 75

Ghrelin, a recently discovered peptide in the mammalian hypothalamus and gastrointestinal tract is thought to be the endogenous ligand for the GH secretagogue (GHS) receptor and it stimulates GH release in rats and humans. The possibility that ghrelin is present in birds was therefore assessed, since a GHS receptor is present in the chicken pituitary gland. Although immunoreactive ghrelin is readily detectable in the rat stomach and ileum, ghrelin immunoreactivity could not be detected in the chicken proventriculus, stomach, ileum or colon, whereas somatostatin immunoreactivity, in contrast and as expected, was readily detectable in the chicken gastrointestinal tract. Ghrelin immunoreactivity was, however, present in the chicken hypothalamus, although not in the arcuate (infundibular) nucleus, as in rats. Discrete parvocellular cells and neuronal fibers with ghrelin immunoreactivity were present in the anterior medial hypothalamus. This immunoreactivity was specific and completely abolished following the preabsorption of the antibody with an excess of human ghrelin. Ghrelin immunoreactivity was also present in clusters of large ovoid magnocellular cells in the nucleus magnocellularis preopticus pars medialis, nucleus magnocellularis preopticus supraopticus and in the chiasmaopticus. Immunoreactivity for ghrelin was restricted to the cytoplasm of the perikarya and their axonal sprouts. Immunoreactivity for ghrelin was not seen in any other hypothalamic nuclei. In a preliminary experiment, circulating GH concentrations in conscious immature chicks were promptly increased following bolus i.v. administration of human ghrelin. The increase in GH concentration (approximately three times that in the controls) was comparable with that induced by the same dose (10 microg/kg) of human GH-releasing hormone, although less than that (approximately sixfold) induced by thyrotropin-releasing hormone. These results demonstrate the presence of a ghrelin-like protein in the chicken hypothalamus and suggest that it participates in the regulation of GH secretion in birds.
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PMID:Ghrelin: a hypothalamic GH-releasing factor in domestic fowl (Gallus domesticus). 1178 79


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