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

Because several peptides originally found in the pituitary as within the central nervous system have been localized in lymphoid tissues and because somatostatin (somatotropin-release-inhibiting hormone, SRIH) can act on cells of the immune system, we searched for this peptide in lymphoid organs. We demonstrated that SRIH mRNA exists in lymphoid tissue, albeit in smaller levels than in the periventricular region of the hypothalamus, the brain region that contains the highest level of this mRNA. SRIH mRNA was found in the spleen and thymus of male rats and in the spleen, thymus, and bursa of Fabricius of the chicken. Its localization in the bursa indicates that the peptide must be present in B lymphocytes since this is the site of origin of B lymphocytes in birds. The SRIH concentration in these lymphoid organs as determined by radioimmunoassay was greater in the thymus than in the spleen of the rat. These concentrations were 50 times less than those found in the periventricular region of the hypothalamus, the site of the perikarya of SRIH-containing neurons. In the chicken, as in the rat, the concentration of SRIH was greater in the thymus than in the spleen; it was present in the bursa of Fabricius, also in higher concentration than in the spleen. Fluorescence immunocytochemistry revealed the presence of SRIH-positive cells in clusters inside the white pulp and more dispersed within the red pulp of the spleen of both the rat and the chicken. The thymus from these species also contained SRIH-positive cells within the medulla and around the corticomedullary junction. In the chicken, there were large clusters of SRIH-positive cells in the medullary portion of each nodule of the bursa of Fabricius. Preabsorption of the primary antiserum or replacing this antiserum with normal rabbit serum verified the specificity of staining. Sequential immunostaining of the same sections from rat spleen using first SRIH antibody and subsequently a monoclonal antibody against a rat B-cell surface antigen revealed the presence of SRIH immunoreactivity in some, but not all, B cells. Other cell types in spleen not yet identified also stained positively with the SRIH antibody but were not reactive to monoclonal antibodies to rat Thy-1.1, a marker for all the thymic T lymphocytes. The possibility that SRIH is present in other populations of cells in the spleen cannot be ruled out. Sequential immunostaining of the same sections of rat thymus revealed the presence of SRIH immunoreactivity in a small population of T lymphocytes in the medulla, as revealed by the Thy-1.1 marker. The SRIH-positive cells were nonimmunoreactive when exposed to the B-cell marker; however, the possibility that SRIH is present in other cells was not investigated. Thus, our results indicate that SRIH is synthesized and stored in cells of the immune system. SRIH may be secreted from these cells to exert paracrine actions that alter the function of immune cells in spleen and thymus.
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PMID:Evidence that somatostatin is localized and synthesized in lymphoid organs. 168 64

Various tumours, classically specified as either neuroendocrine or non-neuroendocrine, contain high numbers of somatostatin receptors, which enable in vivo localization of the primary tumour and its metastases by scintigraphy with the radiolabelled somatostatin analogue octreotide. In addition granulomas and autoimmune processes can be visualized because of local accumulation of somatostatin receptor-positive activated mononuclear leucocytes. In many instances a positive scintigram predicts a favourable response to treatment with octreotide. It is tempting to speculate that octreotide labelled with an appropriate radionuclide might be used in cancer therapy. The successful application of radiolabelled octreotide in scintigraphy indicates the possible usefulness of other radiolabelled peptides, either native peptides or derivatives of these, in, for example, nuclear oncology. The small size of these peptides, e.g. bombesin and substance P, is of the utmost importance for a relatively fast blood clearance, thus leading to low background radioactivity. In this way peptides are powerful alternatives to (fragments of) monoclonal antibodies, the application of which to scintigraphic localization of specific cell surface antigen-bearing tumours is plagued by slow blood clearance and, hence, high background levels.
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PMID:Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy with [111In-DTPA-D-Phe1]- and [123I-Tyr3]-octreotide: the Rotterdam experience with more than 1000 patients. 840 61

Prostate stem cell antigen (PSCA) is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored cell surface antigen with an organ-dependent expression pattern in cancers; e.g., up-regulated in prostate cancer and down-regulated in gastric cancer. Previously it was reported that PSCA is not expressed in the normal pancreas but aberrantly expressed in pancreatic cancer. In this present study, we identified PSCA expression in islets of the pancreas by immunohistochemistry, which was co-localized with four islet-cell markers: insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide. In our investigation of the transcription start site of PSCA, we found a non-coding splicing variant of PSCA as well as authentic PSCA transcripts in mRNA samples from a normal pancreas. Both the transcripts were also identified in several pancreatic cancer cell lines. We previously reported that PSCA expression is correlated to the methylation status of the enhancer region in gastric and gallbladder cancer cell lines but not in pancreatic cancer cell lines, suggesting that PSCA expression is regulated in a diff erent mode in pancreatic cancer from that in gastric and gallbladder cancers.
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PMID:Prostate stem cell antigen gene is expressed in islets of pancreas. 2309 2