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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Somatostatin
is a neuromodulator in the mammalian CNS. To date, genes for at least five different somatotrophin release inhibiting factor receptors, termed sst1-sst5, have been cloned. The rat sst2 receptor exists in two splice variants, sst(alpha)a) and sst2(b), which differ in their carboxy-termini. When heterologously expressed in Chinese hamster ovary-K1 cells, these splice variants show little difference in their operational characteristics. Recently, the distribution of the sst2(a) receptor was documented, yet at present no data are available about the distribution of the sst2(b) receptor in the CNS. Here, we present the characterization of a novel polyclonal anti-peptide antibody that is selective for the sst2(b) receptor splice variant. The antibody was raised against the unique intracellular carboxy-terminal portion of the receptor protein. Using this affinity-purified antibody in western blotting experiments, the sst2(b) receptor expressed in Chinese hamster ovary-K1 cells was shown to be a
glycoprotein
with a molecular weight centred at about 85,000. The antibody showed no cross-reactivity to any of the recombinant human sst1-5 receptors, the rat sst2(a) receptor or wild-type Chinese hamster ovary-K1 cells. Employing immunohistochemistry, we investigated the distribution of the sst2(b) receptor in the brain and spinal cord of adult rats. A distinct distribution was found throughout the rostrocaudal axis of the CNS. Somatodendritic as well as axonal staining was observed. Somatodendritic labelling was particularly obvious in the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, hippocampal formation, mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus and cerebellum, as well as in cranial and spinal motor areas. The results show that the distribution of the sst2(b) receptor partially overlaps with that of the sst2(b) receptor, although there were differences in a number of brain areas. The location of the sst2(b) receptor implies that it may mediate a modulatory role of
somatostatin
inhibitory releasing factor on sensory as well as motor functions.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of the somatostatin sst2(b) receptor splice variant in the rat central nervous system. 1021 86
Neuroendocrine gut and pancreatic tumors are rather rare malignant diseases which has gained increased attraction through the last decennium, possibly through development of new diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Histopathology demonstrating the common neuroendocrine features of these tumors has been the diagnostic corner stone for long, but today it should be supplemented with information about the tumor biology. An excellent biochemical marker which is easy to analyze in serum or plasma is chromogranin A, which is a
glycoprotein
that is stored and released from neuroendocrine cells. This marker can be used for diagnosis and follow-up of the patients.
Somatostatin
receptor scintigraphy has been one of the most important diagnostic tools for staging of the disease and also indicating sensitivity to treatment with
somatostatin
analogues. It is a general agreement that almost every patient should be subjected to this procedure before or during the treatment course. From the therapeutic point of view, surgery is nowadays more extensive aiming at reducing the tumor mass in patients who could not be cured by surgery alone. Other means of tumor reduction is liver dearterialization by embolization with starch spheres. The medical treatment of neuroendocrine tumors has made a real break through with the introduction of
somatostatin
analogues, particularly octreotide, and today most of the hormonally related symptoms can be controlled by this kind of treatment.
Somatostatin
analogues have also shown to be inhibitors of tumor growth and the latest development is tumor targeted radioactive treatment with Ytrium or Indium labelled octreotide. Long-acting formulation of
somatostatin
analogues have come into clinical use and significantly improved quality of life for patients with neuroendocrine tumors. Other means of medical treatment are alpha interferons, which have shown particular effect in patients with midgut carcinoid tumors giving both biochemical and tumor responses. Chemotherapy such as streptozotocin plus 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or doxorubicin is still considered as first-line treatment in malignant endocrine pancreatic tumors but is combined with concomitant
somatostatin
analogue treatment. In the future a multimodal treatment will further develop combining different agents and also somatostatin receptor subtype specific analogues will come into clinical use.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine gastrointestinal tumors--a condensed overview of diagnosis and treatment. 1039 26
Eighteen patients with symptoms of active acromegaly were treated with
somatostatin
analogues for 4 weeks before surgery. Both before and after the treatment, levels of growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL), insulin growth factor -I (IGF-I), luteotropin (LH), folliculostimulin (FSH) and subunit alpha of
glycoprotein
hormones were estimated. Glucose tolerance test, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination, sight acuity and field of vision tests were also performed. The same tests were performed on ten control patients with clinically and biochemically active acromegaly, subjected to surgery but not treated with
somatostatin
analogues. In six patients treated with
somatostatin
analogues GH levels decreased significantly to less than 5 ng/ml and in two patients remained elevated while in 10 patients GH level decreased and ranged from 6.1 to 42.9 ng/ml. In 13 patients we observed a decrease in IGF-I to normal levels (<400 ng/dl) and in 3 patients we noted a decrease to levels slightly higher than normal. There was also a slight decrease in alpha subunit concentration. In the glucose inhibition test 4 patients demonstrated normalized GH levels. In patients with elevated PRL and TSH levels, treatment with
somatostatin
analogues induced their decrease. No changes were observed in levels of LH and FSH. After therapy MRI examination disclosed a decrease in tumor volume in two patients (by 20 and 25%, respectively) and no changes in tumor size in 16 patients. The two patients with a decreased tumor volume also showed normalized glucose tolerance tests. All patients manifested an improved clinical condition. Neurosurgeons disclosed a decreased tumor consistency which greatly facilitated surgical procedure. Our studies documented favourable effects of
somatostatin
analogues on the assayed hormone levels, and on the general condition of the patients as well as on the course of the surgical procedure itself.
...
PMID:Short-term pre-surgical treatment with somatostatin analogues, octreotide and lanreotide, in acromegaly. 1069 45
Mice homozygous for the targeted disruption of the
glycoprotein
hormone alpha-subunit (alphaGsu) display hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the anterior pituitary thyrotropes. Thyrotrope hyperplasia results in tumors in aged alphaGsu(-/-) mice. These adenomatous pituitaries can grow independently as intrascapular transplants in hypothyroid mice, suggesting that they have progressed beyond simple hyperplasia. We used magnetic resonance imaging to follow the growth and regression of thyrotrope adenomatous hyperplasia in response to thyroid hormone treatment and discovered that the tumors retain thyroid hormone responsiveness.
Somatostatin
(
SMST
) and its diverse receptors have been implicated in cell proliferation and tumorigenesis. To test the involvement of
SMST
receptor 2 (SMSTR2) in pituitary tumor progression and thyroid hormone responsiveness in alphaGsu(-/-) mutants, we generated Smstr2(-/-), alphaGsu(-/-) mice. Smstr2(-/-), alphaGsu(-/-) mice develop hyperplasia of thyrotropes, similar to alphaGsu(-/-) mutants, demonstrating that SMSTR2 is dispensable for the development of pituitary adenomatous hyperplasia. Thyrotrope hyperplasia in Smstr2(-/-), alphaGsu(-/-) mice regresses in response to T4 treatment, suggesting that SMSTR2 is not required in the T4 feedback loop regulating TSH secretion.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone-responsive pituitary hyperplasia independent of somatostatin receptor 2. 1173 14
1. Transport of a fluorescent
somatostatin
analogue (NBD-octreotide) across freshly isolated functionally intact capillaries from porcine brain was visualized by confocal microscopy and quantitated by image analysis. 2. Luminal accumulation of NBD-octreotide showed all characteristics of specific and energy-dependent transport. Steady-state luminal fluorescence averaged 2 - 3 times cellular fluorescence and was reduced to cellular levels when metabolism was inhibited by NaCN. 3. The accumulation of NBD-octreotide in capillary lumens was inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by unlabelled octreotide, by verapamil, PSC-833 and cyclosporin A, potent inhibitors of p-
glycoprotein
, and by leucotriene C(4), a strong modulator of Mrp2. Conversely, unlabelled octreotide reduced luminal accumulation of fluorescent BODIPY-verapamil on p-
glycoprotein
and of fluorescein-methotrexate, on Mrp2. None of the inhibitors used significantly reduced cellular accumulation of the fluorescent substrates. 4. Together, the data are consistent with octreotide being transported across the luminal membrane of porcine brain capillaries by both P-gp and Mrp2, providing further evidence that both transporters contribute substantially to the active barrier function of this endothelium.
...
PMID:Permeability of porcine blood brain barrier to somatostatin analogues. 1187 40
Chromogranin (Cg) B is an acidic
glycoprotein
present in neuroendocrine tissue. The sequence shows several dibasic amino acid positions susceptible to proteolytic cleavage. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the expression of CgB epitopes in the human endocrine pancreas. Tissue sections of six human pancreata were immunostained with 16 different region-specific antibodies to the CgB molecule, using double immunofluorescence techniques. The CgB epitope pattern varied in the four major islet cell types. B (insulin)-cells expressed immunoreactivity to all region-specific antibodies. The antibodies to the N-terminal and mid-portions of CgB showed moderate immunoreactivity, the C-terminal antibodies weak. A (glucagon)-cells were reactive only to the N-terminal and mid-portion antibodies but, after microwave pretreatment, to all antibodies, whereas D (
somatostatin
)-cells expressed only the sequence CgB 244-255 and a subpopulation CgB 580-595. PP (pancreatic polypeptide) cells were immunostained with antibodies between CgB 1-417 and a few with CgB 580-593. The fragment CgB 244-255 was expressed in all four cell types. The cause of these differences may be cell-specific cleavage or masking of the molecule, but varying translation of CgB mRNA is also possible. The extent to which these epitopes reflect fragments having biological functions remains to be evaluated.
...
PMID:Region-specific antibodies to chromogranin B display various immunostaining patterns in human endocrine pancreas. 1213 5
Pituitary tumors diagnosed before surgery as "non-functioning" in fact represent a heterogenous group, the majority of which express
glycoprotein
hormones or their free subunits. It is known that some of them expresses
somatostatin
receptors, but the data available until now rarely refer to the receptor subtype. Five different subtypes of
somatostatin
receptors (sst1-5) have been cloned. We studied 18 pituitary tumors diagnosed before surgery as "non-functioning." After the surgery the tumors were immunostained with antibodies against pituitary hormones and alpha subunit as well as with antibodies against the somatostatin receptor proteins 1-5. Thirteen adenomas expressed immunoreactivity for FSH, LH, and/or alpha subunit and were classified as gonadotroph adenomas. The remaining five adenomas were immunonegative for all the examined pituitary hormones and were diagnosed as null cell adenomas. All the adenomas of both the groups showed immunopositivity for at least three receptor subtypes. The strongest immunopositivity was found in both groups with anti-sst1 and anti-sst5 antibodies. The marked immunopositivity was also revealed in both groups with anti-sst2B antibody. On the other hand, the sst2A immunopositivity was weak or absent in a majority of tumors. The main difference between two groups was in the sst4 receptor subtype which was absent in all but two gonadotroph adenomas but present in all but one null cell adenoma. These findings suggest that "non-functioning" pituitary adenomas are potential candidates for therapy with
somatostatin
analogs targeted mainly to the receptor subtypes 1 and 5.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of somatostatin receptor subtypes in "clinically nonfunctioning" pituitary adenomas. 1458 68
The silent adenoma subtype 3 (SAS-3) of undetermined cellular derivation is a seemingly nonfunctioning aggressive pituitary tumor with a high recurrence rate. At the time of diagnosis SAS-3s are macro- or giant adenomas particularly aggressive in young individuals, especially women. They are usually associated with mild hyperprolactinemia and are unremarkable by histology. Immunohistochemistry, demonstrating scattered immunoreactivity mostly for GH, PRL, TSH, and alpha-subunit, is not diagnostic. Presently, only TEM permits conclusive diagnosis. Ultrastructurally, the large polar adenoma cells contain abundant RER, masses of SER, extensive multipolar Golgi apparatus, and unevenly clustered mitochondria, displaced by RER and SER, which may show close spatial relationship to RER. Cell membranes often form plexiform interdigitations. Nuclear pleomorphism and nuclear inclusions are common. The 100- to 200-nm secretory granules accumulate heavily in cell processes, which is a hallmark of
glycoprotein
hormone cell differentiation. The endothelial cells may contain tubuloreticular inclusions. Complete surgical removal of the large often invasive tumors is difficult necessitating postoperative treatment. SAS-3 is sensitive to conventional radiation. Some tumors express
somatostatin
receptors and respond well to
somatostatin
analogues, offering long-term control in patients with residual tumor. Possible derivation of SAS-3 from rostral thyrotrophs, a cell type presently known in rodents is contemplated.
...
PMID:Silent adenoma subtype 3 of the pituitary--immunohistochemical and ultrastructural classification: a review of 29 cases. 1631 52
Non-functioning pituitary tumors are relatively common. A large number of these tumors are incidentally found pituitary microadenomas (<1 cm) and are usually of no clinical importance. Those tumors that require treatment are generally macroadenomas and come to medical attention because of mass effect and/or hypopituitarism. Visual field defects are present in roughly 70% of patients with non-functioning macroadenoma at the time of diagnosis and the majority of these patients have at least growth deficiency and hypogonadism. By immunocytochemistry, the large majority of these tumors are
glycoprotein
producing and less commonly they are non-functioning somatotroph, lactotroph or corticotoph adenomas. In contrast to the immunocytochemistry results, only a minority of these tumors actively secrete intact gonadotrophs or
glycoprotein
subunits. Therapy is directed at eliminating mass effect and correcting hypopituitarism. There are anecdotal reports of tumor shrinkage during therapy with either dopamine agonists or
somatostatin
agonists; however tumor response to medical treatment is not reliable. For most patients, transphenoidal resection of the tumor is the preferable primary treatment. Surgery improves visual defects in the majority of patients and a lesser number will recover pituitary function. In the past, pituitary radiation was commonly administered following pituitary surgery; however the need for routine radiation has recently been reevaluated. Although tumor recurrence at 10 years post surgery may be as high as 50%, few patients with recurrence will have clinical symptoms. Close follow-up with surveillance pituitary scans should be performed after surgery and radiation therapy reserved for patients having significant tumor recurrence.
...
PMID:Clinically non-functioning pituitary adenoma. 1708 98
Several circulating or urinary tumour markers can be used for the diagnosis and follow-up of functioning and clinically non-functioning neuroendocrine tumours of the pancreatic islet cells and intestinal tract. Among the specific tumour markers are serotonin and its metabolites--e.g. 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA)--in carcinoid tumours and the carcinoid syndrome, insulin and its precursors or breakdown products in insulinoma, and gastrin in gastrinoma. Plasma vasointestinal polypeptide (VIP) determinations have been used in the diagnosis of VIPoma, plasma glucagon for glucagonoma, and serum
somatostatin
for somatostatinoma. Among the tumour-non-specific markers are: chromogranins, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), alpha-subunits of the
glycoprotein
hormones, catecholamines, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), ghrelin and adrenomedullin.
...
PMID:Biochemistry of neuroendocrine tumours. 1738 64
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