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)

Diurnal profiles of the content of immunoreactive somatostatin (IRS) in the male and female rat pineal, Harderian gland and retina have been studied. Supplementary experiments have been performed to elucidate a possible effect of infradian cycles, namely estrous and seasonal cycles, and continuous dark on IRS concentration. Results demonstrate that the IRS content in the rat pineal gland, Harderian gland and retina is submitted to diurnal variations, but not under all studied conditions. A sexual dimorphism exists between male and female animals: male rats showed higher IRS content in pineal (103.8 +/- 4.7 vs 32.3 +/- 1.8 pg IRS/gland), but lower in retina (1,362.1 +/- 82.7 vs 2,176 +/- 102.2 +/- pg IRS/mg of protein) and Harderian gland (10.3 +/- 0.8 vs 30.6 +/- 3.5 pg IRS/mg of protein). Additionally, seasonal differences appeared: in male and female animals pineal IRS content was lower in spring than in November. This decrease also appeared in female retina IRS concentration. Estrous cycle did not seem to change IRS content in the three studied tissues. Finally, pineal IRS rhythm persisted after continuous dark for a week. These results demonstrate, in the rat, sexual differences in the IRS content of the various tissues studied and suggest a physiological role for somatostatin, possibly related to seasonal adaptation.
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PMID:Immunoreactive somatostatin diurnal rhythms in rat pineal, retina and harderian gland: effects of sex, season, continuous darkness and estrous cycle. 197 26

Somatostatin is a tetradecapeptide that is assuming increasing importance as a regulator of central nervous system activity. Originally identified as the hypothalamic growth hormone release-inhibiting factor, somatostatin has subsequently been shown to be extensively and selectively distributed throughout the central nervous system, to alter neuron excitability, to regulate and be regulated by the activity of classical neurotransmitters and neuropeptides, to exert a number of direct behavioral actions, and to display neuropsychiatric disorder-related alterations. In this article, a three-part study of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) somatostatin in affective illness and schizophrenia is presented. In part 1, significant reductions in CSF somatostatin were observed in 49 bipolar and unipolar depressed patients relative to 47 controls. Values during depression were also significantly lower than those observed in affective disorder during the improved state or in schizophrenia. Diurnal studies involving paired AM and PM lumbar punctures revealed that depressed patients and normal volunteers had similar somatostatin values in the evening, despite having significantly different values in the morning. In part 2, the effects of several psychopharmacological agents on CSF somatostatin were examined, particularly the tricyclic anticonvulsant carbamazepine. A significant reduction of CSF somatostatin during treatment with carbamazepine was observed. The effect of carbamazepine on somatostatin could be related to its anticonvulsant, analgesic, or psychotropic effects. Part 3 deals with somatostatin as a major regulator of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity. Somatostatin affects HPA activity by inhibiting, at a number of cellular levels, the stimulated release of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) from the pituitary. A significant negative relationship between CSF somatostatin and the postdexamethasone plasma cortisol level in 22 depressed and 16 schizophrenic patients was observed. This relationship between low CSF somatostatin and escape from dexamethasone suppression was observed irrespective of diagnosis (i.e., depression or schizophrenia). Thus, there is indirect supporting evidence for a role for somatostatin dysregulation in the most consistently observed biological abnormality in depression, escape from dexamethasone suppression. Further study of somatostatin in neuropsychiatric disorders, and particularly depressive illness, offers great promise for better understanding their underlying affective, vegetative, cognitive, and physiological dysregulations.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid somatostatin and psychiatric illness. 286 90

CSF and venous blood were sampled hourly during 24 hours in 6 control subjects and in 12 patients with MS, 5 of whom were in stable phase and 7 in relapse. CSF somatostatin immunoreactivity was 166 +/- 5.3 (SFM) pg/ml in controls at noon and rose around midnight to 208 +/- 3.8 pg/ml, then decreased to basal levels at about 5 hours and exhibited another small peak 3 hours later. Almost identical patterns were found in patients with MS during stable phase. During relapse, CSF somatostatin was reduced to 99 +/- 9.2 pg/ml and showed no variation from this value. CSF albumin was similar in the three groups and exhibited no fluctuations. Diurnal patterns of serum growth hormone were similar and unrelated to the oscillations in CSF somatostatin, indicating that hypothalamic release was insignificant in the overall production and in variations. The observation that the CNS releases somatostatin at lower levels during relapse in MS and that these do not oscillate may suggest that the constant low contents represent passive spillover from somatostatin-containing neurons, while the undulating levels above them are representative of active, yet unknown neurophysiologic (eg, neurotransmitter) functions which become reversibly extinct in relapse.
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PMID:CSF somatostatin in multiple sclerosis: reversible loss of diurnal oscillation in relapses. 288 94

Diurnal serum GH patterns were determined in 10 acromegalic patients before treatment, after 3 d continuous s.c. pump infusion and then after 3 d with three equal daily s.c. injections in both instances totalling 100 micrograms/24 h. Subcutaneous injections (33 micrograms) induced impressive suppression of serum GH lasting 3-6 h in eight patients followed by escape to pretreatment values before the next injection. In contrast, continuous infusion resulted in greater and more stable 24 h suppression to the levels reached at the nadir between injections. Suppression of mean 24 h serum GH below 5 ng/ml was achieved by pump treatment in four patients, while two patients had mean values between 5 ng/ml and 10 ng/ml. In four patients occasional or all levels were above 10 ng/ml (24 h average 12.4-102 ng/ml) implying either that adequate suppression by the SMS 201-995, was impossible during the 3 d pump infusion period, or that the dose administered was inadequate. Carbohydrate tolerance was unaffected in either regimen, indicating that reduction in insulin antagonistic hormones balanced inhibition of insulin release. Interestingly, and in contrast to somatostatin, SMS 201-995 did not inhibit TSH release. No untoward effects were observed at the moderate dosage and blood clinical chemistry was unchanged. Fairly constant diurnal serum SMS 201-995 values were obtained during pump infusion, while levels undulated inversely with serum GH during injection treatment. Average diurnal serum somatostatin-C immunoreactivity (all patients) decreased from 496 +/- 129 (mean +/- SD) to 385 +/- 100 ng/ml (P less than 0.003) during pump treatment and did not decrease further during the following 3 d injection treatment (363 +/- 76 ng/ml). The normal adult mean is 179 +/- 40 ng/ml. Computer tomographic (CT) scans of the sellar region were performed in all patients before and after the experimental week. Two patients had extracellular tumours whose size decreased from 8.2 to 4.1 cm3 and from 12.6 to 10.5 cm3. The results demonstrate that superior and stable suppression of GH secretion is obtained during continuous s.c. pump infusion of SMS 201-995.
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PMID:Continuous subcutaneous pump infusion of somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 versus subcutaneous injection schedule in acromegalic patients. 289 99

Dumping syndrome commonly occurs after gastrectomy. The late dumping, which is one of the dumping syndromes, is due to postprandial hypoglycaemia caused by an excessive insulin secretion after a sharp rise in plasma glucose. Several treatments, including operation, dietary fibre and somatostatin, have been attempted to relieve dumping symptoms. These treatments take effect through modulation of plasma insulin and glucose levels, but their efficacy is still under consideration. Alpha-glucosidase inhibitor attenuates the postprandial increase of plasma glucose levels and is widely used for treatment of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The acute effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor on late dumping syndrome has been reported by some studies with test meals. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a long-term effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment with ordinary meals in late dumping patients with NIDDM because administration of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor is only ethically allowed for diabetic patients in Japan. Six late dumping patients with NIDDM were orally administered alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, acarbose (50 or 100 mg), three times a day before each meal for 1 month. Diurnal changes of plasma glucose, insulin and pancreatic glucagon levels were compared before and after the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. All patients had late dumping-related symptoms, such as weakness, palpitation and dizziness before the induction of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. Patients suffered from a rapid fall in plasma glucose levels from hyperglycaemia at the same time as dumping symptoms. These late dumping-related symptoms disappeared and a rapid change of plasma glucose and insulin levels were attenuated after the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. These data suggest a long-term therapeutic efficacy of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor for late dumping patients.
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PMID:Long-term effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor on late dumping syndrome. 991 26