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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A group of 15 biologically active peptides were studied with respect to their susceptibility to chain shortening by human pancreas alanine aminopeptidase. Those susceptible were
somatostatin
, melanocyte stimulating hormone, fibrinopeptide A, eosinophilotactictetrapeptide, lysyl-bradykinin, and methionyl-lysyl-bradykinin. The latter two were selected for further study. Direct identification and determination of the reaction products,
lysine
and/or methionine, were undertaken to establish unequivocally the kinin-converting activity of human pancreas alanine aminopeptidase, which exhibited a pH optimum at pH 7.9. The Km and kcat values for this enzyme for lysyl-bradykinin were 57 mumol/l and 3000 min-1, respectively. The corresponding values for this enzyme for methionyl-lysyl-bradykinin were calculated to be 49 mumol/l and 16000 min-1, respectively. Bradykinin itself is extremely resistant to hydrolysis by this pancreatic enzyme.
...
PMID:Action of human pancreas alanine aminopeptidase on biologically active peptides: kinin converting activity. 611 80
The effects of several neuropeptides were evaluated using a non-human primate model of age-related memory impairments. Several doses of ACTH4-10,
lysine
vasopressin, arginine vasopressin, oxytocin and
somatostatin
were each tested in several aged monkeys. Because data from a large number of non-drug control sessions was collected before, during and after this study, it was possible to define the normal range of control performance for each monkey and statistically determine whether a change in performance under any single dose of drug reflected a significant change from the particular monkey's normal baseline performance. Although none of the neuropeptides produced consistent group effects, evaluations of individual subjects against their own baseline performance revealed reliable changes at certain doses. Arginine vasopressin appeared to produce the best overall effects with three of the five monkeys exhibiting reliable changes in performance from baseline. These same three monkeys also responded positively to the
lysine
form. Oxytocin impaired memory in three of the six aged monkeys tested over a wide range of doses. Three of six aged monkeys performed better under ACTH4-10 compared to baseline; however, in two of these cases only a single dose was effective. The performance of only one subject was improved under
somatostatin
, and this was at a single dose only. The data reported here provide evidence for neuropeptides producing behavioral improvement in non-human primates using an appetitive task, eliminating a popular criticism that the data in this literature has depended too heavily on the testing of rodents in shock-motivated tasks. Additionally, the improvements observed in this study involve a behavior that it naturally impaired by age and one which has many operational similarities and some empirical relevance to measures of recent memory in humans. However, these positive findings must be tempered by the lack of robust effects and high individual variation observed.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide effects on memory in aged monkeys. 612 93
Structure-activity studies of the
lysine
residue in the highly active cyclic hexapeptide
somatostatin
analog cyclo(Pro-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe) confirm the importance of the
lysine
amino group for biological activity through the loss of activity seen on replacement of
lysine
by ornithine, arginine, histidine and p-amino phenylalanine. Three analogs containing thialysine, gamma- and delta-fluorolysine were equipotent to the parent as inhibitors of insulin, glucagon, and growth hormone release. The pKa's of the amino groups in these equiactive peptides ranged from 8.23-9.4. The lack of a correlation between the basicity of the amino groups and the biological activities suggests that deprotonation is not required for biological activity.
...
PMID:Somatostatin analogs which define the role of the lysine-9 amino group. 613 Oct 45
Isolated urethral preparations from rabbit and man responded to transmural electrical stimulation with contraction when the basal tension was low, and with relaxation when the preparations were contracted by noradrenaline, clonidine, 5-hydroxytryptamine and
lysine
vasopressin. Both contractant and relaxant responses were abolished by tetrodotoxin, suggesting that they were caused by the action of transmitters released from nerves. The electrically induced contractions in the rabbit urethra had a threshold frequency of 5 to 6 Hz and maximum was reached at 40 Hz. The responses were markedly reduced by alpha-receptor blockers suggesting that the released contraction-mediating transmitter was mainly noradrenaline. The relaxant response was immediate and rapidly reversible. It was obtained at a threshold frequency of 1 to 2 Hz and maximum was reached at 10 to 15 Hz. It was not inhibited by propranolol, indomethacin, atropine or peptides such as substance P, VIP, vasopressin or
somatostatin
. Prostaglandin E2, isoprenaline, adenosine-5'-triphosphate and VIP relaxed the noradrenaline contracted rabbit urethra with a time course different from that of the electrically induced relaxation. Nifedipine and "calcium free" solution decreased the noradrenaline induced contraction but did not influence the relaxant response to electrical stimulation. It is suggested that the relaxant response of the isolated noradrenaline-contracted urethra to electrical stimulation is caused by an unknown transmitter released from nerves.
...
PMID:Electrically induced relaxation of the noradrenaline contracted isolated urethra from rabbit and man. 613 Nov 47
The effects of glucagon deficiency and excess on plasma concentrations of 21 amino acids were studied in six normal human subjects for 8 h. During glucagon deficiency, produced by intravenous infusion of
somatostatin
(0.5 mg/h) and insulin (5 mU/kg per h), amino acid concentration (sum of 21 amino acids) rose from 2,607 +/- 76 to 2,922 +/- 133 microM after 4 h (P less than 0.025). The largest increases occurred in
lysine
(+26%), glycine (+24%), alanine (+23%), and arginine (+23%) concentrations. During glucagon excess produced by intravenous infusion of
somatostatin
(0.5 mg/h), insulin (5 mU/kg per h), and glucagon (60 ng/kg per h), amino acid concentration decreased from 2,774 +/- 166 to 2,388 +/- 102 microM at 8 h (P less than 0.01). The largest decreases occurred in citrulline (-37%), proline (-32%), ornithine (-30%), tyrosine (-23%), glycine (-20%), threonine (-21%), and alanine (18%) concentrations. Urinary urea nitrogen and total nitrogen excretions were lower during glucagon deficiency than during glucagon excess (3.1 +/- 0.2 vs. 6.3 +/- 2.3 g/8 h, P less than 0.05 and 4.8 +/- 1.0 vs 7.0 +/- 2.6 g/8 h, respectively, P less than 0.05). Biostator-controlled euglycemic glucagon deficiency was produced in four normal subjects for 4 h to eliminate possible effects of changes in glucose concentration on amino acids. Amino acid concentration (sum of 18 amino acids) increases occurred in arginine (+42%), alanine (+28%), glutamine (+25%), and glycine (+16%) concentrations. The data show that small changes (-66 pg/ml and +50 pg/ml) in basal glucagon concentrations cause plasma amino acid concentrations to change in opposite directions. The finding that urinary excretion of nitrogen and urea nitrogen was greater during glucagon excess than during glucagon deficiency suggested alterations in the rate of gluconeogenesis from amino acids as one mechanism by which glucagon controls blood amino acid levels.
...
PMID:Effects of glucagon on plasma amino acids. 614 2
ACTH responsiveness in vitro to synthetic corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF),
lysine
-8-vasopressin, and cAMP was examined using superfusion of pituitary adenoma tissue and the nonadenomatous tissue from 16 patients with Cushing's disease. Sensitivity of adenomas to
lysine
-8-vasopressin and cAMP was similar to that of nonadenomatous tissues; however, sensitivity of adenomas to CRF was lower than that of nonadenomatous tissues in 7 of 16 patients. CRF-induced ACTH secretion from adenomas was inhibited by Ca2+-free medium in all instances and by dexamethasone and
somatostatin
in some. Angiotensins I and II stimulated ACTH secretion from both adenomas and nonadenomatous tissues, while angiotensin I-induced ACTH secretion was inhibited by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor. These results suggest that the sensitivity of the pituitary corticotroph adenomas to CRF in some patients is low. This may be due to an abnormality of the step(s) before cAMP formation, such as the CRF receptor.
...
PMID:Effects of corticotropin-releasing factor and other materials on adrenocorticotropin secretion from pituitary glands of patients with Cushing's disease in vitro. 614 54
The purpose of our study was to evaluate the effect of
somatostatin
(500 microgram/h intravenously) upon insulin, c-peptide, glucagon and plasma amino acids concentrations in patients with and without cirrhosis of the liver. The typical plasma amino acid pattern in cirrhosis is characterised by increased concentrations of the aromatic amino acids and decreased concentrations of the branched chain amino acids and of alanine and glycine. After administration of
somatostatin
insulin, c-peptide and glucagon concentrations decreased and those of the branched chain amino acids in both groups increased; in addition in patients with cirrhosis the plasma concentrations of threonine, serine, glycine, alanine,
lysine
, and arginine increased also. Infusion of
somatostatin
plus insulin in patients with cirrhosis succeeded in preventing the increase in the branched chain amino acid concentrations, while the infusion of
somatostatin
plus glucagon decreased threonine, serine, glycine, alinine, phenylalanine, tyrosine,
lysine
and arginine concentrations. It is therefore suggested that the effect of
somatostatin
on the plasma amino acids may be because of the reduction of insulin and glucagon concentrations; however, other effects of
somatostatin
cannot be excluded at present.
...
PMID:Correction of altered plasma amino acid pattern in cirrhosis of the liver by somatostatin. 614 82
A peptide fraction containing two 28-residue somatostatins, both products of the anglerfish
somatostatin
II gene, has been isolated, characterized, and subjected to amino acid sequence analysis. The structural data indicate that one of the two forms of the 28-residue peptide contains 5-hydroxylysine. Hydroxylysine was identified in an acid hydrolysate of somatostatin-28 by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Fast-atom bombardment mass spectrometry indicated that the two forms of somatostatin-28 have molecular weights of 3220 and 3204, representing the hydroxylated and nonhydroxylated peptides, respectively. The location of the hydroxylated
lysine
was deduced by analysis of proteolytic fragments to be position 23. This represents the first observation of a hydroxylated peptide hormone and one of the few reported occurrences of hydroxylysine in non-collagen proteins.
...
PMID:Anglerfish preprosomatostatin II is processed to somatostatin-28 and contains hydroxylysine at residue 23. 615 Sep 31
The mechanism of degradation of the
somatostatin
analogue cyclo(-Asn-Phe-4-[3H]-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe-Gaba-) in rat intestinal juice in vitro has been studied by isolation and identification of cleavage products. The analogue is much more stable than
somatostatin
but is nevertheless degraded in minutes in dilute intestinal juice. There is a single primary cleavage site at Lys-Thr and the linear peptide thus formed is subsequently rapidly degraded to smaller peptides. Analogues with a modified
lysine
are markedly stabilised relative to the octapeptide analogue.
...
PMID:The mechanism of degradation of cyclo(-Asn-Phe-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe-Gaba-) and the relative stabilities of this and other octapeptide somatostatin analogues in rat intestinal juice. 615 49
The conformation of several naturally occurring peptide hormones and bioactive oligopeptides in phospholipid solutions was studied by circular dichroism. Phosphatidylcholine induced a partial helix in human gastrin I at neutral pH, but phosphatidylserine did not unless the five consecutive glutamic acid residues in gastrin were protonated. Reduced
somatostatin
with two lysines and substance P with one arginine and one
lysine
were partially helical in phosphatidylserine, but not phosphatidylcholine, solution. Both lipids induced a helical conformation in glucagon and its COOH-terminal fragment (19-29) probably because the helical segment is primarily located at the uncharged COOH terminus. Thus, polypeptides with a helix-forming potential can have the helical conformation only when the peptides carry no charge or charges opposite to those on the polar head of the lipid. Renin substrate, which has potentials for the beta form and beta turn, seemed to form a mixture of the two conformations in phosphatidylserine solution. Angiotensin I with a strong probability for the beta form adopted the beta form in phosphatidylserine solution and sleep peptide with no structure-forming potential remained unordered in lipid solutions. The helix usually predominated over the beta form in lipid solutions if the peptide has potentials for both conformations. This could account for the preponderance of helices in bacteriorhodopsin of the purple membrane, which according to its amino acid sequence would have favored the beta form.
...
PMID:Lipid-induced ordered conformation of some peptide hormones and bioactive oligopeptides: predominance of helix over beta form. 618 2
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