Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The drug cysteamine (
CHS
) induces a profound loss of somatostatin-14 (SS-14) biological and immunological (SS-14 LI) activity from
somatostatin
cells in vivo and in vitro. The present study was designed to determine (i) whether
CHS
induced loss of
somatostatin
is accompanied by secondary increases in SS-mRNA perhaps through loss of autoinhibition of
somatostatin
cells; (ii) whether
CHS
exerts additional direct effects on SS gene regulation.
CHS
was administered to rats in vivo or applied in vitro to primary cultures of rat islet cells, rat islet
somatostatin
-producing tumor cells (1027 B2), and endogenous or in vitro synthesized SS-mRNA. In vivo administration of
CHS
led to 80% reduction in tissue SSLI by 4 h. These changes were accompanied by significant alterations in SS-mRNA that were both tissue-specific and time-dependent. The pattern in brain and intestine was typified by a significant 60% increase in SS-mRNA at 2 h followed by a gradual reduction to approximately 55% of control at 8 h. Stomach showed a significant 95% increase in SS-mRNA at 4 h followed by a 37% decrease by 8 h. Pancreatic SS-mRNA displayed a sustained 25-65% reduction for 8 h. Pretreatment of islet cell cultures with
CHS
reproduced the in vivo findings with pancreas viz. decreased SSLI (80-90% of control) accompanied by a parallel reduction in SS-mRNA (40-50% of control) sustained from 2-72 h.
CHS
also induced a reduction in immunoreactive insulin and insulin mRNA in cultured islet cells. As with normal islet cells,
CHS
treatment of 1027 B2 islet tumor cells led to a profound and sustained decrease in SSLI and SS-mRNA. These changes occurred in the absence of any alteration in intracellular cAMP levels.
CHS
was without effect when incubated directly with SS-mRNA isolated from 1027 B2 cells or with in vitro synthesized SS-mRNA. We conclude that in addition to its effect on SSLI,
CHS
also induces time- and tissue-dependent alterations in SS-mRNA. The mechanism of
CHS
action on SS-mRNA is complex and may involve both an indirect effect secondary to loss of
somatostatin
autoinhibition (to account for SS-mRNA increases) and/or a direct inhibition of SS gene expression (to explain SS-mRNA reduction). The precise site of direct
CHS
action on SS gene regulation remains to be defined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cysteamine-induced reduction in tissue somatostatin immunoreactivity is associated with alterations in somatostatin mRNA. 790 40