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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four human small cell lung carcinomas, NCI-H69, NCI-N417, NCI-H345, LX-1, and a non-small cell lung carcinoma, H-165, implanted s.c. as tumor xenografts in athymic nude mice, were treated with Somatuline (
BIM
-23014C), an endocrinologically potent octapeptide analogue of
somatostatin
. All tumors responded, although in varying degrees, with percentage of test/control values ranging from 3 to 88. Somatuline administered as a perilesional infusion effectively inhibited xenograft growth inducing prolonged remissions. When treatment was terminated, some tumors regrew, suggesting antimitogenic activity rather than cytocidal. Absence of observable systemic or local toxicity during prolonged treatment would support this conclusion and suggest the feasibility of long term maintenance therapy with a resultant extended survival.
...
PMID:Response of human lung tumor xenografts to treatment with a somatostatin analogue (Somatuline). 197 71
The binding of 125I-Tyr4 bombesin was investigated on plasma membranes of 8 human breast cancer cell lines and 2 long-term cultures of normal human breast epithelial cells. Scatchard plots were compatible with high-affinity, single-site class of receptors in 3 cell lines (KD of 0.75 x 10(-9) and 10(-9) M, Bmax of 0.75 x 10(-13) and 9.7 x 10(-13) M/mg protein in MDA-MB231 and in T47D cells, respectively) while no binding was observed in 5 other cell lines and normal epithelial cells. The neuropeptide and its structural analogues (natural or synthetic) inhibited the binding of 125I-Tyr4 bombesin in the following order of potency: gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP, EC50 = 1.7 x 10(-10) M) greater than
BIM
26159 greater than bombesin, Tyr4 bombesin greater than
BIM
26147 greater than litorin greater than neuromedin C. In contrast, 125I-Tyr4 bombesin binding was not displaced by neuromedin B,
somatostatin
, bradykinin and insulin. In agreement with our binding data, SDS-PAGE of the complex 125I-Tyr4 bombesin-receptor covalently linked by ethylene glycol-bis succinimidyl succinate (EGS) identified after autoradiography a single band with a molecular weight of 75,000, which disappeared in the presence of bombesin in excess. No transcription of either GRP or neuromedin B mRNA could be shown in tumor or normal cells. Exogenous gastrin-releasing peptide had no effect on growth of the cell lines when a serum-free medium was used, implicating that in breast cancer cell lines this receptor does not mediate growth but has a functional role.
...
PMID:Characterization, in some human breast cancer cell lines, of gastrin-releasing peptide-like receptors which are absent in normal breast epithelial cells. 216 13
The factors responsible for eosinophil recruitment are poorly defined, although both platelet-activating factor (PAF) and cytokines appear to be involved in regulating this process. We compared eosinophil mobilization induced by PAF or antigen injection in the peritoneal cavity of hypereosinophilic rats and the effects of the PAF antagonist BN 52021, the
somatostatin
analog
BIM
23014, and cyclosporin A on this process. PAF induced a significant increase of both peritoneal and circulating eosinophil count. Cyclosporin A almost totally abrogated these variations, whereas BN 52021 reduced the peritoneal increase. Similarly to PAF, peritoneal antigen challenge in actively sensitized animals increased peritoneal and circulating eosinophil counts. Cyclosporin A abolished both hypereosinophilia and peritoneal eosinophil infiltration.
BIM
23014 reduced the circulating eosinophils and cell infiltration. In contrast, BN 52021 primarily decreased peritoneal eosinophil recruitment, while having little effect on circulating cells. The different mechanisms of action of these drugs and the involvement of interleukin 5 in eosinophil recruitment are discussed.
...
PMID:Modulation by drugs of eosinophil recruitment induced by immune challenge in the rat. Possible roles of interleukin 5 and platelet-activating factor. 246 17
Proliferation of vascular smooth muscle is an early and major event in the formation of an atherosclerotic lesion. Here we report for the first time the inhibitory effects on myointimal proliferation of the rat carotid artery by a synthetic peptide, angiopeptin, and its closely related congener,
BIM
23034. Proliferation was initiated in the carotid artery of anesthetized rats by air-drying of the endothelium. After 15 days the rats were killed and the carotid artery was pressure-fixed and subjected to morphologic analysis for evaluation of the degree of myointimal thickening. Five synthetic
somatostatin
-like peptides were tested by pretreating rats (20 and 50 micrograms/kg/rat s.c. daily) for 2 days prior to and for 5 days after the endothelial injury. Angiopeptin and the closely related octapeptide (
BIM
23034) significantly inhibited myointimal thickening. Angiopeptin was also effective when the pretreatment period was reduced from 2 days to 30 min. The inhibitory effect of angiopeptin was further confirmed in an additional experiment involving [3H]thymidine incorporation. In this experiment angiopeptin (100 micrograms/kg/day s.c.) was also administered for 2 days prior to and five days following the endothelial injury and it significantly inhibited thymidine uptake. All the peptides tested inhibit the release of growth hormone. However, only angiopeptin and
BIM
23034 inhibited myointimal proliferation. Thus the effect of angiopeptin and its congener is unlikely to be mediated through growth hormone. Since angiopeptin inhibits myointimal proliferation it may have clinical utility in preventing restenosis following angioplasty and coronary artery by-pass procedures.
...
PMID:Inhibition of myointimal proliferation of the rat carotid artery by the peptides, angiopeptin and BIM 23034. 257 77
The factors responsible for in vivo eosinophil recruitment are poorly defined, although T-lymphocytes appear to be involved in the etiology of eosinophilia. In order to clarify this relationship, we studied the modulation of eosinophil mobilization in the rat after immune challenge, by chronic treatment with the PAF-antagonist, BN 52021, the
somatostatin
analog,
BIM
23014 and with Cyclosporin A (CsA). In rats made hypereosinophilic by pretreatment with cyclophosphamide or sephadex, a significant increase of the eosinophil count in blood and peritoneal fluid was induced by anaphylactic reaction. CsA totally abolished both hypereosinophilia and peritoneal eosinophil infiltration.
BIM
23014 also, significantly reduced the circulating eosinophils (-68%, p less than 0.001) and cell infiltration (-86%, p less than 0.05). In contrast, BN 52021 decreased peritoneal eosinophil recruitment, while having relatively little effect on circulating cells. CsA and
somatostatin
are known to affect T-cell proliferation, and as T-cells are involved in the differentiation of hematopoietic cells into eosinophils, these drugs could decrease eosinophil availability for recruitment. In contrast, the PAF antagonist may act by inhibiting PAF-induced eosinophil chemotaxis, providing a more specific inhibition of this process than that exerted by CsA,
BIM
23014 and other immunosuppressive agents.
...
PMID:Modulation of eosinophil recruitment in the rat by the platelet-activating factor (PAF) antagonist, BN 52021, the somatostatin analog, BIM 23014, and by cyclosporin A. 274 16
An endocrinologically-potent octapeptide analogue of
somatostatin
(SRIF), 3-(2-naphthyl)-D-Ala-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (
BIM
-23014 C), was examined for its ability to inhibit the in vitro and in vivo growth of the human small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) line, NCI-H69. When cultured cells were implanted into athymic nude mice, treatment (500 micrograms/injection, twice daily) resulted in a prolongation of lag time for the appearance of measurable tumors, and there was a marked inhibition of the growth rate. Indeed, peptide injection in the region of the tumor resulted in a complete regression of the NCI-H69 tumors. Withdrawal of
BIM
-23014 C treatment resulted in an acceleration of tumor growth indicating an antiproliferative rather the oncolytic action. A similar inhibition of tumor growth was also observed when solid tumors obtained from the first implantation were used as the donor tissues. In cell culture, the proliferation in the presence of a low concentration (10nM) of
BIM
-23104 C was also significantly retarded suggesting a direct mechanism of action.
...
PMID:In vitro and in vivo inhibition of human small cell lung carcinoma (NCI-H69) growth by a somatostatin analogue. 289 54
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) has recently been shown to be a potent ulcerogenic agent in the stomach and intestinal mucosa. Its extract mechanism of action is not yet known although histological studies suggest that vasocongestion is an important feature of PAF-induced damage. We have therefore studied the activity of various agents with different modes of action toward PAF-induced gastrointestinal lesions in the rat (PAF 2 micrograms/kg i.v.; macroscopic lesions of tissue scored 20 min later; arbitrary scale from 0 to 4). Drugs were administered either i.m., s.c. (5 min) or orally (30 min) before PAF injection. PAF-induced gastric lesions were strongly inhibited by the natural PAF-antagonist BN 52021 as well as by atropine sulphate and cimetidine which implicates cholinergic stimulation in the ulcerogenic activity of PAF. The
somatostatin
analog
BIM
23014 was also very potent against PAF, perhaps by reducing the parasympathetic stimulation in the gastric wall as described for
somatostatin
. Allopurinol, which is a free radical scavenger also almost totally inhibited PAF-induced gastric damage, suggesting that neutrophils are involved in the mucosal lesions. The considerable inhibition of the gastric effects of PAF found in neutrophil-depleted animal supports this hypothesis. Theophylline and disodium cromoglycate, mast cell stabilizing drugs which were also active in our model, could act by protecting mast cell degranulation induced by free radicals released from activated neutrophils. A multifunctional process seems to determine the mucosal gastric damage induced by PAF, but parasympathetic stimulation and neutrophil activation play a major role in this pathology.
...
PMID:Role of neutrophils in gastric damage induced by platelet activating factor. 324 84
Somatostatin
(Sms) and its agonist analogues inhibit the secretory activities of endocrine and neural cells. Recent studies have suggested that Sms has significant immunomodulatory properties. In this study, we examine the effects of two Sms octapeptide analogues on the inflammatory reaction in vivo.
BIM
23014 (Somatulin) and Sandostatin were administered to male Sprague-Dawley rats subject to carrageenin-induced aseptic inflammation, at doses of 2-10 micrograms/rat, given either systemically or locally. Animals were killed 7 h after the induction of the inflammation, and the inflammatory exudates were aspirated and quantitated in terms of volume and leukocyte concentration. Sms analogues, administered via either route, significantly reduced the volume and the leukocyte concentration of the exudate in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. In corroboration of these, immunohistochemical evaluation of the levels of local inflammatory mediators, such as immunoreactive (Ir) TNF-alpha, Irsubstance P, and Ircorticotropin-releasing hormone, was inhibited significantly by Sms analogue treatment. These findings suggest that Sms analogues have significant antiinflammatory effects in vivo, associated with suppression of proinflammatory cytokines and neuropeptides. Furthermore, these data suggest that Sms agonists may be useful in the control of inflammatory reaction.
...
PMID:Somatostatin analogues suppress the inflammatory reaction in vivo. 751 91
1.
Somatostatin
(SRIF) causes a concentration-dependent inhibition of neurotransmission in guinea-pig ileum and vas deferens as well as negative inotropy in guinea-pig isolated right atrium. The SRIF receptors mediating these effects have now been further characterized by use of the peptides
BIM
-23027,
BIM
-23056 and L-362855, reported as selective for the recombinant SRIF receptor types, sst2, sst3 and sst5, respectively. 2.
BIM
-23027 was a highly potent agonist at causing an inhibition of neurotransmission in the guinea-pig ileum (EC50 value 1.9 nM), being about 3 times more potent than SRIF (EC50 value 6.8 nM). In contrast, in both guinea-pig vas deferens and right atrial preparations,
BIM
-23027 was a relatively weak agonist being at least 30-100 times weaker than SRIF. In guinea-pig atria,
BIM
-23027 (3 microM) antagonized the negative inotropic action of SRIF28 (apparent pKB = 5.9 +/- 0.1) but had no effect on the negative inotropic action of cyclohexyladenosine. 3. The inhibitory effect of
BIM
-23027 in the guinea-pig ileum was readily desensitized. Prior exposure to
BIM
-23027 (0.3 microM) markedly attenuated the inhibitory effect of SRIF but had no effect on the inhibitory action of clonidine suggesting that
BIM
-23027 and SRIF act via a common receptor mechanism. 4. L-362855 caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of neurotransmission in both the guinea-pig ileum and vas deferens as well as causing negative inotropy in the guinea-pig atrium but was at least 30-100 times weaker than SRIF. In guinea-pig isolated atria, L-362855 (3 microM) did not antagonize the negative inotropic action of SRIF28. 5.
BIM
-23056 in concentrations up to 1 microM was inactive as an agonist in guinea-pig isolated ileum, vas deferens and atrium and did not antagonize the inhibitory actions of SRIF in any of these preparations.6. The results from this study support our previous contention that the sst2 receptor type mediates inhibition of neurotransmission by SRIF in the guinea-pig ileum. The SRIF receptor type mediating inhibition of neurotransmission in the guinea-pig vas deferens appears different, but similar, to that mediating negative inotropy in the atrium. However the characteristics of these latter receptors appear different from that of the recombinant sst2, sst3 and sst5 receptors for SRIF described for rat and man.
...
PMID:Further evidence from functional studies for somatostatin receptor heterogeneity in guinea-pig isolated ileum, vas deferens and right atrium. 758 29
Regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation is thought to be an essential step in signal transduction mechanisms that mediate cellular responses. In pancreatic tumour cells we demonstrated that
somatostatin
analogues inhibited cell proliferation and stimulated a membrane protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity at concentrations at which they bind to the somatostatin receptor. To elucidate the role of PTP in the signal transduction pathway activated by
somatostatin
receptors we first studied the interaction of PTP with the somatostatin receptor at the membrane. We purified
somatostatin
receptors by immunoaffinity from pancreatic membranes that strongly expressed the type 2 somatostatin receptor sstr2. We identified the receptor as an 87 kDa protein. We demonstrated that a PTP activity co-purified with
somatostatin
receptors. The PTP was identified as a 66 kDa protein immunoreactive to antibodies against SHPTP1. These antibodies immunoprecipitated
somatostatin
receptors either occupied or unoccupied by ligand indicating that SHPTP1 is associated with
somatostatin
receptors. We then expressed sstr2A in monkey kidney COS-7 cells and mouse NIH/3T3 fibroblasts and demonstrated that
somatostatin
analogues (RC 160, octreotide and
BIM
23014) which exhibited high affinity for sstr2 stimulated a PTP activity and inhibited cell proliferation in proportion to their affinities for sstr2. Under the same conditions these analogues have no effect on the growth of cells expressing sstr1. All these results suggest that a PTP related to SHPTP1 is associated with
somatostatin
receptors and may be involved in the negative growth signal promoted by sstr2.
...
PMID:A tyrosine phosphatase is associated with the somatostatin receptor. 758 47
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