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)

Changes in endogenous somatostatin after quinolinic and kainic acids were investigated by measuring somatostatin-like peaks by in vivo voltammetry and by assessing the distribution of somatostatin-positive neurons by immunocytochemistry. Kainic acid (0.19 nmol/0.5 microliter) or quinolinic acid (120 nmol/0.5 microliter) in doses inducing comparable electroencephalographic seizure patterns, were injected into the hippocampus of freely moving rats. Somatostatin-like peaks were measured every 6 min for 3 h by a carbon fiber electrode implanted in the proximity of the injection needle. Kainic acid kept somatostatin-like peaks significantly higher than saline from 48 min after the injection till the end of the recording. Somatostatin-like peaks were dramatically elevated by quinolinic acid, reaching a maximum of 482% 60 min after the injection. Three days later, administration of kainic acid resulted in selective degeneration of CA3 pyramidal neurons but did not affect the number of somatostatin-positive cells, while quinolinic acid induced cell loss in all pyramidal layers and complete degeneration of somatostatin-positive cells in the whole hippocampus. Thus, the quantitative difference in somatostatin release in response to doses of kainic and quinolinic acids inducing comparable electroencephalographic seizure patterns was reflected in a substantial difference in the neurodegenerative consequences. In both models, the release of somatostatin in response to seizures may be interpreted as a "defense" mechanism aimed at reducing the spread of excitation in the tissue.
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PMID:Functional and histological consequences of quinolinic and kainic acid-induced seizures on hippocampal somatostatin neurons. 167 38

The influence of anticonvulsant treatment upon (1) chronically increased seizure susceptibility, (2) on late increases in peptide levels and (3) on seizure-induced brain damage was investigated during various stages of acute kainic acid (10 mg/kg i.p.)-induced seizures. The seizures were interrupted at various stages of the syndrome (50 min to 24 h after injection of the toxin) by injecting thiopental (50 mg/kg i.p.) or the excitatory amino acid antagonist, MK-801 (10 mg/kg i.p.). The increase in neuropeptide Y and somatostatin levels in the frontal cortex could be prevented by early injection of either anticonvulsant (up to 180 min after kainic acid). No protection against the increase in peptide levels was observed when the anticonvulsants were applied later. Kainic acid-induced neuronal damage in the amygdala, with glutamate decarboxylase as a neurochemical marker, was entirely prevented by interrupting seizures up to 2 h after kainic acid. Partial protection (about 40-50%) was even found when the anticonvulsant treatment was applied after the acute syndrome, as late as 8 h after kainic acid injection. Chronically increased seizure susceptibility induced by kainic acid was not prevented, even by early injection (90 min after kainic acid) of the anticonvulsant drugs. The data indicate that (1) the late increase in seizure susceptibility may be initiated early after injection of kainic acid. (2) the late increase in peptide levels may be related to the frequency of acute seizures rather than to a change in seizure threshold or brain damage and (3) even late anticonvulsant therapy may antagonize seizure-induced brain damage in the amygdala.
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PMID:Effect of anticonvulsant treatment on kainic acid-induced increases in peptide levels. 197 15

We previously found that quinolinic acid striatal excitotoxin lesions result in a relative sparing of somatostatin and neuropeptide Y neurons. In the present study we examined dose-response effects of excitotoxins acting at the three subtypes of glutamate receptors: N-methyl-D-aspartate (AA1), quisqualate (AA2), and kainic acid (AA3). Concentrations of both somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) and neuropeptide a Y-like immunoreactivity (NPYLI) were compared with those of substance P-like immunoreactivity (SPLI) and GABA. Kainic acid (AA3), quisqualic acid (AA2), and AMPA (AA2) resulted in dose-dependent reductions in all four neurochemical markers examined, while N-methyl-D,L-aspartate (AA1) and quinolinic acid (AA1) resulted in relative sparing of SLI and NPYLI. At doses of each excitotoxin which resulted in comparable 50% reductions in both GABA and SPLI only N-methyl-D,L-aspartate and quinolinic acid had no significant effect on concentrations of SLI and NPYLI. The relative sparing of somatostatin-neuropeptide Y neurons was confirmed histologically by using histochemical staining for NADPH-diaphorase neurons combined with either Nissl stains, or immunohistochemical staining for enkephalin. Lesions with N-methyl-D-aspartate agonists resulted in preferential sparing of NADPH-diaphorase neurons while these neurons were more vulnerable than other neurons to kainic acid or AMPA. Choline acetyltransferase neurons were relatively spared, as compared with other neurons, by agents acting at all three glutamate receptor subtypes. N-methyl-D,L-aspartate lesions were blocked with MK-801, while there was no effect on quisqualic acid or kainic acid lesions. The relative sparing of somatostatin-neuropeptide Y neurons following striatal excitotoxin lesions with N-methyl-D-aspartate (AA1) agonists probably reflects a paucity of AA1 receptors on these neurons. Since these neurons are also spared in Huntington's disease, excitotoxins acting at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (AA1) site provide an improved neurochemical model of this illness.
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PMID:Differential sparing of somatostatin-neuropeptide Y and cholinergic neurons following striatal excitotoxin lesions. 256 16

Kainic acid was injected into the rat striatum and its effects on presumptive striatal cholinergic, GABAergic and somatostatin-containing neurons were examined with three histochemical staining methods. Presumptive cholinergic and GABAergic neurons are damaged to a similar extent, but somatostatin neurons are more sensitive to the neurotoxic effect of kainic acid and are more severely affected.
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PMID:Differential effect of kainic acid on somatostatin, GABAergic and cholinergic neurons in the rat striatum. 285 35

Substantial amounts of somatostatin have been demonstrated in the basal ganglia and immunocytochemistry has demonstrated both somatostatin staining neurons and nerve terminals. In order to study possible sources of somatostatin input to the striatum a series of lesions were made. Lesions of the substantia nigra produced with either 6-hydroxydopamine or ibotenic acid and hemisections at the level of the globus pallidus (6.2 mm anterior) had no effect on striatal levels of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI). Similarly dorsal frontal or hemicortectomies had no effect on SLI in the striatum. Kainic acid injected directly into the striatum at 2 dose levels resulted in a 60% depletion of SLI on the ipsilateral side and a 25% reduction on the contralateral side. These results suggest that about half of the SLI in the striatum is localizable to intrinsic neurons; the source of the remaining SLI is presently unknown but does not appear to arise in the dorsal cortex, thalamus or brainstem.
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PMID:Effects of lesions on somatostatin-like immunoreactivity in the rat striatum. 613 92

The effects of intraocular injection of kainic acid and acrylamide upon retinal neuropeptides and high affinity binding sites have been determined in the chick. Kainic acid causes a sharp reduction in Met-enkephalin and somatostatin while neurotensin levels are unchanged. This treatment also lowers the extent of cholinergic muscarinic but not of [3H]naloxone or [3H]spiroperidol binding. In contrast, acrylamide treatment causes major increases of retinal Met-enkephalin and neurotensin concentrations. The binding of [3H]naloxone is also increased, and no reductions of any peptide or binding intensity were observed. The results indicate the plasticity of retinal neuropeptide levels and the selectivity with which these can be modulated.
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PMID:Alterations in retinal neurotransmitter receptors and neuropeptides of the chick by kainic acid and acrylamide. 619 41

Integrins are heterodimeric cell surface receptors composed of different alpha and beta subunits that mediate cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions. They have been implicated in the regulation of neuronal migration, differentiation, process outgrowth, and plasticity. The alpha8 integrin subunit associates exclusively with the beta1 subunit to form a receptor (alpha8beta1) for fibronectin, vitronectin, tenascin, and osteopontin. In a previous study, we demonstrated that hippocampal dentate hilar neurons are immunoreactive for alpha8. The present study identifies the major types of alpha8-immunoreactive hilar neurons and characterizes the effects of kainic acid-induced seizures on alpha8-immunoreactivity in these cells. Examination of the hilus in normal rats revealed alpha8-immunoreactivity in the somatodendritic compartments of large hilar neurons identified as mossy cells, including a subset of dendritic thorny excrescences that were contacted by large mossy fiber terminals. alpha8-immunoreactivity also was found in approximately 71% of somatostatin-containing hilar cells. Kainic acid-induced seizures dramatically and rapidly altered the levels and distribution of alpha8-immunoreactivity in hilar neurons. After 1.5 h of seizures, alpha8-immunoreactivity in their dendrites was reduced greatly. One day after kainic acid treatment, labeling was diminished throughout the somatodendritic compartments of most hilar cells. This decrease appeared to be transient, since alpha8 labeling returned to normal levels in surviving hilar neurons within 2 weeks of treatment. In addition, many alpha8-immunoreactive hilar neurons, particularly in caudal dentate regions, were lost 3-5 weeks after kainic acid treatment. Our findings suggest that alpha8beta1 may mediate adhesive interactions of the dendritic processes of mossy cells and somatostatin-containing hilar neurons with other cellular elements or with extracellular matrix components. They also suggest that alpha8 may be susceptible to activity-dependent proteolysis that could modulate its function in the somatodendritic compartment of these cells.
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PMID:Dentate hilar mossy cells and somatostatin-containing neurons are immunoreactive for the alpha8 integrin subunit: characterization in normal and kainic acid-treated rats. 1151 28