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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The in vivo administration of
somatostatin
(SS) or its analogues is capable of suppressing the growth of pancreatic cancer in experimental animals. We examined the effects of SS-14 and its analogue RC-160 on the in vitro growth of two human pancreatic cancer cell lines MiaPaCa-2 and Panc-1 stimulated with epidermal growth factor (EGF) or insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). Neither SS-14 nor RC-160 inhibited the growth of either cell line. In contrast RC-160 did inhibit the EGF-stimulated growth of a rat pancreatic cancer cell line AR42J. Binding studies with 125I-Tyr11
somatostatin
revealed the presence of a single class of high affinity binding sites with a Kd of 0.20 +/- 0.05 nM and a Bmax of 2.1 +/- 0.26 pmoles mg-1 protein on AR42J but not displaceable binding was observed on MiaPaCa-2 or Panc-1. We conclude that lack of receptors accounts for the failure of SS-14 and RC-160 to influence the growth of human pancreatic cancer in vitro. These results, taken together with other findings, lead us to question the therapeutic efficacy of
somatostatin
and its analogues as mono-therapy in the treatment of human pancreatic cancer.
Br J Cancer 1992
Sep
PMID:Human pancreatic cancer cell lines do not express receptors for somatostatin. 135 59
Medical therapy of acromegaly with the
somatostatin
analog octreotide is very successful. Both clinical symptomatology and hormonal hypersecretion by the growth hormone-secreting pituitary adenomas are controlled, and peripheral IGF-I levels also return to near normal levels. Tumor shrinkage is observed in most patients.
Somatostatin
analogs can be used after noncurative surgery and for a limited period after radiotherapy, and octreotide pretreatment might improve the outcome of surgery.
Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 1992
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin analogs in the treatment of acromegaly. 135 29
A series of novel gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) and
Somatostatin
analogs have been developed in our laboratory and were screened for antiproliferative and signal transduction inhibitory effect. Our GnRH analog Folligen, had significant antitumor activity on DMBA induced mammary carcinomas in rats without blocking ovarian functions. The direct effect of Folligen and Buserelin has been compared on the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. Folligen was found to be more effective in inhibiting cell proliferation and significant differences were found in the signal transduction pathways activated by these analogs. Our novel
Somatostatin
analogs were screened for tyrosine kinase inhibition and for antiproliferative effect on human colon tumor cells and for growth hormone (GH) release inhibition in vitro and in vivo. The analog TT-2-50 was significantly more active inhibiting GH release in superfused rat pituitary cells and in vivo than native
Somatostatin
and it strongly inhibited tyrosine kinase and proliferation while it stimulated protein kinase C activity.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1992
Sep
PMID:Novel antitumor peptide hormones and their effect on signal transduction. 135 11
Somatostatin
analogs are used in the control of hormonal hypersecretion and tumor growth of patients with acromegaly, islet cell carcinomas and carcinoids. Recently we showed that somatostatin receptor positive tumors can be visualized in vivo after the administration of radioactive isotope-labelled
somatostatin
analogs. Receptor imaging was positive in 18/21 islet cell tumors, 30/31 carcinoids, 26/28 paragangliomas, 9/14 medullary thyroid carcinomas, 5/7 small cell lung cancers, 6/7 neuroblastomas, 38/49 primary breast cancers, and 0/18 pancreatic adenocarcinomas. Also 11/11 meningiomas, 4/4 astrocytomas and 0/3 glioblastomas could be visualized.
Somatostatin
receptor imaging is an easy, harmless and painless diagnostic method. It is an in vivo method for the recognition of neuroendocrine cancers. It localizes multiple and/or metastatic tumors, predicts the successful control of hormonal hypersecretion by octreotide and seems of prognostic value in certain types of cancer. This scintigraphic method might help in patient selection for clinical trials with
somatostatin
analogs in the treatment of neuroendocrine cancers.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1992
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin receptor imaging in the diagnosis and treatment of neuroendocrine tumors. 135 13
Somatostatin
receptors (SS-R) have been identified in membrane homogenates or tissue sections from several hundred tumors. SS-R were found in most neuroendocrine tumors, i.e. GH and TSH producing pituitary tumors, endocrine gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) tumors, paragangliomas, pheochromocytomas, medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC) and small cell lung carcinomas. SS-R were also expressed in a majority of malignant lymphomas, in several brain tumors (all meningiomas, most astrocytomas) and in breast tumors. The majority of tumors expressing SS-R are rather differentiated (i.e. astrocytomas vs glioblastomas), but exceptions exist (high grade malignant lymphomas). An inverse relationship exists between SS-R and receptors for epidermal growth factor (EGF-R) incidence in lung tumors, glial tumors and most breast tumors, whereas meningiomas express simultaneously both receptors. A minority of tumors (ovarian tumors, MTC, insulinomas) express a subtype of SS-R, characterized by low affinity for the octapeptide SS analog octreotide. The function mediated by SS-R in human tumors may differ according to the tumor type. SS-R in pituitary and GEP tumor mediate hormone secretion inhibition with, in addition, possibly some antiproliferative effects. In meningiomas, however, activation of SS-R inhibits forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, and weakly stimulates proliferation. Whereas SS-R seem to mediate antiproliferative effects in animal models and cell lines of lymphomas, breast and lung tumors, such an effect has not yet been convincingly documented in human primary tumors. The clinical implications of the presence of SS-R in tumors are manyfold: (1) as a predictive marker for efficient therapy with octreotide in pituitary and GEP tumors; (2) as a diagnostic marker: for pathobiochemical classification of tumors, using in vitro detection methods; for clinical evaluation using in vivo scanning techniques; (3) as a prognostic marker; and (4) as a potential radiotherapeutic target.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1992
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin receptors in human cancer: incidence, characteristics, functional correlates and clinical implications. 135 16
Transcription of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) gene is rapidly elevated by activation of protein kinase A (PKA). The additive influence of three cis-acting elements is responsible for this regulation in an adrenal carcinoma cell line. Two sites, CRE2 at -48 base pairs (bp) relative to the start of transcription and CRE3 at +95 bp, are identical to the core motif of the cAMP-responsive element (CRE) of the
somatostatin
gene and are conserved in the mouse, rat, and human ODC genes. Mutation of CRE2 resulted in a substantial decrease in basal promoter activity, as well as a 5-fold decrease in inducibility of the ODC promoter by PKA. CRE3 did not contribute to the basal activity of the ODC promoter, but mutation of this site resulted in a 2-fold decrease in inducibility by PKA. Deletion of a 45-bp sequence (GC-box) located 5' of CRE2, also resulted in a 2-fold decrease in inducibility of the ODC promoter. DNase I protection revealed the presence of protein binding at CRE2, the TATA box, and the GC-box of the ODC promoter. Mutation of CRE2 resulted in loss of protection of this sequence, as well as the 3' extension of the footprint over the TATA box, without affecting interactions at the GC box. Antibodies to the well characterized CRE-binding protein CREB recognized proteins binding to CRE2, suggesting that binding of CREB, or an antigenically related protein, is important for the activity of CRE2. Additionally, recombinant CREB bound to a DNA probe containing the CRE2 sequence.
J Biol Chem 1992
Sep
15
PMID:Multiple DNA elements responsible for transcriptional regulation of the ornithine decarboxylase gene by protein kinase A. 135 8
Somatostatin
inhibition of growth hormone (GH) secretion from adenohypophysis cells in culture was antagonized by the antidiabetic sulfonylurea glipizide (K0.5 = 10 +/- 5 nM). Although all cells that hyperpolarize with
somatostatin
have ATP-sensitive K+ channels, the antagonistic actions of the hormone and of the antidiabetic drug are due to effects on different types of K+ channels. Diazoxide, an opener of ATP-sensitive K+ channels, abolished the increase of intracellular Ca2+ provoked by growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) and induced inhibition of GRF stimulated GH secretion (K0.5 = 138 microM). This inhibition by diazoxide was largely suppressed by glipizide which blocked the ATP-sensitive K+ channels opened by diazoxide. In summary, hormonal activation of GH secretion is inhibited by openers of ATP-sensitive K+ channels, while hormonal inhibition of GH secretion is suppressed by blockers of ATP-sensitive K+ channels.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1992
Sep
16
PMID:Effectors of ATP-sensitive K+ channels inhibit the regulatory effects of somatostatin and GH-releasing factor on growth hormone secretion. 135 34
The GH response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia and growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) has been shown to be impaired in subjects with Cushing's syndrome and in healthy volunteers given oral glucocorticoids. Pyridostigmine is an anticholinesterase that stimulates GH secretion, probably by inhibition of hypothalamic
somatostatin
secretion. This work was designed to study the site of action of glucocorticoids in inhibiting the secretion of GH. Eight healthy male volunteers were studied on three occasions in random order. They took 2 mg oral dexamethasone or placebo at precisely 6-hourly intervals for 48 h before receiving 120 mg oral pyridostigmine or placebo, followed 60 min later by GHRH (100 micrograms) i.v. Samples for measuring GH were obtained at 15 min intervals for 2 h. The 'area under the curve' (AUC) for each of the treatments was significantly different: dexamethasone-pyridostigmine-GHRH (mean +/- S.E.M., 1938 +/- 631 mU/min per l), dexamethasone-placebo-GHRH (634 +/- 211) and placebo-placebo-GHRH (4267 +/- 1183) (P < 0.02, Wilcoxon test). In conclusion, dexamethasone given for 48 h significantly inhibited the AUC for GH following treatment with GHRH. However, pretreatment with pyridostigmine significantly reversed the inhibition although this was still partial. Our data suggested that this short-term suppressive effect of dexamethasone was independent of GHRH, and most probably relates to stimulation of the release of
somatostatin
.
J Endocrinol 1992
Sep
PMID:Pyridostigmine partially reverses dexamethasone-induced inhibition of the growth hormone response to growth hormone-releasing hormone. 135 70
Since there are conflicting reports regarding the effects of
somatostatin
(SS) on cyclic AMP levels in astrocytes derived from rat cerebral cortex and, to date, the SS binding to mature astrocytes is unknown, the present study has determined SS binding and its effect on cyclic AMP accumulation in a fresh astrocyte-rich suspension from rat cerebral cortex. 125I-Tyr11-SS binding was inhibited by SS in a dose-dependent manner. The Scatchard analysis of binding data was linear and yielded a dissociation constant of 0.95 +/- 0.15 nM with a maximal binding capacity of 122 +/- 13 fmol/mg protein. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation up to 2.3 times above the basal levels whereas SS had no effect. This effect at any of the VIP concentrations. Likewise, SS did not inhibit the stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation provoked by other effectors such as isoproterenol and forskolin. In view of our results and those of other authors, SS receptor localized in astrocytes must be able to couple with signal transduction systems other than adenylate cyclase, in order to carry out its biological actions in the cell.
Neuropeptides 1992
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin binding to a fresh rat astrocyte-enriched suspension. 135 80
The dual regulation of cyclic AMP levels in rat peritoneal macrophages incubated with
somatostatin
, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and isoproterenol was studied.
Somatostatin
exerted a non-competitive inhibition of the stimulatory effect of VIP and isoproterenol on cyclic AMP production. In addition,
somatostatin
inhibited basal cyclic AMP levels. Our results suggest that
somatostatin
and VIP may modulate the immune response acting, through cyclic AMP, on macrophage functions.
Neuropeptides 1992
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin inhibition of VIP- and isoproterenol-stimulated cyclic AMP production in rat peritoneal macrophages. 135 81
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