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)

Recently we could demonstrate that in rats with pancreatic hypertrophy, somatostatin is secreted in higher concentrations into the pancreatic juice than into the portal vein blood. For measurement of juice somatostatin and to characterize the molecular forms, we established a new reverse-phase HPLC method, which we describe herein. This HPLC method, using a linear gradient system consisting of 0.2% heptafluorbutyric acid in 10 mM sodium acetate and acetonitrile, showed a stable recovery rate of about 85%. Applying the pure juice to this gradient system, we detect somatostatin-14 to be the major form of immunoreactive somatostatin (IRSS) in the pancreatic juice of the rat (5% of total IRSS). The remaining 35% were found to be somatostatin-28. The role of somatostatin in pancreatic juice is not known. It raises the hypothesis that it possibly interacts with the influences intraluminal intestinal growth factors. This study supports the assumption for the existence of an insuloacinar portal system to regulate exocrine pancreatic functions by islet hormones.
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PMID:Identification of somatostatin-14 and -28 in rat pancreatic juice by a new HPLC method. 134 9

We evaluated the transmembrane signaling mechanism that may underlie the facilitatory action of somatostatin (SOM) on baroreceptor reflex (BRR), using adult, male, Sprague-Dawley rats anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (40 mg/kg, i.p.). Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) application of SOM (2 nmol) promoted a significant elevation in BRR response, induced by phenylephrine (5 micrograms/kg, i.v.). This potentiatory action of the tetradecapeptide was significantly reversed after pretreating animals with bilateral microinjection of pertussis toxin (25 ng) or N-ethylmaleimide (2 nmol) into the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), the terminal site for baroreceptor afferents. These results suggest that a pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding regulatory protein, possibly Gi, may be involved in the modulation of the BRR by SOM at the NTS.
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PMID:Reversal by pertussis toxin and N-ethylmaleimide of the facilitation of baroreceptor reflex response by somatostatin in the rat. 135 Mar 36

Binding of somatostatin-14 to rat liver plasma membranes was characterized with 125-labeled[tyr11] somatostatin-14. Binding at 24 degrees C reached a plateau at 50 min and was reversible by synthetic somatostatin-14. Scatchard analysis revealed a single class of binding sites (affinity constant = 2.4 +/- 0.2 nmol/L, binding capacity = 148 +/- 0.02 fmol/mg protein). Specificity for somatostatin-14 was demonstrated by the inhibition of 125I-[tyr11]somatostatin-14 binding by biologically active somatostatin analogs but not by a biologically inactive somatostatin analog or unrelated peptides. The radioiodinated binding site complex could be cross-linked with disuccinimidyl suberate. Analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel autoradiography revealed a 70,000-Da band. Dithiothreitol, a reducing reagent, did not alter the mobility of the band, and the band could be abolished in the presence of 10 mumol/L synthetic somatostatin-14. Covalently cross-linked, iodinated binding protein complexes could be solubilized by the nonreducing detergents Zwittergent 3-12 and 3-([3-cholamidopropyl] diethylammonio)-1-propanesulfonic acid (CHAPS). Solubilized complex bound to wheat-germ agglutinin-agarose columns and was eluted by N,N',N"-triacetylchitotriose. Binding to wheat-germ agglutinin agarose columns was lost after pretreatment with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F. Binding studies with liver plasma membranes, 125I-labeled[tyrosine11]somatostatin-14 and guanine nucleotides showed inhibition of binding in the presence of guanine nucleotides. These results indicate that the purified rat liver plasma membranes contain a specific binding protein for somatostatin-14, the binding protein appears to be glycosylated and somatostatin-14 binding to rat liver plasma membranes may be regulated by G proteins.
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PMID:Identification and partial characterization of a somatostatin-14 binding protein on rat liver plasma membranes. 135 73

Somatostatin-28 (SRIF-28) preferring receptors were solubilized from hamster beta cell insulinoma using the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate. The binding of the iodinated [Leu8-D-TRP22-Tyr25]SRIF-28 analog (referred to as 125I[LWY] SRIF-28) to the solubilized fraction was time-dependent, saturable, and reversible. Scatchard analysis of equilibrium binding data indicated that the solubilized extract contained two classes of SRIF-28-binding sites: a high affinity site (Kd = 0.3 nM and Bmax = 1 pmol/mg protein) and a low affinity site (Kd = 13 nM and Bmax = 4.7 pmol/mg protein). The binding of 125I[LWY]SRIF-28 to solubilized SRIF-28 receptors was sensitive to the GTP analog guanosine-5'-O-thiotriphosphate, suggesting that receptors are functionally linked to a G-protein. By anion-exchange chromatography of the solubilized extract followed by chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin, a 46-fold purification of SRIF-28 receptors was obtained. At this stage of purification, only high affinity sites were found (Kd = 1 nM) and the GTP effect was not maintained. A specific protein of 37 kDa was identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after photoaffinity labeling. We suggest that this protein is the putative SRIF-28 receptor or a subunit thereof.
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PMID:Solubilization and partial purification of somatostatin-28 preferring receptors from hamster pancreatic beta cells. 135 98

Chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (PH), associated with increased pulmonary arterial pressure (PPA) and right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH), correlates significantly with calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and somatostatin (SOM) levels in lung and blood. CGRP's role in regulation of PPA in chronic hypoxia and its potential interactions with SOM were investigated. CGRP, its antibody (ab) and blocker, CGRP-(8-37), SOM-14, SOM-28, and SOM-ab, respectively, were infused into the pulmonary circulation of hypobaric hypoxia rats for 4, 8, and 16 days. Thereafter, under pentobarbital sodium anesthesia, PPA was measured in the right ventricle and main pulmonary artery. Chronic CGRP infusion prevented PH at all times, whereas immunoneutralization and receptor blocking exacerbated PH. SOM-28 also exacerbated while SOM-14 and SOM-ab decreased PH. RVH generally reflected the PPA. Radioimmunoassay confirmed successful infusion of the peptides with negligible peptide degradation in the pumps throughout 16 days and showed complete immunoneutralization of CGRP with its ab. Peptide levels in lung tissue suggest inhibition of CGRP release by SOM-28 and increased plasma SOM with CGRP infusion. In vitro pharmacological studies suggest that CGRP exerts a receptor-mediated nonadrenergic, nonmuscarinic vasodilatory effect in the lung which is independent of endothelium-derived relaxing factor and does not involve ATP-dependent potassium channels. We conclude that endogenous CGRP plays an important role in pulmonary pressure homeostasis during hypoxia, by directly dilating pulmonary vasculature, thus ameliorating the development of chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in rats.
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PMID:CGRP and somatostatin modulate chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension. 135 80

Somatostatin and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) are co-localized in some neurons in the CA1 area of the hippocampus. Since it is possible that the peptide and the amino acid are co-released, the interactions between the actions of somatostatin and GABA-ergic inhibitory post-synaptic potentials (IPSPs) in the CA1 pyramidal neurons of guinea pig hippocampal slices have been investigated. Somatostatin (2 microM) induced a hyperpolarization of the CA1 neurons associated with a reduction in the input resistance of the cells. These effects were not blocked by picrotoxinin (20 microM) or phaclofen (1 mM). Chelation of intracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+i) with BAPTA or the inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC) with sphingosine (30 microM) had no significant effects on the hyperpolarizing actions of somatostatin. The peptide suppressed the GABAA receptor-mediated fast IPSPs and the GABAB receptor-mediated slow IPSPs, but had no significant effect on the excitatory post-synaptic potentials (EPSPs). Somatostatin-induced depression of the IPSPs was not due to the hyperpolarization of the neurons. Baclofen (20 microM) suppressed the EPSP, as well as the fast and the slow IPSPs. The hyperpolarization of the CA1 neurons caused by somatostatin was greatly reduced in the presence of baclofen, an effect that was not due to the hyperpolarization of the cell by baclofen. The presence of QX-314 in the CA1 neurons, which suppressed the Na+ spikes and the slow IPSPs, prevented the hyperpolarization of the neurons by somatostatin and baclofen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Actions of somatostatin on GABA-ergic synaptic transmission in the CA1 area of the hippocampus. 135 22

To investigate the renal effects of somatostatin in cirrhosis, renal function and plasma and urinary levels of endogenous neurohumoral vasoactive substances were measured in conditions of intravenous water overload (20 mL/kg body wt with 5% glucose) before and during the intravenous infusion of somatostatin (250-500 micrograms/h) in 6 cirrhotic patients without ascites and 17 nonazotemic cirrhotic patients with ascites. Somatostatin induced a significant reduction of renal plasma flow, glomerular filtration rate, and free water clearance in both groups of patients. In patients with ascites, somatostatin also reduced urinary sodium excretion. Changes in renal function were significantly more marked in patients with ascites than in those without ascites and occurred in the absence of changes in mean arterial pressure and plasma levels of renin, aldosterone, norepinephrine, antidiuretic hormone, and atrial natriuretic peptide. Somatostatin induced a significant reduction in the plasma concentration of glucagon and urinary excretion of prostaglandin E2 that was not related to changes in renal function. These findings indicate that somatostatin administration induces renal vasoconstriction and impairs glomerular filtration rate, free water clearance, and sodium excretion in cirrhosis by a mechanism unrelated to systemic hemodynamics and endogenous neurohumoral vasoactive systems.
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PMID:Effects of somatostatin on renal function in cirrhosis. 809 52

Patients with medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) undergo medial temporal lobectomy with hippocampectomy for one of two reasons. (1) A lesion (tumor or arteriovenous malformation) adjacent to, but not invasive of, the hippocampus, results in the removal of the lesion and adjacent hippocampus in order to ensure a tumor-free margin. This group will be referred to as tumor-related TLE (TTLE) patients. (2) The operation is performed when depth electrode recordings and other evaluative techniques point to the hippocampus as the focus of seizure initiation. This group will be referred to as cryptogenic TLE (CTLE) patients. Analysis of the hippocampi of these two groups of patients reveals that the TTLE hippocampus is quite similar to that of autopsy subjects in its chemical neuroanatomy. However, the dentate gyrus of the CTLE patients shows considerable morphological and cytochemical reorganization. This reorganization is characterized by a number of features. (1) There is a loss of granule cells which occurs either as a patchy loss and/or a thinning of the granule cell layer. (2) Remaining granule cells which contain dynorphin appear to produce recurrent collaterals into the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. (3) In the subgranular region of the hilus (the polymorphic layer) there is a selective loss of interneurons immunoreactive for somatostatin, neuropeptide Y and substance P. (4) There appears to be an increase in fibers immunoreactive for somatostatin and neuropeptide Y which extend throughout the dentate molecular layer. Somatostatin fibers being less numerous than neuropeptide Y fibers (5). The distributions of a number of neurotransmitter receptors also show striking reorganization in the dentate gyrus of the CTLE hippocampus. (6) Second messenger systems protein kinase C and adenylate cyclase, and Na+, K(+)-ATPase activity, as determined by ouabain binding, is increased in the molecular layer of CTLE. This remodeling of the CTLE hippocampus may hold the key to the mechanisms of hyperexcitability of the granule cells in the hippocampus of this group, and consequently the generation of seizures. The removal of the hippocampus in CTLE patients results in good control of seizures, whereas removal of hippocampi that do not show such reorganization, in a group of patients classified as atypical CTLE patients, results in inadequate seizure control. These findings suggest a complex series of processes in converting the properly regulated granule cells into hyperexcitable ones.
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PMID:Neurotransmitters and their receptors in human temporal lobe epilepsy. 136 31

Using the polymerase chain reaction technique with degenerative primers, we obtained from a rat pituitary cDNA library a cDNA fragment, rAP236, that exhibited considerable homology to known receptors that belong to the guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein)-coupled receptor superfamily. Oligonucleotides to this fragment were used as probes to obtain a full-length cDNA from the rat pituitary cDNA library. This clone, rAP6-26, encoded a 383-amino acid protein with seven putative transmembrane domains that are characteristic of G protein-coupled receptors. The predicted amino acid sequence of the rAP6-26 cDNA exhibits 56-66% homology to recently cloned somatostatin (SRIF) receptors. Membranes prepared from COS-7 cells transfected with the rAP6-26 cDNA showed specific binding of 125I-Tyr11-SRIF, thus identifying the cDNA clone as a novel SRIF receptor. Radioligand binding competition analysis using somatostatin-28 (SRIF-28) and a number of cyclic SRIF analogs revealed that SRIF-28 was the most potent competitor of 125I-Tyr11-SRIF binding, with a approximately 30-fold greater affinity for the receptor than that of SRIF. In addition, binding of 125I-Tyr11-SRIF was markedly reduced in the presence of Na+ ions and GTP, indicating coupling of rAP6-26 receptors to inhibitory G proteins in COS-7 membranes. In adenylyl cyclase assays, forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation was inhibited by SRIF and SRIF-28, thus confirming that the rAP6-26 cDNA encodes a functional receptor protein. By Northern blot analysis, a approximately 2.6 kilobase mRNA encoding the receptor was present in the pituitary but not in the liver, small intestine, kidney, pancreas, cerebellum, or cortex. Lack of receptor mRNA expression in the brain was confirmed by in situ hybridization histochemical studies. Thus, we report the cloning of a novel rat pituitary SRIF receptor, termed SSTR4, that has marked preferential affinity for SRIF-28 and is linked to inhibition of adenylyl cyclase.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of a pituitary somatostatin receptor with preferential affinity for somatostatin-28. 826 65

We have detected two inwardly rectifying potassium conductances in AtT-20 clonal corticotrophs, a cell line derived from the mouse pituitary gland. An agonist-independent potassium conductance was activated by voltage steps negative to the reversal potential for potassium (VK) and was completely blocked by 1 mM barium in the bathing solution. The conductance was transient and inactivated completely with a time constant of about 80 ms. Reducing the external sodium concentration from 140 mM to 14 mM attenuated inactivation. In the presence of 100 nM somatostatin an inwardly rectifying conductance, which reversed at potentials close to VK, was also elicited. This conductance exhibited a maximal slope conductance that increased with increasing extracellular potassium. Rectification depends on both voltage and extracellular potassium concentration (Vm-VK). The inward current induced by somatostatin during voltage steps negative to VK was completely blocked by 1 mM extracellular barium, whereas the outward somatostatin-induced current activated at the holding current, which was about 30 mV positive to VK, was unaffected by 1 mM extracellular barium. The muscarinic agonist carbachol (10 microM) also induces an inwardly rectifying conductance of similar magnitude to that induced by somatostatin. Since the agonist-independent potassium current exhibits sodium-dependent inactivation, whereas the hormone-induced current does not inactivate, these currents are probably carried by different populations of potassium channels.
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PMID:Inwardly rectifying potassium conductances in AtT-20 clonal pituitary cells. 136 9


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