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)

The effects of various neurogenic peptides and neurotransmitter substances on the release of ACTH induced by hypothalamic corticotropin releasing factor (HY-CRF) were investigated using monolayer cultured anterior pituitary cells. Test substances were given in combination with 0.05-0.1 hypothalamic extract (HE)/ml, because HE evoked a significant ACTH release and a linear dose response relationship was demonstrated sequentially between 0.0165 HE/ml and 0.5 HE/ml. Relative high doses of lysine-vasopressin showed a slight additive effect on the release of ACTH induced by 0.1 HE/ml. Leu-enkephalin, dopamine, prostaglandin E1 and E2 slightly reduced the release of ACTH induced by HY-CRF, but the inhibitory effect of these substances were not dose-related. Other tested substances including luteinizing hormone releasing hormone, thyrotropin releasing hormone, somatostatin, melanocyte stimulating hormone release inhibiting factor, beta-endorphin, neurotensin, substance P, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, angiotensin II, norepinephrine, serotonin, acetylcholine, histamine and gamma-amino butyric acid showed neither agonistic nor antagonistic effect on the release of ACTH induced by HY-CRF. These results indicate that the release of ACTH is controlled specifically by HY-CRF and corticosterone, and modified slightly by some other substances such as vasopressin and prostaglandins, and that the effect of most other neurogenic peptides and neurotransmitter substances is negligible or non-physiological at the pituitary level.
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PMID:ACTH release in pituitary cell cultures. Effect of neurogenic peptides and neurotransmitter substances on ACTH release induced by hypothalamic corticotropin releasing factor (CRF). 3 43

Studies of TSH release and production were performed in short term monolayer cultures of transplantable, thyroid hormone responsive, thyrotropin (TSH) producing mouse pituitary tumors. These tumors contained large amounts of TSH, small amounts of growth hormone (GH) and no detectable luteinizing hormone (LH), indicating that the predominant hormone product of tumor cells was TSH. The TSH content per tumor cell was similar to that of the normal pituitary where thyrotrophs represent a small fraction of the total cells, suggesting that the TSH content per tumor cell was less than that of the normal thyrotroph. There was a time dependent release and production of TSH by tumor cells in monolayer culture. Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) increased the release into the media and the production of TSH in a dose dependent manner. Maximum effects were noted at 0.2 ng/ml. Thyroid hormones and somatostatin inhibited both basal and TRH induced effects on both TSH release and production. TSH release as induced by TRH was calcium dependent. TSH release was stimulated by ouabain (10(-3)M) and potassium (57 mM), agents known to promote cellular calcium uptake in a calcium dependent manner. These studies indicate that tumor derived cells function in monolayer culture in a similar fashion to normal thyrotrophs. Studies were conducted to test the hypothesis that TRH action is mediated by adenosine 3',5' monophosphate (cAMP). Dibutyryl cAMP (6 mM) and theophylline (10 mM) increased TSH release suggesting that cAMP is involved in TSH release. However, TRH had no detectable effect on tumor cell adenylate cyclase activity or levels of cAMP. In contrast, PGE1 (1-10 mug/ml) stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and elevated cellular levels of cAMP without increasing TSH release. Thus, we are unable to confirm the postulate that cAMP is the intracellular mediator of TRH action.
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PMID:Regulation of thyrotropin (TSH) release and production in monolayer cultures of transplantable TSH-producing mouse tumors. 17 85

Somatostatin inhibits basal and chlorpromazine stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in homogenates of GH1 rat pituitary tumor cells. The Dtryp8-Dcys14 analogue is more potent than tyrosyl somatostatin as an inhibitor of both basal and chlorpromazine-stimulated adenylyl cyclase. Somatostatin had no effect on sodium fluoride or quanylyl-imidodiphosphate-stimulated cyclase in GH1 cell homogenates or on basal, epinephrine or prostaglandin E1 stimulated cyclase activity in sonicated BHK fibroblasts. These results indicate a specific effect of somatostatin to inhibit pituitary adenylyl cyclase activity.
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PMID:Inhibition of GH1 rat pituitary tumor cell adenylyl cyclase activity by somatostatin. 74 97

Specificity of the effect of prostaglandins (PGs) on hormone release by the anterior pituitary gland was studied using cells in primary culture. Growth hormone (GH) release is stimulated by all eight PGs studied, PGE1 and E2 being 1000-fold more potent than the corresponding PGFs. The release of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and prolactin (PRL) remains unchanged upon addition of PGEs. While the basal release of thyrotropin (TSH) is only slightly stimulated by concentrations of PGEs above 10(-6)M, an important potentiation of the stimulatory effect of thyrotropin-releasing hormone on TSH release is observed. The release of GH, TSH and LH is stimulated equally well by PGAs and PGBs at concentrations higher than 10(-6)M, 3 X 10(-6)M, and 10(-5)M, respectively. PGFs do not affect the release of any of the measured pituitary hormones at concentrations below 10(-4)M. The stimulation of GH release by PGE2 can be inhibited by the PG antagonist 7-oxa-13-prostynoic acid, a half-maximal inhibition being found at a concentration of 4 X 10(-5)M of the antagonist in the presence of 10(-6)M PGE2. In the presence of somatostatin 10(-8)M, the inhibition of GH release cannot be reversed by PGE2 at concentrations up to 10(-4)M. 8-bromo-cyclic AMP-induced GH release is additive with that produced by PGE2. The present data show that 1) of the five pituitary hormones measured, only GH release is stimulated by prostaglandins at relatively low concentrations, 2) the PGE-induced GH release can be competitively inhibited by 7-oxa-13-prostynoic acid, 3) the inhibition of GH release by somatostatin cannot be reversed by PGE2 and 4) the PGEs increase the responsiveness of the thyrotrophs to TRH.
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PMID:Specificity of the stimulatory effect of prostaglandins on hormone release in rat anterior pituitary cells in culture. 81 70

The prolactin (PRL)-releasing activity of porcine stalk median eminence (pSME) was characterized by an in vivo bioassay and concomitant radioi-munoassay of plasma PRL and thyrotropin (TSH) levels. Methanol extracts of pSME stimulated PRL release in 3-day estrogen-primed rats when administered by the intracarotid route in doses ranging from 0.1 to 2.0 pSME equivalents. Synthetic thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulated the release of PRL and TSH in the dose range of 10 to 300 ng. PRL release was greater in response to a maximally effective dose of pSME than the release elicited by a maximal dose of TRH, and pSME administered together with a greater than mazimally effective dose of TRH caused additional PRL but not TSH secretion. Lysine vasopressin and prostaglandin E1 and E2 stimulated PRL release only at doses several orders of magnitude greater than the dose present in pSME. Somatostatin inhibited the release of TSH but not that of PRL whether the stimulus employed was pSME or TRH. The effective inhibitory dose of somatostatin was also significantly greater than the reported hypothalamic content. When pSME was subjected to incubation with plasma, a treatment reported to inactivate TRH, TSH-releasing activity was destroyed to a greater extent than was PRL-releasing activity. When pSME was adsorbed onto charcoal, the supernatant solution was devoid of TRH, as determined by complete removal of a [3H]TRH marker, yet substantial PRL-releasing activity was retained. TSH-releasing activity eluted from the charcoal with methanol was considerably greater than that expected on the basis of the recovery of [3H]TRH, suggesting the presence in the crude extract of a TSH-release inhibitor or of a TSH-releasing factor other than TRH. Based on the above evidence, we conclude that crude pSME contains PRL-releasing substance(s) distinct from the tripeptide TRH.
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PMID:Dissociation of prolactin-releasing activity from thyrotropin-releasing hormone in porcine stalk median eminence. 81 52

NG108-15 neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cells and S49 lymphoma cells exhibit an enhancement in adenylyl cyclase activity after chronic treatment with receptor agonists that acutely inhibit the enzyme. Using agonists that activate five distinct inhibitory receptors in NG108-15 cells, we have found that there is a correlation between the extent of acute inhibition of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)-stimulated cAMP accumulation and efficacy for induction of enhanced PGE1 stimulation of cAMP accumulation after chronic treatment and withdrawal. Chronic treatment with dideoxyadenosine, which acutely inhibits adenylyl cyclase activity by a mechanism independent or cell surface receptors or pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins, did not induce enhanced PGE1 stimulation of cAMP accumulation in NG108-15 cells or forskolin stimulation of cAMP accumulation in S49 cells. While control basal cAMP concentrations were acutely decreased by carbachol in NG108-15 cells and by somatostatin in S49 cells, when the cAMP concentrations were maintained above the control basal values with a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, chronic treatment with these inhibitory drugs nonetheless resulted in enhanced cAMP responses in both NG108-15 and S49 cells. These results provide evidence that the initial decrement in cAMP concentrations caused by inhibitory drug is not the requisite signal for inducing the subsequent sensitization of adenylyl cyclase in NG108-15 and S49 cells but that activation of a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein is involved in the development of this important adaptation.
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PMID:Adaptive increase in adenylyl cyclase activity in NG108-15 and S49 cells induced by chronic treatment with inhibitory drugs is not due to a decrease in cyclic AMP concentrations. 132 99

The dual (stimulatory and inhibitory) regulation of adenylyl cyclase was studied in syncytiotrophoblast basal membranes prepared from term human placenta. Stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity with GTP, non-hydrolyzable GTP analogs, isoproterenol and PGE1 was observed, confirming the presence of an intact stimulatory pathway in these membranes. Investigations of the inhibitory pathway revealed tight coupling of the G-protein, Gi alpha, to catalytic adenylyl cyclase, with high doses of GTP producing 80 per cent inhibition of GTP/forskolin-stimulated activity. Confirming Gi alpha involvement, pertussis toxin (PTX) treatment of basal membranes augmented the responses of adenylyl cyclase to both GTP and forskolin. In addition, immunoblotting of basal membrane proteins revealed the presence of the G-protein subunits, Gs alpha, Gi alpha, and G beta/gamma. The response of adenylyl cyclase was measured to a series of agonists known to inhibit adenylyl cyclase in other tissues, however a reproducible inhibitory effect was produced only by somatostatin (approximately 80 per cent). Treatment of basal membranes with PTX caused a degree of reversal of the somatostatin-mediated adenylyl cyclase inhibition. However, the intoxication was insufficient to restore GTP/forskolin-stimulated activity.
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PMID:Dual regulation of human syncytial adenylyl cyclase. 135 75

In membranes of neuroblastoma x glioma (NG108-15) hybrid cells, the photoreactive GTP analog, [alpha-32P] GTP azidoanilide, was incorporated into 39-41-kDa proteins comigrating in urea-containing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels with immunologically identified G-protein alpha-subunits, i.e. a 39-kDa Go alpha-subunit, a 40-kDa Gi2 alpha-subunit, and a 41-kDa Gi alpha-subunit of an unknown subtype. The synthetic opioid, D-Ala2,D-Leu5-enkephalin (DADLE), stimulated photolabeling of the 39-41-kDa proteins. In the presence of GDP, which increased the ratio of agonist-stimulated to basal photolabeling, DADLE at a maximally effective concentration stimulated photolabeling of the 39- and the 40-kDa protein 2-3-fold. Somatostatin, adrenaline, and bradykinin were less potent than DADLE and, to varying degrees, stimulated photolabeling of the 40-kDa protein more than that of the 39-kDa protein. Prostaglandin E1 was inactive. The present data represent direct evidence for an activation of endogenous Go and Gi2 via opioid receptors and other receptors in the native membrane milieu.
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PMID:Evidence for opioid receptor-mediated activation of the G-proteins, Go and Gi2, in membranes of neuroblastoma x glioma (NG108-15) hybrid cells. 167 72

The increase in hormone-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation observed in a variety of intact cells after chronic pretreatment with drugs that inhibit adenylate cyclase activity has been attributed to an increase in adenylate cyclase activity following withdrawal of the inhibitory drug. In NG 108-15 mouse neuroblastoma X rat glioma hybrid cells (NG cells) chronically treated with the muscarinic cholinergic agonist carbachol, we have found a significant decrease in the apparent degradation rate constant for cyclic AMP, in addition to an increase in the prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)-stimulated cyclic AMP synthesis rate in intact cells. In carbachol-pretreated NG cells that were stimulated with a maximally effective dose of PGE1, and that accumulated steady-state cyclic AMP concentrations fourfold or more higher than in control cells, the apparent rate constant for degradation was about 53% lower than the value for control cells. In carbachol-pretreated cells stimulated with a submaximal dose of PGE1 to yield a steady-state cyclic AMP concentration comparable to control cells, the apparent rate constant was 31% lower than the value for control cells. In S49 mouse lymphoma cells (S49 cells) chronically treated with an analog of the inhibitory agonist somatostatin, the first-order rate constant for cyclic AMP degradation in intact cells following isoproterenol stimulation was 29% lower than the value for control cells. Despite these changes in the kinetics of cyclic AMP degradation in intact NG cells and S49 cells, there was either no change or a minimal change (less than 10%) in phosphodiesterase activities assayed in extracts of cells chronically exposed to inhibitory drugs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Decreased cyclic AMP degradation in NG 108-15 neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid cells and S49 lymphoma cells chronically treated with drugs that inhibit adenylate cyclase. 168 17

Histamine is found in large amounts in the gastric mucosa and plays an essential role in the regulation of acid secretion. It is thought to stimulate acid secretion directly after being released by the other two major secretagogues (gastrin and acetylcholine) (the mediator hypothesis) or to potentiate the action of the other two secretagogues (the interaction hypothesis). Recent studies with isolated, vascularly perfused rat stomach have shown that gastrin in physiologic concentrations elicits a release of histamine sufficient to explain its acid-stimulatory effect. Vagal nerve stimulation, on the other hand, only gives a faint histamine release, indicating that the vagal acid stimulation is mainly mediated by a direct stimulation of the parietal cell. Furthermore, the gastrin-stimulated histamine release seems to be mediated by a calcium-dependent mechanism. Somatostatin inhibits gastrin-stimulated histamine release via a paracrine mechanism, and a prostaglandin E1 analogue (misoprostol) has been shown to be a potent inhibitor of base-line and gastrin-stimulated histamine release. These studies show that the modulation of histamine release may be a central regulatory mechanism of gastric acid secretion. Although these studies have been done in rats, there are indications that these results are of a general nature nd valid for other species as well.
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PMID:Aspects of the regulation of gastric histamine release. 171 Mar 69


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