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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Peptides can be adsorbed on octadecasilyl-silica from large volumes of aqueous solution and eluted with aqueous solvent mixtures containing methanol or
acetonitrile
. These properties may be used for the extraction and purification of peptide fragments in plasma samples collected from rats. After intravenous injection of Synacthen [corticotropin-(1-24)-tetracosapeptide], it was shown that within 2 min the main circulating products were intact peptide and its sulphoxide. In addition, a number of fragments indicative of cleavage at the N- and C-termini were present. Most of the products formed from Synacthen have low biological activity.
Somatostatin
was rapidly cleaved in vivo and in vitro to a single product, which probably retains biological activity. The absence of other circulating products suggests that
somatostatin
is only inactivated once it leaves the circulation.
...
PMID:Use of octadecasilyl-silica for the extraction and purification of peptides in biological samples. Application to the identification of circulating metabolites of corticotropin-(1-24)-tetracosapeptide and somatostatin in vivo. 20 57
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.
...
PMID:Identification of somatostatin-14 and -28 in rat pancreatic juice by a new HPLC method. 134 9
The effect of lowering PRL levels in blood during early infancy on subsequent growth and development was studied in mice. PRL was reduced by injecting either an antiserum raised against homologous PRL or a PRL-inhibiting drug, 2-chloro-6-methylergoline-8 beta-
acetonitrile
methanesulfonate (ergoline), into 4-day-old mice for a period of 4 or 5 days. Both the anti-PRL serum and ergoline rapidly killed some of the injected animals, but the effect of anti-PRL serum was much more severe than that of ergoline (39% vs. 8.7% mortality during the period of injection). Similar administration of an antiserum against mouse GH or the GH-inhibiting peptide
somatostatin
did not cause a significant number of deaths. The deaths from the anti-PRL serum largely ceased when the antiserum was neutralized with rat PRL (NIH-RP-1) before injection. The gain in body weight of baby mice was markedly retarded within 24 h of injecting anti-PRL serum and ergoline, in contrast to the anti-GH serum and
somatostatin
injections, which took 3--4 days to inhibit growth perceptibly. The anti-PRL serum, despite having only one eighth the titer of anti-GH serum, was by far the most effective of the two antisera in diminishing tibial epiphyseal cartilage width as well as weights of pituitary glands, testes, and adrenals and retarding sexual maturity. The more severe and generalized developmental abnormalities and the incidence of mortality as a result of anti-PRL serum administration suggest that PRL in mice may be involved in the maintenance of some vital function during infancy.
...
PMID:Effect on growth of prolactin deficiency induced in infant mice. 612 59
Human plasma contains substances that interfere with the radioimmunoassay (RIA) of
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity (SLI). A method has been developed for rapid, reproducible extraction of
somatostatin
from human plasma on octadecylsilylsilica (ODS). Hydrophobic binding of
somatostatin
to ODS permitted extraction of the peptide from untreated human plasma, elution of less tightly bound substances with dilute acid, and then elution of
somatostatin
by 80:20
acetonitrile
:0.1% trifluoroacetic acid. The lyophilized extract was reconstituted to a volume of 0.5 ml prior to quantification by RIA. This 6-fold concentration resulted in an effective lower limit of detection of 7.5 pg/ml of plasma. The interassay coefficient of variation for the combined extraction and RIA was 20% (n = 10) at a mean plasma level of 15 pg/ml. Basal concentrations of
somatostatin
in human plasma ranged from 8 to 20 pg/ml (n = 35, mean - 13.3 +/- 0.4). Basal
somatostatin
levels (mean = 14.0 +/- 0.4 pg/ml) for nonobese (BMI less than 30, n = 10) were not different from values (mean = 13.3 +/- 0.7 pg/ml) observed for the obese group (BMI greater than 35, n = 17) nor from the values (n = 8, x = 15.4 +/- 1.2 pg/ml) obtained for subjects with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Extraction of somatostatin from human plasma on octadecylsilyl silica. 612 26
Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is examined as a method for separating pancreatic peptides. The method was based on gradient elution with
acetonitrile
in an acid phosphate buffer (pH 3.10). Apart from human and porcine insulin all the other peptide standards tested (thyrotropin-releasing factor, vaso-active intestinal polypeptide, human C-peptide, porcine C-peptide,
somatostatin
, porcine glucagon, porcine proinsulin and porcine pancreatic polypeptide) could be separated simultaneously in 40 minutes with a binary gradient composed of five linear segments and increasing from 0 to 60%
acetonitrile
. Human and porcine insulin could be almost completely resolved by a minimal reduction in the steepness of the
acetonitrile
gradient. Repeated injections of human C-peptide and porcine insulin resulted in a coefficient of variation of less than 1.5% in the retention times. The use of 125I-labelled peptides gave recoveries exceeding 90%. HPLC of acid ethanol extracts of autopsy pancreases from three infants showed that the immunoreactivity of the peptides measured remained unaffected by the chromatography. Both immunoreactive C-peptide and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) were recovered in two peaks, the second common peak representing proinsulin and amounting to 6.5 to 8.4% of total IRI. Immunoreactive glucagon was eluted in a single peak. Chromatography of plasma extracts from two infants of diabetic mothers demonstrated that proinsulin accounted for 59-63% of total IRI, while insulin was separated into two peaks corresponding to the standards of human insulin and porcine insulin. These results indicate that reversed -phase HPLC is a method with a good reproducibility and a high recovery applicable to the rapid and effective separation of pancreatic peptides from biological extracts.
...
PMID:Analysis of pancreatic peptide hormones by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. 614 91
Growth hormone (GH)-releasing activity has been detected in extracts of carcinoid and pancreatic islet tumors from three patients with GH-secreting pituitary tumors and acromegaly. Bioactivity was demonstrated in 2 N acetic acid extracts of the tumors using dispersed rat adenohypophyseal cells in primary monolayer culture and a rat anterior pituitary perifusion system. The GH-releasing effect was dose responsive and the greatest activity was present in the pancreatic islet tumor. Small amounts of activity were also found in two other tumors (carcinoid and small cell carcinoma of lung) unassociated with GH hypersecretion. Each of the tumors contained
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity but the levels did not correlate with the net biologic expression of the tumor. Sephadex G-75 gel filtration indicated the GH-releasing activity to have an apparent molecular size of slightly greater than 6,000 daltons. The GH-releasing activity was adsorbed onto DEAE-cellulose at neutral pH and low ionic strength, from which it could be eluted by increasing ionic strength. The GH-releasing activity was further purified by high pressure liquid chromatography using an
acetonitrile
gradient on a cyanopropyl column to yield a preparation that was active at 40 ng protein/ml. Partially purified GH-releasing activity, from which most of the bioactive
somatostatin
had been removed, increased GH release by pituitary monolayer cultures to five times base line. Enzymatic hydrolysis studies revealed that the GH-releasing activity was resistant to carboxypeptidase, leucine-aminopeptidase, and pyroglutamate-amino-peptidase but was destroyed by trypsin and chymotrypsin, indicating that internal lysine and/or arginine and aromatic amino acid residues are required for biologic activity and that the NH2-terminus and CO9H-terminus are either blocked or not essential. The results provide an explanation for the presence of GH-secreting tumors in some patients with the multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome, type I, and warrant the addition of GH-releasing activity to the growing list of hormones secreted by tumors of amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation cell types.
...
PMID:Partial purification and characterization of a peptide with growth hormone-releasing activity from extrapituitary tumors in patients with acromegaly. 624 40
Analysis of peptides by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography would be simplified if retention times could be predicted by summing the contribution to retention of each of the peptide's amino acid side chains. This paper describes the derivation of values ("retention coefficients") that represent the contribution to retention of each of the common amino acids and end groups. Peptide retention times were determined on a Bio-Rad "ODS" column at room temperature with a linear gradient from 0.1 M NaclO(4), pH 7.4 or 2.1, at 0 min to 60%
acetonitrile
/0.1 M NaclO(4) at 80 min. The NaclO(4), a chaotropic agent, was added to improve peak shape and to minimize conformational effects. Retention coefficients for the amino acids were computed by using a Hewlett-Packard 9815A calculator programmed to change the retention coefficients for all amino acids sequentially to obtain a maximum correlation between actual and predicted retention times. Correlations of 0.999 at pH 7.4 and 0.997 at pH 2.1 were obtained for 25 peptides including glucagon, oxytocin, [Met]enkephalin, neurotensin, and
somatostatin
. This high degree of correlation suggests that, for peptides containing up to 20 residues, retention is primarily due to partition processes that involve all the residues. Although steric or conformational factors do have some effect on retention, the data suggest that under the above chromatographic conditions the retention of peptides containing up to 20 residues can be predicted solely on the basis of their amino acid composition. This possibility was tested by using data taken from the literature.
...
PMID:Prediction of peptide retention times in high-pressure liquid chromatography on the basis of amino acid composition. 692 13
HPLC and CE methods were developed for analysis of
somatostatin
analogue (S-analogue) peptides utilizing triethylammonium phosphate-organic solvent modifier solvents as the CE buffer and HPLC eluent. Acetonitrile, methanol, ethanol and 2-propanol were applied as organic modifiers. The applicability of HPLC and CE systems was evaluated and compared. Optimum conditions for the separation were determined for both methods. Retention (migration) time, elution order and selectivity can be influenced by modifying the composition of the eluent (buffer) with organic solvents not only in HPLC but also in CE. Although the HPLC system reacted to changes in the organic solvent concentration in a much more sensitive way than the CE system did (from the point of view of retention time), CE proved to be a more suitable method for separating the peptides investigated. Baseline separation could be achieved within 6-9 min by CE, a result which was impossible to achieve with HPLC working in the isocratic mode. In CE the effect of the alcohols on migration times proved to be opposite to that of
acetonitrile
. Whereas ACN decreased, the alcohols increased the migration times in a concentration-dependent way. The results suggest that CE can be applied very advantageously in peptide analysis. Its performance regarding selectivity, resolution, theoretical plate number, duration and cost is comparable or sometimes superior to that of HPLC.
...
PMID:Comparison of high-performance liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis in the analysis of somatostatin analogue peptides. 790 60
A rapid high-performance liquid chromatography method for the analysis of
somatostatin
in pharmaceutical preparations is described. A commercially available column packed with 2 microns spherical non-porous silica-based reversed-phase sorbent is used, along with a mobile phase consisting of
acetonitrile
and aqueous phosphoric acid, adjusted to pH 2.8 with sodium hydroxide. The effect of the organic modifier content and column temperature on the retention behaviour of
somatostatin
is reported. The method is found to be highly selective and specific, as indicated by the baseline separation of a mixture containing
somatostatin
and two analogue peptides, which differ from the analyte for one and two amino acids, respectively. Down to 10 ng of
somatostatin
can be detected and the detector response is linear over the concentration range from 4.14 to 20.75 micrograms ml-1. The application of this method to two commercial pharmaceutical formulations of
somatostatin
is found to give a mean percentage recovery from each of the two commercial samples, subjected to multiple injection analysis (n = 5), of 100.9% with a RSD of 0.92%, and 102.6% with a RSD of 1.56%, respectively.
...
PMID:Rapid analysis of somatostatin in pharmaceutical preparations by HPLC with a micropellicular reversed-phase column. 791 84
An HPLC assay using on-line cation exchange trace enrichment and
acetonitrile
gradient elution, ion pair reverse phase separation with electrochemical detection (EC) is described for the simultaneous determination of the tridecapeptide neurotensin (NT) and six of its fragments. Cyclic voltammetric analysis indicated that the oxidative electrochemical properties of NT and its fragments is not merely a function of the sum of its electroactive amino acids (i.e. tyrosine) but reflects the presence and association of other amino acids (e.g. the arginine-arginine pair at position 8-9). Using the described method, NT1-6, NT1-8, NT1-10, NT1-11, NT8-13, NT9-13 and NT1-13 were baseline resolved within 20 min with a limit of detection varying from 1 to 5 ng peptide/injection. Other structurally similar or quantitatively significant neuropeptides (e.g. substance P,
somatostatin
, bombesin) did not interfere. Initial application of this on-line trace enrichment HPLC-EC assay to the question of the molecular nature of NT in unprocessed human CSF indicated the predominance of NT1-13 with an apparent formation of NT1-8 and NT9-13 resulting from more vigorous sample preparation techniques. The improvements in assay specificity, signal-to-noise ratios, biomatrix compatibility and assayable sample volume compared to non-enrichment HPLC-EC are discussed.
...
PMID:The simultaneous determination of neurotensin and its major fragments by on-line trace enrichment HPLC with electrochemical detection. 879 2
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