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)

A new peptidergic paraventriculo-infundibular system has been revealed using anti-corticoliberin (CRF) antibodies. The localization of its perikarya in the paraventricular nuclei as well as the distribution of its fibres and perivascular nerve-endings within the median eminence are different from those of other systems stained with antibodies directed against gonadoliberin, somatostatin, vasopressin or oxytocin.
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PMID:[Corticoliberin neurons in the rat brain]. 621 70

Bovine adrenal medulla extract prepared by acid-acetone or acid methanol extraction showed two peaks of CRF-like immunoreactivity on Sephadex G-50 chromatography. One eluted near the void volume and another (low molecular weight CRF-like immunoreactivity) eluted slightly before arginine vasopressin (AVP), while most of the immunoreactivity in bovine hypothalamus coeluted with synthetic ovine CRF. When low molecular weight CRF fractions were chromatographed by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography, three CRF-like immunoreactive peaks appeared. The first peak appeared near TRH, the second one eluted near AVP and the last one eluted near somatostatin. These three peaks of immunoreactivity showed ACTH releasing bioactivity in rat pituitary cells cultures. Therefore, the adrenal medulla-CRF-like substances might be tissue-CRF which may play a role to stimulate ACTH release in the severe stress conditions.
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PMID:Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-like immunoreactivity in the adrenal medulla. 633 76

Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH) was immunoassayed in several hypothalamic structures of male rats after complete, anterior, posterior or lateral deafferentation of that structure performed with a rotating knife, as well as after discrete frontal or sagittal transections placed with a glass knife in various parts of the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH). Survival time in all cases was two weeks. Taken together, the results indicate that most fibers containing LH-RH and originating in the preoptic area of the hypo-thalamus (APO) take a lateral course upon leaving that structure and travel along the medial forebrain bundle (MFB). Along that tract, they proceed caudally over some distance and enter the median eminence from the side; fibers innervating the posterior median eminence bend back towards the midline at a more posterior level than those terminating in the zona externa. A limited amount of fibers also reaches the median eminence from a midsagittal location. In addition, a few medial arcuate-median eminence connections may account for the small proportion of MBH LH-RH spared by complete, anterolateral or lateral transections. Projections to the organum vasculosum laminae terminalis, whether proceeding from the APO in an independent manner or as collaterals of fibers terminating in the median eminence, are unaffected by any of the transections tested. A partly common organization pattern of fibers supplying the median eminence in several neuropeptides (for instance somatostatin, CRF, cholecystokinin or dynorphin) is suggested.
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PMID:Mapping of LH-RH-containing projections to the mediobasal hypothalamus by differential deafferentation experiments. 637 45

Neurons producing growth hormone-releasing factor have been characterized and analyzed by immunohistochemistry in the hypothalami of human fetuses, neonates, infants and adults, using two antibodies against human pancreatic GRF (hpGRF). One of the antibodies recognized both the hpGRF(1-40)OH and hpGRF(1-44)NH2 in the mid portion (between the 28th and 39th amino acid), the other one specifically recognized the C-terminal end of hpGRF(1-44)NH2. These two antibodies stain a single neuronal system with cell bodies mainly located in the infundibular (arcuate) nucleus, and in the ventromedial and lateralis tuber nuclei. These neurons project to the median eminence where they give numerous endings in contact with portal vessels. These neurons are distinct from those containing LH-RH, somatostatin, CRF or pro-opiocortin. In fetuses, neurons immunoreactive with hpGRF antibodies are first detected at the 29th week. They display a neuroblastic aspect which persists after birth. Immunoreactive fibers are detectable in the median eminence after the 31st week. These results demonstrate that the infundibular nucleus plays a major role in control of GH secretion in man and that secretion of GRF appears late during fetal life; this suggests that the first stages of differentiation and development of GH producing cells in the human fetus do not depend on hypothalamic GRF secretion.
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PMID:Topographical and ontogenetic study of the neurons producing growth hormone-releasing factor in human hypothalamus. 642 93

By radioimmunoassay and immunocytochemical techniques, 14 neuropeptides have been measured and localized in the rat median eminence. Neuropeptides with inhibitory or stimulatory effects on the anterior pituitary hormones as well as posterior pituitary hormones are present in the median eminence in the highest concentrations of the central nervous system. All these peptides (LH-RH, TRH, somatostatin, CRF, vasopressin, oxytocin) are of preoptic or hypothalamic origin and they are transported to the median eminence by loop-like fiber systems through the lateral retrochiasmatic area. Within the median eminence, the pericapillary space constitutes the main common pathway. Three major transport routes--axons, vessels, liquor spaces--are separated from each others by only basement membranes, which allow free communications downwards to the pituitary but also backwards to the central nervous system.
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PMID:Neuropeptides in the median eminence: their sources and destinations. 681 29

This study extends the neuroendocrine role of central interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) during the stress of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge to include inhibition of the somatotropic [GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-somatostatin (SRIF)-GH] axis in juvenile male rats and clarifies the role of CRF in the mediation of LPS/IL-1-induced changes in GHRH and SRIF neurosecretion. The results of the in vivo component of this study demonstrated that LPS treatment (2.5 mg/kg twice daily for 5 days) caused a significant attenuation of body weight gain for 2 days (2.4 +/- 1.7% vs. 10.3 +/- 1.8% BW/day in saline controls; P < 0.05) and failure of catch-up growth thereafter even though a small transient suppression of food intake returned to normal by the second of 4 days of treatment. Associated with the first day of growth attenuation was an acute suppression of all plasma GH parameters, including GH mass (area under the curve, 1.972 +/- 0.1837 vs. 6.402 +/- 1.7 micrograms/ml.6 h for saline controls; P < 0.05), in animals receiving an acute bolus of LPS, which was blocked by prior microinjection of IL receptor antagonist protein (IRAP) into the third ventricle. In contrast, GH parameters associated with the second day of LPS-suppressed body weight gain were increased (GH mass, 9.4 +/- 2.2 vs. 3.5 +/- 0.5 micrograms/ml.4 h in saline controls; P < 0.05). These increases were reversed after another 2 days of LPS treatment. In a series of in vitro experiments using medial basal hypothalamic (MBH) explants incubated with LPS [100 ng/ml alone or with 10(-7) M IRAP or 10(-6) M CRF antagonist (CRF-ANT)], GHRH release from MBH incubated with LPS was significantly greater than that in controls (231 +/- 79% vs. 71 +/- 34% of baseline release; P < 0.05), and this stimulation was antagonized by both IRAP and CRF-ANT. SRIF release was significantly increased by incubation with LPS (163 +/- 28% vs. 97 +/- 20% of the baseline for controls; P < 0.05) and blocked (to 88 +/- 14% of the baseline) by IRAP, but not by CRF-ANT. Finally, when MBH explants were incubated with IL-1 beta (10(-9) M), there was a significant inhibition of in vitro GHRH release (37.9 +/- 6.7% vs. 74.9 +/- 16.6% for controls), which was reversed by IRAP and CRF-ANT, and a significant stimulation of SRIF release (168.7 +/- 37.5% vs. 98.0 +/- 11.6% for controls), which was reversed by IRAP, but not CRF-ANT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Endotoxin-induced suppression of the somatotropic axis is mediated by interleukin-1 beta and corticotropin-releasing factor in the juvenile rat. 762 73

An apparent seasonal or circannual rhythm in the hypothalamic content of CRF, TRH, neurotensin, and neuromedin N has been observed in 12 separate monthly coherts (n = 10@ or 130 total) adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats obtained at the same time each month from a single commercial supplier and held under constant (12:12) photoperiod conditions since birth. Both annual and 4-month (terannual) harmonics can be statistically discerned in these apparent rhythms, which exhibit cycles containing concentration changes up to 3-fold the lowest levels across the year (CRF increases 390%, TRH increases 173%, neurotensin increases 136%, and neuromedin N increases 150%). Hypothalamic somatostatin did not exhibit these statistically significant robust rhythms nor did any peptide in regions outside the hypothalamus. These data indicate that a mechanism allowing enhanced or diminished physiological availability of these regulatory neuropeptides at different times of the year may exist and may display distinct cycles even in the absence of normal photoperiod cues. Possible regulatory responses of pituitary receptor populations for these hypothalamic peptides must be considered. As certain of these neuropeptides also appear to be altered in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with major depression or schizophrenia, similar hypothalamic cyclic changes may underly psychiatric symptoms with seasonal periodicity.
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PMID:Apparent seasonal rhythms in hypothalamic neuropeptides in rats without photoperiod changes. 783 96

Hypothalamic mechanisms of neurohormone regulation of endocrine pancreas in diabetes mellitus, adaptation to hypoxia and their combination were studied on Wistar rats. To evaluate the condition of supraoptic nucleus (SON) secretory function, paraventricular subnuclei (PVH) of hypothalamus and endocrine pancreas, we used radioimmunoassay, immunocytochemical, morphometrical and histochemical methods. Hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion intensification in diabetes mellitus is accompanied by marked reorganization of hypothalamic neurohormones (CRF, vasopressin, oxytocin) secretion with corresponding signs of activity increase of synthesizing their hypothalamus nuclei and subnuclei and also ACTH, corticosterone, cortisol rise in blood. Adaptation to hypoxia caused hypoglycemia, activated insulin biosynthesis, changed glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion. CRF concentration, corticosterone and cortisol, ACTH in blood was not changed, vasopressin concentration lowered, oxytocin in median eminence of hypothalamus increased to a higher degree than in diabetes. Adaptation to hypoxia corrected impaired hormone balance and state of Langerhans islets (beta-cells destruction process inhibition, insulin biosynthesis stimulation, glucagon and somatostatin secretion decrease) in diabetes mellitus, hypothalamic neurohormones participating in this process.
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PMID:[The vasopressin-, oxytocin- and corticoliberin-synthesizing structures of the hypothalamus in rats with diabetes mellitus under hypoxic exposures]. 790 84

Hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and an increase of glucagon and somatostatin concentration under diabetes mellitus are accompanied by intensification of secretion of hypothalamic neurohormones (CRF, vasopressin, oxytocin, somatostatin) with the corresponding signs of the increase in activity of hypothalamus nuclei and subnuclei secreting them as well as ACTH, corticosterone and cortisol rise in blood. Adaptation to hypoxia has caused hypoglycemia, activated insulin biosynthesis, changed glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion. CRF corticosterone, cortisol and ACTH concentration in blood was not changed, vasopressin concentration lowered, somatostatin and oxytocin amount (in hypothalamus) increased to a higher degree than under diabetes. Adaptation to hypoxia corrected impaired hormone balance and state of Langerhans islets (beta-cells destruction process inhibition, insulin biosynthesis stimulation, glucagon and somatostatin secretion decrease) under diabetes mellitus, hypothalamus neurohormones participating in this process.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic mechanisms of neurohormone regulation of the endocrine part of the pancreas]. 790 82

Amongst the spinal peptide candidates believed to be involved in the mediation of analgesia, only somatostatin fulfills the criterium of a real analgesia substance. Spinal somatostatin specifically blocks the transmission of painful stimuli. Spinal calcitonin may lower the opioid dose requirement in patients with bone metastases but it fails to relieve acute pain. The usefulness of ACTH and CRF for treatment of pain remains to be established. The role of CCK-8, vasopressin and neurotensin is unclear. The contradictory findings on antinociception using simple rodent withdrawal reflex tests (e.g. the tail flick test), or more complex behavioral tests in which supraspinal sensory processing is involved, (e.g. the hot plate test), indicate that these tests are inappropriate when neuropeptides are employed. Furthermore, due to their inability to predict analgesia in humans, they do not fulfill the guidelines proposed by the IASP that animal test procedures have to be for the benefit of humans.
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PMID:Non-opioid peptides for analgesia. 831 62


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