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 first cloned non-mammalian somatostatin (somatostatin release-inhibiting factor = SRIF) receptor previously obtained from the teleost fish Apteronotus albifrons and generically named somatostatin receptor 3 (fsst3), was stably expressed and characterised in Chinese hamster lung fibroblast (CCL39) cells. Radioligand binding studies were performed with four radioligands selective for SRIF receptors in CCL39 cells expressing the fsst3 receptors; [125I]LTT-SRIF28 ([Leu8, D-Trp22, 125I-Tyr25]-SRIF28), [125I]Tyr10-cortistatin, [125I]CGP 23996, and [125I]Tyr3-octreotide labelled the fsst3 receptor with high affinity (pKd values: 10.47, 10.87, 9.59 and 9.57) and in a saturable manner, but defined different Bmax values; 4500, 4000, 3400 and 1500 fmol/mg, respectively. The affinities of SRIF peptides and analogues determined for fsst3 receptors displayed the following rank order of potency: seglitide = SRIF25 > SRIF14 = SRIF28 > cortistatin 14 > BIM 23014 > RC160 = L361,301 = octreotide > or = BIM 23052 > or = L362,855 > CGP23996 > BIM 23056 > BIM 23030 = cycloantagonist > SRIF22. The pharmacological profiles determined with [125I]LTT-SRIF28, [125I]CGP 23996 and [125I]Tyr10-cortistatin correlated highly significantly (r = 0.96-0.99), whereas [125I]Tyr3-octreotide binding was rather divergent (r = 0.78-0.81). Further, [125I]Tyr3-octreotide- and [125I]CGP 23996-labelled sites showed higher affinity for the various peptides than [125I]LTT-SRIF28 and [125I]Tyr10-cortistatin-labelled sites, although there were exceptions. [125I]LTT-SRIF28-binding to fsst3 receptors and human sst1-5 receptors was compared; the fsst3 binding profile correlated better with the hsst5- than with the hsst3 receptor profile. SRIF inhibited potently forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in fsst3 transfected CCL39 cells; this effect was blocked by pertussis toxin, suggesting coupling of the fsst3 receptor to Gialpha and/or Goalpha. [125I]LTT-SRIF28 binding was detected in fish brain, liver, heart, spleen, and stomach, but not in gut. The pharmacological profile of [125I]LTT-SRIF28-labelled sites in brain, but not in liver, correlated significantly with the recombinant fsst3 receptor, in agreement with expression of the fsst3 receptor gene found by RT-PCR in the brain. However, biphasic binding curves obtained with two SRIF-analogues in brain, as well as the distinct pharmacological profile of the liver SRIF receptor, suggest the existence of several yet to be defined SRIF receptor subtypes in fish. The present data demonstrate that the recombinantly expressed fsst3 receptor has a pharmacological profile compatible with that of a SRIF1 receptor, although the rank order of affinity of fsst3 is closer to that of hsst5 than hsst3 receptors, as may be found when comparing very distantly related species. The fsst3 receptor expressed in CCL39 cells, is negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase activity via pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins, like mammalian sst3 receptors. Radioligand binding performed with fish tissue suggests the presence of a native sst3 receptor in brain as well as other yet to be defined SRIF receptor subtypes.
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PMID:Characterisation of the fish sst3 receptor, a member of the SRIF1 receptor family: atypical pharmacological features. 1021 83

Cortistatin-14 (CST-14) is a putative novel neuropeptide that shares 11 of its 14 residues with somatostatin-14 (SRIF-14), yet its effects on sleep physiology, locomotor behavior and hippocampal function are different from those of somatostatin. We studied the structural basis for cortistatin's distinct biological activities. As with SRIF-14, CST-14 does not show any preferred conformation in solution, as determined by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance. Synthetic cortistatin analogs were designed and synthesized based on the cyclic structure of octreotide. Biological assays were carried out to determine their binding affinities to five somatostatin receptors (sstl-5) and their ability to produce changes in locomotor activity and to modulate hippocampal physiology and sleep. The results show that the compound with N-terminal proline and C-terminal lysine amide exhibits cortistatin-like biological activities, including reduction of population spike amplitudes in the hippocampal CA1 region, decrease in locomotor activity and enhancement of slow-wave sleep 2. These findings suggest that both proline and lysine are necessary for cortistatin binding to its specific receptor.
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PMID:Structural and compositional determinants of cortistatin activity. 1037 16

We have developed methodologies for identifying mRNAs with highly restricted expression within the brain. One postnatal-onset mRNA, restricted to sparse GABAergic interneurons of the cerebral cortex and hippocampus, encodes preprocortistatin, the precursor of a 14-residue peptide that shares 11 amino acids with somatostatin. Cortistatin binds to all five cloned somatostatin receptors when they are expressed in transfected cells and depresses neuronal activity, but, unlike somatostatin, it reduces locomotor activity and induces slow-wave sleep. Cortistatin, whose mRNA accumulates during sleep deprivation, apparently acts by antagonizing the effects of acetylcholine on cortical excitability, thereby causing synchronization brain slow waves. A single amino acid difference with somatostatin accounts for the dramatic differences in the effects of the two peptides on physiology and behavior. A second postnatal-onset mRNA, restricted to 1100 large neuronal cell bodies of the dorsal-lateral hypothalamus, encodes preprohypocretin, the precursor of two peptides that share homology with each other and with members of the secretin peptide family. The peptides are detected immunohistochemically in secretory vesicles at synapses of fibers that project to posterior hypothalamus and diverse targets in other brain regions. The peptides are excitatory when applied to cultured hypothalamic neurons. Recent studies by Sakurai and colleagues (1998) have identified the hypocretin peptides (called the orexins by those workers) as ligands for two orphan receptors at which they stimulate food-intake behavior. Sakurai and collaborators showed that the mRNA for these peptides accumulates during food deprivation. The hypocretin projections suggest additional homeostatic roles for the peptides. These studies suggest the common mechanism of regulation for necessary, but voluntary, behaviors (sleep and feeding) by transcription-based accumulation of peptide transmitters that create a pressure for the voluntary activities.
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PMID:Novel neurotransmitters for sleep and energy homeostasis. 1045 67

Preprocortistatin (PPCST) has been recently identified as a novel somatostatin (SST)-related gene expressed only in brain. PPCST shares 11 of 14 residues with SST-14 at its C-terminal segment, where it features Lys-Lys and Lys-Arg basic sites for cleavage to putative cortistatin (CST)-14 and CST-29 peptides, respectively. Although synthetic replicates of the two putative CST peptides interact with SST receptors, they also display novel effects suggesting independent biological functions. Nothing is currently known about the naturally occurring mature cleavage products of PPCST posttranslational processing. Here we have cloned rat PPCST cDNA, stably expressed it in AtT-20 pituitary cells, and characterized the cellular and releasable products of PPCST processing by HPLC and radioimmunoassay using a SST-14 antibody that recognizes synthetic CST-14 and CST-29. Transfected cells released 120 +/- 21 pg of total CST-LI per plate basally, with an increase to 204 +/- 33 pg per plate with forskolin stimulation (p < 0.05). HPLC chromatograms of cell extracts revealed three peaks corresponding to CST-14, CST-29, and unprocessed PPCST (ratio, 41:55:4.5). CST was released preferentially as CST-14 (63-70%) compared with CST-29 (30-37%) under basal and forskolin-stimulated conditions. These studies demonstrate efficient processing of PPCST to both CST-14 and CST-29 through putative cleavage at both C-terminal dibasic sites of PPCST. Although the two peptides are synthesized approximately equally, CST-14 is released preferentially via the regulated secretory pathway.
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PMID:Processing of rat preprocortistatin in mouse AtT-20 cells. 1046 21

Cortistatin (CST) is a presumptive neuropeptide that shares 11 of its 14 amino acids with somatostatin (SST). CST and SST are expressed in partially overlapping but distinct populations of cortical interneurons. In the hippocampal formation, most CST-positive cells are also positive for SST. In contrast to SST, administration of CST into the rat brain ventricles reduces locomotor activity and specifically enhances slow wave sleep. Intracerebroventricular injection of CST or SST has been shown to protect against the neurotoxic effects of kainic acid. Here, we show that CST and SST mRNAs respond differently to kainate-induced seizures. Furthermore, comparison of the upstream sequences from the CST and SST precursor genes reveal that they contain binding motifs for different transcriptional regulatory factors. Our data demonstrate that CST and SST, which are often co-expressed in the same neurons, are regulated by different stimuli.
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PMID:Cortistatin and somatostatin mRNAs are differentially regulated in response to kainate. 1052 99

G protein activation by somatostatin (somatotropin release inhibiting factor, SRIF), cortistatin (CST) and analogues of these neuropeptides was investigated at human somatostatin receptor subtypes 1-5 (sst1-5) stably expressed in CCL39 Chinese hamster lung fibroblast cells by measuring agonist-stimulated [35S]guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) ([35S]GTPgammaS) binding. [35S]GTPgammaS binding was assessed in the presence of 100 mM NaCl and 1 microM GDP, although higher Emax and/or pEC50 values may have been obtained under other conditions, but at the expense of lower absolute stimulation or signal/noise ratio. SRIF14 stimulated [35S]GTPgammaS binding to 162, 220, 148 and 266% of control levels via sst2, sst3, sst4 and sst5 receptors, respectively. At sst1 receptors, SRIF14 produced only a limited stimulation (Emax 115%). Hence sst1 receptors were not subjected to further [35S]GTPgammaS binding experiments. [35S]GTPgammaS binding assays were then performed with sst2-5 receptors. Most of the peptide analogues stimulated [35S]GTPgammaS binding in sst2-5 receptor-expressing cells. BIM 23056 behaved as an antagonist on SRIF14-induced [35S]GTPgammaS binding with an apparent pKBs of 6.33 and 5.84 at hsst3 and hsst5 receptors respectively, whereas neither agonism nor antagonism could be shown (at 1 microM) at sst2 or sst4 receptors. The effect at sst5 receptors was not surmountable and needs further investigations. The so-called "antagonist" SA, was devoid of antagonist activity at sst2 or sst3 receptors, whereas it was almost a full agonist at sst4 and sst5 receptor-mediated [35S]GTPgammaS binding. The [35S]GTPgammaS-binding profiles of hsst2-5 receptors were compared with their respective radioligand binding profiles. For sst4 and sst5 receptors, the rank order of affinity of all tested radioligands correlated highly significantly with [35S]GTPgammaS binding (r = 0.814-0.897). At sst3 receptors, [35S]GTPgammaS binding correlated somewhat less with binding profiles obtained with [125I][Tyr10]CST14 and [125I]CGP 23996 than with [125I]LTT-SRIF28 (r = 0.743, 0.757 and 0.882, respectively). At sst2 receptors, [35S]GTPgammaS binding correlated with [125I]LTT-SRIF28, [125I]CGP 23996 and [125I][Tyr3]octreotide binding profiles (r = 0.596-0.699), but not with [125I][Tyr10]CST14 binding. The present [35S]GTPgammaS binding data combined to previous radioligand binding results obtained in cells expressing human SRIF receptors, suggest that at any given receptor, agonists' rank orders of potency (not to mention absolute affinity values which vary profoundly) are not as strictly ordered as may be anticipated. We are investigating these aspects further by analysing additional signalling pathways.
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PMID:Characterisation of human recombinant somatostatin receptors. 2. Modulation of GTPgammaS binding. 1059 89

The five human somatostatin receptor subtypes (hsst1-5) were stably expressed in CCL39 cells (Chinese hamster lung fibroblast cells) to study the inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase (FSAC) activity induced by somatostatin (somatotropin release inhibiting factor, SRIF), cortistatin (CST) and SRIF peptide analogues. Inhibition of FSAC was observed with all five receptors, although the maximal effects produced by SRIF14 varied from around 40% (sst1, sst2, sst4) to 67% (sst3, sst5) reflecting to some extent differences in receptor density (Bmax values published in accompanying paper, this journal). SRIF28 was slightly more potent than SRIF14 to inhibit FSAC at all five receptors, although the potency of the natural peptides SRIF14, SRIF28 and CST17 was generally similar with pEC50-values ranging from 7.5 to 8.7 depending on receptor and peptide. At SRIF1 receptors (sst2, sst3, sst5) most of the peptide analogues displayed full agonism (with some exceptions e.g. BIM 23056 at sst1-3 and sst5 receptors, and L362,855 and cycloantagonist SA at sst3 receptors), whereas at SRIF2 receptors these analogues tended to behave as partial agonists. BIM 23056 was an antagonist at sst3 receptors (antagonist binding constant pKB = 6.33), but not at other receptors. The AC inhibition profiles of sst1-5 receptors were compared with the different radioligand binding profiles as well as with [35S]guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) ([35S]GTPgammaS) binding profile for sst2-5 receptors. High correlations were observed between FSAC inhibition, radioligand binding and [35S]GTPgammaS binding profiles at sst3, sst4 and sst5 receptors; by contrast, correlation coefficients at sst1 and sst2 receptors were low, and the binding profiles of [125I][Tyr10]CST14 correlated poorly. In line with these findings, the FSAC inhibition and [35S]GTPgammaS binding correlated poorly at sst2 receptors (sst1 receptors show no significant induction of [35S]GTPgammaS binding). The apparent lack of, or only weak, relationship between FSAC, radioligand or [35S]GTPgammaS binding observed for some SRIF receptors suggests that different active states may exist for these receptors, which may favour one transduction cascade over others.
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PMID:Characterisation of human recombinant somatostatin receptors. 3. Modulation of adenylate cyclase activity. 1059 90

Total [3H]phosphoinositide (IPx) accumulation, a measure of phospholipase C (PLC) activity, induced by somatostatin (somatotropin release-inhibiting factor, SRIF) and cortistatin (CST) analogues was studied at human somatostatin receptor subtypes 1-5 (hsst1-5) recombinantly expressed in CCL39 (Chinese hamster lung fibroblast) cells. SRIF14 (10 microM) stimulated total [3H]-IPx production 200% and 1070% over basal levels, and increased intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) 1600% and 2790%, in cells expressing hsst3 and hsst5 receptors, respectively. The SRIF14-stimulated IPx production was partly blocked by 100 ng/ml pertussis toxin (PTX) (30% and 15% inhibition, respectively). At hsst1, hsst2, and hsst4 receptors, only weak or no stimulation of PLC activity was found (Emax = 114%, 122%, and 102%, respectively). Consequently, hsst3 and hsst5 receptors were subjected to more detailed studies to establish pharmacological profiles of PLC stimulation. At hsst3 receptors, the relative efficacies of most ligands were in the same range (maximum response Emax = 218-267%). At hsst5 receptors Emax varied over a broad range, seglitide, CST17, SRIF28 displaying almost full agonism compared to SRIF14, whereas octreotide and BIM 23052 showed very low partial agonism. BIM 23056 behaved as an antagonist on SRIF14-induced total [3H]-IPx accumulation with a pKB (negative logarithm of antagonist binding constant) of 6.74 at hsst3 receptors, and of 6.94 at hsst5 receptors. The putative cycloantagonist SA showed weak antagonist activity on SRIF14-induced total [3H]-IPx levels at hsst3 (pKB = 5.85), but not at hsst5 receptors. The [3H]-IPx accumulation profiles at sst3/sst5 receptors were compared to their respective radioligand binding ([125I]LTT-SRIF28, [125I][Tyr10]CST14, [125I]CGP 23996, [125I][Tyr3]octreotide binding), to [35S]GTPgammaS binding, and to forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase (FSAC) inhibition profiles determined previously in CCL39 cells. The different affinity profiles correlated relatively well at both receptor subtypes with PLC activation (sst3: r = 0.90-0.97; sst5: r = 0.80-0.87). However, [35S]GTPgammaS binding correlated only minimally with stimulation of [3H]-IPx levels at sst5 receptors (r = 0.59), but rather well at sst3 receptors (r = 0.80). A moderate correlation was also observed between inhibition of FSAC activity and stimulation of PLC activity for hsst3 and hsst5 receptors with correlation coefficients of 0.85 and 0.70, respectively. In summary, most SRIF analogues behave as full agonists at hsst3 receptors and agonist-induced phosphoinositide turnover correlates well with radioligand binding, [35S]GTPgammaS binding and inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity, all measured in CCL39 cells. By contrast, at hsst5 receptors, most SRIF analogues behave as intermediate or very low partial agonists (although receptor levels are comparatively high, 7000 vs. 400 fmol/mg), and the agonist-induced phosphoinositide turnover correlates rather poorly with radioligand binding, [35S]GTPgammaS binding or inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity, all measured in the same cell line. Agonist-induced phosphoinositide turnover, [35S]GTPgammaS binding and inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity, show differences both in the rank orders of potency and relative efficacy at hsst3 and markedly at hsst5 receptors, suggesting either that PLC activity is functionally irrelevant or, more probably, that agonist-dependent receptor trafficking is taking place in CCL39 cells.
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PMID:Characterisation of human recombinant somatostatin receptors. 4. Modulation of phospholipase C activity. 1059 91

This study investigated whether peptides acting at somatostatin receptors, such as somatostatin-14, octreotide or cortistatin-14, can influence the extent of brain damage after focal ischaemia in rats. The intracerebroventricular application of 0.1 or 1.0 nmol somatostatin-14 5 min after middle cerebral artery occlusion significantly reduced the infarct size assessed 7 days after the insult (by 47% and 57% of the saline control), whereas 10.0 nmol had no significant protective effect (9% reduction). A similar dose/response relationship was obtained after intracerebroventricular injection of octreotide. The lower doses of 0.1 or 1.0 nmol afforded significant neuroprotection (reduction of the infarct size by 72 and 57%), whereas 10 nmol actually increased the infarct size up to 348%. Cortistatin-14 (10 nmol) decreased the ischaemic damage by 52%. For comparison with the neuropeptides acting on somatostatin receptors, the kappa opiate agonist enadoline (10 nmol) also had a significant protective effect against the development of focal ischaemia; the extent of the brain damage was reduced by 60% after intracerebroventricular injection.
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PMID:Effects of somatostatin, octreotide and cortistatin on ischaemic neuronal damage following permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rat. 1061 79

Cortistatin (CST) is a recently described neuropeptide with high structural homology with somatostatin. Its mRNA is restricted to gamma amino butyric acid (GABA)-containing cells in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. CST modulates the electrophysiology of the hippocampus and cerebral cortex of rats; hence, it may be modulating mnemonic processes. In this study, we have evaluated the effect of CST and somatostatin (SS) on short- and long-term memory (STM and LTM, respectively), as well as on the extinction of the behavior by using the footshock passive avoidance behavioral test. In addition, we tested the ability of both neuropeptides to affect the generation of cAMP in hippocampal neurons in culture. Results showed that the administration of either CST or SS into the hippocampal CA1 deteriorates memory consolidation in a dose-response fashion and facilitates the extinction of the learned behavior. CST was more potent than SS. Likewise, CST increases cAMP while SS decreases it. These results strongly support a modulatory role for CST in memory processes.
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PMID:Cortistatin modulates memory processes in rats. 1070 Jun


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