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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nine cases of endocrine carcinoma, intermediate-cell type of the uterine cervix, were found in a study of 404 cases listed in the files of the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at Houston as adenocarcinoma of the cervix. Based on light microscopic patterns, these cases were divided into pure endocrine carcinoma (six cases), and endocrine carcinoma mixed with adenocarcinoma (three cases). All tumors were 3 cm or larger in at least one dimension. On light microscopic examination, the predominant pattern was trabecular; however, insular, glandular, and spindle patterns were also identified. Argyrophilic granules were demonstrated in all cases by Grimelius stain, and Fontana-Masson (argentaffin) stain was negative. Electron microscopic examination of three cases showed
membrane-bound
, dense-core granules of the neurosecretory type. Although no endocrine symptoms were found, immunoperoxidase studies demonstrated 5-hydroxytryptamine in seven cases, substance P in three, vasointestinal polypeptide in two, pancreatic polypeptide in one, and
somatostatin
in one. Clinical behavior of these tumors was extremely aggressive. Although five cases were Stage IB at presentation, two Stage IIB, one Stage IIIB, and one Stage IV, 87.5% of these patients died of their neoplasms within 3 years. This study emphasizes the importance of correctly diagnosing endocrine carcinoma, intermediate-cell type in the uterine cervix, because of the poor prognosis of this tumor when compared with adenocarcinoma of the cervix.
...
PMID:Endocrine carcinoma intermediate cell type of the uterine cervix. 638 96
Inhibitory G proteins (Gi) play an important role in cell proliferation. In order to characterize Gi proteins in RINm5F (RIN) cells, we first established RIN cells in cell culture. Immunoblot analysis was performed on extracted G proteins using Western blot techniques and a Gi-specific antibody. We identified three prominent bands consistent with three distinct inhibitory alpha subunits of
membrane-bound
G protein (Gi) in RIN cells. In contrast, we identified only one prominent distinct inhibitory alpha subunit of G protein in an equal quantity of membrane-protein in our control (normal rat pancreas). In several cell types, Gi is known to mediate the inhibitory action of
somatostatin
on intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation. Therefore, we studied the action of the long-acting analogue of
somatostatin
, octreotide (SMS), on basal and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine-stimulated cAMP accumulation in RIN cells. SMS did not inhibit cAMP accumulation or tritiated thymidine incorporation into DNA (TTID) in RIN cells. However, when treatment with SMS is supplemented with the nonhydrolyzable analogue of guanine nucleotide, Gpp(NH)p (Gpp), which is known to dissociate G proteins into its constitutive subunits, then SMS+Gpp induced an inhibitory action and significantly reduced cAMP accumulation and TTID. These data are consistent with the concept of qualitatively and functionally altered inhibitory G protein expression in the insulin-producing, islet cell (RINm5F) rat insulinoma tumor cell line. Further study of human tumors will lead to new insights into the clinical implications of G protein-mediated signal transduction in insulinoma.
...
PMID:Molecular and functional studies of inhibitory G protein in RINm5F cells. 752 47
Recently, we developed a technique that allows the in vivo visualization in man of somatostatin receptor-positive neuroendocrine tumors after i.v. injection of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide or [111In-DTPA-D-Phe1]octreotide. Radiotherapy of such tumors using
somatostatin
analogs coupled to alpha- or beta-emitting radionuclides has been proposed as an application for radiolabeled
somatostatin
analogs. To develop this concept further, it is of importance to know whether the above-mentioned radiolabeled
somatostatin
analogs are internalized by the tumor cells, and whether it might be possible to manipulate the degree of internalization. In the present study we investigated the internalization of a stable
somatostatin
analog, [125I-Tyr3]octreotide, by mouse AtT20/D16V pituitary tumor cells and primary cultures of human GH-secreting pituitary tumor cells. Treatment of the cells with low pH was used to distinguish between
membrane-bound
(acid-releasable) and internalize (acid-resistant) radioligand. [125I-Tyr3]octreotide showed a time-dependent increasing accumulation in AtT20 cells; after 4 h of incubation, values up to 6-8% of the dose of radioligand added were obtained. Binding and internalization of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide were temperature dependent and inhibited by pertussis toxin. Inhibitors of lysosomal degradation did not increase the amount of internalized radioligand. After 4 h of incubation, 88% of the radioactivity present in the cells was still peptide bound, suggesting a low intracellular breakdown of this radioligand. Six of seven human GH-secreting adenoma cell cultures also internalized [125I-Tyr3]octreotide (variation between 0.24-4.98% of the dose radioligand added). Displacement of binding and internalization of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide by unlabeled octreotide showed a bell-shaped curve in AtT20 cells. At low concentrations (0.1 and 1 nM), binding and internalization were increased, whereas at higher concentrations, saturation occurred. In contrast to this, binding of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide to a broken cell preparation of AtT20 cells was displaced in a dose-dependent manner by unlabeled octreotide, with an IC50 of 0.1 nM. Similar observations were made in the human GH-secreting adenoma cell cultures. In conclusion, a high amount of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide is internalized in a specific-, time-, temperature-, and pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein-dependent manner by mouse AtT20 and human GH-secreting pituitary tumor cells. In the presence of a low concentration of unlabeled octreotide, a rapid increase in the amount of [125I-Tyr3]octreotide internalized by AtT20 cells and by the majority of the human GH-secreting adenoma cell cultures was found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Internalization of the radioiodinated somatostatin analog [125I-Tyr3]octreotide by mouse and human pituitary tumor cells: increase by unlabeled octreotide. 764 74
The cases of three patients with primary carcinoid tumor of the testis were reported. The patients were 41, 44, and 83 years of age. At initial examination, all three had testicular masses with or without associated pain, and none had the carcinoid syndrome. The tumors measured 4.3 cm, 3.0 cm, and 6.5 cm in dimension. All three tumors manifested classic histologic features of carcinoid tumors. The neoplastic cells exhibited argyrophilia, and all were immunoreactive to chromogranin, serotonin, neuron-specific enolase, and cytokeratin. Two tumors had positive test results for gastrin and one had positive test results for substance P and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. No tumors reacted with
somatostatin
, insulin, pancreatic polypeptide, or placental alkaline phosphatase. Intracytoplasmic,
membrane-bound
, round-to-elliptical pleomorphic granules were identified by ultrastructural analysis in all cases. DNA flow cytometric analysis revealed a low degree (near-diploid) DNA aneuploidy in all cases, with a DNA index of 1.15 in two tumors and 1.3 in the third tumor. The three patients are alive and well 11 years, 7 years, and 6 months, respectively, after diagnosis. A total of 57 cases of this entity, including the 3 reported here, have been reported. Of these, 43 were pure carcinoid, and 14 were associated with teratoma; 6 (11.6%) patients developed metastases. Tumor size and the presence of carcinoid syndrome have been found to correlate with metastatic potential. Neither tumor necrosis nor local tumor invasion (into vessels, tunica albuginea, etc.) correlated with adverse prognosis. Carcinoid tumor of the testis is a rare indolent neoplasm with potential for distant metastases.
...
PMID:Primary carcinoid tumor of testis. Immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and DNA flow cytometric study of three cases with a review of the literature. 768 60
The multiple actions of
somatostatin
are mediated by specific
membrane-bound
receptors present in all
somatostatin
target tissues, such as brain, pituitary, pancreas, gastrointestinal tract, and kidney. For instance, in the human gastrointestinal tract, three different types of tissue compartments express
somatostatin
receptors: the gastrointestinal mucosa, the peripheral nervous system, and the gut-associated lymphoid tissue, where the receptors are preferentially located in germinal centers. In all these cases,
somatostatin
binding is of high affinity and specific for bioactive
somatostatin
analogues.
Somatostatin
receptors are also expressed in pathological states, such as cancers. A particular abundance is found in neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. Ninety percent of the carcinoids and a majority of islet cell carcinomas, including their metastases, usually have a high density of
somatostatin
receptors. Several different
somatostatin
-receptor subtypes can be expressed by these tumors, the SSTR2 subtype being the most frequently and abundantly expressed. The
somatostatin
receptors in tumors are identified with in vitro-binding methods, molecular biology techniques, or in vivo-imaging techniques; the latter allow the precise localization of the tumors and their metastases in the patients. Because
somatostatin
receptors in human gastroenteropancreatic tumors are functional, their identification can be used to predict the therapeutical efficacy of octreotide to inhibit excessive hormone release. Of differential diagnostic importance is the fact that other pathological processes in the gastrointestinal tract may be associated with a high density of
somatostatin
receptors. Ninety percent of lymphomas, including those with intestinal involvement express
somatostatin
receptors. Furthermore, a moderate number of colorectal carcinomas contain
somatostatin
receptors, whereas exocrine pancreatic carcinomas do not. Finally, an increased expression of SS receptors in nonneoplastic conditions, such as in intestinal veins in inflammatory bowel disease, has been recently observed. These observations demonstrate the ability of the human body to regulate SS receptors in a wide number of tissues and conditions.
...
PMID:Expression of somatostatin receptors in normal, inflamed, and neoplastic human gastrointestinal tissues. 797 60
In the present study we show the distribution of catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) in various rat tissues with a highly specific antiserum prepared against recombinant rat COMT. Immunoprecipitation and immunocytochemical controls confirmed the COMT-specificity of the antibodies. The antiserum detected both the 24 KD soluble and the 28 KD
membrane-bound
forms of the enzyme. By immunohistochemical staining the COMT enzyme was found in most rat tissues. Staining was most intense in the liver and in the kidney, in agreement with previous studies and our immunoblotting results. In the gastrointestinal tract, epithelial cells of the stomach, duodenum, and ileum were immunoreactive for COMT. In pancreas, COMT immunoreactivity was found in insulin-producing beta-cells and
somatostatin
-producing D-cells but not in glucagon-producing alpha-cells of the islets of Langerhans. In pituitary, COMT immunoreactivity was found in cleft cells, in pituicytes of the posterior lobe, and in the anterior lobe, partly in the same cells containing luteinizing hormone (LH). In other endocrine organs, COMT immunoreactivity was found in epithelial cells of the thyroid gland and in zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex. In the brain, brightest immunofluorescence was seen in ependymal cells of the cerebral ventricles and choroid plexus. Weak to moderate immunofluorescence was found in the neuropil of several brain areas, including striatum and cortex. Scattered small neurons in spinal sensory ganglia were also COMT immunoreactive. Previous immunocytochemical studies, enzyme activity determinations, and distribution of the COMT mRNA are in general agreement with the results presented here. The wide distribution of COMT in different tissues suggests an important role for this protein in inactivation of catechol compounds.
...
PMID:Distribution of catechol-O-methyltransferase enzyme in rat tissues. 802 27
A major cellular action of the neuropeptide
somatostatin
(SRIF) is the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity. SRIF induces this effect after its interaction with
membrane-bound
receptors. Five SRIF receptors (SSTRs), which differ in their functional coupling to adenylyl cyclase, have recently been cloned. The third SSTR cloned, SSTR3, effectively mediates the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase by SRIF. The molecular mechanism by which SRIF modulates intracellular cAMP synthesis via SSTR3 was investigated by initially identifying which G alpha subunits are involved in coupling SSTR3 to adenylyl cyclase. SRIF did not inhibit cAMP formation in Chinese hamster ovary cells stably expressing SSTR3 and Gi alpha 2 or Gi alpha 3 but lacking Gi alpha 1. However, SRIF did inhibit forskolin-stimulated cAMP formation in Chinese hamster ovary cells stably expressing SSTR3 and Gi alpha 1, indicating that Gi alpha 1 selectively couples SSTR3 to adenylyl cyclase. To investigate the functional domains of Gi alpha 1 necessary for interaction with SSTR3, a chimeric alpha subunit (Gi alpha 2/Gi alpha 1) was constructed, consisting of the amino-terminal two thirds of Gi alpha 2 ligated to the carboxyl-terminal third of Gi alpha 1. SRIF inhibited cAMP formation in cells expressing SSTR3 and the Gi alpha 2/Gi alpha 1 chimera. These findings indicate that the carboxy-terminal third of Gi alpha 1 interacts with SSTR3 and is important in transmitting the signal of SSTR3 activation to adenylyl cyclase. In contrast, a similar Gi alpha 2/Gi alpha 3 chimera did not couple SSTR3 to adenylyl cyclase, further indicating that Gi alpha 3 does not contribute to SRIF inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity. These findings demonstrate that Gi alpha 1 selectively couples SSTR3 to adenylyl cyclase, and they indicate that the carboxyl-terminal region of this alpha subunit is involved in mediating SRIF inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity.
...
PMID:Gi alpha 1 selectively couples somatostatin receptor subtype 3 to adenylyl cyclase: identification of the functional domains of this alpha subunit necessary for mediating the inhibition by somatostatin of cAMP formation. 818 36
The action of neuropeptides at the synapse is terminated through enzymatic degradation by
membrane-bound
proteases. We defined and purified
membrane-bound
proteases functioning at the initial stage of degradation of four neuropeptides. 1. Substance P-degrading endopeptidases isolated from the rat brain and pig striatum showed similar properties to those of endopeptidase-24.16 (neurolysin) except for cleavage sites of substance P. 2. LHRH fragment (1-5)-generating endopeptidases isolated from the neuroblastoma cells and rat brain showed similar properties to those of endopeptidase-24.15 (thimet oligopeptidase). 3. One of two dynorphin-degrading cysteine proteases isolated from neuroblastoma cells showed strict specificity toward the Arg-Arg residues. 4. Endopeptidase-24.11 (neprilysin) isolated from the rat brain was identified as a
somatostatin
-degrading enzyme.
...
PMID:[Membrane-bound proteases involved in neuropeptide degradation in the brain]. 836 28
The neuropeptide
somatostatin
(SRIF) exerts several important physiological actions in the adult CNS through interactions with
membrane-bound
receptors. SRIF expression is developmentally regulated and this regulation is most apparent in the cerebellum, where SRIF immunoreactivity is expressed at early postnatal ages and then disappears toward adulthood. The transitory nature of SRIF expression at a time of major changes in cerebellum suggests that this peptide may have a role in cerebellar development. To further investigate the role of the SRIF transmitter system during development, we have examined the levels of expression of SRIF receptors in the developing rat brain by immunoblotting using antiserum selective for a 60-kDa brain SRIF receptor. In whole rat brain, SRIF receptor immunoreactivity first appears at embryonic day 13 (E13), is elevated at E16, increases at birth, peaks at early postnatal ages, and then gradually declines with age. No apparent changes in size of the receptor occur with age. No consistent changes in levels of SRIF receptor immunoreactivity are detected from early postnatal ages to adulthood in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and striatum, but levels gradually decline in the hypothalamus. In contrast, SRIF receptor immunoreactivity is expressed transiently in cerebellum. SRIF receptor immunoreactivity is detectable in cerebellum at E16, increases in levels at birth, is apparent from postnatal day 3 to postnatal day 8, and then disappears. The transitory nature of SRIF receptor expression in cerebellum is unique and parallels the expression of SRIF immunoreactivity in this brain region. These findings support the hypothesis that SRIF has a role in cerebellar development.
...
PMID:Developmental changes in expression of a 60-kDa somatostatin receptor immunoreactivity in the rat brain. 847 2
Somatostatin
receptors from rabbit retinal membranes were solubilized in an active form using a mixture of the detergent n-octyl b-D-glucopyranoside (OG) and CHAPS. The binding of [125I]-Try11-
somatostatin
to the soluble extract was saturable and of high affinity, with an apparent affinity constant (Kd) of 0.60 +/- 0.20 nM and a maximum number of binding sites (Bmax) of 80 +/- 48 fmol/mg protein. The specific binding of [125I]Tyr11-
somatostatin
was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner only by the somatostatinergic analogs. The biochemical characteristics of both the
membrane-bound
and soluble receptors were studied by photoaffinity labeling techniques. Analysis by SDS-PAGE and subsequent autoradiography revealed the presence of a major protein of similar relative molecular mass (M(r) 54,000 and 57,000 for membrane and soluble sites, respectively). The photolabeling of this protein was specifically inhibited by somatostatin-28, somatostatin-14, SMS 201-995 (a synthetic octapeptide analog of
somatostatin
) but not by bombesin and somatostatin-28(1-14). The non-hydrolysable GTP analog guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio-triphosphate) (GTP gamma S) regulated the photolabeling of [125I]Tyr11-
somatostatin
to the membrane and soluble receptors. These studies describe for the first time the successful solubilization of the somatostatin receptor and the biochemical characterization of both
membrane-bound
and soluble receptors from rabbit retina.
...
PMID:Solubilization of active somatostatin receptors from rabbit retina. 849 40
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