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

Biologically active peptides and neurotransmitter substances were added to anterior pituitary cell cultures to examine the presence of corticotropin releasing factor (CRF)-like activity. Hypothalamic extract (HE) induced significant dose-related increase of ACTH, and the lowest effective dose was 0.01 HE/ml. Other tested substances including luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, thyrotropin releasing hormone, melanocyte stimulating hormone release inhibiting factor, somatostatin, substance P, neurotensin, beta-endorphin. leu-enkephalin, met-enkephalin, bradykinin, norepinephrine, dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, histamine, gamma-amino butyric acid or gamma-hydroxy butyric acid showed no CRF-like activity. Relatively high doses of lysine vasopressin, arginine vasopressin and angiotensin II increased the release of ACTH in pituitary cell cultures, but the maximal ACTH response was markedly less than with HE. These results indicate that cultured anterior pituitary cells are sensitive and fairly specific in detecting CRF(s) comparing with other detecting procedures.
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PMID:Specificity of cultured anterior pituitary cells in detecting corticotropin releasing factor(s): the effect of biologically active peptides and neurotransmitter substances on ACTH release in pituitary cell cultures. 3 34

The effects of neurotensin on insulin and somatostatin release were examined in isolated pancreatic islets prepared from 3-4 days rats, and maintained in culture for 48 h before use. In the presence of 12 mM glucose, glucagon (50-2,000 ng/ml, i.e. 14-560 nM) caused a 2-fold increase in insulin and somatostatin release. Neurotensin (150 ng/ml, i.e., 100 nM) did not affect the glucagon-stimulated release, nor did it alter the release of either peptide measured at 12 mM glucose in the absence of glucagon. In contrast, neurotension markedly inhibited the release of both insulin and somatostatin that was induced by 23 mM glucose. These observations suggest that neurotensin may modulate the release of insulin and somatostatin evoked by high glucose concentrations, but not that resulting from the action of glucagon on pancreatic islets.
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PMID:Neurotensin inhibits glucose but not glucagon-induced insulin and somatostatin release in isolated islets. 4 73

Porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide stimulated adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) production in rat intestinal epithelial cells. The stimulation was dependent on time and temperature and was potentiated by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Under optimal conditions (at 15 degrees C, with 0.2 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylaxanthine, at a cell concentration up to 18 microgram DNA/ml), the cyclic AMP production produced by vasoactive intestinal peptide was constant for 10 min and stopped after 15 min incubation, at either low (1 nM) or high (30 nM) concentration of the peptide. This plateau effect was demonstrated not to be due to an inactivation of vasoactive intestinal peptide in the medium nor to an alteration of receptors for the peptide. Cyclic AMP production was sensitive to a concentration as low as 0.1 nM vasoactive intestinal peptide. Maximal stimulation of cyclic AMP levels by vasoactive intestinal peptide was observed with 30 nM vasoactive intestinal peptide and represented an 11-fold increased above basal. The dorse-response curve was monophasic with a Km of 2.3 x 10(-9) M. No cooperative effects were detected by Hill analysis. The positive non-linear relationship observed between stimulation of cyclic AMP production and occupancy of binding site was not time-dependent as indicated by experiments performed after 15, 45 and 120 min incubation. Maximal and half-maximal responses were obtained at about 70% and 7% occupation of binding sites, respectively. Chicken vasoactive intestinal peptide and porcine secretin were agonists of porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide with a 6-times and a 120-times lower potency, respectively. Among secretin analogs that were found to have low affinity for vasoactive intestinal peptide binding sites, [4-alanine, 5-valine]secretin, that resembles vasoactive intestinal peptide at the first seven amino acids at the N-terminal end, was a partial agonist of vasoactive peptide at the first seven amino acids at the N-terminal end, was a partial agonist of vasoactive intestinal peptide and others failed to stimulate cyclic AMP production. Glucagon (10microM), gastric inhibitory peptide (0.1 microM), substance, P, neurotensin, octapeptide of cholecystokinin, bovine pancreatic polypeptide, human gastrin I with leucine at residue 15, Leu-enkephalinand somatostatin (1 microM) did not alter cyclicAMP levels. Non-peptide mediators such as dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine and histamine, tested at 10 microM, were also ineffective. Prostaglandins E2, E1 and isoproterenol, tested at 10 microM, induced an increase of cyclic AMP levels above basal but were 9.5, 13.7 and 17.5 times less efficient than vasoactive intestinal peptide, respectively. Thus vasoactive intestinal peptide is a unique stimulus of cyclic AMP production in rat intestinal epithelial cells.
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PMID:Interaction of vasoactive intestinal peptide with isolated intestinal epithelial cells from rat. 2. Characterization and structural requirements of the stimulatory effect of vasoactive intestinal peptide on production of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate. 8 68

The effects of a number of peptides which are found in the gastrointestinal tract have been ascertained on the direct current recorded dorsal and ventral root responses of the isolated hemisected toad spinal cord. Motilin, substance P, bombesin, neurotensin, and thyrotropin releasing hormone had potent depolarizing actions on dorsal root terminals and motoneurons. These substances evoked discernable effects at concentrations as low as 10--7 M, or even lower with motilin. The effects of motilin, neurotensin, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone were greatly reduced or abolished by perfusion of the preparation with tetrodotoxin. Adrenocorticotrophic hormone, secretin, and pancreozymin (cholecystokinin) also depolarized dorsal root terminals and motoneurons. The effects of secretin and cholecystokinin were not abolished by tetrodotoxin. Leu- and Met-enkephalin had weak hyperpolarizing actions on the dorsal and ventral root potentials of repetitively stimulated preparations. Gastrin, gastric inhibitory peptide, glucagon, and somatostatin had no apparent effects on the responses of the preparation. Angiotensin and vasopressin both had rather weak depolarizing effects on the dorsal and ventral roots.
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PMID:Actions of various gastrointestinal peptides on the isolated amphibian spinal cord. 11 60

Administered by either intravenous (i.v.) or intracisternal (i.cis.) injections, MK-771 and TRH induced a dose-related increase in EMG activity recorded from the flexor ulnaris muscle in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats. By the i.v. route, MK-771 was 6 times more potent than TRH and with i.cis. administration MK-771 was some 30 times more active than TRH. At equieffective doses of the two peptides, MK-771 exhibited a greater (approximately 3 fold) duration of action than TRH. In unanesthetized, spinally transected rats MK-771 was also more potent than TRH in eliciting EMG activity recorded from the biceps femoris muscle. Substance P, administered by the i.cis route failed to induce EMG activity. Intracisternally administered neurotensin, which did not affect EMG activity by itself, antagonized the actions of MK-771 while somatostatin was inactive in this regard. Neurotensin did not affect the EMG activity induced by physostigmine. While these studies do not delineate the mechanism whereby TRH and MK-771 induce EMG activity, it appears reasonable to suggest that TRH and related peptides, such as MK-771, may have some influence in functional disorders of human muscle.
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PMID:MK-771-induced electromyographic (EMG) activity in the rat: comparison with thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) and antagonism by neurotensin. 11 37

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is a potent and efficient stimulator of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) accumulation in a human colon carcinoma cell line, HT 29. cAMP accumulation is sensitive to a concentration of VIP as low as 3x10(-12) M. Maximum VIP-induced cAMP levels were observed with 10(-9) M VIP and are about 200 times above the basal levels. Half-maximum cAMP production was obtained at 3x10(-10) M VIP. (125)I-Labeled VIP was found to bind to HT 29 cells; this binding was competitively inhibited by concentrations of unlabeled VIP between 10(-10) and 10(-7) M. Half-maximum inhibition of binding was observed with 2x10(-9) M VIP. Secretin also stimulated cAMP accumulation in HT 29 cells, but its effectiveness was 1/1000 that of VIP. The other peptides tested at 10(-7) M, such as insulin, glucagon, bovine pancreatic polypeptide, somatostatin, octapeptide of cholecystokinin, neurotensin, and substance P, did not stimulate cAMP accumulation. Prostaglandin E(1) and catecholamines stimulated cAMP production but were 1/2.3 and 1/5.5 as efficient as VIP, respectively. Another malignant cell line from the gut, the human rectal tumor cell line HRT 18, is also sensitive to VIP. In HRT 18 cells, VIP stimulated cAMP accumulation with a maximal effect at 10(-8) M; half-maximum stimulation was observed at about 10(-9) M. These results demonstrate the presence of VIP receptors in two malignant human intestinal cell lines (HT 29 and HRT 18) in culture and provide a model for studying the action of VIP on cell proliferation.
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PMID:Vasoactive intestinal peptide: a potent stimulator of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate accumulation in gut carcinoma cell lines in culture. 20 77

GH4C1 cells are a clonal strain of rat pituitary tumor cells which synthesize and secrete prolactin and growth hormone. Somatostatin, a hypothalamic tetradecapeptide, inhibits the release of growth hormone and, under certain circumstances, also prolactin from normal pituitary cells. We have prepared [125I-Tyr1]somatostatin (approximately 2200 C1/mmol) and have shown that this ligand binds to a limited number of high affinity sites on GH4C1 cells. Half-maximal binding of somatostatin occurred at a concentration of 6 x 10(-10) M. A maximum of 0.11 pmol of [125I-Tyr1]somatostatin was bound per mg of cell protein, equivalent to 13,000 receptor sites per cell. The rate constant for binding (kon) was 8 x 10(7) M(-1) min(-1). The rate constant for dissociation (koff) was determined by direct measurement to be 0.02 min(-1) both in the presence and absence of excess nonradioactive somatostatin. Binding of [125I-Tyr1]somatostatin was not inhibited by 10(-7) M thyrotropin-releasing hormones. Substance P, neurotensin, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, calcitonin, adrenocorticotropin, or insulin. Of seven nonpituitary cell lines tested, none had specific receptors for somatostatin. Somatostatin was shown to inhibit prolactin and growth hormone production by CH4C1 cells. The dose-response characteristics for binding and the biological actions of somatostatin were essentially coincident. Furthermore, among several clonal pituitary cell strains tested, only those which had receptors for somatostatin showed a biological response to the hormone. We conclude that the characterized somatostatin receptor is necessary for the biological actions of somatostatin on GH4C1 cells.
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PMID:Characterization of functional receptors for somatostatin in rat pituitary cells in culture. 21 Jan 85

We have prepared (125)I-labeled [Tyr(4)]bombesin and have examined the kinetics, stoichiometry, and chemical specificity with which the labeled peptide binds to dispersed acini from guinea pig pancreas. Binding of (125)I-labeled [Tyr(4)]-bombesin was saturable, temperature-dependent, and reversible and reflected interaction of the labeled peptide with a single class of binding sites on the plasma membrane of pancreatic acinar cells. Each acinar cell possessed approximately 5000 binding sites, and binding of the tracer to these sites could be inhibited by [Tyr(4)]bombesin [concentration for half-maximal effect (Kd), 2 nM], bombesin (Kd, 4 nM), or litorin (Kd, 40 nM) but not by eledoisin, physalemin, somatostatin, carbachol, atropine, secretin, vasocative intestinal peptide, neurotensin, or bovine pancreatic polypeptide. At high concentrations (>0.1 muM), cholecystokinin and caerulein each caused a small (15-20%) reduction in binding of lableled [Tyr(4)]bombesin. With bombesin, litorin, and [Tyr(4)]bombesin, there was a close correlation between the relative potency for inhibition of binding of labeled [Tyr(4)]bombesin and that for stimulation of amylase secretion. For a given peptide, however, a 10-fold higher concentration was required for half-maximal inhibition of binding than for half-maximal stimulation of amylase secretion, calcium outflux, or cyclic GMP accumulation. These results indicate that dispersed acini from guinea pig pancreas possess a single class of receptors that interact with [Tyr(4)]bombesin, bombesin, and litorin and that occupation of 25% of these receptors will cause a maximal biological response.
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PMID:Interaction of bombesin and litorin with specific membrane receptors on pancreatic acinar cells. 21 15

Substance P stimulation of salivation in rats has been studied as has its in vitro enhancement of amylase release by isolated parotid cells. The extent of the stimulation on amylase release by isolated parotid cells was dependent upon the concentration of substance P, with the minimum effective concentration being 1 nM. The substance P effect was detectable within 1 min after incubation and lasted for at least 50 min. Substance P stimulation was demonstrable at 25--37 degrees C but not at 0 degrees C. Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), vasopressin and neurotensin had no effect on amylase release. These results suggest that substance P may act directly on the parotid cells. Examination of the salivary-stimulating activity of fragments of substance P showed that the C-terminal octapeptide and (pyroglutamyl)hexapeptide were active, although less potent than substance P, whereas its free acid, C-terminal tetra- and tri-peptides were inactive. Vasopressin, angiotensin II and neurotensin could inhibit substance P induced salivation, whereas TRH, ACTH and somatostatin had no effect. Amylase activity per unit volume of saliva was not changed by the injection of vasopressin, angiotensin II or neurotensin. These vasoactive peptides did not affect substance P stimulation of amylase release by isolated parotid cells. The results indicate that vasopressin, angiotensin II and neurotensin inhibit the action of substance P on salivation at sites other than the parotid cells.
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PMID:Substance P stimulation of amylase release by isolated parotid cells and inhibition of substance P induction of salivation by vasoactive peptides. 22 41


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