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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Elevation of circulating GH acts to feed back at the level of the hypothalamus to decrease GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) and increase
somatostatin
(SRIF) production. In the rat, GH-induced changes in GHRH and SRIF expression are associated with changes in pituitary
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
), GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R), and SRIF receptor subtype messenger RNA (mRNA) levels. These observations suggest that GH regulates its own synthesis and release not only by altering expression of key hypothalamic neuropeptides but also by modulating the sensitivity of the pituitary to hypothalamic input, by regulating pituitary receptor synthesis. To further explore this possibility, we examined the relationship between the expression of hypothalamic neuropeptides [GHRH, SRIF, and neuropeptide Y (NPY)] and pituitary receptors [
GHRH-R
, GHS-R, and SRIF receptor subtypes (sst2 and sst5)] in two mouse strains with alterations in the GH-axis; the GH receptor/binding protein gene-disrupted mouse (GHR/BP-/-) and the metallothionein promoter driven human GHRH (MT-hGHRH) transgenic mouse. In GHR/BP-/- mice, serum insulin-like growth factor I levels are low, and circulating GH is elevated because of the lack of GH negative feedback. Hypothalamic GHRH mRNA levels in GHR/BP-/- mice were 232 +/- 20% of GHR/BP+/+ littermates (P < 0.01), whereas SRIF and NPY mRNA levels were reduced to 86 +/- 2% and 52 +/- 3% of controls, respectively (P < 0.05; ribonuclease protection assay). Pituitary
GHRH-R
and GHS-R mRNA levels of GHR/BP-/- mice were elevated to 275 +/- 55% and 319 +/- 68% of GHR/BP+/+ values (P < 0.05, respectively), whereas the sst2 and sst5 mRNA levels did not differ from GHR/BP intact controls as determined by multiplex RT-PCR. Therefore, in the absence of GH negative feedback, both hypothalamic and pituitary expression is altered to favor stimulation of GH synthesis and release. In MT-hGHRH mice, ectopic hGHRH transgene expression elevates circulating GH and insulin-like growth factor I. In this model of GH excess, endogenous (mouse) hypothalamic GHRH mRNA levels were reduced to 69 +/- 6% of nontransgenic controls, whereas SRIF mRNA levels were increased to 128 +/- 6% (P < 0.01). NPY mRNA levels were not significantly affected by hGHRH transgene expression. Also, MT-hGHRH pituitary
GHRH-R
and GHS-R mRNA levels did not differ from controls. However, sst2 and sst5 mRNA levels in MT-hGHRH mice were increased to 147 +/- 18% and 143 +/- 16% of normal values, respectively (P < 0.05). Therefore, in the presence of GH negative feedback, both hypothalamic and pituitary expression is altered to favor suppression of GH synthesis and release.
...
PMID:The growth hormone (GH)-axis of GH receptor/binding protein gene-disrupted and metallothionein-human GH-releasing hormone transgenic mice: hypothalamic neuropeptide and pituitary receptor expression in the absence and presence of GH feedback. 1118 26
GH secretion is regulated by the interaction of GHRH and
somatostatin
and is released in 10-20 pulses in each 24-h cycle. The exact roles in pulse generation played by
somatostatin
, GHRH, and the recently isolated GH-releasing peptide, Ghrelin, are not fully elucidated. To investigate the GHRH-mediated GH secretion in human, we investigated pulsatile, entropic, and 24-h rhythmic GH secretion in two young adults (male, 24 yr; female, 23 yr) from a Moroccan family with a novel inactivating defect of the
GHRH receptor
gene. Data were compared with values in age- and gender-matched controls. Plasma GH concentration were measured by a sensitive immunofluorometric assay, with a detection limit of 0.01 mU/L. All plasma GH concentrations in the female patient were measurable; in the male patient 30 of 145 samples were at or below the detection limit. GH secretion was pulsatile, with 21 and 23 secretory episodes/24 h in the male and female patients, respectively. The fraction of basal to total GH secretion was raised in both patients by 0.18 and 0.15, respectively. The total 24-h GH production rate was greatly diminished; in the male patient it was 6.9 mU/L (normal values for his age, 26--63 mU/L), and in the female patient it was 4.2 mU/L (normal values for her age, 96--390 mU/L). The nyctohemeral plasma GH rhythm was preserved (P < 0.001), with normal acrophases (0430 and 0218 h in the male and female, respectively). Approximate entropy was greatly elevated in both subjects (0.82 in the male and 1.17 in the female; upper normal values for age and gender, 0.24 and 0.59, respectively). Intravenous injection of 50 microg GHRH failed to increase the plasma GH concentration in both patients, but 100 microg GH-releasing peptide-2 elicited a definite increase (male patient, 0.13 to 1.74 mU/L; female patient, 0.29 to 0.87 mU/L). Both patients had a partial empty sella on magnetic resonance imaging scanning. In summary, the present studies in two patients with a profound loss of function mutation of the
GHRH receptor
favor the view that in the human the timing of GH pulses is primarily supervised by intermittent
somatostatin
withdrawal, and the amplitude of GH pulses is driven by GHRH. In addition, we infer that effectual GHRH input controls the GH cell mass and the orderliness of the secretory process.
...
PMID:Growth hormone (GH) secretion in patients with an inactivating defect of the GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor is pulsatile: evidence for a role for non-GHRH inputs into the generation of GH pulses. 1139 40
The aim of this article is to briefly review the physiology of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and the diagnosis and treatment of GHRH-mediated acromegaly. Moreover, the role of GHRH and its antagonists in the pathogenesis and treatment of cancer will be reviewed. Hypothalamic GHRH is secreted into the portal system, binds to specific surface receptors of the somatotroph cell and elicits intracellular signals that modulate pituitary GH synthesis and/or secretion. GHRH-producing neurons have been well characterized in the hypothalamus by immunostaining techniques. Hypothalamic tumors, including hamartomas. choristomas, gliomas. and gangliocitomas. may produce excessive GHRH with subsequent GH hypersecretion and resultant acromegaly. GHRH is synthesized and expressed in multiple extrapituitary tissues. Excessive peripheral production of GHRH by a tumor source would therefore be expected to cause somatotroph cell hyperstimulation and increased GH secretion. The structure of hypothalamic GHRH was infact elucidated from material extracted from pancreatic GHRH-secreting tumors in two patients with acromegaly. Immunoreactive GHRH is present in several tumors, including carcinoid tumors, pancreatic cell tumors, small-cell lung cancers, adrenal adenomas, and pheochromocitomas which have been reported to secrete GHRH. Acromegaly in these patients. however, is uncommon. In a retrospective survey of 177 acromegalic patients only a single patient was identified with elevated plasma GHRH levels. Measuring GHRH plasma levels therefore provides a precise and cost-effective test for the diagnosis of ectopic acromegaly. Peripheral GHRH levels are not elevated in patients with hypothalamic GHRH- secreting tumors, supporting the notion that excess eutopic hypothalamic GHRH secretion into the hypophyseal portal system does not appreciably enter the systemic circulation. Elevated circulating GHRH levels, a normal or small-size pituitary gland, or clinical and biochemical features of other tumors known to be associated with extrapituitary acromegaly, are all indications for extrapituitary imaging. An enlarged pituitary is, however, often found on MRI of patients with peripheral GHRH-secreting tumors, and the radiologic diagnosis of a pituitary adenoma may be difficult to exclude. Surgical resection of the tumor secreting ectopic GHRH should reverse the hypersecretion of GH, and pituitary surgery should not be necessary in these patients. Nonresectable, disseminated or reccurrent carcinoid syndrome with ectopic GHRH secretion can also be managed medically with long-acting
somatostatin
analogs (octreotide and lanreotide). The presence of GHRH and its receptors in several extrahypothalamic tissues, including ovary, testis and the digestive tract, suggests that GHRH may have a regulatory role in these tissues. As previously mentioned, biologically or immunologically active GHRH and mRNA encoding GHRH have been found in several human malignant tumors. including cancers of the breast, endometrium and ovary and their cell lines. The synthesis and evaluation of analogs with various modifications revealed that certain hydrophobic and helix-stabilizing amino acid substitutions can produce antagonists with increased GH releasing inhibitory potencies and
GHRH receptor
-binding affinities in vitro. The review of experimental results of these substances are promising altrough no clinical data are yet available. Finally, the advent of these antagonists has allowed significant progress in the understanding of the role of the central and tissue GHRH-GH-IGFs system in the pathogenesis of tumors.
...
PMID:Ectopic secretion of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) in neuroendocrine tumors: relevant clinical aspects. 1176 59
Growth hormone (GH) secretion is regulated by GH-releasing hormone (GHRH),
somatostatin
, and possibly ghrelin, but uncertainty remains about the relative contributions of these hypophysiotropic factors to GH pulsatility. Patients with genetic
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
) deficiency present an opportunity to examine GH secretory dynamics in the selective absence of GHRH input. We studied circadian GH profiles in four young men homozygous for a null mutation in the
GHRH-R
gene by use of an ultrasensitive GH assay. Residual GH secretion was pulsatile, with normal pulse frequency, but severely reduced amplitude (<1% normal) and greater than normal process disorder (as assessed by approximate entropy). Nocturnal GH secretion, both basal and pulsatile, was enhanced compared with daytime. We conclude that rhythmic GH secretion persists in an amplitude-miniaturized version in the absence of a
GHRH-R
signal. The nocturnal enhancement of GH secretion is likely mediated by decreased
somatostatin
tone. Pulsatility of residual GH secretion may be caused by oscillations in
somatostatin
and/or ghrelin; it may also reflect intrinsic oscillations in somatotropes.
...
PMID:Pulsatile growth hormone secretion persists in genetic growth hormone-releasing hormone resistance. 1188 17
Available data on the influence of estradiol (E(2)) on GH levels remains controversial. A factor contributing to this uncertainty is a lack of knowledge of both E(2) action on somatotropes as well as the molecular mechanisms involved. In this study we investigated gene expression implicated in GH secretion in somatotropes derived from female aromatase knockout (ArKO) mice. In these mice E(2) production is blocked due to disruption of the Cyp19 gene encoding aromatase, the enzyme responsible for estrogen biosynthesis. The effect of E(2) replacement was also studied by in vivo treatment of mice with E(2) for 3 wk. It was demonstrated that somatotropes from ArKO mice had a low expression of GH, GH secretagogue receptor,
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
), and pituitary-specific transcription factor (Pit-1). On the other hand, the somatotropes exhibited elevated expression of
somatostatin
receptors (sst1-5). Overall, these effects resulted in a reduction in GH secretion. E(2) replacement increased
GHRH-R
, Pit-1, and GH mRNA levels to 185%, 193%, and 157% and reduced the levels of sst1, sst2, sst4, and sst5 mRNA expression in ArKO mice, respectively. E(2) replacement did not affect the levels of pituitary estrogen (alpha and beta) and androgen receptor mRNA expression. It is concluded that the expression of important genes involved in GH synthesis in somatotropes of the female ArKO mouse are functionally down-regulated, and such a down-regulation is reversed to normal levels by E(2) replacement. The levels of GH secretagogue receptor,
GHRH-R
, and Pit-1 mRNA expression were also reduced, and sst1 and sst3 mRNA expression enhanced in aging ArKO and wild-type mice, resulting in a decrease in GH mRNA expression. It is suggested that aging is another important impact factor for the pituitary expression and regulation of GH mRNA in female mice.
...
PMID:Functional modification of pituitary somatotropes in the aromatase knockout mouse and the effect of estrogen replacement. 1456 98
The two hypothalamic hormones, GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) and
somatostatin
(SRIF), are known to regulate GH secretion. However, the effects of these hormones on GH gene expression are not completely clear, partly because of the lack of appropriate host cells maintaining the original characteristics of the somatotroph. Since MtT/S, a pure somatotroph cell line, has become available, the effects of GHRH and SRIF on GH gene transcription have been studied using a subclone of MtT/S (MtT/SGL), in which the GH gene 5'-promoter-luciferase fusion gene was stably incorporated. The expression of
GHRH receptor
and SRIF receptor subtypes was also studied by RT-PCR. The results showed that MtT/SGL cells intrinsically expressed the functional
GHRH receptor
and all of the SRIF receptor subtypes. The expression of
GHRH receptor
was markedly enhanced by glucocorticoid pretreatment and, in the presence of corticosterone and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, GHRH (at or above 100 pM) stimulated GH gene 5'-promoter activity in a dose-dependent manner. On the other hand, SRIF (100 nM) significantly antagonized the effect of GHRH, which was completely reversed by pretreatment with pertussis toxin (50 ng/ml). Taken together, the present data indicated that both GHRH and SRIF are involved in the transcriptional regulation of the GH gene, and that the effect of SRIF is mediated through pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein. The MtT/SGL cell line is a good in vitro model for studying the molecular mechanisms of GH gene transcription by GHRH and/or SRIF.
...
PMID:The effects of GH-releasing hormone/somatostatin on the 5'-promoter activity of the GH gene in vitro. 1466 5
Secretion of GH by pituitary somatotropes is primarily stimulated by the hypothalamic GHRH through the activation of a specific G protein-coupled receptor,
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
). GH is also released in response to ghrelin, a peptide produced in the stomach, hypothalamus, and pituitary that activates somatotropes via a distinct G protein-coupled receptor, referred to as the GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R). Here, we have analyzed the expression of both
GHRH-R
and GHS-R (by multiplex RT-PCR) in porcine pituitary cell cultures, after acute (4 h) treatment with GHRH or ghrelin as well as with other regulators of somatotropes (
somatostatin
, dexamethasone). Exposure of cultures to GHRH decreased
GHRH-R
mRNA content and also diminished GHS-R transcript levels. Likewise, ghrelin down-regulated both GHS-R and
GHRH-R
expression. Interestingly, administration of the activator of adenylate cyclase, forskolin, decreased
GHRH-R
mRNA levels but had no effect on GHS-R, thus suggesting a distinct contribution of the various intracellular signals operating in somatotropes to the regulation of the expression of these receptors. Accordingly, an atypical activator of adenylate cyclase in the pig somatotrope is low-dose (10(-13) m)
somatostatin
, which also suppressed
GHRH-R
mRNA levels without altering GHS-R expression. Finally, dexamethasone did not modify
GHRH-R
or GHS-R expression. In summary, our data show for the first time that ghrelin, as well as GHRH, mediates homologous and heterologous down-regulation of their own receptor synthesis. However, our results also indicate that the expression of porcine
GHRH-R
and GHS-R is regulated by distinct signals that may differ from those reported in other mammalian species.
...
PMID:Homologous and heterologous regulation of pituitary receptors for ghrelin and growth hormone-releasing hormone. 1504 57
Circulating insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels have been shown to be related to risk of prostate cancer in epidemiologic studies. While specific genetic loci responsible for interindividual variation in circulating IGF-I levels in normal men have not been identified, candidate genes include those involved in the growth hormone (GH)-IGF-I axis such as the hypothalamic factors GH releasing hormone (GHRH) and
somatostatin
and their receptors. To investigate the role of the GH-IGF-I axis on in vivo prostate carcinogenesis and neoplastic progression, we generated mice genetically predisposed to prostate cancer (the TRAMP model) to be homozygous for lit, a mutation that inactivates the
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
) and reduces circulating levels of GH and IGF-I. The lit mutation significantly reduced the percentage of the prostate gland showing neoplastic changes at 35 weeks of age (P=0.0005) and was also associated with improved survival (P<0.01). These data provide an example of a germ line mutation that reduces risk in an experimental prostate carcinogenesis model. The results suggest that prostate carcinogenesis and progression may be influenced by germ line variation of genes encoding signalling molecules in the GH-IGF-I axis.
...
PMID:A germ line mutation that delays prostate cancer progression and prolongs survival in a murine prostate cancer model. 1587 Jul 5
The objective of this study was to determine whether differences in mRNA levels of key pituitary genes that regulate GH production, pituitary development, and growth were present and/or associated with divergent body composition phenotypes observed between sheep from genetically divergent lean and fat selection lines. Real-time PCR transcription profiles for pituitary specific transcription factor 1, prophet of pit1, GH, GH receptor, GH secretagogue receptor,
GHRH receptor
, leptin receptor, and
somatostatin
receptors 1 and 2 were determined in pituitary tissue. There was a difference in the amount of both GH (P < 0.001) and GH secretagogue receptor (P < 0.001) mRNA between the selection lines (5 females and 5 males per line; 20 wk of age); the lean line had greater abundance than the fat line, irrespective of which endogenous control gene was used. The results obtained for
GHRH receptor
were equivocal but suggestive; there were greater
GHRH receptor
mRNA levels (P < 0.001) in the lean line using beta-2-microglobulin as the endogenous control but not when hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase were used. No difference in pituitary specific transcription factor 1, prophet of pit1, GH receptor, leptin receptor, or
somatostatin
receptors 1 and 2 mRNA concentration was observed between the lines. The greater abundance of GH mRNA in the pituitary somatotropes from genetically lean animals appears to be associated with increased levels of GH secretagogue receptor mRNA and possibly
GHRH receptor
mRNA. This suggests that the difference in GH secretion between the lines may be due to differences in the afferent signals, such as ghrelin and/or GHRH, arising from the hypothalamus, or as a result of differential pituitary sensitivity to these hormones.
...
PMID:Growth hormone and ghrelin receptor genes are differentially expressed between genetically lean and fat selection lines of sheep. 1642 60
GHRH stimulates GH secretion in chickens as in mammals. However, nothing is known about the chicken
GHRH receptor
(
GHRH-R
). Here we report the cDNA sequence of chicken
GHRH-R
. Comparison of the cDNA sequence with the chicken genome localized the
GHRH-R
gene to chicken chromosome 2 and indicated that the chicken
GHRH-R
gene consists of 13 exons. Expression of all exons was confirmed by RT-PCR amplification of pituitary mRNA. The amino acid sequence predicted by the
GHRH-R
cDNA is homologous to that in other vertebrates and contains seven transmembrane domains and a conserved hormone-binding domain. The predicted size of the GHRH-R protein (48.9 kDa) was confirmed by binding of (125)I-GHRH to chicken pituitary membranes and SDS-PAGE.
GHRH-R
mRNA was readily detected by RT-PCR in the pituitary but not in the hypothalamus, total brain, lung, adrenal, ovary, or pineal gland. Effects of corticosterone (CORT), GHRH, ghrelin, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide,
somatostatin
(SRIF), and TRH on
GHRH-R
and GH gene expression were determined in cultures of chicken anterior pituitary cells.
GHRH-R
and GH mRNA levels were determined by quantitative real-time RT-PCR. Whereas all treatments affected levels of GH mRNA, only CORT, GHRH, and SRIF significantly altered
GHRH-R
mRNA levels.
GHRH-R
gene expression was modestly increased by GHRH and suppressed by SRIF at 4 h, and CORT dramatically decreased levels of
GHRH-R
mRNA at 72 h. We conclude that adrenal glucocorticoids may substantially impact pituitary GH responses to GHRH in the chicken through modulation of
GHRH-R
gene expression.
...
PMID:Identification of the chicken growth hormone-releasing hormone receptor (GHRH-R) mRNA and gene: regulation of anterior pituitary GHRH-R mRNA levels by homologous and heterologous hormones. 1646
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