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)

Isolated nerve ending particles (synaptosomes) prepared from rat and human cerebral cortex, after varying conditions of post-mortem storage were shown to possess good structural and morphological integrity and metabolic activity. Respiration, potassium retention, lactate dehydrogenase content, and stimulus-induced release of transmitter candidate amino acids, as well as the neuropeptide somatostatin, were measured. These preparations from post-mortem material showed properties which were closely comparable with similar preparations from fresh material. The relevance of these findings to studies on human post-mortem material is discussed.
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PMID:Metabolic and secretory processes in nerve-endings isolated from post-mortem brain. 43 89

This review addresses means for improving treatment results in small cell and non-small cell lung cancer. In small cell lung cancer lactate dehydrogenase and neuron-specific enolase seem to be important prognostic factors that may reflect not only tumor load but also growth rate. Chemotherapy seems to induce or select differentiated cells in small cell lung cancer, which focuses attention on other treatment modalities such as drugs, which can induce terminally differentiated nonproliferating cells. Scheduling of chemotherapy may improve survival, especially in extensive disease patients. Exciting new techniques for tumor targeting by a radiolabelled somatostatin-analogue and radiolabelled murine anti-epidermal growth factor are reported. The possible adverse effect of heterologous blood transfusions on survival after surgery of stage I and II non-small cell lung cancer remains a very important subject for investigation to solve the essential question whether the need for transfusion or the transfusion itself is the adverse prognostic factor. A possible improvement of survival of non-small cell lung cancer patients by chemotherapy should be investigated in patients with an excellent performance score and a small tumor load, eg, stage IIIa and IIIb patients. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy in such patients may improve survival but a better and especially more uniform design of the trials is urgently needed. Finally, the development of techniques to palliate terminally ill patients quickly and easily by reopening a closed bronchial lumen should be encouraged.
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PMID:Therapy for small cell and non-small cell lung cancer. 131 20

Using radiolabeled microspheres, spinal cord blood flow was measured after spinal subarachnoid injections of 3.1- to 12.5-nmol doses of somatostatin through either indwelling i.t. catheters or acutely inserted intervertebral needles. With either injection technique, somatostatin caused significant dose-dependent reductions in thoracic and lumbosacral blood flow that could be partially blocked by a 5-min preinjection of the somatostatin receptor antagonist cyclo[7-aminoheptanoyl-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr(Bzl)], which has previously been shown to block the hindlimb flaccidity produced by these doses of somatostatin in conscious rats. The duration of these blood flow changes were appreciably less in the rats injected through indwelling i.t. catheters. Somatostatin-induced reductions in spinal cord perfusion were accompanied by transient pressor responses, reduced cardiac output, 3-fold increases in spinal cord cerebrospinal fluid lactic acid concentrations and breakdown of the blood-spinal cord barrier, as reflected by significantly increased extravasation of [125I]bovine serum albumin. By 24 hr postinjection, a 12.5-nmol dose of somatostatin caused appreciable spinal cord cellular injury, as evidenced by significant elevations in cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of lactate dehydrogenase. After topical application to exposed pial vessels of the parietal cortex, comparable doses of somatostatin caused immediate intense dose-related arteriolar vasospasm and subsequent extravasation of the visible macromolecular tracer Evans blue dye. We conclude that somatostatin has significant vasoconstrictory effects on the blood vessels of the brain and spinal cord of the rat that must be recognized and appreciated when studying its neuropharmacological actions in vivo.
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PMID:Somatostatin causes vasoconstriction, reduces blood flow and increases vascular permeability in the rat central nervous system. 134 70

GABAergic and cholinergic synaptosomes from rat cerebral cortex were isolated by a magnetic immunoaffinity technique, i.e. immunomagnetophoresis. These subpopulations were extracted and subjected to radioimmunoassay for four neuropeptides: Neuropeptide Y (NPY); vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP); substance P (SP); and somatostatin (SRIF). In each of the sub-populations three of the four peptides were enriched in the sorted fraction compared with the mother fraction with respect to the cytosolic marker lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). In the GABAergic sub-population the order was SP > SRIF > NPY > or = VIP whilst in the cholinergic sub-population they were enriched in the order VIP > or = NPY > SP > SRIF. The presence of NPY has not previously been reported in cortical cholinergic neurons.
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PMID:The presence of neuropeptides in GABAergic and cholinergic rat cerebrocortical synaptosome sub-populations. 145 55

Cholinergic synaptosomes from rat cerebral cortex were isolated by a magnetic immunoaffinity technique, i.e. immunomagnetophoresis. This subpopulation was extracted and subjected to radioimmunoassay for 4 neuropeptides:neuropeptide Y (NPY); vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP); substance P (SP); and somatostatin (SRIF). Three of the 4 neuropeptides were enriched in the sorted fraction compared with the mother fraction with respect to the cytosolic marker lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). The most enriched neuropeptide was NPY followed by SP and VIP. Somatostatin was not enriched in the cholinergic synaptosome subpopulation. The presence of NPY has not previously been reported in cortical cholinergic neurones.
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PMID:Neuropeptide content of purified rat brain cholinergic synaptosome subpopulations. 160 51

We exposed murine cortical neuronal cell cultures for 24 hours to defined concentrations of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate, or alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA), and assessed the resultant neuronal degeneration quantitatively by the efflux of lactate dehydrogenase to the bathing medium. The small subpopulations of neurons that stained immunohistochemically for either somatostatin- or parvalbumin-like reactivity were atypically affected by these excitotoxins. Limited exposure to kainate or AMPA did little damage to the general neuronal population, but destroyed nearly all somatostatin- or parvalbumin-reactive cells. Conversely, these immunoreactive cells were more resistant to NMDA-induced injury than the general population. In view of reports suggesting that somatostatin- and parvalbumin-reactive cortical neurons may be preferentially damaged in Alzheimer's disease, these observations support a hypothesis that the overactivation of non-NMDA receptors could be involved in Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis.
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PMID:Cortical neurons containing somatostatin- or parvalbumin-like immunoreactivity are atypically vulnerable to excitotoxic injury in vitro. 197 32

The Wobbler mouse (wr) is a mutant that exhibits loss of anterior horn cells in the spinal cord and brainstem and subsequent muscle wasting, particularly of the forelimbs and neck. The wr mice, 2-3 months of age, were found to have increased levels of immunoreactive-thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (ir-TRH) in the spinal cord and pons and medulla, but not in other CNS areas. This increase was observed in dorsal and ventral cord and at cervical, thoracic, and lumbar levels and was confirmed by HPLC to be authentic TRH. The levels of immunoreactive-somatostatin, -neurotensin, and -substance P were not raised in the CNS of wr mice. The activities of two peptidases capable of degrading TRH, pyroglutamylaminopeptidase (PGAP, EC 3.4.11.8) and proline endopeptidase (PEP, EC 3.4.21.26), and the level of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid were also raised in the spinal cord of 2-3-month-old wr mice although the activities of alanine aminopeptidase and lactate dehydrogenase and the level of 5-hydroxytryptamine were not. Increased spinal cord levels of ir-TRH and PGAP and PEP activities were not observed in the 1-month-old wr mice. In addition, a pilot study using spinal cord obtained at autopsy from three patients with motor neurone disease and 12 control subjects indicated no increase in spinal cord ir-TRH, PGAP, or PEP in human motor neurone disease.
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PMID:Raised thyrotrophin-releasing hormone, pyroglutamylamino peptidase, and proline endopeptidase are present in the spinal cord of wobbler mice but not in human motor neurone disease. 244 4

A prospective study was carried out to evaluate the efficacy of somatostatin in the treatment of acute pancreatitis. Seventy one patients were randomised to control (h = 36), or to the somatostatin group (h = 35) who received somatostatin 100 micrograms/h after a 250 microgram bolus for the first two days. The following were compared in the two groups on admission and two days later: laboratory tests of prognostic significance, severity of pancreatitis, and also morbidity and mortality. Of the nine laboratory tests compared, the white blood cell count, lactate dehydrogenase, and urea concentrations were significantly lower in the somatostatin group two days after admission. Severity of pancreatitis after hospitalisation increased in fewer patients given somatostatin (NS). There was a trend toward fewer complications, especially local, in the somatostatin group. Mortality in both groups was low. Somatostatin appeared to reduce the local complications of acute pancreatitis. A larger trial is necessary to show its beneficial effect conclusively.
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PMID:Somatostatin in the treatment of acute pancreatitis: a prospective randomised controlled trial. 256 34

The effects of 23 agonists on the rates of cellular 32P efflux and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release were tested in a perfused rat heart preparation which had been prelabelled in vitro with [32P]Pi. Some 13 compounds produced detectable changes at high doses within 10 min, and in most cases a polyphasic response was observed. Six classes of compound gave rise to substantial effects, as follows. Catecholamines and glucagon produced a transient initial stimulation of Pi efflux, followed by a long-term inhibition of Pi transport and an increased rate of LDH release. These effects were clearly different from the response seen after treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP, which had a slower, stimulatory, effect on Pi output in doses which gave rise to a pronounced inotropic effect, and produced a marked increase in both coronary flow and LDH release. Carbachol also gave rise to a large transient stimulation of Pi efflux, which was followed by smaller sustained increase in Pi output without any obvious effect on LDH release. Dibutyryl cyclic GMP had no effect on Pi efflux or LDH release. Insulin decreased the rate of Pi efflux, although the loss rate partially recovered towards the control value after prolonged exposure to the hormone. Insulin had no obvious inotropic effects and produced no change in the rate of LDH release. Corticosteroids increased the rate of Pi efflux, although the loss rate partially declined towards the control value with prolonged exposure to the hormones. Corticosteroids produced a very slight inotropic response, and large doses sometimes increased the rate of LDH release from the tissue. Aldosterone slightly stimulated Pi output. A small, transient and somewhat variable stimulation of Pi efflux was observed with vasopressin and angiotensin, whereas tri-iodothyronine was slightly inhibitory, but adenosine, histamine, spermidine, des-Asp1-angiotensin, prolactin, parathyroid substances, calcitonin and somatostatin had no significant effects under our experimental conditions. Ouabain stimulated Pi efflux in doses that had no detectable inotropic effect. It is suggested that Pi efflux involves the electroneutral transport of NaH2PO4 across the cardiac plasmalemma and that many of the hormonal effects might be explained by changes in the intracellular [Na+] and pH in addition to changes in the intracellular [Pi].
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PMID:Some hormonal effects on myocardial phosphate efflux. 609 15

1. Analytical subcellular fractionation techniques have been applied to endoscopic human rectal biopsies to study the localization of enteroglucagon, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal peptide and the properties of the principal subcellular organelles. 2. The peptide hormones, detected by radioimmunoassay, showed particulate localizations with single peaks in the density gradients for enteroglucagon (modal density 1.25) and somatostatin (modal density 1.23). Vasoactive intestinal peptide showed a less discrete localization but demonstrated a major peak (modal density, 1.17) with a small subsidiary peak (modal density 1.24). 3. The following organelles, characterized by their marker enzymes, were located in the density gradients; plasma membrane (5'-nucleotidase), mitochondria (malate dehydrogenase), peroxisomes (catalase), lysosomes (beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase), endoplasmic reticulum (neutral alpha-D-glucosidase) and cytosol (lactate dehydrogenase). 4. This technique can be used to investigate disease of the human rectum at a subcellular level.
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PMID:Subcellular fractionation studies of human rectal mucosa: localization of the mucosal peptide hormones. 610 76


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