bim-23268 and quinagolide

bim-23268 has been researched along with quinagolide* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for bim-23268 and quinagolide

ArticleYear
A luteinizing hormone-, alpha-subunit- and prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma responsive to somatostatin analogs: in vivo and in vitro studies.
    European journal of endocrinology, 2001, Volume: 145, Issue:1

    Evaluation of the efficiency of somatostatin analogues in the treatment of a mixed luteinizing hormone (LH)-, alpha-subunit-, prolactin (PRL)-secreting pituitary adenoma.. A 30-year-old woman, with amenorrhaea-galactorrhaea, presented with a pituitary macroadenoma. The endocrine evaluation showed high plasma levels of PRL, LH, and alpha-subunit inhibited by 65%, 65% and 33% respectively under octreotide test (200 microg, s.c.). Long-term treatment with slow release (SR) lanreotide (30 mg/10 days, i.m.) restored menstrual cycles and normalized PRL values. Due to persisting supranormal levels of LH and alpha-subunit, and to the absence of tumoral shrinkage, the adenoma was resected by the transsphenoidal route.. In vitro characterization of the somatostatin receptor subtypes (SSTR) expression and functionality. Real-time polymerase chain reaction was performed to quantify the expression of SSTR mRNAs and functionality of the SSTRs was assessed in cell culture studies with various concentrations of native somatostatin (SRIF-14) and of analogues preferential for SSTR2 or SSTR5.. This adenoma presented with high levels of SSTR2, SSTR3 and SSTR5 mRNAs, as compared with a series of gonadotroph adenomas. In cell culture studies, PRL, LH and alpha-subunit were inhibited by 60%, 47% and 33% respectively by SRIF-14 at a concentration of 10 nmol/l. The SSTR2 (BIM-23197, lanreotide) and SSTR5 (BIM-23268) preferential analogues both produced a partial 21-38% inhibition of PRL, LH, and alpha-subunit release.. In this plurihormonal-secreting adenoma, the high efficacy of somatostatin analogues to inhibit PRL, LH and alpha-subunit secretion in vivo may be explained by the unusually high level of expression and by the functionality of both SSTR2 and SSTR5 receptor subtypes.

    Topics: Adult; Aminoquinolines; Antineoplastic Agents; Dopamine Agonists; Female; Glycoprotein Hormones, alpha Subunit; Humans; Oligopeptides; Peptides, Cyclic; Piperazines; Pituitary Neoplasms; Prolactin; Prolactinoma; Receptors, Somatostatin; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA, Neoplasm; Somatostatin

2001
Quantitative and functional expression of somatostatin receptor subtypes in human prolactinomas.
    The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 1999, Volume: 84, Issue:9

    Recently, it was demonstrated that somatostatin analogs preferential for the SSTR5 subtype suppress PRL release from prolactinoma cell cultures by 30-40%. These data supported the idea of somatostatin receptor subtype-specific control of PRL secretion in such tumors. The present study examines the quantitative profile of SSTRs messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in 10 PRL-secreting tumors and correlates the expression with the ability of native somatostatins (SS14 and SS28), SSTR2 preferential analogs (octreotide and BIM-23197), and the SSTR5 preferential analog BIM-23268 to suppress PRL secretion. RT-PCR quantitative analysis showed a large predominance of SSTR5 mRNA [5648 +/- 1918 pg/pg glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH)] vs. SSTR2 mRNA (148 +/- 83 pg/pg GAPDH). The SSTR1 transcript was also highly expressed in prolactinomas (1296 +/- 669 pg/pg GAPDH). SSTR5 mRNA expression correlated with PRL inhibition induced by both SRIF14 and SRIF28. Among the different analogs tested, only BIM-23268 produced inhibition of PRL release similar to that achieved with the native peptides. Its EC50 for PRL suppression was 0.28 +/- 0.10 nmol/L. No additive effects on PRL suppression were achieved by cotreatment of the tumor cells with SSTR2 and SSTR5 preferential analogs. In the same tumor cell cultures, quinagolide, a potent dopamine agonist, produced a dose-dependent inhibition of PRL with an EC50 at least 10 times lower than that of BIM-23268. Coincubation of quinagolide and BIM-23268, particularly in tumor cells resistant to dopamine agonist treatment, did not produce additive effects on PRL suppression. In conclusion, prolactinomas have a specific pattern of SSTR subtype mRNA expression (SSTR5 and SSTR1). SSTR5 expression is correlated to PRL regulation. These inhibitory effects are superimposable, at a higher concentration, to those of the dopamine agonists, but are not additive, particularly in the adenomas resistant to dopaminergic suppression of PRL release.

    Topics: Adult; Aminoquinolines; Dopamine Agonists; Female; Gene Expression; Hormones; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Octreotide; Oligopeptides; Piperazines; Pituitary Neoplasms; Prolactin; Prolactinoma; Receptors, Somatostatin; RNA, Messenger; Somatostatin; Tumor Cells, Cultured

1999