dynorphins and Endocrine-System-Diseases

dynorphins has been researched along with Endocrine-System-Diseases* in 2 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for dynorphins and Endocrine-System-Diseases

ArticleYear
Opioid biology: the next set of questions.
    Australian and New Zealand journal of medicine, 1985, Volume: 15, Issue:1

    A range of biologically different opioid peptides are synthesised as components of three distinct precursors, pro-opiomelanocortin, proenkephalin, and prodynorphin. They interact with a number of receptors which have so far been characterised as mu, delta, kappa, sigma, and epsilon. It is unclear which ligands bind to which receptors under physiological circumstances, but preferential in vitro interactions include enkephalins with delta receptors, dynorphin with kappa receptors, and beta-endorphin with epsilon receptors. Post-translational processing determines which of several opioid products are produced from each precursor, but the identity of the enzymes involved and regulation of processing is unknown. Opioid involvement in the neuroendocrine and cardiovascular systems is reviewed. Naloxone-sensitive opioid mechanisms are implicated in the control of gonadotrophin and adrenocorticotropic hormone secretion and in the hypotension of various types of shock. The investigation of possible dynorphin involvement in neurohypophysial function is taking place because vasopressin and dynorphin A (1-8) have been shown to coexist in the neurosecretory vesicles of magnocellular neurons.

    Topics: Cardiovascular Diseases; Dynorphins; Endocrine System Diseases; Endorphins; Enkephalins; Female; Humans; Male; Nervous System Diseases; Protein Processing, Post-Translational; Receptors, Opioid; Receptors, Opioid, delta; Receptors, Opioid, kappa

1985

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for dynorphins and Endocrine-System-Diseases

ArticleYear
Expression of opioid peptides in tumors.
    The New England journal of medicine, 1987, Dec-03, Volume: 317, Issue:23

    We looked for opioid peptides and their precursors in 108 tumors of both neuroendocrine and nonneuroendocrine origin, using a monoclonal "pan-opioid" antibody, 3-E7, which recognizes the tetrapeptide Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe (the sequence responsible for pharmacologic activity in all known opioid peptides), in conjunction with polyclonal antibodies directed against representative peptides of each of the three precursors (alpha-endorphin, [met]enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu, and dynorphin B). Using the avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique, we observed consistent cytoplasmic immunoreactivity (at least focally) in all of 15 adrenal pheochromocytomas, all of 6 thyroid medullary carcinomas, and all of 5 pituitary adenomas. Opioid staining was also observed in parathyroid adenomas (8 of 9), pancreatic islet-cell tumors (7 of 10), carcinoid tumors from various sites (18 of 26), and paragangliomas (1 of 2). There was no immunoreactivity in pulmonary small-cell carcinomas, Merkel-cell tumors of skin, neuroblastomas, or any of the non-neuroendocrine tumors examined. The expression of alpha-endorphin, [met]enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu, and dynorphin B varied from tumor to tumor; however, positive staining with the "pan-opioid" antibody was found in each tumor containing at least one of the three precursors. Opioid peptide immunoreactivity was also detected in non-neoplastic cells of the adrenal medulla, pancreatic islets, pituitary, intestinal and bronchial mucosa, and intestinal myenteric plexuses. We conclude that opioid expression within tumors is most likely due to enhanced expression of a normal cell product and that opioid peptides are useful markers of neuroendocrine differentiation in many tumors.

    Topics: alpha-Endorphin; Antibodies, Monoclonal; Biomarkers, Tumor; Dynorphins; Endocrine System Diseases; Endorphins; Humans; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Neoplasms; Neurosecretory Systems; Peptide Fragments

1987