Plasma neurotensin (NT) was measured by radioimmunoassay in propanol extracted and unextracted plasma from 16 parkinsonian patients (four before treatment) and 16 age and sex matched controls. Mean plasma NT concentrations were consistently higher in parkinsonian patients than in controls and higher in the four untreated patients than in levodopa treated patients suggesting that plasma NT measurement may represent an easy detectable additional index in diagnosing parkinsonism and provides a novel approach to research in this field. (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2001;70:784-786)
Neurotensin (NT), a neuromodulator, is also thought to play an immunomodulatory role. We sought to confirm the effects of NT on proliferation in human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs; n = 10), to characterize the binding properties of the NT receptor using Scatchard analysis, and to measure NT receptors using blood volumes (50 ml) applicable to clinical investigation. Incubation of phytohemagglutinin-stimulated PBLs with NT (10–10 to 10–13 M) in the presence of 0.07% normal human serum (72 h at 37°C) significantly enhanced proliferation (p < 0.001), which is consistent with PBLs possessing functional NT receptors. However, the various experimental conditions tested constantly yielded low specific NT binding to human PBLs, and hence Scatchard analysis was impossible for 50-ml blood samples. Our data confirm the existence of a link between NT and the immune system and support a physiological significance for this link. However, measurement of NT receptor binding in readily available cells proved unsuitable for clinical investigation.
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