Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.13.12.5 (aequorin)
1,451 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of PTH on aldosterone secretion from isolated bovine adrenal glomerulosa cells was examined. PTH binding was autoradiographically localized to the adrenal cortex, suggesting a specific effect. This binding of PTH was displaceable by cold PTH, but not by ACTH. No binding was observed in the adrenal medulla. In addition, PTH was shown to stimulate aldosterone secretion in a dose-dependent manner and to potentiate aldosterone secretion in response to angiotensin-II, such that PTH (10(-9)M) elevated the secretory rate from 58.6 +/- 6.8 to 110.9 +/- 19 pg/min.million cells in the presence of 10 nM angiotensin-II. The magnitude of the synergism between the two hormones depended on the concentrations of PTH and angiotensin-II as well as the time during which aldosterone secretion was measured. Within the first 15 min of stimulation, PTH increased the sensitivity to angiotensin-II, shifting the Ka for activation from 1.0 to 0.3 nM. In contrast, between 30-45 min of angiotensin-II stimulation, PTH elevated the maximal secretory response to angiotensin-II from 109 +/- 3.4 to 219 +/- 13.3 pg/min.million cells. By itself PTH elicited only a small increase in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration, as measured by aequorin luminescence in glomerulosa cells. In cells pretreated with angiotensin-II or 15 mM potassium, the intracellular calcium response to PTH was markedly potentiated. PTH was also found to cause a small increase in the cellular cAMP content. Thus, PTH stimulates aldosterone secretion from adrenal glomerulosa cells, both alone and in combination with angiotensin-II.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone modulates angiotensin II-induced aldosterone secretion from the adrenal glomerulosa cell. 164 6

Effects of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) on cytoplasmic free calcium concentration, [Ca2+]c, have been measured in adrenal glomerulosa cells using a calcium-sensitive photoprotein, aequorin. ACTH causes a rapid and transient increase in [Ca2+]c. Dose response study demonstrates that 1 pM ACTH induces an elevation of [Ca2+]c and that effect of ACTH appears to be saturated at 100 pM. ACTH action is greatly inhibited but not abolished by removal of extracellular calcium and is completely blocked in medium containing no added calcium and 1 mM EGTA. Under similar conditions, angiotensin II induces a remarkable rise in [Ca2+]c. ACTH action is not affected by pretreatment with dantrolene, which considerably decreases angiotensin II action on [Ca2+]c. One micromolar forskolin, which mimics 1 nM ACTH-mediated elevation of intracellular cAMP, does not increase [Ca2+]c nor modulates changes in [Ca2+] induced by a low dose of ACTH. One hundred micromolar forskolin or 1 mM 8-bromo-cAMP, however, increases [Ca2+]c even in calcium-free medium containing 1 mM EGTA. When glomerulosa cells are co-loaded with aequorin and quin2, angiotensin II-induced change in aequorin signal is greatly reduced, and ACTH-induced change is abolished. Quin2 loading results in accumulation of calcium in the cell under both unstimulated and stimulated conditions. These results indicate that ACTH increases [Ca2+]c by cAMP-independent mechanism, that ACTH action on [Ca2+]c is exclusively dependent on extracellular calcium, and that quin2 is unable to detect the rapid change in [Ca2+]c because of its calcium chelating activity.
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PMID:Direct demonstration of adrenocorticotropin-induced changes in cytoplasmic free calcium with aequorin in adrenal glomerulosa cell. 301 10