Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (protein kinase)
81,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Early studies in whole heart indicated that cGMP antagonized the positive inotropic effects of catecholamines and cAMP. However, the regulation of cGMP levels by a variety of agents was not always consistent with their effects on contractility. It is now clear that at least two major cell types in whole heart, cardiac myocytes and vascular smooth muscle cells, differ markedly in their mechanisms of cGMP regulation and response to cGMP. Furthermore, experiments on isolated cardiac myocytes indicate that the mechanism of cGMP action even in this single cell type can be multifaceted. Cyclic GMP inhibits the L-type calcium channel current (ICa), which is the major source of Ca++ entry into heart cells, and which plays a predominant role in the initiation and regulation of cardiac electrical and contractile activities. Patch-clamp measurements of ICa indicate that in isolated frog myocytes cGMP inhibits ICa by stimulation of cAMP phosphodiesterase (cGS-PDE), whereas in purified rat ventricular myocytes, cGMP predominantly inhibits ICa via a mechanism involving cGMP-dependent protein kinase (cGMP-PK). Under certain conditions, cGMP can also inhibit a cGMP-inhibited cAMP phosphodiesterase (cGI-PDE) and thereby produce a stimulatory effect on ICa. Biochemical characterization of the endogenous PDEs and cGMP-PK in purified cardiac myocytes provided further evidence in support of these mechanisms of cGMP action on ICa.
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PMID:Signal transduction by cGMP in heart. 166 25

The Ca(2+)-pump ATPases of the plasma membrane and of the endoplasmic reticulum play an important role in controlling the intracellular Ca(2+)-concentration. In this perspective it is not unexpected that these enzymes are modulated by different factors. The activity of the plasmalemmal (Ca2+ +Mg2+)ATPase is modified by the amount of negatively charged phospholipids surrounding the enzyme. Some evidence is presented indicating that in stomach and myometrium smooth muscle agonists inhibit the extrusion of Ca2+ by reducing the negatively charged phospholipids surrounding the plasmalemmal Ca(2+)-pump, while c-GMP dependent protein kinase would activate this Ca(2+)-pump by increasing this amount. The regulation of the Ca(2+)-pump of the endoplasmic reticulum depends on the phosphorylation of phospholamban by cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinase. In the second part of this review, the heterogeneity of the intracellular Ca2+ compartments and a possible connection between the intracellular compartment and the extracellular solution are discussed. In addition, some data on the regulation of Ca2+ inside the nucleus are presented.
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PMID:Ca(2+)-transport ATPases and Ca(2+)-compartments in smooth muscle cells. 166 64

The effectiveness of the cGMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor, KT5823, was investigated in human neutrophils. KT5823 did not inhibit the cGMP-dependent protein kinase mediated in vitro, or in situ phosphorylation of vimentin, a known substrate for this enzyme in activated neutrophils. In addition, KT5823 was shown to induce dramatic shape changes in neutrophils, suggesting it has an activating effect upon the cells.
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PMID:KT5823 activates human neutrophils and fails to inhibit cGMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation of vimentin. 166 98

1. Effects of cyclic GMP on L-type Ca2+ current (ICa) were investigated in myocytes isolated from guinea-pig ventricles using the patch clamp method in the whole-cell configuration combined with intracellular perfusion. 2. When ICa was increased by bath application of isoprenaline (0.001-0.1 microM) or forskolin (0.5-1 microM), or by intracellular dialysis with cyclic AMP (50-100 microM), dialysis with 10 microM-cyclic GMP resulted in an additional stimulation of ICa. Without these pre-treatments, cyclic GMP (1-100 microM) had no effect on the basal ICa. 5'-GMP was without effect. 3. The stimulatory effect of cyclic GMP was observed at concentrations higher than 0.1 microM with a maximum at around 10 microM in the pipette. The dose-response relation between isoprenaline and ICa was shifted to the left by (10 microM) cyclic GMP; the half-maximum isoprenaline concentration shifted from 16 to 4.6 nM. 4. The increase of ICa on dialysing 50 microM-cyclic AMP varied from cell to cell, probably due to a difference in phosphodiesterase activity. The cells responding weakly to cyclic AMP showed a greater response to cyclic GMP, and vice versa. In cells dialysed with hydrolysis-resistant derivatives (10-50 microM-8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cyclic AMP or 50 microM-8-bromo-cyclic AMP), additional dialysis with cyclic GMP failed to modify ICa. Dialysis with cyclic GMP abolished the stimulatory effect of milrinone, a specific inhibitor of cyclic GMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase. These findings suggested that inhibition of cyclic GMP-sensitive phosphodiesterase was responsible for the stimulatory effect of cyclic GMP. 5. In the presence of isoprenaline, direct application of an active fragment of cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) failed to modify ICa in most cells. Activation of native PKG by intracellular dialysis with 8-bromo-cyclic GMP, or higher concentrations of cyclic GMP (100-1000 microM), depressed ICa in about 25% of the cells. Furthermore, dialysis of cyclic GMP reversed the increase of ICa by the non-specific phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine (IBMX). These findings suggested the presence of antagonistic mechanisms of cyclic GMP, which are independent from the above synergistic action. PKG may be involved in this antagonistic effect.
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PMID:Potentiation by cyclic GMP of beta-adrenergic effect on Ca2+ current in guinea-pig ventricular cells. 166 41

Atrial natriuretic peptide, acting through its second messenger guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP), suppresses Na+ absorption across the renal inner-medullary collecting duct and increases urinary Na+ excretion. Patch clamp studies show that cGMP reduces Na+ absorption by inhibiting an amiloride-sensitive cation channel in the apical membrane. We have now examined, using the patch clamp technique, the molecular mechanisms of cGMP inhibition. Cyclic GMP directly and specifically reduced the probability of a single channel being open (open probability, Po) by 39% (inhibition constant, Ki = 7.6 x 10(-7) M) by a phosphorylation-independent mechanism. Cyclic GMP also inhibited the channel by activating cGMP-dependent protein kinase (cGMP-kinase). Exogenous cGMP-kinase completely inhibited the channel by a phosphorylation-dependent mechanism. Activation of a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein by GTP-gamma-S blocked cGMP-kinase inhibition of the channel. By contrast, cGMP-kinase inhibition of Po was completely reversed by GTP-gamma-S. Taken together with the results of a previous study showing that a G protein activates the cation channel, these data indicate that cGMP-kinase and a G protein sequentially regulate the cation channel. Our results show that atrial natriuretic peptide, acting through cGMP, inhibits Na+ absorption across the inner-medullary collecting duct by a dual mechanism, and that cGMP-kinase inhibits the channel by a pathway involving a G protein.
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PMID:Dual ion-channel regulation by cyclic GMP and cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase. 169 Mar 55

Bullous pemphigoid antigens are defined as the autoantigens in a blistering skin disease, bullous pemphigoid. One of them, a 230-kDa protein (BPAG1), is associated with hemidesmosomes, attachment complexes at the basal keratinocyte-lamina lucida interface within the dermal-epidermal basement membrane zone. The precise functions and cellular compartmentalization of BPAG1 are unknown. In this study, a human keratinocyte lambda gt11 cDNA library was screened for clones corresponding to BPAG1. The composite of overlapping cDNAs delineated 8,930 base pairs of nucleotide sequences that contained an open reading frame encoding 2,649 amino acids. Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences predicted a putative signal peptide of 43 amino acids and the presence of a membrane-associated sequence of 17 amino acids. Several potential sites for N-glycosylation, as well as for protein kinase C or cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinase-mediated phosphorylation were identified. Three peptide segments were predicted to be highly antigenic, potentially serving as epitopes for the formation of autoantibodies. Eight repeat segments of 38 residues each with a high degree of homology with sequences in desmoplakin I, a component of desmosomal cytoplasmic plaques, were detected in the carboxyl-terminal end of the molecule. In addition, the presence of three subdomains characterized by heptad repeats predicted an alpha-helical coiled coil dimer structure in the central portion of the protein. These data suggest that BPAG1 may be a membrane-associated protein that plays a role in the attachment of basal keratinocytes to the underlying basement membrane.
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PMID:Human bullous pemphigoid antigen (BPAG1). Amino acid sequences deduced from cloned cDNAs predict biologically important peptide segments and protein domains. 171 41

We have found that a fungal strain, Talaromyces wortmannin KY12420, produces a potent inhibitor of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK). This active product, designated as MS-54, was isolated and purified from the culture broth of the fungus and identified as wortmannin. The inhibition of MLCK by wortmannin was prevented by a high concentration of ATP. The activity of the catalytic domain, which was disclosed by partial tryptic digestion, was also inhibited by wortmannin. These results suggest that wortmannin acts at or near to the catalytic site of the enzyme. It was shown clearly by kinetic analyses, preincubation studies, and dialysis experiments that the inhibitory action of wortmannin on MLCK was irreversible. Under the condition of preincubation for 3 min, 0.3 microM wortmannin inhibited the activity of MLCK, while 10 microM wortmannin had no effect on the activities of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, cGMP-dependent protein kinase, and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, and had little effect on protein kinase C activity. These data expressed clearly the marked selectivity of the compound for MLCK. Furthermore, wortmannin also inhibited both the phosphorylation of myosin light chain and the contraction in rat thoracic aorta stimulated with KCl, which indicates the effectiveness of the compound in the cellular level as an MLCK inhibitor.
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PMID:Wortmannin, a microbial product inhibitor of myosin light chain kinase. 173 24

A survey of the available literature leads to the conclusion that the most probable mechanism by which nitrovasodilators act, is by nitric oxide (NO) formation. This by itself or by formation of a nitrosothiol (e.g. nitroscocysteine) activates guanylyl cyclase which increases the production of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). Endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), which later turned out to be or to form NO, relaxes smooth muscle by stimulating cGMP formation. The effect of cGMP is mediated by a cGMP-dependent protein kinase and causes a reduction in the intracellular concentration of free Ca2+ ions in the smooth muscle cell. The precise mechanism of this effect is not completely clear but sequestration into sarcoplasmatic reticulum seems to play a major role. In order to identify the nature of the endogenous stimulator of guanylyl cyclase, i.e. to decide whether it is a nitrosothiol or the free radical NO, we compared the effects of NO, nitrosocysteine and nitrosoglutathione on vascular relaxation and increases in cGMP levels in isolated bovine circular strips and on guanylyl cyclase activity in vitro. Induction of tolerance and of cross-tolerance between various NO donors was also investigated. Nitrosodium and nitrosoglutathione augmented cGMP and relaxed vascular smooth muscle slightly more powerfully than NO. The three agents induced slight tolerance after repeated administration without affecting cGMP rises or desensitizing guanylyl cyclase. Pretreatment of coronary strips with nitrosoglutathione caused largely similar cross-tolerance as did NO against nitroglycerin, SIN-1 and sodium nitroprusside. The similarities to NO characterize nitrosocysteine as its most likely precursor, e.g. as EDRF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cellular mechanisms of action of therapeutic nitric oxide donors. 179 Jul 79

Cyclic GMP mediates vascular smooth muscle relaxation to a variety of drugs and naturally-occurring substances. The reduction of intracellular Ca2+ levels is believed to underlie this action, but the mechanism of this effect is unknown. In order to test the hypothesis that inhibition of guanine nucleotide-binding protein function is involved in the actions of cGMP, the effects of cGMP-dependent protein kinase on the phosphorylation of both pertussis toxin-sensitive (Gi/Go) and insensitive (Gz) G-proteins were examined in vitro. None of these proteins were effective substrates for either cGMP- or cAMP-dependent protein kinases, despite the fact that assay conditions were designed to detect poorly phosphorylated substrate proteins. In line with these observations, atriopeptin II did not inhibit angiotensin II-treated inositol phosphate formation in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells. These results suggest that phosphorylation by cGMP-dependent protein kinase of these G-proteins is not the major mechanism by which cGMP reduces intracellular Ca2+ levels in vascular smooth muscle.
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PMID:Pertussis toxin-sensitive and insensitive guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G-proteins) are not phosphorylated by cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase. 183 99

The role of cGMP-dependent protein kinase in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ levels in vascular smooth muscle cells was examined by studying the effects of cGMP on the phosphorylation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase regulatory protein phospholamban. Cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells incubated with atrial natriuretic peptide II or sodium nitroprusside responded with increased phosphorylation of the 6000-Da subunit of phospholamban. The identity of phospholamban was confirmed using immunoprecipitation methods. Phosphorylation was associated with an increase in the activation of membrane-associated ATPase by Ca2+. These results indicated that at least one site of action of cGMP in smooth muscle cells is the sarcoplasmic reticulum, where phosphorylation of proteins regulating Ca2+ fluxes occurs. Studies using confocal laser scanning microscopy to define the cellular distribution of cGMP-dependent protein kinase suggested that the enzyme was localized to the same cellular region(s) as was phospholamban. Phosphorylation of proteins by cGMP in broken cell fractions from rabbit aorta was also performed. Phospholamban and other proteins were phosphorylated in the presence of cGMP but not cAMP, suggesting that only cGMP-dependent protein kinase was associated with smooth muscle membrane fractions containing phospholamban. These results suggest that one mechanism of action of cGMP in the reduction of intracellular Ca2+ is the activation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase via phosphorylation of phospholamban. The data also support the concept that compartmentalization of protein kinases with substrates in the intact cell is an important factor involved in protein phosphorylation.
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PMID:Regulation of sarcoplasmic reticulum protein phosphorylation by localized cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase in vascular smooth muscle cells. 183 34


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