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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)
The
muscarinic receptor
subtype-activated signal transduction mechanisms mediating rat urinary bladder contraction are incompletely understood. M(3) mediates normal rat bladder contractions; however, the M(2) receptor subtype has a more dominant role in contractions of the hypertrophied bladder. Normal bladder muscle strips were exposed to inhibitors of enzymes thought to be involved in signal transduction in vitro followed by a single cumulative concentration-response curve to the
muscarinic receptor
agonist carbachol. The outcome measures were the maximal contraction, the potency of carbachol, and the affinity of the M(3) -selective antimuscarinic agent darifenacin for inhibition of contraction. Inhibition of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) with 1-O-octadecyl-2-O-methyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (ET-18-OCH(3)) reduces carbachol potency and reduces darifenacin affinity, whereas inhibition of phosphatidyl choline-specific phospholipase C (PC-PLC) with O-tricyclo[5.2.1.02,6]dec-9-yl dithiocarbonate potassium salt (D609) attenuates the carbachol maximal contraction. Inhibition of rho kinase with (R)-(+)-trans-4-(1-aminoethyl)-N-(4-pyridyl)cyclohexanecarboxamide dihydrochloride (Y-27632) reduces carbachol potency and increases darifenacin affinity. Inhibition of rho kinase,
protein kinase A
(
PKA
), and
protein kinase
G (PKG) with 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-homopiperazine.HCl (HA-1077) reduces the carbachol maximal contraction, carbachol potency, and darifenacin affinity. Inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC) with chelerythrine increases darifenacin affinity, whereas inhibition of rho kinase,
PKA
, PKG, and PKC with 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine.2HCl (H7) reduces the carbachol maximum and carbachol potency while increasing darifenacin affinity. Inhibition of rho kinase,
PKA
, and PKG with N-[2-(p-bromocinnamylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide.2HCl (H89) reduces carbachol maximum and carbachol potency. Both the M(2) and the M(3) receptor subtype are involved in normal rat bladder contractions. The M(3)subtype seems to mediate contraction by activation of PI-PLC, PC-PLC, and
PKA
, whereas the M(2) signal transduction cascade may include activation of rho kinase, PKC, and an additional contractile signal transduction mechanism independent of rho kinase or PKC.
...
PMID:M2 and M3 muscarinic receptor activation of urinary bladder contractile signal transduction. I. Normal rat bladder. 1624 61
Normal rat bladder contractions are mediated by the M(3)
muscarinic receptor
subtype. The M(2) receptor subtype mediates contractions of the denervated, hypertrophied bladder. This study determined signal transduction mechanisms mediating contraction of the denervated rat bladder. Denervated bladder muscle strips were exposed to inhibitors of enzymes thought to be involved in signal transduction in vitro followed by a cumulative carbachol concentration-response curve. Outcome measures were the maximal contraction, the potency of carbachol, and the affinity of darifenacin for inhibition of contraction. Inhibition of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) with 1-O-octadecyl-2-O-methyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (ET-18-OCH(3)) has no effect on denervated bladder contractions, whereas inhibition of phosphatidyl choline-specific phospholipase C (PC-PLC) with O-tricyclo[5.2.1.02,6]dec-9-yl dithiocarbonate potassium salt (D609) attenuates the carbachol maximum and potency. Inhibition of rho kinase with (R)-(+)-trans-4-(1-aminoethyl)-N-(4-pyridyl)cyclohexanecarboxamide dihydrochloride (Y-27632) reduces carbachol maximum, carbachol potency, and increases darifenacin affinity. Inhibition of rho kinase,
protein kinase A
(
PKA
), and
protein kinase
G (PKG) with 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-homopiperazine.HCl (HA-1077) reduces the carbachol maximum and potency. Inhibition of PKC with chelerythrine increases darifenacin affinity, whereas inhibition of rho kinase,
PKA
, PKG, and protein kinase C (PKC) with 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine.2HCl (H7) reduces the carbachol potency while increasing darifenacin affinity. Inhibition of rho kinase,
PKA
, and PKG with N-[2-(p-bromocinnamylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide.2HCl (H89) increases darifenacin affinity. This study demonstrates that different signal transduction mechanisms mediate the contractile response in the denervated rat bladder than in normal rat bladder. In normal rat bladder, PI-PLC and PC-PLC mediate the contraction, but in denervated bladder only PC-PLC is involved. In the denervated bladder, the rho kinase pathway is more dominant than in normal bladders.
PKA
seems to mediate a contractile response in normal bladders, whereas it seems to inhibit contraction in denervated bladders.
...
PMID:M2 and M3 muscarinic receptor activation of urinary bladder contractile signal transduction. II. Denervated rat bladder. 1624 62
Receptor-mediated changes in cAMP production play an essential role in sympathetic and parasympathetic regulation of the electrical, mechanical, and metabolic activity of cardiac myocytes. However, responses to receptor activation cannot be easily ascribed to a uniform increase or decrease in cAMP activity throughout the entire cell. In this study, we used a computational approach to test the hypothesis that in cardiac ventricular myocytes the effects of beta(1)-adrenergic receptor (beta(1)AR) and M(2)
muscarinic receptor
(M(2)R) activation involve compartmentation of cAMP. A model consisting of two submembrane (caveolar and extracaveolar) microdomains and one bulk cytosolic domain was created using published information on the location of beta(1)ARs and M(2)Rs, as well as the location of stimulatory (G(s)) and inhibitory (G(i)) G-proteins, adenylyl cyclase isoforms inhibited (AC5/6) and stimulated (AC4/7) by G(i), and multiple phosphodiesterase isoforms (PDE2, PDE3, and PDE4). Results obtained with the model indicate that: 1), bulk basal cAMP can be high ( approximately 1 microM) and only modestly stimulated by beta(1)AR activation ( approximately 2 microM), but caveolar cAMP varies in a range more appropriate for regulation of
protein kinase A
( approximately 100 nM to approximately 2 microM); 2), M(2)R activation strongly reduces the beta(1)AR-induced increases in caveolar cAMP, with less effect on bulk cAMP; and 3), during weak beta(1)AR stimulation, M(2)R activation not only reduces caveolar cAMP, but also produces a rebound increase in caveolar cAMP following termination of M(2)R activity. We conclude that compartmentation of cAMP can provide a quantitative explanation for several aspects of cardiac signaling.
...
PMID:Compartmentation of cAMP signaling in cardiac myocytes: a computational study. 1729 6
Verrucotoxin is the major component of venom from the stonefish (Synanceia verrucosa). Stings from the dorsal spines of the stonefish produce intensive pain, convulsions, hypotension, paralysis, respiratory weakness and collapse of the cardiovascular system, occasionally leading to death. It has been reported that verrucotoxin might modulate ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) current in frog atrial fibers. However, the mechanism by which verrucotoxin acts on KATP current remains unclear. In this study, we examined whether verrucotoxin inhibited KATP current in guinea pig ventricular myocytes, using the patch clamp method. Verrucotoxin suppressed KATP current induced by pinacidil (KATP channel opener) in a concentration-dependent manner, with a half maximum concentration of 16.3 microg/ml. The effect of verrucotoxin on KATP current was suppressed by atropine (1 microM), a
muscarinic receptor
antagonist, or by 4-diphenylacetoxy-N-methylpiperidine (100 nM), a muscarinic M3 receptor antagonist. Furthermore, the effect of verrucotoxin on KATP current was attenuated by the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor chelerythrine (10 microM) and calphostin C (10 microM), yet not by the
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
(
PKA
) inhibitor H-89 (0.5 microM). These results suggest that verrucotoxin inhibits KATP current through the muscarinic M3 receptor-PKC pathway. These findings enhance our understanding of the toxic effects of verrucotoxin from the stonefish.
...
PMID:Verrucotoxin inhibits KATP channels in cardiac myocytes through a muscarinic M3 receptor-PKC pathway. 1736 22
We demonstrate a role for
protein kinase
casein kinase 2
(
CK2
) in the phosphorylation and regulation of the M3-
muscarinic receptor
in transfected cells and cerebellar granule neurons. On agonist occupation, specific subsets of receptor phosphoacceptor sites (which include the SASSDEED motif in the third intracellular loop) are phosphorylated by
CK2
. Receptor phosphorylation mediated by
CK2
specifically regulates receptor coupling to the Jun-kinase pathway. Importantly, other phosphorylation-dependent receptor processes are regulated by kinases distinct from
CK2
. We conclude that G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) can be phosphorylated in an agonist-dependent fashion by protein kinases from a diverse range of kinase families, not just the GPCR kinases, and that receptor phosphorylation by a defined kinase determines a specific signalling outcome. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the M3-
muscarinic receptor
can be differentially phosphorylated in different cell types, indicating that phosphorylation is a flexible regulatory process where the sites that are phosphorylated, and hence the signalling outcome, are dependent on the cell type in which the receptor is expressed.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation and regulation of a G protein-coupled receptor by protein kinase CK2. 1740 28
As inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase, clinical presentations of poisoning from organophosphate compounds are generally believed to entail overstimulation by the accumulated acetylcholine on muscarinic receptors at peripheral and central synapses. That some patients still yielded to acute organophosphate poisoning despite repeated dosing of atropine suggests that cellular mechanisms that are independent of
muscarinic receptor
activation may also be engaged in organophosphate poisoning. The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that
muscarinic receptor
-independent activation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent
protein kinase A
(
PKA
) in rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), a medullary site where sympathetic vasomotor tone originates and where the organophosphate poison mevinphos (Mev) acts, is involved in the cardiovascular responses exhibited during organophosphate intoxication. In Sprague-Dawley rats, microinjection bilaterally of Mev (10 nmol) into the RVLM significantly augmented
PKA
activity in ventrolateral medulla that was not antagonized by coadministration of an equimolar concentration (1 nmol) of atropine or selective
muscarinic receptor
type M1 (pirenzepine), M2 (methoctramine), M3 (4-diphenyl-acetoxy-N-dimethylpiperidinium), or M4 (tropicamide) inhibitor. Comicroinjection of two selective
PKA
antagonists (100 pmol), N-[2-(p-bromocinnamylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide and (9R,10S,12S)-2,3,9,10,11,12-hexahydro-10-hydroxy-9-methyl-1-oxo-9,12-epoxy-1H-diindolol[1,2,3-fg:3',2',1'-kl]pyrrolo[3,4-1][1,6]benzodiazocine-10-carboxylic acid, significantly blunted the initial sympathoexcitatory cardiovascular response and the accompanying augmentation of nitric oxide synthase (NOS I) expression in the ventrolateral medulla exhibited during Mev intoxication; the secondary sympathoinhibitory phase and associated elevation in NOS II expression were unaffected. We conclude that whereas a
muscarinic receptor
-independent augmentation of
PKA
activity in the ventrolateral medulla was manifested throughout acute Mev intoxication, this activation was preferentially involved in the sympathoexcitatory phase by an upregulation of NOS I expression.
...
PMID:Muscarinic receptor-independent activation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinase in rostral ventrolateral medulla underlies the sympathoexcitatory phase of cardiovascular responses during mevinphos intoxication in the rat. 1743 62
The M1
muscarinic receptor
(M1 mAChR) is a therapeutic target in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and the M1-selective muscarinic agonists AF102B, AF150(S) and AF267B are cognitive enhancers and potential disease modifiers. Notably, AF267B decreased cerebrospinal fluid beta-amyloid (Abeta(40) and Abeta(42)) in rabbits, decreased brain Abeta levels in hypercholesterolemic rabbits and vascular Abeta(42) deposition from the cortex in cholinotoxin-treated rabbits. In triple transgenic AD mice, AF267B reduced cognitive deficits and decreased Abeta(42) and tau pathologies in the cortex and hippocampus (not amygdala), via M1 mAChR activation of protein kinase C and a disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain 17 (ADAM17 or TACE) and decreased beta-site amyloid precursor protein-cleaving enzyme 1 and
glycogen synthase kinase
3beta, respectively. AF267B is the first reported low-molecular-weight therapy that targets the major AD hallmarks.
...
PMID:M1 muscarinic agonists target major hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease--the pivotal role of brain M1 receptors. 1832
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 14 (SCA14) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease caused by mutations in
protein kinase
Cgamma (PKCgamma). Interestingly, 18 of 22 mutations are concentrated in the C1 domain, which binds diacylglycerol and is necessary for translocation and regulation of PKCgamma kinase activity. To determine the effect of these mutations on PKCgamma function and the pathology of SCA14, we investigated the enzymological properties of the mutant PKCgammas. We found that wild-type PKCgamma, but not C1 domain mutants, inhibits Ca2+ influx in response to
muscarinic receptor
stimulation. The sustained Ca2+ influx induced by
muscarinic receptor
ligation caused prolonged membrane localization of mutant PKCgamma. Pharmacological experiments showed that canonical transient receptor potential (TRPC) channels are responsible for the Ca2+ influx regulated by PKCgamma. Although in vitro kinase assays revealed that most C1 domain mutants are constitutively active, they could not phosphorylate TRPC3 channels in vivo. Single molecule observation by the total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy revealed that the membrane residence time of mutant PKCgammas was significantly shorter than that of the wild-type. This fact indicated that, although membrane association of the C1 domain mutants was apparently prolonged, these mutants have a reduced ability to bind diacylglycerol and be retained on the plasma membrane. As a result, they fail to phosphorylate TRPC channels, resulting in sustained Ca2+ entry. Such an alteration in Ca2+ homeostasis and Ca2+-mediated signaling in Purkinje cells may contribute to the neurodegeneration characteristic of SCA14.
...
PMID:Enzymological analysis of mutant protein kinase Cgamma causing spinocerebellar ataxia type 14 and dysfunction in Ca2+ homeostasis. 1849 72
In cardiac myocytes there is evidence that activation of some receptors can regulate
protein kinase A
(
PKA
)-dependent responses by stimulating cAMP production that is limited to discrete intracellular domains. We previously developed a computational model of compartmentalized cAMP signaling to investigate the feasibility of this idea. The model was able to reproduce experimental results demonstrating that both beta(1)-adrenergic and M(2)
muscarinic receptor
-mediated cAMP changes occur in microdomains associated with
PKA
signaling. However, the model also suggested that the cAMP concentration throughout most of the cell could be significantly higher than that found in
PKA
-signaling domains. In the present study we tested this counterintuitive hypothesis using a freely diffusible fluorescence resonance energy transfer-based biosensor constructed from the type 2 exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac2-camps). It was determined that in adult ventricular myocytes the basal cAMP concentration detected by the probe is approximately 1.2 muM, which is high enough to maximally activate
PKA
. Furthermore, the probe detected responses produced by both beta(1) and M(2) receptor activation. Modeling suggests that responses detected by Epac2-camps mainly reflect what is happening in a bulk cytosolic compartment with little contribution from microdomains where
PKA
signaling occurs. These results support the conclusion that even though beta(1) and M(2) receptor activation can produce global changes in cAMP, compartmentation plays an important role by maintaining microdomains where cAMP levels are significantly below that found throughout most of the cell. This allows receptor stimulation to regulate cAMP activity over concentration ranges appropriate for modulating both higher (e.g.,
PKA
) and lower affinity (e.g., Epac) effectors.
...
PMID:Cytoplasmic cAMP concentrations in intact cardiac myocytes. 1855 Jul 6
We investigated the inhibitory role of the nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP-
protein kinase
G (PKG) pathway on receptor-activated TRPC6 channels in both a heterologous expression system (HEK293 cells) and A7r5 vascular myocytes. Cationic currents due to TRPC6 expression were strongly suppressed (by approximately 70%) by a NO donor SNAP (100 microm) whether it was applied prior to
muscarinic receptor
stimulation with carbachol (CCh; 100 microm) or after G-protein activation with intracellular perfusion of GTPgammaS (100 microm). A similar extent of suppression was also observed with a membrane-permeable analogue of cGMP, 8Br-cGMP (100 microm). The inhibitory effects of SNAP and 8Br-cGMP on TRPC6 channel currents were strongly attenuated by the presence of inhibitors for guanylyl cyclase and PKG such as ODQ, KT5823 and DT3. Alanine substitution for the PKG phosphorylation candidate site at T69 but not at other sites (T14A, S28A, T193A, S321A) of TRPC6 similarly attenuated the inhibitory effects of SNAP and 8Br-cGMP. SNAP also significantly reduced single TRPC6 channel activity recorded in the inside-out configuration in a PKG-dependent manner. SNAP-induced PKG activation stimulated the incorporation of (32)P into wild-type and S321A-mutant TRPC6 proteins immunoprecipitated by TRPC6-specific antibody, but this was greatly attenuated in the T69A mutant. SNAP or 8Br-cGMP strongly suppressed TRPC6-like cation currents and membrane depolarization evoked by Arg(8)-vasopressin in A7r5 myocytes. These results strongly suggest that TRPC6 channels can be negatively regulated by the NO-cGMP-PKG pathway, probably via T69 phosphorylation of the N-terminal. This mechanism may be physiologically important in vascular tissues where NO is constantly released from vascular endothelial cells or nitrergic nerves.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide-cGMP-protein kinase G pathway negatively regulates vascular transient receptor potential channel TRPC6. 1861 65
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