Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.12 (PKG)
2,515 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Perfusion of hippocampal slices with an inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthase-blocked induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) produced by a one-train tetanus and significantly reduced LTP by a two-train tetanus, but only slightly reduced LTP by a four-train tetanus. Inhibitors of heme oxygenase, the synthetic enzyme for carbon monoxide (CO), significantly reduced LTP by either a two-train or four-train tetanus. These results suggest that NO and CO are both involved in LTP but may play somewhat different roles. One possibility is that NO serves a phasic, signaling role, whereas CO provides tonic, background stimulation. Another possibility is that NO and CO are phasically activated under somewhat different circumstances, perhaps involving different receptors and second messengers. Because NO is known to be activated by stimulation of NMDA receptors during tetanus, we investigated the possibility that CO might be activated by stimulation of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs). Consistent with this idea, long-lasting potentiation by the mGluR agonist tACPD was blocked by inhibitors of heme oxygenase but not NO synthase. Potentiation by tACPD was also blocked by inhibitors of soluble guanylyl cyclase (a target of both NO and CO) or cGMP-dependent protein kinase, and guanylyl cyclase was activated by tACPD in hippocampal slices. However, biochemical assays indicate that whereas heme oxygenase is constitutively active in hippocampus, it does not appear to be stimulated by either tetanus or tACPD. These results are most consistent with the possibility that constitutive (tonic) rather than stimulated (phasic) heme oxygenase activity is necessary for potentiation by tetanus or tACPD, and suggest that mGluR activation stimulates guanylyl cyclase phasically through some other pathway.
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PMID:On the respective roles of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide in long-term potentiation in the hippocampus. 1035 25

GABA(A) receptors of rat cerebellar granule cells in culture have been studied by the whole cell patch clamp technique. The biphasic desensitization kinetic observed could be due either to different desensitization mechanisms of a single receptor population or to different receptor populations. The overall data indicate that the latter hypothesis is most probably the correct one. In fact, the fast desensitizing component was selectively potentiated by a benzodiazepine agonist and preferentially down-regulated by activation of the protein serine/threonine kinases A and G, as a consequence of the latter characteristic that receptor population was preferentially down-regulated by previous activation of N-methyl-d-aspartate glutamate receptors, via production of nitric oxide and PKG activation, most probably in dendrites. The other population is benzodiazepine insensitive and not influenced by activation of PKA or PKG. This slowly desensitizing population may correspond to the extrasynaptic delta subunit containing GABA(A) receptors described by other authors. Instead, the rapidly desensitizing population appears to represent dendritic synaptic GABA(A) receptors.
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PMID:Evidence of two populations of GABA(A) receptors in cerebellar granule cells in culture: different desensitization kinetics, pharmacology, serine/threonine kinase sensitivity, and localization. 1060 May 49

The physiological actions of nitric oxide (NO) as a signaling molecule in endothelial and brain cells and as a toxic molecule used by activated immune cells have been the focus of a wide range of studies. Nevertheless, the downstream effector molecules of this important neuromodulator are not well understood. We have previously demonstrated that expression of the gene for the reproductive neuropeptide, GnRH, is repressed by the glutamate/NO/cyclic GMP (cGMP) signal transduction pathway through cGMP-dependent protein kinase in the hypothalamic GnRH-secreting neuronal cell line GT1-7. This repression localized within a previously characterized 300-bp neuron-specific enhancer. Here, we find that mutation of either of two adjacent elements within the enhancer eliminates repression by this pathway. An AT-rich sequence located at -1695 has homology to the octamer motif known to bind POU-homeodomain proteins, while the adjacent element at -1676 has homology to the C/EBP (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein) protein family consensus sequence. Antibody supershift assays reveal that one of the proteins bound at the -1695 sequence is Oct-1, and one of the proteins bound to the element at -1676 is C/EBPbeta. These two proteins can bind simultaneously to the adjacent -1695 and -1676 binding sites in vitro. In nuclear extracts of GT1-7 cells treated with an NO donor, the intensity of the Oct-1 complex is increased. However, although Western blot analysis indicates that neither Oct-1 nor C/EBPbeta protein levels are increased, the relative binding affinity of Oct-1 is increased. Dephosphorylation of the nuclear extracts decreases binding of the Oct-1 complex to the -1695 site only in NO donor-treated extracts. Thus, we conclude that Oct-1 and C/EBPbeta are both downstream transcriptional regulators involved in the repression of GnRH gene expression by the glutamate/NO/ cGMP signal transduction pathway.
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PMID:Transcription factors Oct-1 and C/EBPbeta (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-beta) are involved in the glutamate/nitric oxide/cyclic-guanosine 5'-monophosphate-mediated repression of mediated repression of gonadotropin-releasing hormone gene expression. 1067 95

Nitric oxide (NO) acts as a neurotransmitter and neuromodulator in the nervous system of many vertebrates and invertebrates. The effects of extracellularly applied sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and diethylamine NO (C(2)H(5))(2)N[N(O)NO]-Na(+) (DEA/NO), NO donors, on a glutamate (Glu)-induced K(+) current in identified Onchidium neurons were investigated using voltage clamp and pressure ejection techniques. Bath-applied SNP (10 microM) and DEA/NO (5-10 microM) reduced the Glu-induced K(+) current without affecting the resting membrane conductance and holding current. The Glu-induced K(+) current also was inhibited by the focal application of SNP to the neuron somata. The suppressing effects of NO donors were concentration-dependent and completely reversible. Pretreatment with hemoglobin (50 microM), a nitric oxide scavenger, and 1H-[1,2, 4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ; 1 microM), a specific inhibitor of NO-stimulated guanylate cyclase, decreased the SNP-induced inhibition of the Glu-induced current. Bath-applied 50 microM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), a nonspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor, or intracellular injection of 1 mM guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) inhibited the Glu-induced current, mimicking the effect of NO donors. These results demonstrate that SNP and DEA/NO inhibit the Glu-induced K(+) current and that the mechanism of NO inhibition of the Glu-induced current involves cGMP-dependent protein kinase.
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PMID:Inhibition of the glutamate-induced K(+) current in identified Onchidium neurons by nitric oxide donors. 1082 Apr 35

Postsynaptic processes induced by glutamate, GABA, and dopamine in dendritic spines of inhibitory striatal neurones, were studied. Some functional features were revealed in striatal neurones activation of two protein kinases, cAMP-dependent PKA and cGMP-dependent PKG; presence of calcium/calmodulin-independent adenylate cyclase; bidirectional changes of the cAMP concentration with dopamine. Rise of the cGMP concentration in striatum seems to be a result of activation of the membrane-bound guanylate cyclase via the GABAb receptors. The findings suggest that the active protein kinases/phosphatases ratio is affected by calcium influx through the NMDA-channels.
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PMID:[Interconnected biochemical processes in striatal neurons induced by activation of excitatory, inhibitory, and dopamine inputs]. 1088 13

It is known from the experimental data that at different cerebellar neurons there are voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, NMDA receptors, metabotropic glutamate and GABAB receptors. This receptor arrangement ensures that activation of excitatory and inhibitory input results in changes in activity of protein kinases and phosphatases and subsequent modification of synaptic efficacy. The mechanism of synaptic plasticity is advanced that in accordance with the known experimental data concerning the modification of excitatory and inhibitory inputs to Purkinje cells, granule cells, and deep cerebellar nuclei cells. The mechanism is based on a postulate that phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of AMPA (GABAA) receptors on cerebellar cells causes the LTP/LTD of excitatory (LTD/LTP of inhibitory) transmission. It is assumed that modification rules for Purkinje cells, granule cells, and deep cerebellar nuclei cells, wherein cGMP-dependent protein kinase G is involved in synaptic plasticity, are distinct from those of hippocampal/neocortical cells, wherein cAMP-dependent protein kinase A is involved in synaptic plasticity, since cGMP (cAMP) concentration decreases (increases) with Ca2+ rise.
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PMID:[Mechanisms of modification of excitatory and inhibitory inputs in various neurons of olivary-cerebellar network]. 1092 75

We have previously reported that nitric oxide-related cyclic guanosine-3',5'-monophosphate (GMP) protected spinal nonmotor neurons, but not motor neurons against chronic glutamate-induced toxicity, which is associated with selective motor neuronal death after glutamate stress. In this report, we investigated the effect of cyclic GMP against reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced toxicity in cultured neurons from embryonic rat spinal cords. Pretreatment with a cGMP analogue, 8-bromoguanosine monophosphate (8br-cGMP), for 12-24 hours protected both spinal motor neurons and nonmotor neurons against injury induced by either hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)), or a glutathione depletor, L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO). This protective effect was reversed by coadministration with the cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) inhibitor Arg-Lys-Arg-Ala-Arg-Lys-Glu. Interestingly, when cultures were exposed to BSO for 24 hours to allow irreversible inhibition of glutathione synthesis, 8br-cGMP protected only nonmotor neurons. Our results indicate that cGMP attenuates oxidative injury to cultured spinal neurons, in a mechanism associated with glutathione synthesis.
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PMID:Neuroprotective effect of cyclic GMP against radical-induced toxicity in cultured spinal motor neurons. 1093 31

Cortical glutamatergic and nigral dopaminergic afferents impinge on projection spiny neurons of the striatum, providing the most significant inputs to this structure. Isolated activation of glutamate or dopamine (DA) receptors produces short-term effects on striatal neurons, whereas the combined stimulation of both glutamate and DA receptors is able to induce long-lasting modifications of synaptic excitability. Repetitive stimulation of corticostriatal fibres causes a massive release of both glutamate and DA in the striatum and, depending on the glutamate receptor subtype preferentially activated, produces either long-term depression (LTD) or long-term potentiation (LTP) of excitatory synaptic transmission. D1-like and D2-like DA receptors interact synergistically to allow LTD formation, while they operate in opposition during the induction phase of LTP. Corticostriatal synaptic plasticity is severely impaired after chronic DA denervation and requires the stimulation of DARPP-32, a small protein expressed in dopaminoceptive spiny neurons which acts as a potent inhibitor of protein phosphatase-1. In addition, the formation of LTD and LTP requires the activation of PKG and PKA, respectively, in striatal projection neurons. These kinases appear to be stimulated by the activation of D1-like receptors in distinct neuronal populations.
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PMID:Dopaminergic control of synaptic plasticity in the dorsal striatum. 1128 3

A cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) was recently identified as an anticoccidial target for the apicomplexan parasite Eimeria tenella [Gurnett, A., Liberator, P. A., Dulski, P., Salowe, S., Donald, R. G. K., Anderson, J., Wiltsie, J., Diaz, C., Harris, G., Chang, B., Darkin-Rattray, S. J., Nare, B., Crumley, T., Blum, P., Misura, A., Tamas, T., Sardana, M., Yuan, J., Biftu, T., and Schmatz, D. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. (in press)]. Unlike the PKGs of higher organisms that have two cGMP binding sites in their regulatory domain, the PKG from Eimeria tenella (Et-PKG) contains three putative cGMP binding sites and has distinctive activation properties, including a very large stimulation by cGMP ( approximately 1000-fold) with significant cooperativity (Hill coefficient of 1.7). During our investigation of Et-PKG activation, we found that 8-substituted cGMP analogues are weak partial activators. For example, 8-NBD-cGMP provides a maximal stimulation of activity of only 20-fold with little evident cooperativity, although cGMP can synergize with the analogue to provide full activation. The results suggest that partial activation is a consequence of restricted binding of 8-NBD-cGMP to a subset of cGMP sites in the enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis of conserved arginine and glutamate residues in the parasite-specific third cGMP site confirms that this site is an important functional participant in the allosteric regulation of the kinase and that it exhibits very high selectivity against 8-NBD-cGMP. Since the results are consistent with full activation of Et-PKG requiring cyclic nucleotide binding in all three allosteric sites, one role for the additional cGMP site may be to establish a stricter regulatory mechanism for the kinase activity than is present in the PKGs of higher organisms containing only two allosteric sites.
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PMID:The role of a parasite-specific allosteric site in the distinctive activation behavior of Eimeria tenella cGMP-dependent protein kinase. 1191 85

Presynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) often act as feedback inhibitors of synaptic transmission and serve important roles in defining the activity of glutamatergic synapses. Recent investigations have begun to identify novel interactions of presynaptic mGluRs, especially mGluR7, with multiple protein kinases and putative regulatory proteins that probably serve to further shape the overall activity of glutamatergic synapses. In the present study, we report that in addition to protein kinase C (PKC), cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) can inhibit calmodulin (CaM) interactions with the carboxyl-terminal tail of mGluR7. These actions are mediated by PKC-, PKA-, or PKG-dependent phosphorylation of mGluR7 at a single serine residue, Ser(862), in the carboxyl terminus of the receptor. Mutation of this residue inhibits kinase-mediated phosphorylation of the mGluR7 carboxyl terminus and reverses kinase-mediated inhibition of CaM binding to mGluR7. However, PKC-mediated inhibition of the functional coupling of mGluR7 to G protein-coupled inward rectifier potassium (GIRK) currents in a heterologous expression system is not affected by mutating Ser(862). Furthermore, mutation of Ser(862) to glutamate to mimic receptor phosphorylation and inhibit CaM interactions with mGluR7 does not affect receptor function. These studies demonstrate that the ability of these second messenger-dependent kinases to inhibit mGluR7-mediated activation of GIRK current is not dependent on the phosphorylation of Ser(862) or the regulation of CaM binding to mGluR7. Furthermore, our studies suggest that CaM binding is not required for mGluR7-mediated activation of GIRK current.
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PMID:Dissociation of protein kinase-mediated regulation of metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 (mGluR7) interactions with calmodulin and regulation of mGluR7 function. 1202 91


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