Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (ribonuclease)
6,589 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma membranes prepared from rat renal cortex contain both a parathyroid hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase and a potent proteolytic activity which degrades the hormone into peptide fragments. The degree and pattern of degradation was determined by subjecting incubation mixtures to gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography. Estimation of the degree of degradation by acid precipitation of the intact hormone was inadequate since metabolism of the hormone apparently generated acid-insoluble fragments. When parathyroid hormone was incubated with membrane fraction, the capacity of its stimulatory effect on adenylate cyclase decreased steadily. This decrease of PTH activitiy could be closely related to the degradation of intact hormone by the same membrane preparation. The adenylate cyclase and degradative activity appeared to exist in similar membrane structures since they could not be separated by centrifugation through sucrose density gradients. The degradation of the hormone could not be inhibited by Trasylol and pancreatic or soybean trypsin inhibitors and was only slightly inhibited by ribonuclease and benzamidine. Histone (1 mg per ml), on the other hand, was able to decrease the degradation of the hormone and prevent the loss of its activity. Radioimmunoassay of the incubation mixtures showed that the rapid degradation of both amino- and carboxy-terminal regions of the hormone was prevented by histone. The oxidized, inactive hormone was also degraded to the same extent by the renal cortical membrane. Furthermore, the degradative activity was also found in plasma membrane preparations of renal medulla and liver. This lack of hormone and tissue specificity suggests that similar degradative activity exists in all tissues and that caution should be exercised in estimating hormonal potency based on activation of adenylate cyclase.
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PMID:Interaction of parathyroid hormone with membranes of kidney cortex: degradation of the hormone and activation of adenylate cyclase. 119 1

The aim of the present work was to characterize at the molecular level the mechanism of PTH resistance in a rat model of secondary hyperparathyroidism resulting from vitamin D deprivation. PTH/PTH-related protein (PTHrp) receptor messenger RNA (mRNA) expression, assayed by ribonuclease protection analysis, was studied in the kidney, femoral epi/metaphysis, and diaphysis. In addition, in the kidney, PTH/PTHrp receptor mRNA expression was correlated to receptor function by measuring adenyl cyclase activity in crude renal membranes after stimulation by PTH (10(-10) - 10(-6) M), forskolin (0.1 and 0.2 mM), NaF (5 and 10 mM), and isoproterenol (1 and 10 microM). Four groups of rats were studied to investigate the effects of calcium, PTH, and/or vitamin D status. The first group received a control diet (D+D+). The second group received a diet deficient in vitamin D until death (D-D-). In the two other groups that also received a vitamin D-deficient diet, the hypocalcemia and the hyperparathyroidism were later corrected, by either vitamin D supplementation (D-D+) or lactose and high calcium diet (D-Ca+), 1 week before death. The results revealed a 2-fold decrease in the PTH-induced adenyl cyclase activity of the renal membranes in the D-D- rats compared to those in the three other groups. There was no significant difference in the four groups in adenyl cyclase activity stimulated by forskolin, NaF, and isoproterenol. The decrease in PTH-induced adenyl cyclase activity was associated with an approximately 2-fold increase in PTH/PTHrp receptor mRNA expression in the kidneys of the D-D- rats compared to controls. Normalization of PTH/PTHrp receptor mRNA expression was observed after vitamin D supplementation (D-D+ rats), but not after correction of the hypocalcemia and secondary hyperparathyroidism by oral lactose and calcium supplementation. In the epi/metaphysis, an approximately 2-fold increase in PTH/PTHrp receptor mRNA was also observed in the D-D- rats compared to the controls; this increase was partially corrected upon normalization of the calcemia and PTH levels with either vitamin D (D-D+ group) or lactose/calcium (D-Ca+ group). In the diaphysis, no change in the expression of PTH/PTHrp receptor mRNA was observed in any group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone (PTH)/PTH-related protein receptor messenger ribonucleic acid expression and PTH response in a rat model of secondary hyperparathyroidism associated with vitamin D deficiency. 764 81

To explore the possibility that defects in the regulation of expression of the messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) coding for the PTH receptor could be involved in pseudohypoparathyroidism type Ib (PHP-Ib), PTH-induced cAMP production and PTH/PTH-related peptide (PTH-rp) receptor mRNA expression, measured using a ribonuclease protection assay, were compared in untreated and dexamethasone (dexa)-pretreated (5 x 10(-7) mol/L; 7 days) cultured skin fibroblasts from controls (n = 4) and patients with PHP-Ib (n = 6). In control fibroblasts, stimulation of cAMP production by PTH and expression of PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA were easily detectable and were not significantly affected by dexa pretreatment. In fibroblasts from three PHP-Ib patients demonstrating reduced PTH-induced cAMP production that was reversed by dexa, the level of basal PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA was also reduced, but increased to levels similar to those in control cells after dexa pretreatment. In fibroblasts from a patient with resistance to PTH not reversed by dexa, PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA expression was also significantly lower than that in control cells (18 +/- 13%; P < 0.001) and remained only 30 +/- 15% of that observed in control cells after dexa pretreatment (P < 0.001). In fibroblasts from two PHP-Ib patients expressing normal cAMP responsiveness to PTH before and after dexa treatment, the level of PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA was not different from that in control cells before or after dexa treatment. Thus, in all conditions where PTH-induced cAMP production by PHP-Ib fibroblasts was reduced, the abnormality could be explained by the reduced level of PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA in these cells. These results suggest that defects in the regulation of expression of the PTH/PTH-rp receptor mRNA, not structural defects in the receptor itself, explain the PTH resistance in PHP-Ib in the patients evaluated, but several different defects must exist.
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PMID:Expression and modulation of the parathyroid hormone (PTH)/PTH-related peptide receptor messenger ribonucleic acid in skin fibroblasts from patients with type Ib pseudohypoparathyroidism. 788 58

PTH-induced mobilization of cytosolic Ca2+ in a human kidney cell line (HEK/W) occurring in the absence of cAMP stimulation was characterized and compared with that obtained in the same cells stably transfected by the PTH/PTH-related peptide (PTHrp) receptor (HEK/T). In both cell lines, N-terminal fragments of PTH and PTHrp induced a concentration-dependent biphasic stimulation in [Ca2+]i: a transient peak followed by a slow linear increase. These increases in [Ca2+]i were inhibited by the PTH antagonist [Nle(8,18),Tyr(34)]bPTH(3-34). The transient peaks were due to calcium release from intracellular stores, as they resisted quenching of calcium in the extracellular buffer and were abolished by prior emptying of intracellular stores. These peaks differed, however, both in latency period and in magnitude, in the two cell lines. The phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 inhibited the PTH-induced increase in [Ca2+]i in HEK/T cells, but not in HEK/W. Similarly, PTH-induced inositol phosphate (InsPs) production was detected in HEK/T but not in HEK/W cells. PTH-induced calcium release in HEK/W cells was inhibited by the simultaneous presence of ryanodine and U73122. Low level PTH/PTHrp receptor messenger RNA expression was demonstrated by ribonuclease protection in HEK/W cells, although no specific binding of [125I]PTHrP(1-34) could be detected. Amplification products for the PTH/PTHrp receptor 1, but no other isoforms, were detected by RT-PCR in HEK/W cells. As expected, HEK/T cells responded to PTH by a 500-fold stimulation in cAMP production and expressed large numbers of PTH/PTHrp receptors, as shown by [125I]PTHrp binding. These results demonstrate that the signal transduction pathways activated by PTH in HEK/W and HEK/T cells are different. Because the major difference in these cell lines is the number of PTH/PTHrp receptors expressed, these results suggest that the transduction of signals by the PTH/PTHrp receptor is controlled by receptor number in such a way that PTH stimulates an increase in intracellular calcium in the absence of stimulation of InsPs and cAMP production in cells expressing low levels of PTH/PTHrp receptor, but stimulates calcium release through an InsPs pathway and induces cAMP production in cells expressing large numbers of PTH/PTHrp receptors. The control of receptor number may be one of the mechanisms through which PTH effects are regulated.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone-induced calcium release from intracellular stores in a human kidney cell line in the absence of stimulation of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate production. 938 12

Complementary DNAs encoding two nonallelic PTH/PTH-related peptide (PTHrP) receptor (PPR) isoforms, xPPR-A and xPPR-B, were isolated from a kidney complementary DNA library of the tetraploid African clawed frog Xenopus laevis. Both isoforms differ in their coding region by 19 amino acids, and lack the region corresponding to the mammalian exon E2. When expressed in mammalian COS-7 cells, both receptor isoforms bound radiolabeled PTH-(1-34) and PTHrP-(1-36) analogs with comparable affinity, and both unlabeled peptides equivalently stimulated the accumulation of cAMP. xPPR-A also mediated inositol phosphate turnover in COS cells and stimulated channel-mediated current changes in voltage clamp experiments after injection into oocytes. Using ribonuclease protection analysis, significant xPPR-A messenger RNA expression was first detected in neurula stage embryos, which subsequently increased approximately 30-fold during tadpole development. Expression reached a maximum at the metamorphotic climax, when isoform B also became detectable at significant levels, and subsequently declined in postmetamorphotic froglets. In the adult frog, xPPR-A was prominently expressed in lung, brain, small bowel, and skin, whereas isoform B was highest in lung, heart, and brain. Using an xPPR-A antisense riboprobe for in situ hybridization, expression appeared during metamorphosis at all sites of chondrogenesis, specifically in the maturing zone of the amphibian growth plate. xPPR-A expression was also seen in a subpopulation of mononuclear cells, possibly representing osteoblasts that line perichondral bone and diaphyseal bone trabeculae. Our findings suggest that xPPRs serve a prominent role in amphibian skeletal development and possibly other functions during embryonal and early larval development.
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PMID:Identification, functional characterization, and developmental expression of two nonallelic parathyroid hormone (PTH)/PTH-related peptide receptor isoforms in Xenopus laevis (Daudin). 944 46

Calcitriol, via its receptor (VDR) is a main regulator of PTH secretion and parathyroid cell proliferation. Recently, marked overrepresentation of the polymorphic VDR alleles b, a, and T was found in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), which suggests pathogenic importance in the disease. Using the ribonuclease protection assay, relative VDR and PTH messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) levels of parathyroid adenomas from 42 patients with sporadic pHPT were related to these VDR polymorphisms. The tumors of patients homozygous for the b, a, or T alleles demonstrated significantly lower VDR and higher PTH mRNA levels than those exhibiting the BB, AA, or tt genotypes (P < 0.0001-0.02), whereas heterozygotes had intermediate values. A similar discrepancy was found when comparing the baT and non-baT haplotypes (0.042 +/- 0.005 vs. 0.064 +/- 0.004 for VDR; 34.4 +/- 3.7 vs. 21.6 +/- 2.2 for PTH; both P < 0.005). The lower VDR mRNA levels associated with the b, a, and T alleles may affect the calcitriol-mediated control of parathyroid function and thereby contribute to the development of sporadic pHPT.
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PMID:Vitamin D receptor (VDR) and parathyroid hormone messenger ribonucleic acid levels correspond to polymorphic VDR alleles in human parathyroid tumors. 966 91

Parathyroid bone disease in humans is caused by chronic hyperparathyroidism (HPT). Continuous infusion of PTH into rats results in histological changes similar to parathyroid bone disease, including increased bone formation, focal bone resorption, and severe peritrabecular fibrosis, whereas pulsatile PTH increases bone formation without skeletal abnormalities. Using a cDNA microarray with over 5000 genes, we identified an association between increased platelet-derived growth factor-A (PDGF-A) signaling and PTH-induced bone disease in rats. Verification of PDGF-A overexpression was accomplished with a ribonuclease protection assay. Using immunohistochemistry, PDGF-A peptide was localized to mast cells in PTH-treated rats. We also report a novel strategy for prevention of parathyroid bone disease using triazolopyrimidine (trapidil). Trapidil, an inhibitor of PDGF signaling, did not have any effect on indexes of bone turnover in normal rats. However, dramatic reductions in marrow fibrosis and bone resorption, but not bone formation, were observed in PTH-treated rats given trapidil. Also, trapidil antagonized the PTH-induced increases in mRNA levels for PDGF-A. These results suggest that PDGF signaling is important for the detrimental skeletal effects of HPT, and drugs that target the cytokine or its receptor might be useful in reducing or preventing parathyroid bone disease.
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PMID:Triazolopyrimidine (trapidil), a platelet-derived growth factor antagonist, inhibits parathyroid bone disease in an animal model for chronic hyperparathyroidism. 1269 8

PTH has diverse effects on bone metabolism: anabolic when given intermittently, catabolic when given continuously. The cellular mechanisms underlying the varying target cell response are not clear yet. PTH induces RGS-2, a member of the Regulator of G-protein Signaling protein family, via cAMP/PKA, and inactivates PKC-mediated signaling. To investigate intracellular signaling pathways with different PTH concentration-time patterns, we treated UMR 106-01 osteoblast-like cells in a perfusion system. PTH was administered intermittently (4 min/h, 10(-7) M) or continuously at an equivalent cumulative dose (6.6 x 10(-9) M). cAMP was measured using radioimmunoassay, mRNA levels using real-time rtPCR and ribonuclease protection assay, and protein levels using Western immunoblotting. A single PTH pulse transiently increased cAMP levels by 2000% +/- 1200%. In contrast to continuous PTH exposure, cAMP induction remained unchanged with intermittent PTH, ruling out desensitization of the PTH receptor. In continuously perfused cells, RGS-2 abundance was three to five times higher than in cells intermittently exposed to PTH for up to 12 h. MKP-1 and -3 were significantly less induced with pulsatile PTH; exposure-mode-dependent differences in MMP-13 and IGFBP-5 were small. Pulsatile but not continuous PTH administration prevents PTHrP receptor desensitization and accumulation of RGS-2 in osteoblasts, which should preserve PKC-dependent signaling.
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PMID:Differential regulation of RGS-2 by constant and oscillating PTH concentrations. 1922 8