Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.4.1 (phosphodiesterase)
18,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of somatostatin on insulin release by incubated slices of rat pancreas was studied. Somatostatin inhibited insulin release induced by arginine/glucose (A/G), glucagon, glibenclamide, pentoxifyllin, 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), phentolamine, and KCl. When A/G was used as a stimulus, the quantial inhibitory effect of somatostatin was not neutralized by progressively increasing glucose concentrations. The alpha adrenergic blocking agent phentolamine, the phosphodiesterase inhibitors theophylline (10 mM) or pentoxifyllin (10 mM), and KCl partially reversed the inhibitory effect of somatostatin on A/G stimulation. The maximal reversal of somatostatin inhibition was obtained when the slices of pancreas were stimulated with A/G in the presence of the calcium ioniphore A23187 plus ATP. These results suggest that the inhibitory effect of somatostatin on insulin secretion could result from calcium translocation in pancreatic beta cells.
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PMID:Studies on the mode of action of somatostatin on insulin secretion. 19 19

The levels of glycogen and cyclic AMP, incorporation of glucose into glycogen and activities of glycogen synthetase and phosphorylase were determined in pancreatic islets isolated from genetically obese mice and their lean litter-mates. Islets from obese mice had elevated glycogen levels, increased phosphorylase activity and an increased amount of glycogen synthetase in the physiologically more effective I-form, indicating an increased turnover of glycogen. There was no significant difference in cyclic AMP levels between islets of lean and obese mice, but inhibition of phosphodiesterase or stimulation of adenyl cyclase increased cyclic AMP levels more in obese than in lean mouse islets, indicating a more rapid turnover of cyclic AMP in the former. It is suggested that cyclic AMP stimulated phosphorolytic breakdown of glycogen may be one of the mechanisms responsible for the increased insulin secretory response to glucose observed in islets from genetically obese mice.
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PMID:Glycogen metabolism and cyclic AMP levels in isolated islets of lean and genetically obese mice. 20 May 36

1. Insulin biosynthesis in isolated rat islets of Langerhans was determined by the incorporation of [(3)H]leucine into newly synthesized islet proteins. Anti-insulin serum covalently coupled to a solid phase (CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B) was used to separate the immunoreactive proinsulin and insulin from other islet proteins. This method was applied to a study of the regulation of insulin biosynthesis in isolated rat islets of Langerhans during pregnancy, and immediately after a period of food deprivation. 2. Islets isolated from pregnant rats showed an increased basal rate of synthesis compared with the non-pregnant controls. In addition, they showed a significant increase in biosynthesis of proinsulin and insulin in comparison with the normal islets over a range of glucose concentrations of 2-20mm. 3. Addition of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine significantly increased the insulin-synthetic response of normal islets over the glucose range 5-20mm, so that their glucose response approached that of islets from pregnant rats. 4. Normal female rates were injected with a long-acting progesterone derivative (hydroxyprogesterone hexanoate), to investigate the role of progesterone on the increased insulin biosynthesis observed in islets in pregnancy. There appeared to be no marked difference in insulin biosynthesis between the islets from the progesterone-injected and control rats in the presence of 2mm- or 6mm-glucose alone. However, in the presence of 4mm- or 6mm-glucose and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine there was a significant increase in insulin biosynthesis in the progesterone-treated animals. 5. Total islet protein biosynthesis was determined by the incorporation of [(3)H]leucine into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable islet proteins. Islets isolated from normal rats showed a 1.6-fold increase in incorporation over the glucose concentration range 2-20mm, and this value remained unchanged during starvation; however, rates of incorporation were significantly raised in islets isolated from pregnant rats in the presence of 20mm-glucose. 6. Islets from starved and fed control rats were incubated in the presence of increasing concentrations of glucose or glucose+3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. The islets isolated from the starved animals showed a diminished insulin-synthetic response to glucose as compared with the controls; this response was partially restored to normal values by elevation of cyclic AMP concentrations by using 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. 7. It is suggested that the alterations in glucose-stimulated insulin biosynthesis observed in islets during pregnancy and after a period of starvation could be attributable, at least in part, to a long-term alteration of the cyclic AMP system, and in pregnancy to a direct or indirect effect of progesterone on beta-cell function.
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PMID:Alterations in regulation of insulin biosynthesis in pregnancy and starvation studied in isolated rat islets of langerhans. 20 48

The effects of tolbutamide and glibenclamide on the metabolism of cyclic AMP were investigated in pancreatic islets of the rat. Changes in cyclic AMP were assessed by measuring [(3)H]cyclic AMP after labeling of the islets with [2-(3)H]adenine. In the presence of a nonstimulatory concentration of glucose (3.3 mM), both sulfonylureas caused a rapid increase in islet [(3)H]cyclic AMP, which declined within 5 (tolbutamide) or 10 min (glibenclamide). In the absence of glucose, the glibenclamide effect was shortened, but the initial (1 min) response of [(3)H]-cyclic AMP was unaffected. Glucose could be substituted with d-glyceraldehyde but not pyruvate for prolongation of the glibenclamide response. The effect of glucose withdrawal on the glibenclamide response was reproduced by the addition of d-mannoheptulose to glucose containing media. The [(3)H]cyclic AMP response to glibenclamide was influenced by prior exposure of the islets to glucose, a 30-min preincubation with 27.7 mM glucose, enhancing the response to the sulfonylurea over a subsequent 5-min stimulation period. Sulfonylureas exerted their effects at low but not at high glucose concentrations, i.e., shifted the glucose dose-response curve to the left both for [(3)H]cyclic AMP accumulation and insulin release. On the other hand, increasing concentrations of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, progressively augmented the effects of the drugs. Omission of Ca(++) from the incubation media inhibited both the glucose and the sulfonylurea [(3)H]-cyclic AMP and insulin responses. Epinephrine (1 muM) partially inhibited the [(3)H]cyclic AMP response to both glucose and sulfonylurea, whereas insulin release was completely abolished. It is concluded that the sulfonylurea effects on islet cyclic AMP are intimately related to those of glucose. It is suggested that sulfonylureas exert a major part of their action by facilitating the effect of glucose on the beta-cell adenylate cyclase; the increased cyclic AMP level, in its turn, enhances the secretion rate of insulin.
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PMID:Interacting effects of sulfonylureas and glucose on cyclic AMP metabolism and insulin release in pancreatic islets of the rat. 20 36

In order to establish the mechanism(s) of chlorothiazide-induced hyperglycemia, measurements of blood glucose, plasma insulin, liver glycogen and hepatic cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) levels, and liver phosphodiesterase activity were made in rats administered 10, 25, 50 or 100 mg/kg of the drug. Comparison of data obtained on these animals with those from controls revealed significant and dose-dependent increases in blood glucose, decreases in liver glycogen, increases in hepatic cyclic AMP and inhibition of phosphodiesterase. Although basal insulin levels were significantly increased at the two higher doses of chlorothiazide, ratios of blood glucose/plasma insulin levels showed suppression of insulin secretion at all four doses. However, this suppression was not dose-related. All effects of the drug were maximal at 2 hours after subcutaneous administration. The results of this investigation indicate that the primary mechanism of chlorothiazide-induced carbohydrate intolerance is cyclic AMP-mediated stimulation of glycogenolysis and inhibition of glycogenesis. Suppression of insulin secretion is secondary but probably contributes to the hyperglycemia.
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PMID:The mechanism of chlorothiazide-induced carbohydrate intolerance. 21 Feb 75

Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and glucagon increase the urinary fractional excretion of phosphate, but insulin administration is associated with a decreased fractional excretion of phosphate. It was the purpose of this study to determine whether insulin will antagonize the effects of PTH and glucagon on cAMP levels and protein kinase activation of rat renal cortex. In situ incubation studies were performed on rat renal cortical slices exposed to insulin, PTH, and glucagon. Insulin alone did not affect the tissue cAMP and cGMP levels or the state of protein kinase activation. Preincubation of slices with insulin, however, did significantly inhibit increases in protein kinase activation induced by both PTH and glucagon. Insulin also significantly inhibited PTH-stimulated increases in tissue cAMP levels, but did not blunt the elevations of cAMP levels induced by glucagon. Insulin (10(-9) M) had no effect on either the in vitro activity of adenylate cyclase, basal or PTH-stimulated, or on the activities of low Km cytosolic or membrane-bound cAMP phosphodiesterase. The data show that insulin antagonizes activation of protein kinase by both PTH and glucagon in renal cortex. Separate mechanisms are probably involved for PTH and glucagon interaction. The antiphosphaturic effect of insulin in vivo may result in part from this antagonism at the cellular level.
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PMID:Insulin inhibition of hormone-stimulated protein kinase systems of rat renal cortex. 22 Aug 84

The character of the insulin effect on the activity of phosphodiesterase (PDE) cAMP of various subcellular localization was studied in the liver of normal and diabetic rats. As a result of kinetic investigations for PDE cAMP preparations of the plasma membranes there were obtained kinetic characteristics of two PDE forms, differing by their affinity to the substrate. For the both PDE cAMP forms stimulation of the activity with insulin was indicated. In examining the insulin effect on the activity of PDE cAMP of the liver of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes there was revealed a significant effect of the hormone on the kinetics of the enzyme with a high affinity to cAMP only.
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PMID:[Regulation of the activity of 3', 5'-cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by pancreatic hormones]. 22 45

A membrane fraction prepared from isolated rat adipocytes contained an insulin-sensitive cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) which catalyzed the hydrolysis of both adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) and guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP). The rate of hydrolysis of cGMP was about one-third that of cAMP. The hydrolysis of the two nucleotides appeared to be assoicated with one catalytic site: one nucleotide interfered with the hydrolysis of the other, in a manner predictable from the kinetic constants in that the Km of one nucleotide as a substrate was comparable to its Ki as an inhibitor of the hydrolysis of the other nucleotide. Incubation of the adipocytes with insulin increased the Vmax of phosphodiesterase without affecting the Km values for either substrate. After adipocytes had been treated with filipin, a membrane perturbant, at a concentration that did not cause cell lysis, the response of phosphodiesterase to insulin was obliterated. Further, the insulin-stimulated phosphodiesterase activity was reversed when hormone-treated cells were subsequently incubated with this agent. These results suggest that the response of membrane phosphodiesterase to insulin is impaired once adipocytes have been exposed to filipin, either preceding or following the incubation with insulin.
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PMID:Filipin prevents and reverses insulin stimulation of rat adipocyte phosphodiesterase. 22 98

Thyroidectomy is known to enhance fat cell phosphodiesterase activity; as a result, the response to lipolytic hormones is markedly reduced. Thyroidectomy also stimulates overall lipogenesis and the uptake of glucose: the present experiments investigated whether there was a correlation between cyclic AMP and glucose uptake. The parameter measured was the transport and phosphorylation (uptake) of deoxy-D-glucose in the presence of two modifiers of the cyclic AMP pool: phosphodiesterase inhibitors and the analogue, dibutyryl cyclic AMP. The inhibition by methylxanthines and dibutyryl cyclic AMP of deoxy-D-glucose uptake observed, was the same in fat cells from normal and thyroidectomized rats: the latter nonetheless still maintained their enhanced glucose uptake. It was therefore concluded that thyroid hormones and cyclic AMP control this step by different, separate pathways. Insulin, well known for its lipogenic effect, enhanced deoxy-D-glucose uptake in fat cells from both normal and thyroidectomized rats to the same extent (about 40%). An additive effect of thyroidectomy and insulin on glucose uptake was thus demonstrated. These results imply that glucose uptake in the adipocyte is controlled by at least three factors: thyroid hormones, cyclic AMP and insulin, each of which can act independently. Maximum glucose uptake is achieved in the presence of a combination of low concentrations of cyclic AMP, of insulin, and in the absence of thyroid hormones.
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PMID:Regulation of lipogenesis in adipocytes. Independent effects of thyroid hormones, cyclic AMP and insulin on the uptake of deoxy-D-glucose. 22 38

The data presented concern the chemistry and biology of cardiotrop peptides and proteins isolated by us from the hypothalamus. The molecular mechanisms of the effect of neurohormone "C" (NC) as well as of a new cardiotrop hexapeptide from cattle hypothalamus are discussed. In in vitro studies on homogenates NC has been found to inhibit greatly not only 3'--5'-cyclo-AMP phosphodiesterase activity of brain and heart but also 3'--5'-cyclo-GMP phosphodiesterase activity. NC has been shown to be bound to specific proteins and to the regulatory unit of cyclo-AMP-dependent histone kinase of brain. It seems to compete with cyclo-AMP for the same proteins and is considered to be a regulator of intracellular cyclic nucleotides. NC has been shown to be combined to specific proteins in brain with non covalent bonds. A new cardiotrop hexapeptide has been shown to be present in bovine hypothalamus and its chemical structure has been found to be Tyr-Leu-Gly-Arg-Pro-Gly-amide. The acetylated form of this hexapeptide, which may be also present in brain, is much more active. The radioimmunochemical experiments carried out with antiserum 744 (from prof. Schally) by us have confirmed the existence of this hexapeptide and other fragments of LH-RH in the bovine hypothalamus. The effect of this hexapeptide on cardiac function and metabolism has been compared with a number of polypeptides (luliberin fragments). The hexapeptide has been shown to have not only cardiotropic but also a hypoglycaemic effect. It enhances the secretion of insulin and counteracts the inhibitory action of somatostatin on the insular apparatus. The hexapeptide produces significant changes in the activities of phosphorylase a and b as well as in that of phosphoprotein phosphatases. It reduces the amount of kinines in blood. Certain fractions of substance P, have been shown to have cardiotrop actitivty--they increase the rate of blood leaving the heart. The organotrop effects of a number of peptide neurohormones are discussed in connection with the hexapeptide. The results obtained have shown that the mechanisms underlying the effects of the cardioactive substances found by us are quite different. The data presented show that in brain a number of chemical factors (mainly peptides) are formed, which are involved in the regulation of heart function.
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PMID:[Chemistry and biology of hypothalamic cardioactive proteins and peptides]. 22 93


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