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)

Changes in enzyme activities of the plasma membrane markers were examined during phagocytosis using guinea-pig polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Incubation of neutrophils with fresh serum-opsonized zymosan particles showed a significant reduction in leucine aminopeptidase activity, whereas 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase activities remained unchanged. Inactivation of leucine aminopeptidase activity was also observed by exposure of neutrophils to complement-opsonized zymosan particles, but not to non-opsonized zymosan, IgG-coated zymosan or polystyrene latex particles. Pretreatment of neutrophils with cytochalasin B, which prevents phagocytosis but not surface binding of particles, provoked inactivation to the same degree as when the cells were allowed to phagocytose the particles. However, the inactivation during phagocytosis was protected by serine protease inhibitors. These findings suggest that loss of leucine aminopeptidase activity from phagocytosing cells may be mediated by certain serine protease inhibitor-sensitive factor(s) which are probably activated by the attachment of an opsonized zymosan particle to a specific membrane receptor, probably the C3b receptor.
...
PMID:Inactivation during phagocytosis of leucine aminopeptidase, an ecto-enzyme of polymorphonuclear neutrophils. 731 56

The topological disposition of Wolfgram proteins (WP) and their relationship with 2', 3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (CNPase) in human, rat, sheep, bovine, guinea pig and chicken CNS myelin was investigated. Controlled digestion of myelin with trypsin gave a 35KDa protein band (WP-t) when electrophoresed on dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel in all species. Western blot analysis showed that the WP-t was derived from WP. WP-t was also formed when rat myelin was treated with other proteases such as kallikrein, thermolysin and leucine aminopeptidase. Staining for CNPase activity on nitrocellulose blots showed that WP-t is enzymatically active. Much of the CNPase activity remained with the membrane fraction even after treatment with high concentrations of trypsin when WP were completely hydrolysed and no protein bands with M.W > 14KDa were detected on the gels. Therefore protein fragments of WP with M.W < 14KDa may contain CNPase activity. From these results, it is suggested that the topological disposition of all the various WP is such that a 35KDa fragment is embedded in the lipid bilayer and the remaining fragment exposed at the intraperiod line in the myelin structure which may play a role in the initiation of myelinogenesis.
...
PMID:Topology of Wolfgram proteins and 2', 3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase in CNS myelin: studies with proteases. 782 62

The greater part of the intracellular aminopeptidases in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus is soluble. The localization of aminopeptidases in the cells was examined using the osmotic shock method with some modifications. When the cells of A. calcoaceticus and P. aeruginosa of the logarithmic phase were subjected to an osmotic shock, all aminopeptidases investigated were mainly localized in the sucrose supernatants and in the periplasm. Acid phosphatase as marker enzyme for periplasm showed a similar distribution between the fractions as the aminopeptidases. The periplasmic aminopeptidases of both microorganisms were separated by FPLC on Superose 12 and their molecular masses were determined. The results obtained show that at least four different aminopeptidases occur in the periplasm, a leucyl aminopeptidase (LAP, cleaving Leu-NH-NH2, 400 kDa), a glutamyl aminopeptidase (GAP, 200 kDa), an alanyl aminopeptidase (AAP, 80 kDa) and a prolyl aminopeptidase (PAP, 65 kDa). The results are in agreement for both species. Our results show clearly that aminopeptidases of these typical members of Gram-negative bacteria are mainly periplasmic like degrading enzymes (alkaline and acid phosphatases, 5'-nucleotidase, cyclic phosphodiesterase), detoxifying enzymes and binding proteins for amino acids and sugars.
...
PMID:Periplasmic aminopeptidases in Acinetobacter calcoaceticus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 822 72

1. Mice were subjected to gastrectomy (GX) or food deprivation (24 h). The release of insulin and glucagon in response to different secretagogues was monitored in vivo and in isolated islets 3-4 weeks after surgery. 2. GX animals responded to glucose with an impaired glucose tolerance and a poor increase in plasma insulin. Islets from GX or food-deprived mice displayed impaired insulin release to high glucose and enhanced glucagon release at low glucose. 3. After GX the insulinogenic index, Delta insulin (microU ml-1)/Delta glucose (mg ml-1), was suppressed by 65% after oral glucose and by 59% after i.v. glucose. The integrated insulin response after oral glucose was reduced by 90% in GX mice. After i.v. glucose the reduction was 67%. 4. Carbachol-induced insulin release in vivo was reduced after food deprivation and exaggerated after GX. Carbachol-stimulated glucagon secretion was suppressed after GX and after food deprivation. A similar pattern was found in vitro. 5. Cyclic AMP activation (by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine or the adenylate cyclase stimulator forskolin) induced a greater insulin response in GX or food-deprived mice than in sham-operated, fed mice. A similar pattern was found in vitro. The glucagon response was enhanced in vitro but not in vivo. 6. Crude extracts of rat oxyntic mucosa enhanced basal as well as glucose-induced insulin release from isolated islets, whereas glucagon release was markedly inhibited. The effects were dose dependent, the inhibition of glucagon release being achieved at lower concentrations than the potentiation of glucose-induced insulin release. The active principle was inactivated by incubation with trypsin or leucine aminopeptidase. 7. The data suggest that a circulating agent, probably a peptide, from gastric oxyntic mucosa stimulates glucose-induced insulin secretion. It also suppresses glucagon secretion. The GX-evoked impairment of the insulin (and glucagon) response to glucose is partly compensated for by an enhanced insulin response to cholinergic and/or cyclic AMP activation.
...
PMID:Gastrectomy induces impaired insulin and glucagon secretion: evidence for a gastro-insular axis in mice. 985 37

Because porcine chromosome (SSC) 8 has become the focal point of many efforts aimed at identifying quantitative trait loci affecting ovulation rate, genes distributed across human chromosome (HSA) 4 were physically mapped in the pig. A more refined comparative map of this region for these two species was produced. In this study, four genes were selected based on their location in the human genome, the availability of nucleotide sequence and their genomic organization. The genes selected were fibroblast growth factor basic (FGF2; HSA 4q25-27), gonadotropin releasing hormone receptor (GNRHR; HSA 4q13), phosphodiesterase 6 B (PDE6B; HSA 4p16.3) and aminopeptidase S (PEPS; HSA 4p11-q12). Genomic libraries were screened via PCR and clones were physically assigned using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). These four genes from HSA 4 were physically mapped to SSC 8p2.3 (PDE6B), 8p1.1 (PEPS), 8q1.1-1.2 (GNRHR) and 8q2.2-2.4 (FGF2). These assignments provide additional benchmarks for the comparative map and help define the level of gene order conserved between HSA 4 and SSC 8.
...
PMID:Mapping four genes from human chromosome 4 to porcine chromosome 8 further develops the comparative map for an economically important chromosome of the swine genome. 1005 Feb 87

Snake envenomation employs three well integrated strategies: prey immobilization via hypotension, prey immobilization via paralysis, and prey digestion. Purines (adenosine, guanosine and inosine) evidently play a central role in the envenomation strategies of most advanced snakes. Purines constitute the perfect multifunctional toxins, participating simultaneously in all three envenomation strategies. Because they are endogenous regulatory compounds in all vertebrates, it is impossible for any prey organism to develop resistance to them. Purine generation from endogenous precursors in the prey explains the presence of many hitherto unexplained enzyme activities in snake venoms: 5'-nucleotidase, endonucleases (including ribonuclease), phosphodiesterase, ATPase, ADPase, phosphomonoesterase, and NADase. Phospholipases A(2), cytotoxins, myotoxins, and heparinase also participate in purine liberation, in addition to their better known functions. Adenosine contributes to prey immobilization by activation of neuronal adenosine A(1) receptors, suppressing acetylcholine release from motor neurons and excitatory neurotransmitters from central sites. It also exacerbates venom-induced hypotension by activating A(2) receptors in the vasculature. Adenosine and inosine both activate mast cell A(3) receptors, liberating vasoactive substances and increasing vascular permeability. Guanosine probably contributes to hypotension, by augmenting vascular endothelial cGMP levels via an unknown mechanism. Novel functions are suggested for toxins that act upon blood coagulation factors, including nitric oxide production, using the prey's carboxypeptidases. Leucine aminopeptidase may link venom hemorrhagic metalloproteases and endogenous chymotrypsin-like proteases with venom L-amino acid oxidase (LAO), accelerating the latter. The primary function of LAO is probably to promote prey hypotension by activating soluble guanylate cyclase in the presence of superoxide dismutase. LAO's apoptotic activity, too slow to be relevant to prey capture, is undoubtedly secondary and probably serves principally a digestive function. It is concluded that the principal function of L-type Ca(2+) channel antagonists and muscarinic toxins, in Dendroaspis venoms, and acetylcholinesterase in other elapid venoms, is to promote hypotension. Venom dipeptidyl peptidase IV-like enzymes probably also contribute to hypotension by destroying vasoconstrictive peptides such as Peptide YY, neuropeptide Y and substance P. Purines apparently bind to other toxins which then serve as molecular chaperones to deposit the bound purines at specific subsets of purine receptors. The assignment of pharmacological activities such as transient neurotransmitter suppression, histamine release and antinociception, to a variety of proteinaceous toxins, is probably erroneous. Such effects are probably due instead to purines bound to these toxins, and/or to free venom purines.
...
PMID:Ophidian envenomation strategies and the role of purines. 1173 31


<< Previous 1 2