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Query: EC:3.1.4.1 (
phosphodiesterase
)
18,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity of several tissues of rat is inhibited by an endogenous factor isolated from rat adipocytes following exposure of these cells to agents that raise intracellular cyclic AMP levels. The inhibitory action was demonstrated with varying cAMP concentrations from 0.1-400 muM. Enzyme from 10,000 X g supernatant of
epididymal
adipose tissue was inhibited approximately 2-3 fold more than the plasma membrane of adipocytes by a given concentration of the feedback regulator. Kinetic analysis of cAMP
phosphodiesterase
of plasma membrane showed that feedback regulator (8.8 U/ml) inhibited the Vmax 48%. The maximum inhibition of
phosphodiesterase
by feedback regulator (20 U/ml) was about 80%. The apparent Km for cAMP was increased. The ability of
phosphodiesterase
from several tissues of rat (10,000 X g supernatant) to hydrolyze cAMP and cGMP was tested. Feedback regulator inhibited cGMP hydrolysis in cardiac muscle and 5 other tissues 23-92% more than it inhibited the hydrolysis of cAMP. The physiological significance of this inhibitory effect can begin to be clarified when the feedback regulator is purified to homogeneity and characterized.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity by an endogenous factor. 17 58
The in vitro effects of insulin on different
phosphodiesterase
activities present in rat
epididymal
fat cells from normal and hypothyroid rats have been studied. Evidence is presented that insulin increases the maximum velocity of a particulate, low Km, cyclic adenosine-3', 5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP)
phosphodiesterase
in both types of cells, this effect being more clearly evident with the fat cells from hypothyroid animals; combination of insulin and thyroidectomy resulted in a 400% stimulation with 10-10 - 10-9 M insulin. A clear and significant effect was apparent at 10-11 M insulin. However, the dose-response curve was biphasic, since stimulation by insulin was suppressed for doses of hormone higher 10-8 - 10-7 M. Moreover, insulin effects were very fast, since clear stimulation was observed after only 2 min of incubation; the maximal increase was obtained after 10 min. Insulin did not significantly affect the soluble cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in normal cells, thus confirming results obtained by others. However, the soluble cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity was clearly stimulated by insulin when the fat cells were prepared from hypothyroid rats. Maximal stimulation was obtained with 10-9 M insulin; the response was again very fast. Soluble cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activity was also increased additively by hypothyroidism and insulin, maximal stimulation being obtained with 10-9 M insulin. With this dose of insulin the additive effects of thyroidectomy and insulin produced a 5-fold stimulation. The effect of insulin on the soluble cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase was very fast (2-5 min). With both soluble cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activities, insulin increased the maximal velocity but not apparent Km of the enzyme. Thus, hypothyroidism and insulin produced additive effects suggesting a different mechanism of action of these two hormonal situations on the degradation of the intracellular pools of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP.
...
PMID:Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases, insulin and thyroid hormones. 18 75
Cyclic AMP metabolism in
epididymal
adipose tissue of exercise-trained rats was examined to determine if training induced changes in cyclic AMP production or inactivation. Beginning at 7 weeks of age, male rats were physically trained by 12 weeks of treadmill running. Pair-fed control rats remained sedentary in their cages for the duration of the experiment. Tissue levels of cyclic AMP were measured in
epididymal
adipose tissue slices incubated with norepinephrine. Adenyl cyclase was assayed in adipocyte ghost cell prepartions and low-Km
phosphodiesterase
was assayed in homogenates of adipose tissue. In response to norepinephrine stimulation, tissue cyclic AMP levels were reduced in trained compared to untrained rats. Training increased the ratio of activity of
phosphodiesterase
relative to adenyl cyclase. The results of this study indicate that cyclic AMP production in response to norepinephrine stimulation is not increased by training and may even be reduced, implying that adipose tissue cyclic AMP levels may be under a greater degree of control in trained rats. Modulation of adipose tissue cyclic AMP levels may function to regulate more closely the duration of lipolysis in exercise-trained rats.
...
PMID:Cyclic AMP metabolism in adipose tissue of exercise-trained rats. 21 Nov 72
Soluble and particulate fractions from extracts of rat
epididymal
fat cells were shown to exhibit a number of different
phosphodiesterase
activities, as determined by substrate specificity and sensitivity to activators and inhibitors. These activities were then further characterized following separation by MonoQ fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC). A cyclic AMP-specific activity, unaffected by the presence of calcium and calmodulin and inhibited by rolipram, was the major soluble
phosphodiesterase
. This fraction also contained distinct calcium and calmodulin- and cyclic-GMP-stimulated activities. Over 80% of the
phosphodiesterase
activity in the particulate fraction could be accounted for by an insulin-activated cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP-hydrolysing enzyme, which was sensitive to inhibition by cyclic GMP, SKF 94120, SKF 95654 and cilostamide, and eluted as a single peak during MonoQ chromatography. At 1 microM cyclic AMP, the
phosphodiesterase
activity in the soluble fraction was about eight times greater than in the particulate fraction. Specific inhibitors to the particulate
phosphodiesterase
(cilostamide and SKF 95654) were added to incubations of isolated fat cells, and were able to potentiate sub-maximal concentrations of isoproterenol in the stimulation of lipolysis. These inhibitors were also able to reverse the antilipolytic effect of insulin, demonstrating the importance of the particulate
phosphodiesterase
in insulin action, despite the fact that its activity represents only a small proportion of the total
phosphodiesterase
activity in fat cells. Inhibitors of the major soluble
phosphodiesterase
had no effect on lipolysis.
...
PMID:Characterization of the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isoenzymes present in rat epididymal fat cells. 157 Dec 3
Exposure of rat
epididymal
fat pad to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (TPA), an activator of protein kinase C, results in an 85% increase in isoproterenol-stimulated cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation, an effect which was antagonized by H7, a protein kinase C inhibitor. This promoting action of TPA appears to be related to (i) an increase in the catalytic activity of adenylate cyclase, (ii) an increase in the maximal response of adenylate cyclase to fluoride and guanylimidodiphosphate (GppNHp) with no change in the EC50 value for GppNHp, and (iii) a reduction of the isoproterenol-stimulated low-Km cAMP
phosphodiesterase
activity present in the 30,000 g pellet of fat pad homogenates. In contrast with fat pads, exposure of isolated rat fat cells to TPA failed to influence their adenylate cyclase response to GppNHp and their cAMP accumulation and lipolysis. However, the other alterations caused by TPA in fat pads were still observed in fat cells. These results suggest that (i) the major alteration responsible for the promoted isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP response observed in fat pads after exposure to TPA is an increased interaction between the alpha s subunit of Gs and the catalytic site of adenylate cyclase and (ii) this increased interaction is dependent on protein kinase C activation and is abolished by collagenase digestion.
...
PMID:Differential modulation of the adenylate cyclase/cyclic AMP stimulatory pathway by protein kinase C activation in rat adipose tissue and isolated fat cells. Influence of collagenase digestion. 165 98
Previous studies from this laboratory and others have identified several enzymes on the surface of mammalian spermatozoa. Some of these enzymes, namely a galactosyltransferase and a novel alpha-D-mannosidase, are believed to play a ligand-like role in recognizing and binding to the complementary moiety(ies) present on zona pellucida glycoconjugates. However, little or no information is available about the occurrence of these enzymes in human spermatozoa. In the present report, we show that a very small amount of the total galactosyltransferase activity present in human semen is associated with spermatozoa. Moreover, our failure to find a significant amount of the enzyme on sperm plasma membranes suggests that the enzyme is not associated with the sperm surface. Therefore, it is unlikely that galactosyltransferase in humans has the same ligand-like role in zona binding that is demonstrated in mouse sperm. In contrast, nearly 5% of alpha-D-mannosidase activity was repeatedly found in the salt-washed plasma membrane fraction. The recovery and enrichment of the alpha-D-mannosidase was nearly one-half that observed for adenylate cyclase and nearly one-third that for
phosphodiesterase I
, the two sperm plasma membrane marker enzymes. The differential enrichment and recovery of the sperm surface alpha-D-mannosidase is consistant with our previous studies in rat spermatozoa, and suggests that alpha-D-mannosidase may be localized on morphologically distinct region(s) of the sperm plasma membranes. The properties of human sperm surface alpha-D-mannosidase are quite similar to those reported by us for rat sperm plasma membrane mannosidase, but quite different from human sperm acid alpha-D-mannosidase. In addition, whereas anti-rat
epididymal
alpha-D-mannosidase antibody (IgG-fraction) cross-reacted with the human sperm acid alpha-D-mannosidase, no cross-reactivity was observed with the sperm surface mannosidase. A small amount of fucosyltransferase (less than 1% of the enzyme originally present on spermatozoa) was found in the salt-washed plasma membrane, but the enrichment of the enzyme was only one-tenth of that observed for adenylate cyclase. The potential ligand-like role of human sperm surface alpha-D-mannosidase and other sperm surface enzymes during fertilization is discussed.
...
PMID:Human sperm plasma membranes possess alpha-D-mannosidase activity but no galactosyltransferase activity. 211 23
Capacitation of hamster caudal spermatozoa at a density of 1 x 10(6)/ml is associated with a progressive rise in cAMP levels that precedes the onset of hyperactivated motility. This increase is not expressed by caput spermatozoa incubated under identical conditions. Both the incidence of hyperactivation and the rise in cAMP levels are severely attenuated in the absence of exogenous calcium. Neither factor is restored to control levels by the addition of the
phosphodiesterase
inhibitor IBMX, although in the presence of exogenous calcium, this reagent increased cAMP levels, stimulated percentage motility and advanced the appearance of hyperactivation. Treatment of spermatozoa at a density of 1 x 10(6)/ml with the calmodulin antagonist, calmidazolium (CZ), caused severe disruption of sperm motility and abolished hyperactivation, while causing only a slight reduction in cAMP content. Addition of IBMX in the presence of CZ elevated cAMP content to levels higher than normally observed during capacitation but did not restore either coordinated or hyperactivated motility. To determine both the mechanisms responsible for this elevation of cAMP content and the changes that occur during
epididymal
maturation to facilitate the expression of this increase, the free cytosolic calcium concentration, ATP levels, and intracellular pH of caput and caudal cells were compared. The calcium content of caudal spermatozoa rose significantly at a time when cAMP levels were increasing, while ATP content and intracellular pH fell. However, the inability of caput spermatozoa to express a rise in cAMP content was not due to deficiencies in any of these factors. These results indicate a positive role for the cAMP rise in the expression of hyperactivated motility and that the fundamental control mechanism governing both these events may be the influx of calcium that accompanies capacitation in this species.
...
PMID:Relationship between calcium, cyclic AMP, ATP, and intracellular pH and the capacity of hamster spermatozoa to express hyperactivated motility. 254 81
Male Wistar rats, 6-8 week old, were fasted for 72 hours. The in vitro lipolytic activity of
epididymal
adipocytes was measured in the presence of adrenalin (a alpha and beta adrenergic agonist), isoprenaline (a pure beta agonist), theophylline (a
phosphodiesterase
inhibitor) or UK 14304 (a alpha 2 adrenoceptor agonist) associated with adenosine deaminase. The basal lipolytic activity, expressed per 100 mg lipids, was higher in fasted adipocytes than in fed ones. Its stimulation by adrenalin or isoproterenol was decreased by fast. The effects of these drugs were more potentiated by theophylline in fasted adipocytes than in fed ones. The UK 14304 inhibition of adenosine deaminase-stimulated lipolysis was about 20% in fasted adipocytes and 50% in fed adipocytes. The in vitro resistance of fasted adipocytes to the lipolytic effect of adrenalin or isoproterenol may be related to the hypothyroid status of fasted rats.
...
PMID:[Prolonged fasting on the lipolytic activity of isolated adipocytes of the rat epididymis]. 257 11
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in the plasma membranes of bovine
epididymal
spermatozoa was stimulated by added Ca2+ and calmodulin. The rate of hydrolysis and responsiveness toward calmodulin was greater for cAMP than for cGMP. The kinetic analysis of the activity revealed two forms of
phosphodiesterase
with apparent Km values of 7.5 and 95 microM for cAMP. Calmodulin stimulated both of the activities by increasing the Vmax without affecting the Km's. The activity response with respect to Ca2+ concentration appears to be biphasic in both the absence and presence of added calmodulin. Trifluoperazine inhibited the Ca2+- and calmodulin-sensitive enzyme activity in a dose-dependent manner. The calmodulin-stimulated
phosphodiesterase
activity in the sperm plasma membranes can be solubilized and absorbed to a Calmodulin-Sepharose affinity column in the presence of Ca2+.
...
PMID:Calmodulin-stimulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases in plasma membranes of bovine epididymal spermatozoa. 283 7
Cyclic AMP has been implicated as a regulator of capacitation, but the control of its metabolism in sperm remains obscure. A recent study of mouse sperm has shown capacitation-related changes in the activities of both adenylate cyclase, which increased during incubation, and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase, which decreased. The present study was conducted to extend these observations by measuring
phosphodiesterase
activity in sperm incubated in media with modified calcium and/or glucose content, conditions known to modulate fertilizing ability. Phosphodiesterase activity of sequential sperm samples, taken first when sperm are essentially uncapacitated and then when they are either partially or completely capacitated, decreased with time under all conditions, and in each case the greater fall in activity was seen in the medium that would support the greater change in fertilizing ability of the sperm population. Sperm washed by centrifugation to remove
epididymal
fluid also displayed a reduction in
phosphodiesterase
activity with time. The medium surrounding the sperm contained about half of the total
phosphodiesterase
activity, as well as 5'-nucleotidase and adenosine deaminase. The crude enzyme preparation showed complex kinetic behavior when assayed over a range of cAMP concentrations, but the reduction in activity with time was seen at all substrate levels. The observed changes in
phosphodiesterase
activity, together with the increased adenylate cyclase activity seen under these sperm incubation conditions, would increase cAMP availability with time, thus providing further evidence for a fundamental role for cAMP in controlling the events of capacitation.
...
PMID:Phosphodiesterase activity of mouse sperm incubated under conditions that modulate fertilizing potential in vitro. 285 27
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