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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)
Sperm surface changes during in vitro capacitation were examined with the help of an assay system using lectin-coated agarose beads. The nature and intensity of binding of
epididymal
spermatozoa to beads depended entirely on the particular stage of capacitation and the type of lectin attached to the bead surface. Fresh
epididymal
spermatozoa bound readily to beads coated with Con A, LCA, WGA, and PNA, but not with seven other lectins. During capacitation there was a constant decline in sperm binding to beads, and spermatozoa cultured for 4-5 hr bound only to those coated with Con A. A dramatic increase in sperm binding to Con A-coated agarose beads occurred between 4.5 and 5 hr, when large numbers of hyperactivated spermatozoa adhered, predominantly through their flagellae, to form large clumps on the beads. The clumping of spermatozoa on Con A-coated beads was enhanced in the presence of stimulators of capacitation (i.e., taurine, hypotaurine, and
phosphodiesterase
inhibitors) and was suppressed in the presence of various metabolic inhibitors (i.e., sodium azide and local anesthetics). The implications of these results are that the carbohydrate components of the entire surface of spermatozoa undergo striking changes during capacitation, and a close relationship may exist between the sperm surface and the metabolic changes occurring within capacitating spermatozoa. Sperm-bead binding assays are clearly able to recognize surface changes in asynchronous populations of motile spermatozoa and, due to their simplicity and speed, should prove to be valuable in gaining a greater understanding of the biochemistry of sperm capacitation.
...
PMID:Lectin-coated agarose beads in the investigation of sperm capacitation in the hamster. 673 31
The activity of adipose tissue hormone-sensitive lipase in animals with hyperinsulinemia has been reported to be increased compared with that in control animals. We examined whether this results from a direct effect of insulin on the tissue and whether it is accompanied by alteration in the regulation of lipolysis. When rat
epididymal
fat pads are incubated in culture medium with bovine serum albumin for 2-4 h with 2 ng/ml or 50 microU/ml of insulin, hormone-sensitive lipase activity in the postmicrosomal supernatant fraction after acid precipitation and activation with ATP-Mg2+ increases significantly compared with preparations from tissues incubated with the vehicle. The specific activities of hormone-sensitive lipase in sonicates of adipocytes after primary culture with insulin at concentrations from 10 to 4000 ng/ml (250 microU to 100 mU/ml) increase in an insulin-dose-related manner. Lipolysis in response to 10(-7) M isoproterenol also increases in an insulin-dose-dependent manner. Enhancement of isoproterenol-mediated lipolysis is not attributable to a difference in the triglyceride content of the cells. Lipolysis caused by the beta-agonist could be completely blocked by the simultaneous presence of insulin in both control and insulin-treated cells reflecting normal responsiveness of both types of cells to the acute effect of insulin. Although an increase in lipolysis is seen with norepinephrine and growth hormone after insulin treatment, other lipolytic agents such as ACTH, thyrotropin, and glucagon evoke similar responses in insulin-treated and control cells. The simultaneous presence of growth hormone and insulin during the 16-h culture results in additive effects on the subsequent response of the cells to 10(-7) M isoproterenol compared with the responses of the cells cultured with each hormone alone. beta-Agonist-mediated cAMP accumulation in the presence of Ro-20.1724, a specific
phosphodiesterase
inhibitor, is significantly higher in cells cultured in the presence of insulin than in control cells. Forskolin (1-25 microM) increases the lipolytic responses of insulin-treated cells compared with control cells, but the maximal response of the insulin-treated cells to forskolin is lower than that to isoproterenol. We conclude that changes produced by chronic insulin treatment involve more than one site along the lipolytic cascade.
...
PMID:Chronic exposure of rat fat cells to insulin enhances lipolysis and activation of partially purified hormone-sensitive lipase. 839 27
The concentrations of cAMP, cAMP
phosphodiesterase
(
PDE
) activity, and the effect of theophylline in vitro on the forward motility (FM) of maturing goat
epididymal
sperm have been analyzed. cAMP levels increase slowly during transit of the cells from the caput to the proximal cauda, although they acquired a minimal degree of forward progression. The last phase of sperm transit (proximal to distal cauda) was associated with a concomitant sharp rise in the level of both cAMP as well as flagellar motility.
PDE
activity progressively decreased (approximately threefold) during
epididymal
maturation, being minimal in mature cauda sperm. Theophylline (30 mM), a specific inhibitor of
PDE
, markedly activated (10-fold or greater) motility of the sperm derived from proximal-corpus, mid-corpus, distal-corpus, and proximal-cauda epididymides. FM of the native mature caudal sperm was similar to that of the theophylline-treated proximal-cauda sperm. The terminal stage of sperm maturity (proximal to distal cauda) was associated with a markedly reduced level of theophylline-dependent motility activation (approximately 50%). The data are consistent with the view that
PDE
plays an important role in the initiation of motility during
epididymal
sperm maturation.
...
PMID:Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase: a regulator of forward motility initiation during epididymal sperm maturation. 901 74
The metabolic effects of insulin are initiated by the binding of insulin to the extracellular domain of the insulin receptor within the plasma membrane of muscle and adipose and liver cells. The subsequent activation of the intracellular tyrosine protein kinase activity of the receptor leads to autophosphorylation of the receptor as well as phosphorylation of a number of intracellular proteins. This gives rise to the activation of Ras and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and hence to the activation of a number of serine/threanine protein kinases. Many of these kinases appear to be arranged in cascades, including a cascade that results in the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase and another that may result in the activation of protein kinase B, leading to the inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3 and the activation of the 70 kiloDalton ribosomal S6 protein kinase (p70 S6 kinase). We have explored the role of these early events in the the stimulation of glycogen, fatty acid, and protein synthesis by insulin in rat
epididymal
fat cells. Comparisons have been made between the metabolic effects of insulin and those of epidermal growth factor, since these 2 agents have contrasting effects on p70 S6 kinase and mitogen-activated protein kinase. The effects of wortmannin (which inhibits phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase), and rapamycin (which blocks the activation of p70 S6 kinase) have also been studied. These and other studies indicate that the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade is probably not important in the acute metabolic effects of insulin, but may have a role in the regulation of gene transcription and hence the more long-term effects of insulin. The short-term metabolic effects of insulin appear to involve at least 3 distinct signaling pathways: (1) those leading to increases in glucose transport and the activation of glycogen synthase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, eukaryotic initiation factor-2B, and
phosphodiesterase
, which may involve phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and protein kinase B; (2) those leading to some of the effects of insulin on protein synthesis (formation of eukaryotic initiation factor-4F complex, S6 phosphorylation, and activation of eukaryotic elongation factor-2), which may involve phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and p70 S6 kinase; and finally, (3) that leading to the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase, which is unique in apparently not requiring activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase.
...
PMID:Multiple signaling pathways involved in the metabolic effects of insulin. 929 55
To elucidate the mechanism of anti-lipolytic action of insulin in rat
epididymal
adipocytes, we explored the potential mechanism that might be involved in the hormone-dependent stimulation of cAMP
phosphodiesterase
(
PDE
) kinase.
PDE
kinase was assayed in a cell-free system. Both wortmannin and LY294002, highly specific inhibitors of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, almost completely blocked the hormonal effect not only on
PDE
kinase but also on mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. Neither PD98059, a specific inhibitor of MAP kinase, nor rapamycin, a potent inhibitor of insulin-dependent stimulation of p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase (p70S6K), had inhibitory effect on that of
PDE
kinase. These results are consistent with the view that (i) insulin-activated
PDE
kinase as well as MAP kinase and p70S6K are localized downstream of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, (ii)
PDE
kinase is distinct from either MAP kinase or p70S6K and (iii)
PDE
kinase does not exist downstream of either MAP kinase or p70S6K. It is suggested that
PDE
kinase and MAP kinase or p70S6K may be localized in separate branches of the cascade of insulin action. The branching point of the cascade could be either at or below the level of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase.
...
PMID:Mitogen-activated protein kinase and p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase are not involved in the insulin-dependent stimulation of cAMP phosphodiesterase kinase in rat adipocytes. 956 5
At mating, mammalian sperm are diluted in the male and female reproductive fluids, which brings contact with HCO(3)(-) and initiates several cellular responses. We have identified and studied two of the most rapid of these responses. Stop-motion imaging and flagellar waveform analysis show that for mouse
epididymal
sperm in vitro, the resting flagellar beat frequency is 2-3 Hz at 22-25 degrees C. Local perfusion with HCO(3)(-) produces a robust, reversible acceleration to 7 Hz or more. At 15 mM the action of HCO(3)(-) begins within 5 seconds and is near-maximal by 30 seconds. The half-times of response are 8.8+/-0.2 seconds at 15 mM HCO(3)(-) and 17.5+/-0.4 seconds at 1 mM HCO(3)(-). Removal of external HCO(3)(-) allows a slow return to basal beat frequency over approximately 10 minutes. Increases in beat symmetry accompany the accelerating action of HCO(3)(-). As in our past work, HCO(3)(-) also facilitates opening of voltagegated Ca(2+) channels, increasing the depolarization-evoked rate of rise of intracellular Ca(2+) concentration by more than fivefold. This action also is detectable at 1 mM HCO(3)(-) and occurs with an apparent halftime of approximately 60 seconds at 15 mM HCO(3)(-). The dual actions of HCO(3)(-) respond similarly to pharmacological intervention. Thus, the
phosphodiesterase
inhibitor IBMX promotes the actions of HCO(3)(-) on flagellar and channel function, and the protein kinase A inhibitor H89 blocks these actions. In addition, a 30 minute incubation with 60 micro M cAMP acetoxylmethyl ester increases flagellar beat frequency to nearly 7 Hz and increases the evoked rates of rise of intracellular Ca(2+) concentration from 17+/-4 to 41+/-6 nM second(-1). However, treatment with several other analogs of cAMP produces only scant evidence of the expected mimicry or blockade of the actions of HCO(3)(-), perhaps as a consequence of limited permeation. Our findings indicate a requirement for cAMP-mediated protein phosphorylation in the enhancement of flagellar and channel functions that HCO(3)(-) produces during sperm activation.
...
PMID:Bicarbonate actions on flagellar and Ca2+ -channel responses: initial events in sperm activation. 1258 48
The enzyme PP1gamma2 is a testis- and sperm-specific isoform of type 1 protein phosphatase (PP1), and it is the only isoform of PP1 in spermatozoa. The enzyme PP1gamma2 is essential for spermatogenesis and is also a key enzyme in the development and regulation of sperm motility. The carboxy terminus of the enzyme contains a consensus amino acid sequence for phosphorylation by cyclin-dependent kinases. Using antibodies specific to this phosphorylated amino acid sequence domain, we found that phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is present in bovine
epididymal
spermatozoa. The level of phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is significantly higher in motile caudal compared to immotile caput
epididymal
spermatozoa. A number of treatments, such as 2-chloro adenosine, cAMP analogues, cAMP
phosphodiesterase
inhibitors, and calcium, which stimulate sperm motility, did not alter the level of phosphorylated PP1gamma2. However, calyculin A, which is an inhibitor of protein phosphatase subtypes PP1 and PP2A, significantly increases the level of phosphorylated PP1gamma2 in both caput and caudal
epididymal
spermatozoa. Partial purification by column chromatography showed that phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is catalytically active. Phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is the only spontaneously catalytically active form of the enzyme in caudal sperm extracts. Western blot analysis shows that the enzyme cyclin-dependent kinase 2, one of the enzymes that phosphorylates the consensus domain at the carboxy terminus in PP1 isoforms, is present in spermatozoa. Western blot analysis of proteins extracted from purified head and tail fragments of spermatozoa showed that phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is present predominantly in the sperm head. Fluorescence immunocytochemistry also showed that phosphorylated PP1gamma2 is present predominantly in the posterior region of the sperm head. The distinct subcellular localization and changes in its level during sperm maturation suggest a possible role for sperm phosphorylated PP1gamma2 in signaling events during fertilization.
...
PMID:Increased phosphorylation of a distinct subcellular pool of protein phosphatase, PP1gamma2, during epididymal sperm maturation. 1456 12
The aim of this experiment was to study the influence of 18-hour food deprivation on basal and stimulated lipolysis in adipocytes obtained from young male Wistar rats. Fat cells from fed and fasted rats were isolated from the
epididymal
adipose tissue by collagenase digestion. Adipocytes were incubated in Krebs-Ringer buffer (pH 7.4, 37 degrees C) without agents affecting lipolysis and with different lipolytic stimulators (epinephrine, forskolin, dibutyryl-cAMP, theophylline, DPCPX, amrinone) or inhibitors (PIA, H-89, insulin). After 60 min of incubation, glycerol and, in some cases, also fatty acids released from adipocytes to the incubation medium were determined. Basal lipolysis was substantially potentiated in cells of fasted rats in comparison to adipocytes isolated from fed animals. The inhibition of protein kinase A activity by H-89 partially suppressed lipolysis in both groups of adipocytes, but did not eliminate this difference. The agonist of adenosine A (1) receptor also did not suppress fasting-enhanced basal lipolysis. The epinephrine-induced triglyceride breakdown was also enhanced by fasting. Similarly, the direct activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin or protein kinase A by dibutyryl-cAMP resulted in a higher lipolytic response in cells derived from fasted animals. These results indicate that the fasting-induced rise in lipolysis results predominantly from changes in the lipolytic cascade downstream from protein kinase A. The antagonism of the adenosine A (1) receptor and the inhibition of cAMP
phosphodiesterase
also induced lipolysis, which was potentiated by food deprivation. Moreover, the rise in basal and epinephrine-stimulated lipolysis in adipocytes of fasted rats was shown to be associated with a diminished non-esterified fatty acids/glycerol molar ratio. This effect was presumably due to increased re-esterification of triglyceride-derived fatty acids in cells of fasted rats. Comparing fed and fasted rats for the antilipolytic effect of insulin in adipocytes revealed that short-term food deprivation resulted in a substantial deterioration of the ability of insulin to suppress epinephrine-induced lipolysis.
...
PMID:Short-term fasting and lipolytic activity in rat adipocytes. 1552 90
Small membranous vesicles, between 25- and 75-nm diameter, were collected by high-speed centrifugation from the ram cauda
epididymal
fluid and were found to be normal constituents of this fluid and of the seminal plasma. The SDS-PAGE protein pattern of these vesicles was specific and very different from that of the caudal fluid, seminal plasma, sperm extract, and cytoplasmic droplets. After two-dimensional electrophoresis separation and mass spectrometry analysis, several proteins were identified and grouped into i) membrane-linked enzymes, such as dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV), neprilysin (NEP),
phosphodiesterase
-I (E-NPP3), and protein G-beta; ii) vesicle-associated proteins, such as lactadherin (MFEG8-PAS6/7) and vacuolar ATPase; iii) several cytoskeleton-associated proteins, such as actin, ezrin and annexin; and iv) metabolic enzymes. The presence of some of these proteins as well as several different hydrophobic proteins secreted by the epididymis was further confirmed by immunoblotting. These markers showed that the majority of the vesicles originated from the cauda
epididymal
region. The physical and biochemical characteristics of these vesicles suggest they are the equivalent of the exosomes secreted by several cell types and epithelium. The main membrane-linked proteins of the vesicles were not retrieved in the extract from cauda or ejaculated sperm, suggesting that these vesicles did not fuse with sperm in vivo.
...
PMID:Identification, proteomic profiling, and origin of ram epididymal fluid exosome-like vesicles. 1563 28
The isoflavones--genistein and daidzein -- compounds found in high concentrations in soy play an important role in prevention of many diseases and affect some metabolic pathways. In the performed experiment it was demonstrated that genistein (5mg/kg b.w.) administered intragastrically for three days to male Wistar rats substantially diminished blood leptin level. Studies with isolated rat adipocytes revealed that this phytoestrogen strongly restricted leptin secretion from these cells. These effects were not accompanied by any changes in leptin gene expression in adipocytes. Daidzein-- an analogue of genistein -- used at similar concentrations did not affect blood leptin concentration, leptin secretion and expression of its gene. To determine the influence of genistein and daidzein on leptin release, adipocytes isolated from the
epididymal
fat tissue were incubated for 2h in Krebs--Ringer buffer. Leptin secretion stimulated by glucose with insulin was significantly diminished by genistein (0.25--1mM). This effect of genistein may arise from several aspects of its action in adipocytes documented in the literature such as the inhibition of glucose transport and metabolism, the attenuation of insulin signalling, the inhibition of cAMP
phosphodiesterase
and the stimulation of lipolysis. However, the bypassing of the restrictive action of genistein on glucose transport and glycolysis (by the use of alanine instead of glucose) and on insulin action (by the use of nicotinic acid) was not sufficient to restore leptin secretion from isolated adipocytes. It was also demonstrated that the restriction of the stimulatory influence of genistein on cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway (by the inhibition of PKA activity) did not improve leptin release. Results obtained in our experiments point at the restriction of glucose metabolism following formation of pyruvate as the pivotal reason of the inhibitory action of genistein on leptin release.
...
PMID:Genistein restricts leptin secretion from rat adipocytes. 1597 Apr 40
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