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Query: EC:3.1.4.3 (
phospholipase C
)
18,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The leukotriene D4 (LTD4) receptor on rat basophilic
leukemia
(RBL-1) cell membranes was characterized using a radioligand binding assay. [3H]LTD4 binding to RBL-1 membrane receptors was stereoselective, specific, and saturable. The binding affinity and maximum binding density of [3H]LTD4 to RBL-1 membrane receptors were 0.9 +/- 0.2 nM and 800 +/- 125 fmol/mg protein, respectively. Binding of [3H]LTD4 to the receptors was enhanced by divalent cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, and Mn2+) and inhibited by guanine nucleotides and sodium ions, specifically, indicating that a guanine nucleotide-binding protein may regulate the agonist-receptor interaction. LTD4, LTE4 agonist and antagonist analogs competed with the radioligand in binding to the RBL-1 LTD4 receptors. The binding affinities of these analogs correlated with (a) those determined from the guinea pig lung LTD4 receptors and (b) the pharmacological activities in smooth muscle contraction. LTD4 and related agonists also induced time- and concentration-dependent phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis in RBL-1 cells. The LTD4 induction of inositol 1-phosphate was potent, stereoselective, specific, and was blocked by LTD4 receptor antagonists. The rank order potency of agonist-induced inositol 1-phosphate formation in RBL-1 cells was equivalent to the receptor binding affinity determined using either RBL-1 cell or guinea pig lung membranes. These studies have demonstrated the G protein coupled LTD4 receptors on RBL-1 cell membranes. Binding of agonists to the receptor may activate the G protein-regulated
phospholipase C
to induce hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol. The hydrolytic products of phosphatidylinositol, possibly inositol trisphosphate and diacylglycerol, may be the intracellular messengers for LTD4 receptors in RBL-1 cells.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of leukotriene D4 receptors and signal transduction processes in rat basophilic leukemia cells. 303 Oct 59
Mono-ADP ribosylation is a post-transcriptional modification of proteins which can alter their biological properties. Particular substrates for this reaction are the GTP-binding proteins involved in the adenylate cyclase and
phospholipase C
second messenger pathways. Consequently, mono-ADP ribosylation may be an important element in intracellular signaling. Cholera toxin is a potent mono-ADP-ribosyl transferase, while benzylaminododecylguanine hydrochloride (BADGH) is an inhibitor of cholera toxin-induced ADP ribosylation. We have used these compounds to modulate the effects of inducers of differentiation in HL-60 cells. Cholera toxin, although unable to induce differentiation itself, synergized with inducers of both granulocytic and monocytic differentiation. In contrast, BADGH selectively inhibited the growth of undifferentiated cells. These effects imply regulatory roles for substrates for mono-ADP ribosylation both in the proliferation of undifferentiated cells and in the early stages of differentiation.
Leukemia
1988 Aug
PMID:Agents which modify mono-ADP ribosylation can influence the differentiation of hemopoietic cells. 316 78
Australia antigen [Au(1)], a particle associated with viral hepatitis, was isolated from the plasma of a patient with chronic anicteric hepatitis and
leukemia
who had received radioactive phosphorus. We have found that the immunoreactivity and appearance of Au(1) in the electron microscope were not altered by treatment with enzymes including trypsin, pronase, lipase,
phospholipase C
, ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, amylase, and neuraminidase. In contrast, other serum constituents were degraded by these enzymes. Therefore, treatment of the patient's plasma with many enzymes was exploited as an initial step for the isolation of Au(1). Subsequently, Au(1) was purified from the enzyme-treated (32)P-labeled plasma by gel filtration through Sephadex G-200 and centrifugation through sucrose and in cesium chloride gradients. There were no detectable human serum components in the purest fractions, as tested by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion. The density of the purified Au(1) was 1.21 in CsCl. The particle measured about 200 A in diameter, was predominantly spherical in shape and appeared to be composed of subunits. Nucleic acids were not detected by spectrophotometric, radiochemical, and chemical analyses. Immunoreactivity of purified Au(1) was destroyed by heating for 1 hr at 85 degrees C but was stable at 56 degrees C. Treatment with Carnoy's solution (3 parts ethanol:1 part glacial acetic acid) followed by pronase disrupted the particles as seen with the electron microscope. These findings, combined with other published information on Australia antigen and viral hepatitis, suggest that the bulk of Australia antigen in the blood of this patient is an incomplete virus or virus capsid.
...
PMID:Australia antigen (a hepatitis-associated antigen): purification and physical properties. 424 40
Tumor cell membranes were susceptible to the action of Clostridium perfringens
phospholipase C
, and this was reflected by inhibition of cellular replication in culture. The differential susceptibility of two neoplastic cell lines to this enzyme was studied in detail. The growth of sarcoma 180 cells cultured in Fischer's medium was markedly inhibited by
phospholipase C
; whereas, in contrast, cultured L1210
leukemia
cells were relatively resistant to the cytotoxic effects of this enzyme. The differential sensitivity of these two neoplastic cell lines to
phospholipase C
was corroborated by dye-exclusion tests. Thus,
leukemia
L1210 cells exposed to a concentration of 0.2 mg of
phospholipase C
per ml of Fischer's medium for 30 min at 37 degrees C were able to exclude Trypan Blue; whereas, only about 21% of sarcoma 180 cells treated under identical conditions were able to exclude the dye. That the cytotoxicity of
phospholipase C
to sarcoma 180 was the result of hydrolysis of phospholipids of the plasma membrane was supported by measurements of the rate of hydrolysis of radioactivity from the phospholipid of neoplastic cells prelabeled with [3H]choline. Eighty-two percent of incorporated radioactive choline was released from sarcoma 180 cells treated with
phospholipase C
in Fischer's medium, whereas, only 20% of the label from [3H]choline was solubilized from L1210
leukemia
cells treated with the enzyme under similar conditions. Scanning electron microscopy revealed significant damage to sarcoma 180 cells exposed to
phospholipase C
in Fischer's medium, which was characterized by alterations in size and shape of cells, disappearance of microvilli, and appearance of fistulas in cell membranes; relatively resistant L1210 leukemic cells did not appear to be markedly damaged by comparable enzyme treatment. Exposure of
leukemia
L1210 cells to
phospholipase C
in Puck's saline A increased the sensitivity of these cells to enzymatic action. Under these conditions, a comparable amount of phospholipid was hydrolyzed from surface membranes of sarcoma 180 and
leukemia
L1210 cells, and the degree of membrane damage appeared to be similar, as measured by the capacity of the tumor cell lines to exclude Trypan Blue and by scanning electron microscopy. The extensive damage to membranes by hydrolysis of phospholipids was not accompanied by a change in the degree of specific binding of [3H]concanavalin A(ConA).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy with Clostridium perfringens phospholipase C and cytosine antimetabolites: complementary inhibition directed at membrane lipids. 608 55
Bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) was found to agglutinate mouse erythrocytes. Under optimal conditions, including the use of neuraminidase-treated erythrocytes, 200 microgram/ml of BLV purified from the supernatant fluid of BLV-infected bat cells had haemagglutinating titres of about 512 units. BLV haemagglutination was drastically affected by pH and temperature; maximum agglutination occurred at pH 6 and 4 degrees C. That the BLV haemagglutinin is a glycoprotein was suggested by the fact that trypsin, potassium periodate or neuraminidase, but not lipid solvents or
phospholipase C
, significantly reduced the haemagglutinating (HA) activity of purified BLV. Furthermore, purified BLV glycoprotein of mol. wt. 51 000 (gp51) had HA activity. The receptors for BLV on mouse erythrocytes were inactivated by proteolytic enzymes but not by sodium deoxycholate or potassium periodate. Neuraminidase treatment of erythrocytes increase their agglutinability fourfold. Haemagglutination is a relatively sensitive test for detecting BLV glycoprotein because 0.4 microgram/ml of glycoprotein can be detected by this method. The pH and temperature sensitivity of the BLV HA reaction and specificity for mouse erythrocytes distinguish BLV from that of equine infectious anaemia virus and murine
leukaemia
virus, the other C type retroviruses known to have HA activity.
...
PMID:Haemagglutination by bovine leukaemia virus. 627 77
Procoagulant activity of gastric cancer tissues and leukocytes obtained from various types of
leukemia
have been studied with special reference to TTP. The following results were obtained. Homogenates of APL leukocytes and gastric cancer tissues contained strong procoagulant activities, most of which have been identified as TTP since the activities were neutralized by a specific antibody against purified human placenta TTP, inactivated by the removal of phospholipid with heptane-butanol mixture, and inactivated by the addition of
phospholipase C
. The delipidated homogenates regained procoagulant activities by relipidation procedures. These results also confirmed that TTP from APL leukocytes and gastric cancer tissues have the same lipoprotein properties as those of TTP in normal tissues. Though slight proteolytic activity and fibrinolytic activity were demonstrated in the homogenate of gastric cancer tissues, it was noted that the TTP activity was different from these two activities by partial purification of TTP from gastric cancer tissues. The TTP activity of 9 homogenates of gastric cancer tissues was 301 +/- 289 (mean +/- SD) units per mg protein, being higher in homogenates of mucinous adenocarcinoma and signet-ring cell carcinoma than in those of tubular and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. The mean TTP activity of leukocyte homogenates from 14 patients with APL and one out of 4 patients with CML in blastic crisis was 81 +/- 76 units/10(7) cells. The TTP activity of the homogenates of leukocytes from 7 out of 18 patients with AML and another patient with CML in blastic crisis ranged from one to six units/10(7) cells with a mean of 3.3 +/- 1.2. The TTP activity of leukocyte homogenates from the other 11 cases of AML, two cases of CML in blastic crisis, 6 cases of CML, and one case each of ALL and CLL were less than one unit/10(7) cells. In leukemic patients, all cases with a value of more than 202 for the product of units of TTP activity per 10(7) cells and differential count (%) of leukemic cells in the bone marrow smear (MU value) were accompanied by DIC. The MU value of leukemic patients correlated well to the plasma fibrinogen and serum FDP levels. All patients with a MU value of more than 277 died of DIC when a sufficient amount of heparin was not administered. On the other hand, no DIC developed in any of the patients with a MU value of less than 90.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The role of tissue thromboplastin in the development of DIC accompanying neoplastic diseases. 666 48
To define the molecular mechanisms of cross-regulation among chemoattractant receptors, we stably coexpressed, in a rat basophilic
leukemia
(RBL-2H3) cell line, epitope-tagged receptors for the chemoattractants formylmethionylleucylphenylalanine (fMLP), a peptide of the fifth component of the complement system (C5a), and interleukin-8 (IL-8). All the expressed receptors underwent homologous phosphorylation and desensitization upon agonist stimulation. When co-expressed, epitope-tagged C5a receptor (ET-C5aR) and epitope-tagged IL-8 receptor (ET-IL-8RA) were cross-phosphorylated by activation of the other. Activation of epitope-tagged fMLP receptor (ET-FR) also cross-phosphorylated ET-C5aR and ET-IL-8RA, but ET-FR was totally resistant to cross-phosphorylation. Similarly, C5a and IL-8 stimulation of [35S]guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio) triphosphate (GTP gamma S) binding and Ca2+ mobilization were cross-desensitized by each other and by fMLP. Stimulation of [35S]GTP gamma S binding by fMLP was also not cross-desensitized by C5a or IL-8, however, Ca2+ mobilization was, suggesting a site of inhibition distal to G protein activation. Consistent with this desensitization of Ca2+ mobilization, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate release in RBL-2H3 cells expressing both ET-C5aR and ET-FR revealed that fMLP and C5a cross-desensitized each other's ability to stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis. Taken together, these results indicate that receptor cross-phosphorylation correlates directly with desensitization at the level of G protein activation. The ET-FR was resistant to this process. Of note, cross-desensitization of ET-FR at the level of phosphoinositide hydrolysis and Ca2+ mobilization was demonstrated in the absence of receptor phosphorylation. This suggests a new form of chemoattractant cross-regulation at a site distal to receptor/G protein coupling, involving the activity of
phospholipase C
.
...
PMID:Cross-desensitization of chemoattractant receptors occurs at multiple levels. Evidence for a role for inhibition of phospholipase C activity. 749 54
Steel factor (SF) synergizes with a variety of hemopoietins to support the growth and differentiation of human progenitor cells. The human factor-dependent cell line MO7 has been used as a model to study the interaction of SF with other growth factors such as GM-CSF, because both factors support the proliferation of this cell line and are synergistic in combination. Previous studies have shown that this effect is not readily explained by the synergistic activation of early, cytosolic signal transduction intermediates such as tyrosine kinases, Raf-1, MAP2 kinase, or
phospholipase C
gamma. In an attempt to further explore the biological and biochemical mechanisms of the synergy between SF and GM-CSF, we examined the effects of these growth factors on the regulation of nuclear proto-oncogenes, cell cycle control genes, and G1-->S transition of MO7 cells. Individually, GM-CSF was a much more potent growth factor for MO7 cells than SF, particularly under serum-free conditions. Only GM-CSF, but not SF, was able to stimulate G1-->S transition of MO7 cells after factor deprivation for 24 h. Northern blot analyses showed also differential effects of GM-CSF and SF on the expression of some nuclear proto-oncogenes and G1 cyclins. GM-CSF (10 ng/ml), but not SF (20 ng/ml) increased the expression of c-myc and cyclin D2 mRNA, whereas both factors caused transient increases of c-fos and cyclin D3 mRNAs. When added simultaneously, GM-CSF and SF induced an at least additive increase of c-fos mRNA expression; this effect required the presence of fetal calf serum. No additive effects of GM-CSF and SF on c-myc, cyclin D2 or D3 mRNA expression were observed. C-jun and c-myb mRNAs were constitutively expressed in the MO7 cell line, but not further increased after stimulation with GM-CSF or SF for 15 min to 48 h. The inability of SF to induce growth promoting genes such as c-myc and cyclin D2 may explain why this cytokine does not support sustained proliferation of MO7 cells. These observations suggest that SF and GM-CSF exert different effects on the expression of genes involved in regulatory pathways of cell proliferation, but the molecular mechanism of synergy remains to be elucidated.
Leukemia
1994 May
PMID:Signal transduction of steel factor and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor: differential regulation of transcription factor and G1 cyclin gene expression, and of proliferation in the human factor-dependent cell line MO7. 751 43
Ghosts prepared from rat basophilic
leukemia
cells (RBL cell ghosts) and permeabilized with
alpha-toxin
from S. aureus are a simplified system for the study of Fc epsilon RI-mediated activation of
phospholipase C
(
PLC
). This activity is dependent upon ATP and magnesium, and is enhanced by the addition of another compound containing an energetic phosphate group, either phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) or phosphocreatine (PCr). This effect appears to be specific for PEP and PCr in that other compounds with energetic phosphate bonds including fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and additional ATP are not effective. On the contrary, GTP-gamma-S, an activator of G proteins, activates
PLC
in the presence of ATP alone and this is not further enhanced by the addition of PEP. In addition to Fc epsilon RI and GTP-gamma-S, two other stimuli lead to enhanced activity of
PLC
in permeabilized RBL cell ghosts: 1) an inhibitor of tyrosine phosphatases (Na3VO4) and 2) an analog of adenosine (NECA). Data presented here extend previous results to show that activation of
PLC
by GTP-gamma-S is not enhanced either by the addition of PCr or by the addition of a more MgATP. Further new findings include the observations that activation of
PLC
by Na3VO4 is augmented by PEP and PCr in a fashion similar to that observed for Fc epsilon RI-mediated activation of
PLC
and that activation of
PLC
by NECA shows even more marked dependency on PEP than does activation by Fc epsilon RI or Na3VO4.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:ATP-dependent activation of phospholipase C by antigen, NECA, Na3VO4, and GTP-gamma-S in permeabilized RBL cell ghosts: differential augmentation by ATP, phosphoenolpyruvate and phosphocreatine. 756 46
Extracellular sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) and galactosylsphingosine (psychosine) induced Ca2+ mobilization in a dose-dependent manner in HL60
leukemia
cells. The rapid and transient increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) elicited by SPC and psychosine at concentrations lower than 30 microM was inhibited by treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin (PTX) and U73122, a
phospholipase C
inhibitor, as was the case for UTP, a P2-purinergic agonist. The increase in [Ca2+]i induced by these lysosphingolipids was associated with inositol phosphate production, which was also sensitive to PTX and U73122. The inositol phosphate response is not secondary to the increase in [Ca2+]i as evidenced by the observation that thapsigargin and ionomycin, Ca2+ mobilizing agents, never induced inositol phosphate production and, unlike lysosphingolipids, the [Ca2+]i rise by these agents was totally insensitive to PTX and U73122. When HL60 cells were differentiated into neutrophil-like cells by dibutyryl cyclic AMP, inositol phosphate and Ca2+ responses to AlF4- were enhanced, probably reflecting an increase in the amount of Gi2 and Gi3 compared with undifferentiated cells. In the neutrophil-like cells, however, the responses to SPC and psychosine were markedly attenuated. This may exclude the possibility that the lysosphingolipids activate rather directly PTX-sensitive GTP-binding proteins or the
phospholipase C
itself. Other lysosphingolipids including glucosylsphingosine (glucopsychosine) and sphingosylgalactosyl sulfate (lysosulfatides) at 30 microM or lower concentrations also showed PTX- and U73122-sensitive Ca2+ mobilization and inositol phosphate response in a way similar to SPC and psychosine. However, platelet-activating factor and lysoglycerophospholipids such as lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidic acid were less effective than these lysosphingolipids in the induction of Ca2+ mobilization. Taken together, the results indicate that a group of lysosphingolipids at appropriate doses induces Ca2+ mobilization through inositol phosphate production by
phospholipase C
activation. The lysosphingolipids-induced enzyme activation may be mediated by PTX-sensitive GTP-binding protein-coupled receptors, which may be different from previously identified platelet-activating factor receptor or lysophosphatidic acid receptor.
...
PMID:Pertussis toxin inhibits phospholipase C activation and Ca2+ mobilization by sphingosylphosphorylcholine and galactosylsphingosine in HL60 leukemia cells. Implications of GTP-binding protein-coupled receptors for lysosphingolipids. 759 44
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