Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) accounts for 20-25% of primary lung cancers and is rapidly growing, widely metastatic, and rarely curable. Autocrine stimulation of multiple G protein-coupled neuropeptide receptor systems contributes to the transformed growth of SCLC. The ability of neuropeptide receptors to stimulate phospholipase C and mobilize intracellular Ca2+ indicates that Gq family members of heterotrimeric G proteins are a convergence point mediating autocrine signaling by multiple neuropeptides in SCLC. Expression of a GTPase-deficient, constitutive active form of an alpha q family member, alpha 16Q212L, in SCLC markedly inhibited growth of the cells in soft agar and tumor formation in nude mice. SCLC lines expressing alpha 16Q212L exhibited 2-4-fold elevated basal phospholipase C activity, but neuropeptide and hormone-regulated intracellular Ca2+ mobilization was nearly abolished. The data suggest that Ca2+ mobilization is an obligatory signal in neuropeptide-stimulated growth of SCLC. In addition, the proline-directed c-Jun NH2-terminal kinases/stress-activated protein kinases, which are members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase family, were stimulated approximately 2-fold in parental SCLC in response to exogenous neuropeptides and muscarinic agonists and were constitutively activated to the same degree in alpha 16Q212L-expressing SCLC. Thus, alpha 16Q212L expression induced desensitizaton of neuropeptide-stimulated Ca2+ signaling and persistent activation of the c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase/stress-activated protein kinase pathway. We propose that the induction of discordant signaling by selective perturbation of receptor-regulated effector systems leads to the inhibition of SCLC cell growth.
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PMID:Discordant signal transduction and growth inhibition of small cell lung carcinomas induced by expression of GTPase-deficient G alpha 16. 855 May 85

Persistent stimulation of specific protein kinase pathways has been proposed as a key feature of receptor tyrosine kinases and intracellular oncoproteins that signal neuronal differentiation of rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells. Among the protein serine/threonine kinases identified to date, the p42/44 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases have been highlighted for their potential role in signalling PC12 cell differentiation. We report here that retrovirus-mediated expression of GTPase-deficient, constitutively active forms of the heterotrimeric Gq family members, G alpha qQ209L and G alpha 16Q212L, in PC12 cells induces neuronal differentiation as indicated by neurite outgrowth and the increased expression of voltage-dependent sodium channels. Differentiation was not observed after cellular expression of GTPase-deficient forms of alpha i2 or alpha 0, indicating selectivity for the Gq family of G proteins. As predicted, overexpression of alpha qQ209L and alpha 16Q212L constitutively elevated basal phospholipase C activity approximately 10-fold in PC12 cells. Significantly, little or no p42/44 MAP kinase activity was detected in PC12 cells differentiated with alpha 16Q212L or alpha qQ209L, although these proteins were strongly activated following expression of constitutively active cRaf-1. Rather, a persistent threefold activation of the cJun NH2-terminal kinases (JNKs) was observed in PC12 cells expressing alpha qQ209L and alpha 16Q212L. This level of JNK activation was similar to that achieved with nerve growth factor, a strong inducer of PC12 cell differentiation. Supportive of a role for JNK activation in PC12 cell differentiation, retrovirus-mediated overexpression of cJun, a JNK target, in PC12 cells induced neurite outgrowth. The results define a p42/44 MAP kinase-independent mechanism for differentiation of PC12 cells and suggest that persistent activation of the JNK members of the proline-directed protein kinase family by GTPase-deficient G alpha q and G alpha 16 subunits is sufficient to induce differentiation of PC12 cells.
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PMID:GTPase-deficient G alpha 16 and G alpha q induce PC12 cell differentiation and persistent activation of cJun NH2-terminal kinases. 855 93

Serum stimulation of quiescent fibroblasts leads to a dramatic depolarization of the plasma membrane; however, the identity of the active serum factor(s) and the underlying mechanism are unknown. We find that this serum activity is attributable to albumin-bound lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) acting on its own G protein-coupled receptor, and that membrane depolarization is due to activation of an anion conductance mediating Cl- efflux. This depolarizing Cl- current can also be activated by thrombin and neuropeptide receptors; it is distinct from volume-regulated Cl- currents. Activation of the Cl- current consistently follows stimulation of phospholipase C and coincides with remodelling of the actin cytoskeleton, which is regulated by the Ras-related GTPase Rho. However, the response is not due to Ca2+/protein kinase C signalling and requires neither Rho nor Ras activation. The results indicate that in quiescent fibroblasts, LPA and other G protein-coupled receptor agonists evoke membrane depolarization by activating a new type of Cl- channel through a signalling pathway that is closely associated with phosphoinositide hydrolysis, yet independent of known second messengers.
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PMID:Serum-induced membrane depolarization in quiescent fibroblasts: activation of a chloride conductance through the G protein-coupled LPA receptor. 859 7

The phospholipase C-beta1 (PLC-beta1) signaling pathway was reconstituted by addition of purified PLC to phospholipid vesicles that contained purified recombinant m1 muscarinic cholinergic receptor, Gq, and 2-4 mol % [3H]phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. In this system, the muscarinic agonist carbachol stimulated steady-state PLC activity up to 90-fold in the presence of GTP. Both GTP and agonist were required for PLC activation, which was observed at physiological levels of Ca2+ (10-100 nM). PLC-beta1 is also a GTPase-activating protein for Gq. It accelerated steady-state GTPase activity up to 60-fold in the presence of carbachol, which alone stimulated activity 6-10-fold, and increased the rate of hydrolysis of Gq-bound GTP by at least 100-fold. Despite this rapid hydrolysis of Gq-bound GTP, the receptor maintained >10% of the total Gq in the active GTP-bound form by catalyzing GTP binding at a rate of at least 20-25 min-1, approximately 10-fold faster than previously described. These and other kinetic data indicate that the receptor and PLC-beta1 coordinately regulate the amplitude of the PLC signal and the rates of signal initiation and termination. They also suggest a mechanism in which the receptor, Gq, and PLC form a three-protein complex in the presence of agonist and GTP (stable over multiple GTPase cycles) that is responsible for PLC signaling.
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PMID:Regulation of phospholipase C-beta1 by Gq and m1 muscarinic cholinergic receptor. Steady-state balance of receptor-mediated activation and GTPase-activating protein-promoted deactivation. 862 81

Cholinergic pathways serve important functions in learning and memory processes, and deficits in cholinergic transmission occur in Alzheimer disease (AD). A subset of muscarinic cholinergic receptors are linked to G-proteins that activate phospholipase C, resulting in the liberation of inositol trisphosphate and Ca2+ release from intracellular stores. We now report that amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta), which forms plaques in the brain in AD, impairs muscarinic receptor activation of G proteins in cultured rat cortical neurons. Exposure of rodent fetal cortical neurons to Abeta25-35 and Abeta1-40 resulted in a concentration and time-dependent attenuation of carbachol-induced GTPase activity without affecting muscarinic receptor ligand binding parameters. Downstream events in the signal transduction cascade were similarly attenuated by Abeta. Carbachol-induced accumulation of inositol phosphates (IP, IP2, IP3, and IP4) was decreased and calcium imaging studies revealed that carbachol-induced release of calcium was severely impaired in neurons pretreated with Abeta. Muscarinic cholinergic signal transduction was disrupted with subtoxic levels of exposure to AP. The effects of Abeta on carbachol-induced GTPase activity and calcium release were attenuated by antioxidants, implicating free radicals in the mechanism whereby Abeta induced uncoupling of muscarinic receptors. These data demonstrate that Abeta disrupts muscarinic receptor coupling to G proteins that mediate induction of phosphoinositide accumulation and calcium release, findings that implicate Abeta in the impairment of cholinergic transmission that occurs in AD.
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PMID:Amyloid beta-peptide disrupts carbachol-induced muscarinic cholinergic signal transduction in cortical neurons. 869 90

Oxytocin increases myometrial intracellular free calcium by promotion of calcium entry and release of calcium from intracellular stores. Calcium release from intracellular stores is secondary to an increase in phosphoinositide (PI) turnover and generation of IP3. We have explored the biochemical basis for the coupling of oxytocin (OT) to phospholipase C (PLC). Rat myometrial membranes contain PLC beta, gamma, and delta isoforms as well as the GTP-binding proteins G alpha(q) and G alpha(11). Oxytocin stimulates both GTPase and PLC activity in rat and human myometrial membranes. These data and available structural information suggest that the oxytocin receptor couples to PLC through a GTP-binding protein. In support of this hypothesis, an antibody generated against the specific C-terminal region of G alpha(q) and G alpha(11) inhibits both the oxytocin-stimulated GTPase and PLC activities. This inhibition is reversed by neutralization of the antibody with the antigenic peptide. The data indicate that the oxytocin receptor couples to PLC, presumably of the beta subclass, via interaction with proteins of the G alpha(q/11) subclass. In the nonpregnant, estrogen-primed rat, the stimulation of PI turnover by oxytocin is inhibited by the hormone relaxin and by pertussis toxin. The effects of both of these agents are mediated by the action of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. In plasma membranes, GTP-stimulated PLC activity can also be inhibited by treatment with protein kinase A. These data suggest that cAMP-dependent phosphorylation at a step involving GTP-binding protein/PLC coupling can exert a negative effect on the stimulation of IP3 formation by oxytocin and thereby affect contraction/relaxation in the myometrium.
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PMID:Mechanisms regulating oxytocin receptor coupling to phospholipase C in rat and human myometrium. 871 99

Heterotrimeric G proteins transmit hormonal and sensory signals received by cell surface receptors to effector proteins that regulate cellular processes. Members of the highly conserved family of alpha subunits specifically modulate the activities of a diverse array of effector proteins. To investigate the determinants of alpha subunit-effector specificity, we localized the effector-specifying regions of alphai2, which inhibits adenylyl cyclase, and alphaq, which stimulates phosphoinositide phospholipase C using chimeric alpha subunits. The chimeras were generated using an in vivo recombination method in Escherichia coli. The effector-specifying regions of both alphai2 and alphaq were localized within the GTPase domain. An alphaq/alphai2/alphaq chimera containing only 78 alphai2 residues within the GTPase domain robustly inhibited adenylyl cyclase. This alphai2 segment includes regions corresponding to two of the three regions of alphas that activate adenylyl cyclase, but does not include any of the alpha subunit regions that switch conformation upon binding GTP. Replacement of the alphaq residues that comprise the helical domain with the homologous alphai2 residues resulted in a chimeric alpha subunit that activated phospholipase C. Combined with previous studies of the effector-specifying residues of alphas and alphat, our results suggest that the effector specificity of alpha subunits is generally determined by the GTPase and not the helical domain.
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PMID:Localization of the effector-specifying regions of Gi2alpha and Gqalpha. 879 40

1. Thromboxane A2 (TXA2) receptor-mediated signal transduction was investigated in washed rabbit platelets to clarify the mechanisms of induction of shape change and aggregation. 2. The TXA2 agonist, U46619 (1 nM to 10 microM) caused shape change and aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner. A forty-times higher concentration of U46619 was needed for aggregation (EC50 of 0.58 microM) than shape change (EC50 of 0.013 microM). The aggregation occurred only when external 1 mM Ca2+ was present, but the shape change could occur in the absence of Ca2+. 3. SQ29548 at 30 nM and GR32191B at 0.3 microM (TXA2 receptor antagonists) competitively inhibited U46619-induced shape change and aggregation with similar potency, showing that both aggregation and shape change induced by U46619 were TXA2 receptor-mediated events. However, ONO NT-126 at 1 nM, another TXA2 receptor antagonist, inhibited U46619-induced aggregation much more potently than the shape change, suggesting the possible existence of TXA2 receptor subtypes. 4. ONO NT-126 (2 nM to 3 microM) by itself caused a shape change without aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner, independent of external Ca2+. Therefore, ONO NT-126 is a partial agonist at the TXA2 receptor in rabbit platelets. 5. U46619 (10 nM to 10 microM) increased internal Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) and activated phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis in a concentration-dependent manner with a similar concentration-dependency. 6. U46619 (3 nM to 10 microM) also activated GTPase concentration-dependently in the membranes derived from platelets. U46619-induced activation of GTPase was partly inhibited by treatment of membranes with QL, an antibody against Gq/11. 7. The EC50 values of U46619 in Ca2+ mobilization (0.15 microM), PI hydrolysis (0.20 microM) and increase in GTPase activity (0.12 microM) were similar, but different from the EC50 value in shape change (0.013 microM), suggesting that activation of TXA2 receptors might cause shape change via an unknown mechanism. 8. U46619-induced shape change was unaffected by W-7 (30 microM), a calmodulin antagonist or ML-7 (30 microM), a myosin light-chain kinase inhibitor, indicating that an increase in [Ca2+]i might not be involved in the shape change. In fact, U46619 (10 nM) could cause shape change without affecting [Ca2+]i level, determined by simultaneous recordings. 9. [3H]-SQ29548 and [3H]-U46619 bound to platelets at a single site with a Kd value of 14.88 nM and Bmax of 106.1 fmol/10(8) platelets and a Kd value of 129.8 nM and Bmax of 170.4 fmol/10(8) platelets, respectively. The inhibitory constant Ki value for U46619 as an inhibitor of 3H-ligand binding was similar to the EC50 value of U46619 in GTPase activity, phosphoinositide hydrolysis and Ca2+ mobilization, but significantly different (P < 0.001 by Student's t test) from the effect on shape change. 10. Neither U46619 nor ONO NT-126 affected the adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) level in the presence or absence of external Ca2+ and/or isobutyl methylxanthine. 11. The results indicate that TXA2 receptor stimulation causes phospholipase C activation and increase in [Ca2+]i via a G protein of the Gq/11 family leading to aggregation in the presence of external Ca2+, and that shape change induced by TXA2 receptor stimulation might occur without involvement of the Gq-phospholipase C-Ca2+ pathway.
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PMID:Thromboxane A2-mediated shape change: independent of Gq-phospholipase C--Ca2+ pathway in rabbit platelets. 888 2

Fragments of the approximately 50 kDa COOH-terminal region of phospholipase C-beta1 (PLC-beta1(1)), ranging in size from 14 to 38 kDa, were expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and tested for their regulatory activities. As expected, none of the fragments had phospholipase activity. Several fragments, referred to as PLC tails, displayed GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity for Gq, the G protein class that stimulates the PLC-betas in response to receptors. Gq GAP activity is characteristic of intact PLC-betas. In reconstituted phospholipid vesicles that contained purified Gq and m1 muscarinic cholinergic receptors, the most active tails increased agonist-stimulated, steady-state GTPase activity over 4-fold. Stimulation of steady-state GTPase by the tails depended on receptors for facilitation of GDP-GTP exchange, suggesting that the tails act by accelerating hydrolysis of bound GTP. In addition to intrinsic GAP activity, one tail with high GAP activity and others with low or minimal activity potentiated the GAP activity of intact PLC-beta1. Other tails inhibited PLC-beta1s GAP effect. Both intrinsic GAP activity and potentiation of the PLC-beta1 GAP effect were often biphasic, with maxima as low as 100 nM tail and declining activities at higher concentrations. Several tails inhibited either the phospholipase activity of PLC-beta1, its stimulation by Gq, or both. The tails thus define the region of PLC-beta1 that has Gq GAP activity and suggest a mechanism of action in which the COOH terminus of PLC-betas can interact with Gq and with other PLC-beta1 molecules.
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PMID:Carboxyl-terminal fragments of phospholipase C-beta1 with intrinsic Gq GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity. 890 Jan 36

DGq is the alpha subunit of the heterotrimeric GTPase (G alpha), which couples rhodopsin to phospholipase C in Drosophila vision. We have uncovered three duplicated exons in dgq by scanning the GenBank data base for unrecognized coding sequences. These alternative exons encode sites involved in GTPase activity and G beta-binding, NorpA (phospholipase C)-binding, and rhodopsin-binding. We examined the in vivo splicing of dgq in adult flies and find that, in all but the male gonads, only two isoforms are expressed. One, dgqA, is the original visual isoform and is expressed in eyes, ocelli, brain, and male gonads. The other, dgqB, has the three novel exons and is widely expressed. Remarkably, all three nonvisual B exons are highly similar (82% identity at the amino acid level) to the Gq alpha family consensus, from Caenorhabditis elegans to human, but all three visual A exons are divergent (61% identity). Intriguingly, we have found a third isoform, dgqC, which is specifically and abundantly expressed in male gonads, and shares the divergent rhodopsin-binding exon of dgqA. We suggest that DGqC is a candidate for the light-signal transducer of a testes-autonomous photosensory clock. This proposal is supported by the finding that rhodopsin 2 and arrestin 1, two photoreceptor-cell-specific genes, are also expressed in male gonads.
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PMID:Novel Gq alpha isoform is a candidate transducer of rhodopsin signaling in a Drosophila testes-autonomous pacemaker. 890 71


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