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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)

Studies were performed to examine a potential role for a guanine nucleotide-binding protein in epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated phospholipase A2 (PLA2) activity. EGF increased prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production in intact or saponin-permeabilized rat inner medullary collecting tubule (RIMCT) cells. Incubation of permeabilized cells with guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) enhanced and with guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) inhibited the response to EGF. GDP beta S had no effect on ionomycin-stimulated PGE2 production. Exposure of intact cells to 25 mM NaF + 10 microM AlCl3 enhanced both basal and EGF-stimulated PGE2 production. Pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylated a 41-kDa protein in RIMCT cell membranes. Pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml for 16 h) eliminated the response to EGF in intact cells and the response to EGF + GTP gamma S in permeabilized cells. Pertussis toxin had no effect on the response to ionomycin. The effect of pertussis toxin was not due to alterations in cAMP as cellular cAMP levels were unaffected by pertussis toxin both in the basal state and in the presence of EGF. PGE2 production in response to EGF was not transduced by a G protein coupled to phospholipase C (PLC) as neomycin, which inhibited PLC, did not decrease EGF-stimulated PGE2 production. Also, PGE2 production was not increased by inositol trisphosphate and did not require the presence of extracellular Ca2+. In contrast to EGF-stimulated PLC activity, stimulation of PLA2 by EGF was not susceptible to inhibition by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. These results clearly demonstrate the existence of a PLA2-specific pertussis toxin-inhibitable guanine nucleotide-binding protein coupled to the EGF receptor in RIMCT cells.
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PMID:The epidermal growth factor receptor is coupled to a phospholipase A2-specific pertussis toxin-inhibitable guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein in cultured rat inner medullary collecting tubule cells. 215 14

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) exhibits specific saturable binding to cultured rat inner medullary collecting tubule cells and stimulates inositol trisphosphate (IP3) production by these cells in a dose-dependent fashion. EGF-stimulated IP3 production is enhanced by GTP gamma s or AIF4- and is inhibited by GDP beta s or pertussis toxin. Alterations in extracellular Ca2+ have no effect on either basal or EGF-stimulated IP3 production. Similarly, treatment with EGTA which decreases cytosolic Ca2+ is without effect. In contrast, treatment with ionomycin which increases cytosolic Ca2+ has no effect on basal IP3 production but enhances the response to EGF. Activation of protein kinase C inhibits IP3 production in response to either EGF or AIF4-. These studies demonstrate the occurrence of EGF-stimulated phospholipase C activity in the rat inner medullary collecting duct. Stimulation by EGF is transduced by a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein, unaffected by alterations in extracellular Ca2+, insensitive to a decrement in cytosolic Ca2+, enhanced by an increase in cytosolic Ca2+, and inhibited by protein kinase C.
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PMID:Epidermal growth factor-stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis in cultured rat inner medullary collecting tubule cells. Regulation by G protein, calcium, and protein kinase C. 215 92

Ca current (ICa) was measured by whole-cell voltage clamp in single cells isolated from frog ventricle, in which the Na current was inhibited by tetrodotoxin (0.3 microM) and K currents were blocked by substituting K with 120 mM intracellular and 20 mM extracellular Cs. The influence of stimulation by ATP (0.1-100 microM) was assessed in the presence of propranolol (1 microM) or pindolol (0.1 microM), prazozin (0.1 microM) and atropine (10 microM). ATP, in the micromolar range, had two types of effect. Like other P1-purinoagonists, it antagonized the increase in ICa elicited by beta-adrenostimulation. When added alone, 1 microM ATP could increase ICa up to twofold. An increase in ICa was also observed even after it had been maximally enhanced by intracellularly applied cAMP (50 microM). Voltage dependence and kinetics of ICa were not affected. These effects were considered to be related to P2-purinoceptor activation. At higher ATP concentrations the increase in ICa was less; at 100 microM, ATP reduced ICa. The ATP-induced increase in ICa was prevented by internal perfusion of the cells with GDP [beta-S] or neomycin, respectively, to block signal transduction to phospholipase C or its phosphodiesterase activity on the polyphosphoinositides. We conclude that P2-purinoceptor stimulation increases the Ca current in frog ventricular cells by a pathway that might involve phosphoinositide turnover.
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PMID:Effects of purinergic stimulation on the Ca current in single frog cardiac cells. 216 32

Addition of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) to intact Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (CCL39) depolarized by high K+ concentrations results in activation of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PLC) (at GTP gamma S concentrations greater than 0.1 mM), inhibition of adenylate cyclase (between 10 microM and 0.5 mM), and activation of adenylate cyclase (above 0.5 mM). Since GTP gamma S-induced activation of PLC is dramatically enhanced upon receptor-mediated stimulation of PLC by alpha-thrombin, we conclude that in depolarized CCL39 cells GTP gamma S directly activates various guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) coupled to PLC (Gp(s)) and to adenylate cyclase (Gi and Gs). Pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin strongly inhibits GTP gamma S-induced activation of PLC and inhibition of adenylate cyclase. GTP gamma S cannot be replaced by other nucleotides, except by guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S), which mimics after a lag period of 15-20 min all the effects of GTP gamma S, with the same concentration dependence and the same sensitivity to pertussis toxin. We suggest that GDP beta S is converted in cells into GTP beta S, which acts as GTP gamma S. Since cell viability is not affected by a transient depolarization, these observations provide a simple method to examine long-term effects of G protein activation on DNA synthesis. We show that a transient exposure of G0-arrested CCL39 cells to GTP gamma S or GDP beta S under depolarizing conditions is not sufficient by itself to induce a significant mitogenic response, but markedly potentiates the mitogenic action of fibroblast growth factor, a mitogen known to activate a receptor-tyrosine kinase. The potentiating effect is maximal after 60 min of pretreatment with 2 mM GTP gamma S. GDP beta S is equally efficient but only after a lag period of 15-20 min. Mitogenic effects of both guanine nucleotide analogs are suppressed by pertussis toxin. Since the activation of G proteins by GTP gamma S under these conditions vanishes after a few hours, we conclude that a transient activation of G proteins facilitates the transition G0----G1 in CCL39 cells, whereas tyrosine kinase-induced signals are sufficient to mediate the progression into S phase.
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PMID:Guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) and guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) activate G proteins and potentiate fibroblast growth factor-induced DNA synthesis in hamster fibroblasts. 216 8

The effect of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) on PtdIns and PtdIns(4)P kinase activities was measured in rat liver plasma membranes. The addition of [32P]ATP resulted in the rapid incorporation of 32P into PtdIns(4)P and PtdIns(4,5)P2, with maximal levels reached within 30 s. GTP[S] (25-500 microM) increased the rate and magnitude of [32P]PtdIns(4)P and [32P]PtdIns(4,5)P2 formation by 50 and 120% respectively. Similar stimulatory effects were induced by guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate, GTP, GDP and guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate. The stimulation of PtdIns phosphorylation by GTP[S] occurred in the presence of 2 mM-EGTA, a condition which fully inhibited phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C. GTP[S] did not stimulate phosphomonoesterase activity, and its action was not due to the binding of magnesium. However, the overall ATP-hydrolysing activity of the membrane preparation was inhibited by GTP[S] and the other guanine nucleotides. There was a direct correlation between the extent of this inhibition and the stimulation of polyphosphoinositide formation. The results indicate that stimulation of polyphosphoinositide formation by guanine nucleotides in rat liver plasma membranes can be accounted for by an inhibition of ATP hydrolysis. These data are inconsistent with a specific GTP-binding protein (G-protein)-mediated stimulation of PtdIns or PtdIns(4)P kinase.
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PMID:Effect of guanine nucleotides on polyphosphoinositide synthesis in rat liver plasma membranes. 217 1

Myeloid differentiated human leukaemia (HL-60) cells contain a soluble phospholipase C that hydrolysed phosphatidylinositol 4.5-bisphosphate and was markedly stimulated by the metabolically stable GTP analogue guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]). Half-maximal and maximal (up to 5-fold) stimulation of inositol phosphate formation by GTP[S] occurred at 1.5 microM and 30 microM respectively. Other nucleotides (GTP, GDP, GMP, guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate. ATP, adenosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate, UTP) did not affect phospholipase C activity, GTP[S] stimulation of inositol phosphate accumulation was inhibited by excess GDP, but not by ADP. The effect of GTP[S] on inositol phosphate formation was absolutely dependent on and markedly stimulated by free Ca2+ (median effective concn. approximately 100 nM). Analysis of inositol phosphates by anion-exchange chromatography revealed InsP3 as the major product of GTP[S]-stimulated phospholipase C activity. In the absence of GTP[S], specific phospholipase C activity was markedly decreased when tested at high protein concentrations, whereas GTP[S] stimulation of the enzyme was markedly enhanced under these conditions. As both basal and GTP[S]-stimulated inositol phosphate formation were linear with time whether studied at low or high protein concentration, these results suggest that (a) phospholipase C is under an inhibitory constraint and (b) GTP[S] relieves this inhibition, most likely by activating a soluble GTP-binding protein.
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PMID:Guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate-stimulated hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate in HL-60 granulocytes. Evidence that the guanine nucleotide acts by relieving phospholipase C from an inhibitory constraint. 217 6

The possibility, that a GTP-binding protein is involved in the transducing mechanism leading to the formation of inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) in heart was explored in rat heart ventricles. Accordingly, a crude membrane fraction was isolated from 3[H] inositol prelabelled rat heart ventricles. When incubated with the non-hydrolysable GTP analogues GTP gamma S and GMP-PNP, it produced InsP3 in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. GDP beta S and the aminoglycoside antibiotic neomycin were effective inhibitors of this activation. In the absence of GTP gamma S or GMP-PNP, no such formation occurred with Ca2+ concentration from 10 nM to 1 microM but formation tripled in relation to the control level when Ca2+ concentration was raised from 1 microM to 100 microM. GTP gamma S increased the Ca2+ sensitivity of InsP3 production towards more physiologically relevant concentrations occurring during diastole (100 nM). These findings strongly suggest the presence in heart of a particulate Ca2(+)-dependent phospholipase C, whose activity is regulated by guanine nucleotides. This Ca2(+)-dependent phospholipase C observed in a cell free system was evidenced also in a multicellular system when altering the free Ca2+ concentrations around the physiological range. The results support the possibility that the enzyme might be activated during each cardiac cycle and thus produce two potential activators of cardiac contraction, namely InsP3 and diglycerides.
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PMID:Mediation by GTP gamma S and Ca2+ of inositol trisphosphate generation in rat heart membranes. 218 85

In recent years, ethanol has been shown to interact with membrane-associated signal transduction mechanisms which rely on the reaction of phospholipases with their phospholipid substrates in the membrane. In several cell and membrane preparations, ethanol activates the polyphosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C and triggers the complete battery of intracellular signalling responses that are characteristic for hormones acting through this pathway, including the formation of inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate, the release of Ca2+ from intracellular storage sites with the consequent activation of cytosolic Ca2(+)-dependent enzymes, and the formation of diacylglycerol leading to the stimulation of protein kinase C. The activation of phospholipase C appears to be due to an interaction of ethanol with the intramembrane complex of receptor-G-protein-phospholipase C, presumably promoting the release of bound GDP and the binding of GTP to activate the G-protein which controls phospholipase C activity. In many intact cells, the phospholipase C is subject to a feedback inhibitory control by protein kinase C. In liver cells, ethanol also triggers this feedback inhibition, leading to a rapid decline in the phospholipase C activation; at the same time, ethanol also causes the desensitization of the response to vasopressin and other phospholipase C-linked agonists. At hormone concentrations in the physiological range, the heterologous desensitization by ethanol of the agonist-mediated phospholipase C activation may be a significant factor at ethanol concentrations that are readily attained in vivo. Further interaction of ethanol with the intracellular second messenger system is mediated through a hormone-sensitive phospholipase D. This enzyme uses phosphatidylcholine to generate phosphatidic acid which can be further converted to diacylglycerol. In the presence of ethanol the enzyme catalyzes the transphosphatidylation to phosphatidylethanol. It is not clear, however, under what conditions this process could affect the normal pattern of formation of second messenger molecules. After chronic ethanol intake, a tolerance can develop at the cellular level to the effects of ethanol on agonist-induced signal transduction processes. However, the mechanism by which this tolerance develops is currently a matter of conjecture. Studies on liver cells indicate that the activity of protein kinase C may play a role in the development of this type of tolerance to ethanol. A better understanding of the interaction of ethanol with these phospholipid-dependent signal transduction processes could point to mechanisms by which ethanol could interfere with physiological control mechanism in a variety of cells and tissues.
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PMID:Alcohol and membrane-associated signal transduction. 219 31

Stimulation of P2-purinergic receptors by ATP resulted in activation of phosphorylase, which was associated with marked production of inositol trisphosphate (Ins-P3), in rat hepatocytes. ATP also inhibited forskolin-induced accumulation of cAMP in the presence of a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. On the contrary, adenosine or AMP never inhibited the cAMP accumulation, but increased hepatocyte cAMP; the stimulation was antagonized by a methylxanthine. Thus, P1-purinergic receptors are linked to adenylate cyclase in a stimulatory fashion in hepatocytes. Various kinds of purine nucleotides stimulating P2-receptors can be divided into two groups on the basis of their relative abilities to stimulate Ins-P3 production and to inhibit cAMP accumulation; the first group including adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (ATP gamma S), ADP, 5-adenylyl imidodiphosphate, GTP, and guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) has an efficacy similar to that of ATP, and the second group of nucleotides including alpha, beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate, beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate (App(CH)2)p), and GDP exerts considerable inhibitory effects on cAMP accumulation, but only slight effects on inositol lipid metabolism. Treatment of hepatocytes with islet-activating protein, pertussis toxin, blocked the nucleotide-induced inhibition of cAMP accumulation, but exerted only a small effect on Ins-P3 production. In membranes prepared from hepatocytes, forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase was inhibited by GTP. This GTP-induced inhibition of the enzyme was susceptible to islet-activating protein and dependent on the concentration of ATP (or its derivatives, ATP gamma S or App(CH2)p). It is concluded that there are two types of P2-purinergic receptors: one is linked to adenylate cyclase via an inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Gi) and the other is linked to phospholipase C.
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PMID:P2-purinergic receptors are coupled to two signal transduction systems leading to inhibition of cAMP generation and to production of inositol trisphosphate in rat hepatocytes. 244 92

Rat mast cells and bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells (BMMC) were sensitized with mouse IgE mAb, and permeabilized by ATP to introduce guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and/or guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) into the cells. After ATP-induced lesions were resealed with Mg2+, the cells were challenged by Ag to determine the effect of the nonhydrolyzable guanosine phosphate on Ag-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides and histamine release. Introduction of GTP gamma S into permeabilized rat mast cells or BMMC, followed by exposure of the cells to extracellular Ca2+, resulted in histamine release, but failed to induce hydrolysis of phosphoinositides. It was also found that introduction of GTP gamma S into the cells did not synergistically enhance Ag-induced histamine release. Introduction of GDP beta S into sensitized BMMC inhibited the GTP gamma S-dependent, Ca2+-induced histamine release but failed to inhibit Ag-induced histamine release. The results suggest that GTP gamma S-dependent, Ca2+-induced histamine release and Ag-induced histamine release go through independent biochemical pathways. It was also found that introduction of GTP gamma S or GDP beta S into sensitized BMMC neither enhanced nor inhibited Ag-induced formation of inositol phosphates. These results together with previous findings that pretreatment of BMMC with either pertussis toxin or cholera toxin does not affect Ag-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides, indicate that a G protein is not involved in the transduction of IgE-mediated triggering signals to phospholipase C in rodent mast cells.
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PMID:Effect of nonhydrolyzable guanosine phosphate on IgE-mediated activation of phospholipase C and histamine release from rodent mast cells. 247 37


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