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)

Carboxypeptidase M, a plasma membrane-bound enzyme, is present in many human organs and differs from other carboxypeptidase that cleave basic COOH-terminal amino acids. Cultured Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) distal tubular cells contain a kininase I-type enzyme that inactivates bradykinin by releasing Arg9. We found the properties of this kininase to be identical with carboxypeptidase M. In fractionated cells, carboxypeptidase activity sediments with membranes; and detergents, trypsin, and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C solubilize it, similar to results with human placental carboxypeptidase M. Ten microM 2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid and 1 mM o-phenanthroline inhibit, whereas 1.0 mM CoCl2 activates the enzyme. It has a neutral pH optimum and cleaves COOH-terminal Arg or Lys in bradykinin and in shorter peptides. The relative hydrolysis rates of peptides in the presence or absence of 1 mM CoCl2 were similar to those obtained with human carboxypeptidase M. The carboxypeptidase in MDCK cells (54 kDa) cross-reacts with antibodies to human carboxypeptidase M in Western blotting, but not with antibodies to plasma carboxypeptidase N. The enzyme is a glycoprotein; chemical deglycosylation reduced the size to 48 kDa. The presence of the enzyme on the cell membrane of MDCK cells was also shown with transmission electron microscopy using immunogold, which indicated that the enzyme is on the apical side. In addition, MDCK cells contain neutral endopeptidase 24.11 (enkephalinase) and prolylcarboxypeptidase (angiotensinase C) activities. Partitioning of solubilized carboxypeptidase M into Triton X-114 and water indicates that trypsin and phospholipase C remove a hydrophobic tail, while detergent solubilization leaves the hydrophobic moiety intact. Labeling of MDCK cells with [3H]ethanolamine resulted in the synthesis of radiolabeled carboxypeptidase M as determined by immunoprecipitation and fluorography. Thus, MDCK cells contain membrane-bound carboxypeptidase M, which is anchored to the plasma membrane via phosphatidylinositol-glycan. As a major kininase of the distal tubules, it may regulate salt and water excretion.
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PMID:Carboxypeptidase M in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Evidence that carboxypeptidase M has a phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor. 239 13

The involvement of arachidonic acid and arachidonic acid metabolites in the control of oxytocin secretion by ovine corpus luteum was investigated, using slices of luteal tissue incubated in vitro. Oxytocin was secreted at steady rates by luteal slices, during 60-min incubations (315.0 +/- 45.3 pg/mg.h). The secretion of oxytocin was stimulated by arachidonic acid, phospholipase A2 (PLA2), and phospholipase C (PLC) in a dose-dependent manner. The highest doses of arachidonic acid, PLA2, and PLC used stimulated oxytocin secretion by 145.8 +/- 23.0% (P less than 0.01; n = 6), 331.5 +/- 42.4% (P less than 0.02; n = 4), and 955.5 +/- 278.6% (P less than 0.01; n = 4), respectively. Oxytocin secretion by luteal slices was not affected by either prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) or PGE2 over a concentration range from 3-3000 nM. Furthermore, inhibitors of the cyclo-oxygenase pathway of arachidonic acid metabolism did not consistently affect arachidonic acid and PLA2-stimulated oxytocin secretion. Nordihydroguaiaretic acid, which inhibits 5-lipoxygenase, however, totally abolished arachidonic acid- and reduced PLA2-stimulated oxytocin secretion. The presence of CoCl2 in the incubation medium also significantly reduced basal and PLA2- and PLC-stimulated oxytocin secretion [P less than 0.05 (n = 5), P less than 0.05 (n = 5), and P less than 0.01 (n = 6), respectively]. We have shown that oxytocin secretion from slices of ovine corpus luteum incubated in vitro is stimulated by exogenous and endogenously released arachidonic acid. The data show that PGF2 alpha and PGE2 do not have a role in luteal oxytocin secretion in vitro and PG formation does not appear to be involved in the stimulation of oxytocin secretion elicited by arachidonic acid or PLA2. Arachidonic acid may have its effect via the lipoxygenase pathway.
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PMID:Control of oxytocin secretion by ovine corpora lutea: effects of arachidonic acid, phospholipases, and prostaglandins. 312 41

The presence of high concentrations of membrane-bound carboxypeptidase M in human, baboon, dog, and rat lung was established by employing a variety of techniques. The activity of the enzyme in the membrane-enriched fractions of human, baboon, dog, and rat lung, measured with fluorescent dansyl substrate (DNS-Ala-Arg), was 198, 261, 484, and 153 nmol/h/mg protein, respectively. This activity in the lung was much higher than that found in the heart, liver, or kidney. The enzyme, optimally active around neutral pH, was completely inhibited by 10 microM 2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid and was activated by 1 mM CoCl2 to 170%. Antibody to human carboxypeptidase M immunoprecipitated the solubilized carboxypeptidase from human (98%), baboon (81%), and dog (88%) lung membrane fractions. Carboxypeptidase M is attached to lung membranes by a phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor; thus, it is released with bacterial phospholipase C. Membrane fractions from cultured human pulmonary arterial endothelial cells also contained high carboxypeptidase M activity (254 nmol/h/mg protein). A Northern blot of poly(A)+ RNA from various human tissues showed the presence of a high level of carboxypeptidase M mRNA in human lung and placenta. Finally, immunohistochemistry, employing purified antibody to the enzyme, revealed in fluorescent light microscopy that carboxypeptidase M is present in alveolar type I pneumocytes and in macrophages in apparently lower concentration. In contrast, type II alveolar epithelial cells gave negative results. Because carboxypeptidase M cleaves a variety of active peptides (e.g., bradykinin, anaphylatoxins), it may protect the alveolar surface from the effects of these peptides. In addition, carboxypeptidase M could be a marker enzyme for type I cells.
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PMID:High concentration of carboxypeptidase M in lungs: presence of the enzyme in alveolar type I cells. 833 89

The objective of these experiments was to determine the role of Ca2+ during oxytocin-stimulated prostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha release from bovine endometrial tissue in vitro. Uteri were collected from dairy cows on the day after spontaneous luteal regression. Caruncular endometrial explants were dissected and incubated in vitro to determine phospholipase C activity or PGF2 alpha release. A23,187 (a calcium ionophore) and maitotoxin (an activator of voltage-gated L-type calcium channels) stimulated release of PGF 2 alpha in a concentration-dependent manner (P < 0.05). Thapsigargin (induces accumulation of Ca2+ in the cytoplasm by inhibiting endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+/ATPase pumps) stimulated release of PGF2 alpha in a concentration-dependent manner as well (P < 0.13). Oxytocin (10(-6) M), AIF4- (a nonspecific activator of G-proteins; 10(-5) M), A23,187 (10(-5) M), and melittin (a stimulator of phospholipase A2; 10(-4) M) stimulated PGF2 alpha release when explants were incubated in Ca(2+)-free medium (P < 0.10); however, oxytocin, A23,187, or melittin were unable to stimulate PGF2 alpha release when explants were incubated in Ca(2+)-free medium containing the calcium chelator EGTA (P < 0.10). This treatment did not prevent oxytocin or AIF4- from stimulating phospholipase C activity (P < 0.08). CoCl2 (a nonspecific Ca2+ channel blocker) and methoxyverapamil (a specific voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channel blocker) prevented oxytocin from stimulating PGF2 alpha release (P < 0.05). Our results suggest that both extracellular and intracellular Ca2+ may be required for oxytocin to stimulate PGF2 alpha secretion in bovine endometrial tissue.
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PMID:Cellular mechanisms by which oxytocin mediates uterine prostaglandin F2 alpha synthesis in bovine endometrium: role of calcium. 986 39

Exogenous electric fields induce cellular responses including redistribution of integral membrane proteins, reorganization of microfilament structures, and changes in intracellular calcium ion concentration ([Ca2+]i). Although increases in [Ca2+]i caused by application of direct current electric fields have been documented, quantitative measurements of the effects of alternating current (ac) electric fields on [Ca2+]i are lacking and the Ca2+ pathways that mediate such effects remain to be identified. Using epifluorescence microscopy, we have examined in a model cell type the [Ca2+]i response to ac electric fields. Application of a 1 or 10 Hz electric field to human hepatoma (Hep3B) cells induces a fourfold increase in [Ca2+]i (from 50 nM to 200 nM) within 30 min of continuous field exposure. Depletion of Ca2+ in the extracellular medium prevents the electric field-induced increase in [Ca2+]i, suggesting that Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane is responsible for the [Ca2+]i increase. Incubation of cells with the phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 does not inhibit ac electric field-induced increases in [Ca2+]i, suggesting that receptor-regulated release of intracellular Ca2+ is not important for this effect. Treatment of cells with either the stretch-activated cation channel inhibitor GdCl3 or the nonspecific calcium channel blocker CoCl2 partially inhibits the [Ca2+]i increase induced by ac electric fields, and concomitant treatment with both GdCl3 and CoCl2 completely inhibits the field-induced [Ca2+]i increase. Since neither Gd3+ nor Co2+ is efficiently transported across the plasma membrane, these data suggest that the increase in [Ca2+]i induced by ac electric fields depends entirely on Ca2+ influx from the extracellular medium.
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PMID:Transmembrane calcium influx induced by ac electric fields. 1009 28