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)

Many proteins of eukaryotic cells are anchored to membranes by covalent linkage to glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI). These proteins lack a transmembrane domain, have no cytoplasmic tail, and are, therefore, located exclusively on the extracellular side of the plasma membrane. GPI-anchored proteins form a diverse family of molecules that includes membrane-associated enzymes, adhesion molecules, activation antigens, differentiation markers, protozoan coat components, and other miscellaneous glycoproteins. In the kidney, several GPI-anchored proteins have been identified, including uromodulin (Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein), carbonic anhydrase type IV, alkaline phosphatase, Thy-1, BP-3, aminopeptidase P, and dipeptidylpeptidase. GPI-anchored proteins can be released from membranes with specific phospholipases and can be recovered from the detergent-insoluble pellet after Triton X-114 treatment of membranes. All GPI-anchored proteins are initially synthesized with a transmembrane anchor, but after translocation across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, the ecto-domain of the protein is cleaved and covalently linked to a preformed GPI anchor by a specific transamidase enzyme. Although it remains obscure why so many proteins are endowed with a GPI anchor, the presence of a GPI anchor does confer some functional characteristics to proteins: (1) it is a strong apical targeting signal in polarized epithelial cells; (2) GPI-anchored proteins do not cluster into clathrin-coated pits but instead are concentrated into specialized lipid domains in the membrane, including so-called smooth pinocytotic vesicles, or caveoli; (3) GPI-anchored proteins can act as activation antigens in the immune system; (4) when the GPI anchor is cleaved by PI-phospholipase C or PI-phospholipase D, second messengers for signal transduction may be generated; (5) the GPI anchor can modulate antigen presentation by major histocompatibility complex molecules. Finally, at least one human disease, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, is a result of defective GPI anchor addition to plasma membrane proteins.
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PMID:Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane proteins. 145 Mar 66

Sarcolemmal membrane vesicle preparations from white and red muscles of rat were found to contain a carbonic anhydrase which was indistinguishable from carbonic anhydrase IV from rat lung. This isozyme appears to account for all of the carbonic anhydrase activity in the sarcolemmal vesicle preparations. Digestion of 39-kDa CA IV with endoglycosidase F reduced the Mr to 36 kDa, suggesting that it contains one N-linked oligosaccharide. Treatment of sarcolemmal vesicles with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C released all of the activity, indicating that the enzyme is anchored to membranes by a phosphatidylinositol-glycan linkage. White muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles also contain a small amount of 39-kDa CA IV-type enzyme. A 52-kDa polypeptide in sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes cross-reacts with anti-human CA II and anti-rat CA II antisera, but does not bind to the sulfonamide affinity column. This cross-reacting polypeptide has no detectable CA activity.
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PMID:Rat skeletal muscle membrane associated carbonic anhydrase is 39-kDa, glycosylated, GPI-anchored CA IV. 153 9

We have purified carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV from human lung membranes to apparent homogeneity in a form which is catalytically active and stable to storage. It has an apparent molecular mass of 35 kDa, is insensitive to endoglycosidases, and seems to contain no N-linked or O-linked oligosaccharide chains. Reduction of disulfide linkages led to altered migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and loss of catalytic activity. CA IV resembles CA II in being a "high activity" isozyme, relatively resistant to inhibition by halide ions and sensitive to inhibition by sulfonamides. Application of this purification to human kidney membranes produced homogeneous enzyme with nearly identical properties. Amino acid compositions of both lung and kidney CA IV were similar, as were tryptic peptide patterns resolved on high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Amino-terminal sequences of native enzyme from lung and kidney were identical, as were amino-terminal sequences of the three major tryptic peptides resolved on reverse phase HPLC. Isoelectric focusing revealed microheterogeneity in enzyme from both sources. Antibody raised to human lung CA IV reacted equally strongly with CA IV from kidney, but very weakly or not at all with other CAs. Treatment of lung membranes and kidney membranes with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C released over half of the membrane-bound CA IV, suggesting that at least half of the CA IV in both organs is anchored to membranes by phosphatidylinositol-glycan linkages.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase IV from human lung. Purification, characterization, and comparison with membrane carbonic anhydrase from human kidney. 211 24

We used polyclonal antisera raised in rabbits against membrane-bound rat lung and human lung carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV in immunofluorescence studies to stain cryosections of rat soleus and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and several human skeletal muscles. There was strong specific staining of capillaries in all muscles investigated. Several techniques were applied to verify this result. (a) Serial sections were either incubated with anti-CA IV/FITC or processed for endothelial ATPase reaction. There was precise co-localization of antibody marked structures and ATPase stained capillaries. (b) Human muscle sections were double stained with anti-CA IV/TRITC and anti-von Willebrand factor (vWF)/FITC. vWF, a capillary marker, and CA IV were localized at identical sites. (c) The CAIV was released from capillaries by treatment with phosphatidylinositol specific phospholipase C, suggesting that the enzyme is anchored to the endothelial cell membrane via a phosphatidylinositolglycan anchor. (d) A rat hindlimb was perfused with diluted antiserum. Cryosections of perfused soleus and EDL processed for anti-rabbit IgG/FITC staining showed clear fluorescence associated with capillaries, indicating that the antigen was accessible from the capillary lumen. (e) Immune complexes formed during antiserum perfusion as described in d were precipitated from muscle homogenates. SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblotting showed that the predominant portion of total muscle CA IV was bound in these complexes and therefore must be located intravascularly.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of carbonic anhydrase IV in capillaries of rat and human skeletal muscle. 806 30

Direct measurements have found that ectothermic vertebrates possess a significant postcapillary PCO2 disequilibrium between arterial blood and alveolar gas, indicating that the CO2-HCO3(-)-H+ system does not reach equilibrium during pulmonary capillary transit. One plausible explanation for the blood disequilibrium is that turtle lungs lack vascular carbonic anhydrase (CA) to enhance the conversion of blood HCO3- to CO2. The present study characterized the contribution of pulmonary vascular CA to CO2 excretion and postcapillary CO2-HCO3(-)-H+ equilibration in the turtle. In situ perfusion of turtle lungs with salines containing membrane-permeating and membrane-impermeant CA inhibitors produced significant and comparable postcapillary pH and PCO2 perfusate disequilibria. Replacement of perfusate chloride with various anions had no affect on pulmonary CO2 excretion, thereby ruling out a significant contribution of Cl- sensitive CA isozymes (i.e., CA II-like). Perfusion of lungs with control salines following treatment with phosphatidylinositol specific-phospholipase C produced significant CO2 disequilibria, consistent with connection of CA IV to the luminal membrane of endothelial cells via a phosphatidylinositol glycan linkage. Vascular CA IV in the turtle lung would participate in diffusive and reactive CO2 equilibration and, thus, may compensate for the slow rate of the physiological anion shift in turtle erythrocytes (Stabenau et al., 1991) during capillary transit.
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PMID:Physiological characterization of pulmonary carbonic anhydrase in the turtle. 889 64

The purpose of this study was to examine the subcellular distribution and isoenzyme characteristics of carbonic anhydrase from the gills and respiratory air bladder of bowfin Amia calva, a primitive air-breathing fish. Separation of subcellular fractions by differential centrifugation revealed that the vast majority of carbonic anhydrase from the gills of bowfin originated from the cytoplasmic fraction. Washing of the gill microsomal pellet also indicated that the carbonic anhydrase originally associated with this pellet was largely due to contamination from the cytoplasmic fraction. Experiments with a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, sulphanilamide, and the plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor from this species confirmed that the bowfin gill probably contains only one carbonic anhydrase isoenzyme which had properties resembling those of CA II. In contrast to the situation in the gills, a relatively large percentage (27%) of the total air bladder carbonic anhydrase was associated with the microsomal fraction. Washing of the air bladder microsomal pellet removed little of the carbonic anhydrase activity, indicating that most of the carbonic anhydrase in the microsomal fraction was associated with the membranes. Like the mammalian pulmonary CA IV isoenzyme, microsomal carbonic anhydrase from the bowfin air bladder was less sensitive to the bowfin plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) and sulphanilamide than was cytoplasmic carbonic anhydrase from the air bladder. Microsomal carbonic anhydrase from the bowfin air bladder also resembled CA IV in that it appears to be anchored to the membrane via a phosphatidylinositol-glycan linkage which could be cleaved by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Taken together, these results suggest that a membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase isoenzyme resembling mammalian CA IV in terms of inhibition characteristics and membrane attachment is present in the air-breathing organ of one of the most primitive air-breathing vertebrates.
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PMID:Evidence for membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase in the air bladder of bowfin (Amia calva), a primitive air-breathing fish. 963 94

We tested the hypothesis that extracellular membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase (CA) type IV is responsible for the regulation of interstitial pH (pH(o)) transients in brain. Rat hippocampal slices were incubated in phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC), which cleaves the link of CA IV to the external face of plasma membranes. Then evoked alkaline pH(o) shifts were studied in a recording chamber, using pH microelectrodes. Incubation fluid was saved for later analysis. The ability to buffer a rapid alkaline load was reduced markedly in PI-PLC-treated tissue as compared with adjacent, paired control slices. The effect of benzolamide (a poorly permeant CA inhibitor) on evoked pH(o) shifts was diminished greatly in the PI-PLC-treated tissue, consistent with the washout of interstitial CA. Treatment of the incubation fluid with SDS abolished nearly all of the CA activity in fluid from controls, whereas an SDS-insensitive component remained in the fluid from PI-PLC-treated slices. These data suggested that CA type II (which is blocked by SDS) leaked from injured glial cells in both slice preparations, whereas CA type IV (which is insensitive to SDS) was liberated selectively into the fluid from PI-PLC-treated tissue. Western blot analysis was consistent with this interpretation, demonstrating a predominance of CA IV in the incubation fluid from PI-PLC-treated tissue and variable amounts of CA II in fluid from PI-PLC-treated and control slices. These results demonstrate that interstitial CA activity brain is attributable principally to membrane-bound CA IV.
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PMID:Interstitial carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in brain is attributable to membrane-bound CA type IV. 1106 30

In Pacific spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias), plasma CO(2) reactions have access to plasma carbonic anhydrase (CA) and gill membrane-associated CA. The objectives of this study were to characterise the gill membrane-bound CA and investigate whether extracellular CA contributes significantly to CO(2) excretion in dogfish. A subcellular fraction containing membrane-associated CA activity was isolated from dogfish gills and incubated with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. This treatment caused significant release of CA activity from its membrane association, a result consistent with identification of the dogfish gill membrane-bound CA as a type IV isozyme. Inhibition constants (K(i)) against acetazolamide and benzolamide were 4.2 and 3.5 nmol L(-1), respectively. Use of a low dose (1.3 mg kg(-1) or 13 micromol L(-1)) of benzolamide to selectively inhibit extracellular CA in vivo caused a significant 30%-60% reduction in the arterial-venous total CO(2) concentration difference, a significant increase in Pco(2) and an acidosis, without affecting blood flow or ventilation. No effect of benzolamide on any measure of CO(2) excretion was detected in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). These results indicate that extracellular CA contributes substantially to CO(2) excretion in the dogfish, an elasmobranch, and confirm that CA is not available to plasma CO(2) reactions in rainbow trout, a teleost.
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PMID:Extracellular carbonic anhydrase in the dogfish, Squalus acanthias: a role in CO2 excretion. 1143 32

Separated plasma and whole blood non-bicarbonate buffering capacities, together with plasma and gill carbonic anhydrase activities and endogenous plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor activity were investigated in three species of fish: the brown bullhead (Ameirus nebulosus), a teleost; the longnose skate (Raja rhina), an elasmobranch; and the spotted ratfish (Hydrolagus colliei), a chimaeran. The objective was to test the hypothesis that species possessing gill membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase and/or plasma carbonic anhydrase activity would also exhibit high plasma nonbicarbonate buffering capacity relative to whole blood non-bicarbonate buffering capacity and would lack an endogenous plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor. Separated plasma non-bicarbonate buffering capacity constituted > or = 40% of whole-blood buffering in all three species. In addition, all species lacked an endogenous plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor. Separated plasma from skate and ratfish contained carbonic anhydrase activity, whereas bullhead plasma did not. Examination of the subcellular distribution and characteristics of branchial carbonic anhydrase activity revealed that the majority of branchial carbonic anhydrase activity originated from the cytoplasmic fraction in all species, with only 3-5% being associated with a microsomal fraction. The microsomal carbonic anhydrase activity of bullhead and ratfish was significantly reduced by washing, indicating the presence of carbonic anhydrase activity that was not integrally associated with the membrane pellet, microsomal carbonic anhydrase activity in skate was unaffected by washing. In addition, microsomal carbonic anhydrase activity from skate and ratfish but not bullhead gills was released to a significant extent from its membrane association by treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. The results obtained for skate are consistent with published data for dogfish, suggesting that the possession of branchial membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase activity may be a generalised elasmobranch characteristic. Ratfish, which also belong to the class Chondrichthyes, exhibited a similar pattern. Unlike skate and ratfish, bullhead exhibited high plasma non-bicarbonate buffering capacity and lacked an endogenous carbonic anhydrase inhibitor in the absence of plasma and gill membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase activities.
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PMID:An investigation of carbonic anhydrase activity in the gills and blood plasma of brown bullhead (Ameiurus nebulosus), longnose skate (Raja rhina), and spotted raffish (Hydrolagus colliei). 1182 6

This study examined whether the snake lung possesses intravascular carbonic anhydrase (CA). Lungs were perfused with control salines and with salines containing CA inhibitors. Perfusion with control salines resulted in a stable CO(2) excretion, whereas CA inhibitors significantly reduced pulmonary CO(2) excretion. Membrane-permeable and membrane-impermeable CA inhibitors produced comparable decreases in CO(2) excretion, suggesting that extracellular, intravascular CA participated in the pulmonary CO(2)-HCO3(-)-H(+) reactions. Treatment of lungs with phosphatidylinositol specific-phospholipase C (PI-PLC) significantly decreased CO(2) excretion, indicating that CA was connected to the luminal endothelial cell membrane by a phosphatidylinositol glycan linkage. Taken together, these results are the first to demonstrate the presence of membrane-bound, intravascular CA (CA IV) in the snake lung.
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PMID:Pulmonary carbonic anhydrase in the garter snake, Thamnophis sirtalis. 1188 Sep 81


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