Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.4.3 (phospholipase C)
18,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sarcolemmal Ca++-ATPase, Mg++-ATPase, and (Na+-K+)-ATPase activities were increased in late stages of heart failure in myopathic hamsters (BIO 14.6) without any changes in the adenylate cyclase activity. On the other hand, these hamsters at early and moderate stages of heart failure showed depressions in mitochondrial calcium binding and uptake and microsomal calcium binding. Sarcolemmal (Na+-K+)-ATPase was decreased in failing hearts because of substrate lack, oxygen lack, and perfusion with Ca++-free, Na+-free, or K+-free medium. Both Mg++-ATPase and Ca++-ATPase activities of sarcolemma did not change on perfusing the hearts with substrate-free, hypoxic, Na+-free, or K+-free medium. Adenylate cyclase activity decreased on substrate-free or Ca++-free perfusion. Intracellular calcium overload produced by perfusing the hearts with medium containing calcium after Ca++-free perfusion was associated with decrease in all the sarcolemmal-bound enzyme activities. All types of failing hearts employed in this study showed a dramatic shift in the electrolyte composition. Failure of the cardiac muscle to generate contractile force on treatment with trypsin was associated with defects in the functions of sarcolemma, mitochondria, and sarcoplasmic reticulum, whereas such an effect on treatment with phospholipase C was limited to alterations in the activities of sarcolemma. The data suggest that abnormality at the level of sarcolemma plays an important role in the pathogenesis of heart dysfunction; however, the degree and direction of alterations in the sarcolemmal functions seem to be dependent upon the type of heart failure.
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PMID:Role of sarcolemmal changes in cardiac pathophysiology. 13 Jun 63

Purified phospholipae C (phosphatidylcholine cholinephosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.3) and theta-toxin from Clostridium perfringens both inhibited noradrenaline-stimulated lipolysis and cyclic AMP accumulation in isolated rat adipocytes in a dose-dependent manner. The action of phospholipase C was gradual in onset, while the effect of theta-toxin was almost immediate. Phospholipase C, but not theta-toxin, hydrolyzed membrane phospholipids and inhibited adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) in a crude membrane fraction from fat cells. The inhibitory effects of phospholipase C were associated with morphological alterations detectable by electron microscopy, whereas effects of theta-toxin were observed at a time when no clearcut morphological alterations could be observed. It is concluded that the two purified principles from C. perfringens, which are both present in commercial preparations of phospholipase C, antagonize noradrenaline-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation and lipolysis. Although their exact mechanisms of action have not been elucidated, phospholipase C and theta-toxin have different modes of attack.
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PMID:Inhibition of noradrenaline-stimulated lipolysis and cyclic AMP accumulation in isolated rat adipocytes by purified phospholipase C and theta-toxin from Clostridium perfringens. 20 64

Rat liver plasma membranes were incubated with phospholipase A2 (purified from snake venom) or with filipin, a polyene antibiotic, followed by analysis of the binding of glucagon to receptors, effects of GTP on the glucagon-receptor complex, and the activity and responses of adenylate cyclase to glucagon + GTP, GTP, Gpp(NH)p, and F-. Phospholipase A2 treatment resulted in concomitant lossess of glucagon binding and of activation of cyclase by glucagon + GTP. Greater than 85% of maximal hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids was required before significant effects of phospholipase A2 on receptor binding and activity response to glucagon were observed. The stimulatory effects of Gpp(NH)p or F- remained essentially unaffected even at maximal hydrolysis of phospholipids, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP was reduced. Detailed analysis of receptor binding indicates that phospholipase A2 treatment affected the affinity but not the number of glucagon receptors. The receptors remain sensitive to the effects of GTP on hormone binding. Filipin also caused marked reduction in activation by glucagon + GTP. However, in contrast to phospholipase A2 treatment, the binding of glucagon to receptors was unaffected. The effect of GTP on the binding process was also not affected. The most sensitive parameter of activity altered by filipin was stimulation by GTP or Gpp(NH)p; basal and fluoride-stimulated activities were least affected. It is concluded from these findings that phospholipase A2 and filipin, as was previously shown with phospholipase C, are valuable tools for differentially affecting the components involved in hormone, guanyl nucleotide, and fluoride action on hepatic adenylate cyclase.
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PMID:Effects of phospholipase A2 and filipin on the activation of adenylate cyclase. 42 Aug 40

A number of neuropeptides were shown to produce potent mitogenic effects on Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts by activating the phospholipase C pathway. Here we provide evidence for the activation by PACAP of the adenylate cyclase pathway in 3T3, as well as in non-tumoral pituitary fibroblasts, similarly to what was seen in pituitary endocrine cells. In these cells, PACAP triggered elevation of both intracellular and extracellular contents of cAMP and the effect was time- and dose-dependent, with half-maximal stimulations being induced with about 0.1 nM. Following activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by the phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), PACAP-induced cAMP production was amplified in pituitary endocrine cells, but was either unchanged or dampened in 3T3 and pituitary fibroblasts, respectively. Pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin (PT) failed to change the effect of PMA on PACAP-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, irrespective of the cell type being used. However, PT dramatically reduced the potentiation by PMA of cAMP production enhanced by forskolin in 3T3 cells. These results provide new evidence pointing to the presence in fibroblasts of receptors for PACAP, coupled to cAMP production, which may play a role in the modulation of the mitogenic signal. They also indicate that, compared with pituitary endocrine cells, PKC activation in fibroblasts differentially affected PACAP-induced cAMP formation and that these effects were unaltered upon inhibition by PT of Gi-like proteins.
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PMID:Pituitary adenylate cyclase polypeptide (PACAP) stimulates cyclic AMP formation in pituitary fibroblasts and 3T3 tumor fibroblasts: lack of enhancement by protein kinase C activation. 128 Feb 35

The properties of brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) have been analyzed. BCECs express two types of receptor sites for endothelins (ETs), and ETA-like receptor, and an ETB-like receptor that is not coupled to phospholipase C but whose occupancy activates Na+/H+ exchange activity. The ETA receptor is positively coupled to phospholipase C and negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase. BCECs, unlike aortic endothelial cells, express high-affinity receptor sites for C-type natriuretic peptide. They respond to exogenous nitric oxide (NO) and to NO donor molecules by large activations of soluble guanylate cyclase. They produce little cGMP in response to A23187 or to agonists of phospholipase C but do so after an exposure to interleukin-1. The physiological consequence of the high reactivity of BCECs to vasoactive factors is discussed.
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PMID:Function of vasoactive factors in the cerebral microcirculation. 128 98

Dopamine receptors of D2 type present on lactotroph cells are coupled to a large series of transduction mechanisms. Beside their negative coupling with adenylate cyclase, they are also coupled with potassium and calcium channels, leading to a decreased intracellular calcium concentration. In addition, D2 dopamine receptors also modulate phospholipase activities. Dopamine inhibits inositol phosphate production, through two distinct mechanisms. One of them could represent a direct negative coupling with phospholipase C. All these transduction mechanisms of the D2 dopamine receptors implicate G proteins sensitive to pertussis toxin. In contrast, these receptors are negatively coupled to phospholipase A2 through G proteins insensitive to this toxin. Both isoforms of the D2 dopamine receptor, generated by alternate splicing of a single gene, are present in lactotroph cells. After transfection in CH4C1 cells the two isoforms are coupled with adenylate cyclase while only the shortest isoform appears negatively coupled to phospholipase C. Functional D2 dopamine receptors are present in human prolactinomas. Resistance to bromocriptine therapy is associated with a decreased density of these receptors in the tumor. In addition, the ratio of the two receptor isoforms (measured by PCR) is different in responsive and resistant tumors. Furthermore, the activity of Gi/Go proteins coupled to adenylate cyclase appears also affected in resistant tumors. Resistance to bromocriptine therapy appears thus to involve multiple changes at the different levels of the multiple mechanisms of action of dopamine on lactotroph cells.
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PMID:D2 dopaminergic receptors: normal and abnormal transduction mechanisms. 130 22

Thrombin is thought to stimulate responsive cells by cleaving cell-surface receptors coupled to intracellular second-messenger-generating enzymes via G-proteins. In order to understand this process better, we have examined the regulation of adenylate cyclase by thrombin in the megakaryoblastic HEL cell line and compared it with platelets. A notable difference was found. In HEL-cell membrane preparations, thrombin inhibited cyclic AMP (cAMP) formation by a pertussis-toxin-sensitive mechanism comparable with that observed in platelets. In contrast, when added to intact HEL cells, thrombin activated adenylate cyclase and caused an increase in cAMP formation synergistic with that produced by forskolin and prostaglandin I2. This increase, which was not seen with platelets, was accompanied by an increase in cAMP metabolism by phosphodiesterase. Like other responses to thrombin, the increase in cAMP formation required proteolytically active thrombin and was subject to homologous desensitization. An equivalent response could be evoked by the addition of a polypeptide, derived from the N-terminus of the thrombin receptor, that has been shown to activate the receptor. The effects of thrombin could not, however, be reproduced by the addition of phorbol ester and the Ca2+ ionophore, A23187, nor be prevented with inhibitors of arachidonate metabolism. Preincubation of the cells with adrenaline, which inhibited Gs-mediated activation of adenylate cyclase, or pertussis toxin, which inhibited phospholipase C activation, had no effect on thrombin-induced cAMP formation. These results suggest that thrombin can regulate cAMP formation by two different mechanisms. First, thrombin can inhibit adenylate cyclase in a Gi-dependent manner. This effect predominates in HEL-cell membrane preparations, as it does in platelets, but is not detectable when thrombin is added to intact HEL cells. Instead, in intact HEL cells thrombin activates adenylate cyclase. Although clearly receptor-mediated, this response does not appear to involve Gi, Gs, protein kinase C, eicosanoid formation or changes in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration.
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PMID:Dual regulation of cyclic AMP formation by thrombin in HEL cells, a leukaemic cell line with megakaryocytic properties. 131 10

Biogenic amines such as serotonin elicit or modulate a wide range of behaviours by interacting with multiple receptor subtypes. We have isolated cDNA clones encoding three distinct Drosophila serotonin receptors which belong to the G protein-coupled receptor family. When expressed in mammalian cells, these receptors activate different intracellular effector systems. The 5HT-dro1 receptor stimulates adenylate cyclase while the 5HT-dro2A and the 5HT-dro2B receptors inhibit adenylate cyclase and activate phospholipase C. Expression of all three receptors starts in late embryos and is restricted to distinct populations of cells in the central nervous system. The 5HT-dro2A receptor is predominantly expressed in midline motor neurons (VUM neurons) that innervate larval muscles thus suggesting a role for this receptor in motor control.
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PMID:A family of Drosophila serotonin receptors with distinct intracellular signalling properties and expression patterns. 131 Sep 37

alpha-Thrombin (thrombin) stimulates phospholipase C and modulates the activity of adenylate cyclase in a number of cell types via G protein-coupled receptors. It is also a potent growth factor, notably for a line of hamster fibroblasts (CCL39 cells). Recently, predicted amino acid sequences for human and hamster thrombin receptors have been reported that display a putative thrombin cleavage site in the N-terminal extracellular domain. Synthetic peptides corresponding to 14 residues carboxyl to the presumed thrombin cleavage site of the human receptor have been shown to activate platelets as well as the thrombin receptor expressed in Xenopus oocytes. In the present study we have examined the effects of synthetic peptides corresponding to the same region of the hamster receptor (S-42-L-55) and shorter peptides (2-7 residues) on signal transducing systems in CCL39 cells. Our results indicate that hamster receptor peptides of greater than or equal to 5 residues effectively stimulate phospholipase C in CCL39 cells via the thrombin receptor and induce rapid desensitization of the response. The same peptides also inhibit adenylate cyclase in a pertussis toxin-sensitive manner. Although the peptides are potent agonists of serotonin release in platelets, unlike thrombin, by themselves they are not mitogenic. However, they potentiate DNA synthesis in cooperation with growth factors possessing tyrosine kinase receptors. Hence, we conclude that the potent mitogenic action of thrombin cannot be accounted for solely by the activation of the cloned receptor. We postulate the existence of an additional receptor activated by thrombin, which is required for its full mitogenic potential.
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PMID:Synthetic alpha-thrombin receptor peptides activate G protein-coupled signaling pathways but are unable to induce mitogenesis. 131 81

Parathyroid hormone (PTH), a major regulator of mineral ion metabolism, and PTH-related peptide (PTHrP), which causes hypercalcemia in some cancer patients, stimulate multiple signals (cAMP, inositol phosphates, and calcium) probably by activating common receptors in bone and kidney. Using expression cloning, we have isolated a cDNA clone encoding rat bone PTH/PTHrP receptor from rat osteosarcoma (ROS 17/2.8) cells. The rat bone PTH/PTHrP receptor is 78% identical to the opossum kidney receptor; this identity indicates striking conservation of this receptor across distant mammalian species. Additionally, the rat bone PTH/PTHrP receptor has significant homology to the secretin and calcitonin receptors but not to any other G protein-linked receptor. When expressed in COS cells, a single cDNA clone, expressing either rat bone or opossum kidney PTH/PTHrP receptor, mediates PTH and PTHrP stimulation of both adenylate cyclase and phospholipase C. These properties could explain the diversity of PTH action without the need to postulate other receptor subtypes.
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PMID:Expression cloning of a common receptor for parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide from rat osteoblast-like cells: a single receptor stimulates intracellular accumulation of both cAMP and inositol trisphosphates and increases intracellular free calcium. 131 66


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