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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)
Angiotensin II
(Ang II) receptor subtypes AT1 and AT2 share 34% overall homology, but the least homology is in their third intracellular loop (3rd ICL). In an attempt to elucidate the role of the 3rd ICL in determining the similarities and differences in the functions of the AT1 and the AT2 receptors, we generated a chimeric receptor in which the 3rd ICL of the AT2 receptor was replaced with that of the AT1 receptor. Ligand-binding properties and signaling properties of this receptor were assayed by expressing this receptor in Xenopus oocytes. Ligand-binding studies using [125I-Sar1-Ile8] Ang II, a peptidic ligand that binds both the AT1 and the AT2 receptor subtypes, and 125I-CGP42112A, a peptidic ligand that is specific for the AT2 receptor, showed that the chimeric receptor has lost affinity to both ligands. However, IP3 levels of the oocytes expressing the chimeric receptor were comparable to the IP3 levels of the oocytes expressing the AT1 receptor, suggesting that the chimeric receptors could couple to
phospholipase C
pathway in response to Ang II. We have shown previously that the nature of the amino acid present in the position 215 located in the fifth transmembrane domain (TMD) of the AT2 receptor plays an important role in determining its affinity to different ligands. Our results from the ligand-binding studies of the chimeric receptor further support the idea that the structural organization of the region spanning the 5th TMD and the 3rd ICL of the AT2 receptor has an important role in determining the ligand-binding properties of this receptor.
...
PMID:Role of the third intracellular loop of the angiotensin II receptor subtype AT2 in ligand-receptor interaction. 1006 67
The purpose of this study was to characterize the nature and mechanisms of angiotensin II-evoked calcium signaling in AR42J cells. Cytosolic calcium concentrations were determined using fura-2-based microfluorimetry.
Angiotensin II
causes elevations in free cytosolic calcium ([Ca2+]i) in the rat pancreatic acinar cell line AR42J. The mechanisms of angiotensin II-evoked calcium signaling were examined using fura-2-based fluorescent digital microscopy.
Angiotensin II
caused dose-dependent increments in [Ca2+]i over a concentration range of 0.1-1,000 nM, with an average increment of 243 +/- 16 nM at an angiotensin II concentration of 1,000 nM. Dup753, an AT1-specific antagonist, inhibited angiotensin II-evoked signaling, whereas the AT2 antagonist PD123,319 had no effect. Preincubation with the
phospholipase C
inhibitor U73122 reduced the response in [Ca2+]i to 25% of that of the control. Thapsigargin abolished angiotensin II-evoked calcium signaling. The inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor antagonist heparin introduced by radiofrequency electroporation inhibited responses to 46 +/- 6% of controls.
Angiotensin II
-evoked signals were reduced in magnitude and duration by elimination of Ca2+ from the extracellular buffer. Preincubation with pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml) had no effect.
Angiotensin II
did not stimulate cyclic AMP or suppress vasoactive intestinal peptide stimulated cyclic AMP production over the concentration range that caused Ca2+ signaling.
...
PMID:Calcium signaling induced by angiotensin II in the pancreatic acinar cell line AR42J. 1009 Apr 17
Angiotensin
(A) II is a potent constrictor as well as growth stimulant of vascular smooth muscle cell caused by activation of AT1 receptor signal transduction systems. There are two major signal systems of AT1 receptor: one leads to an increase in cytosolic free calcium levels causing smooth muscle contraction which may result in high blood pressure, and the other leads to smooth muscle proliferation and inflammation which may result in atherosclerosis. AT1 receptor activation induces phosphinositide hydrolysis by
phospholipase C
and creates an inositol phosphate, which release calcium from cytosolic calcium pools. Cytosolic calcium can also be elevated by activation of calcium channel via a link between AT1 receptor and a G protein. Protein phosphorylation triggered by AT1 receptor is important for cell growth, in which tyrosine kinase, serine/threonine kinase and protein kinase C are involved. Free radicals are generated by NADH/NADPH oxidase in response to AT1 receptor activation, causing expression of genes leading to atherosclerosis. On the other hand, activation of AT2 receptor is shown to play a role of lowering blood pressure. Some phosphatases and NO/cyclic GMP would be involved in the mechanism. In renal vasculature, endothelium dependent epoxygenase products are synthesized by AT2 receptor stimulation causing vasorelaxation. In summary, AT1 receptor signals are vasopressive and evoke atherosclerosis, whereas AT2 receptor signals may possibly be vasodilatory.
...
PMID:[Signal transduction systems of angiotensin II receptors]. 1036 37
Currently at least 11 protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms have been identified and may play different roles in cell signaling pathways leading to changes in cardiac contractility, the hypertrophic response, and tolerance to myocardial ischemia. The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that responses of individual PKC isoforms to distinct pathological stimuli were differentially regulated in the adult guinea pig heart. Isolated hearts were perfused by the Langendorff method and were exposed to ischemia, hypoxia, H(2)O(2), or angiotensin II. Hypoxia and ischemia induced translocation of PKC isoforms alpha, beta(2), gamma, and zeta, and H(2)O(2) translocated PKC isoforms alpha, beta(2), and zeta.
Angiotensin II
produced translocation of alpha, beta(2), epsilon, gamma, and zeta isoforms. Inhibition of
phospholipase C
with tricyclodecan-9-yl-xanthogenate (D609) blocked hypoxia-induced (alpha, beta(2), and zeta) and angiotensin II-induced (alpha, beta(2), gamma, and zeta) translocation of PKC isoforms. Inhibition of tyrosine kinase with genistein blocked translocation of PKC isoforms by hypoxia (beta(2) and zeta) and by angiotensin II (beta(2)). By contrast, neither D609 nor genistein blocked H(2)O(2)-induced translocation of any PKC isoform. We conclude that hypoxia-induced activation of PKC isoforms is mediated through pathways involving
phospholipase C
and tyrosine kinase, but oxidative stress may activate PKC isoforms independently of Galphaq-
phospholipase C
coupling and tyrosine kinase signaling. Because oxidative stress may directly activate PKC, and PKC activation appears to be involved in human heart failure, selective inhibition of the PKC isoforms may provide a novel therapeutic strategy for the prevention and treatment of this pathological process.
...
PMID:Responses of cardiac protein kinase C isoforms to distinct pathological stimuli are differentially regulated. 1043 69
Angiotensin
(Ang) II acts as a mitogen in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) via the activation of multiple signaling cascades, including
phospholipase C
, tyrosine kinase, and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. However, increasing evidence supports signal-activated phospholipases A(2) and D (PLD) as additional mechanisms. Stimulation of PLD results in phosphatidic acid (PA) formation, and PA has been linked to cell growth. However, the direct involvement of PA or its metabolite diacylglycerol (DAG) in Ang II-induced growth is unclear. PLD activity was measured in cultured rat VSMC prelabeled with [(3)H]oleic acid, while the incorporation of [(3)H]thymidine was used to monitor growth. We have previously reported the Ang II-dependent, AT(1)-coupled stimulation of PLD and growth in VSMC. Here, we show that Ang II (100 nM) and exogenous PLD (0.1-100 units/mL; Streptomyces chromofuscus) stimulated thymidine incorporation (43-208% above control). PA (100 nM-1 microM) also increased thymidine incorporation to 135% of control. Propranolol (100 nM-10 microM), which inhibits PA phosphohydrolase, blocked the growth stimulated by Ang II, PLD, or PA by as much as 95%, an effect not shared by other beta-adrenergic antagonists. Propranolol also increased the production of PA in the presence of Ang II by 320% and reduced DAG and arachidonic acid (AA) accumulation. The DAG lipase inhibitor RHC-80267 (1-10 microM) increased Ang II-induced DAG production, while attenuating thymidine incorporation and release of AA. Thus, it appears that activation of PLD, formation of PA, conversion of PA to DAG, and metabolism of DAG comprise an important signaling cascade in Ang II-induced growth of VSMC.
...
PMID:The Ang II-induced growth of vascular smooth muscle cells involves a phospholipase D-mediated signaling mechanism. 1066 19
Angiotensin II
(AngII) receptors couple to a multitude of different types of G-proteins resulting in activation of numerous signaling pathways. In this study we examined the consequences of this promiscuous G-protein coupling on secretion. Chromaffin cells were voltage-clamped at -80 mV in perforated-patch configuration, and Ca(2+)-dependent exocytosis was evoked with brief voltage steps to +20 mV. Vesicle fusion was monitored by changes in membrane capacitance (DeltaC(m)), and released catecholamine was detected with single-cell amperometry. Ca(2+) signaling was studied by recording voltage-dependent Ca(2+) currents (I(Ca)) and by measuring intracellular Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) with fura-2 AM. AngII inhibited I(Ca) (IC(50) = 0.3 nm) in a voltage-dependent, pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive manner consistent with G(i/o)-protein coupling to Ca(2+) channels. DeltaC(m) was modulated bi-directionally; subnanomolar AngII inhibited depolarization-evoked exocytosis, whereas higher concentrations, in spite of I(Ca) inhibition, potentiated DeltaC(m) fivefold (EC(50) = 3.4 nm). Potentiation of exocytosis by AngII involved activation of
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) and Ca(2+) mobilization from internal stores. PTX treatment did not affect AngII-dependent Ca(2+) mobilization or facilitation of exocytosis. However, protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors decreased the facilitatory effects but not the inhibitory effects of AngII on stimulus-secretion coupling. The AngII type 1 receptor (AT1R) antagonist losartan blocked both inhibition and facilitation of secretion by AngII. The results of this study show that activation of multiple types of G-proteins and transduction pathways by a single neuromodulator acting through one receptor type can produce concentration-dependent, bi-directional regulation of exocytosis.
...
PMID:Bidirectional modulation of exocytosis by angiotensin II involves multiple G-protein-regulated transduction pathways in chromaffin cells. 1086 35
Angiotensin
(
ANG
) IV stimulation of pulmonary artery (PA) endothelial cells (PAECs) but not of PA smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) resulted in significant increased production of cGMP in PASMCs.
ANG
IV receptors are not present in PASMCs, and PASMC nitric oxide synthase activity was not altered by
ANG
IV.
ANG
IV caused a dose-dependent vasodilation of U-46619-precontracted endothelium-intact but not endothelium-denuded PAs, and this response was blocked by the
ANG
IV receptor antagonist divalinal
ANG
IV but not by
ANG
II type 1 and 2 receptor blockers.
ANG
IV receptor-mediated increased intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) release from intracellular stores in PAECs was blocked by divalinal
ANG
IV as well as by the G protein,
phospholipase C
, and phosphoinositide (PI) 3-kinase inhibitors guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate), U-73122, and LY-294002, respectively, and was regulated by both PI 3-kinase- and ryanodine-sensitive Ca(2+) stores. Basal and
ANG
IV-mediated vasorelaxation of endothelium-denuded PAs was restored by exogenous PAECs but not by exogenous PAECs pretreated with the intracellular Ca(2+) chelator 1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid-AM. These results demonstrate that
ANG
IV-mediated vasodilation of PAs is endothelium dependent and regulated by [Ca(2+)](i) release through receptor-coupled G protein-
phospholipase C
-PI 3-kinase signaling mechanisms.
...
PMID:Angiotensin IV-mediated pulmonary artery vasorelaxation is due to endothelial intracellular calcium release. 1105 19
Angiotensin
(Ang II) activates neuronal AT(1) receptors located in the hypothalamus and the brainstem and stimulates noradrenergic neurons that are involved in the control of blood pressure and fluid intake. In this study we used complementary DNA microarrays for high throughput gene expression profiling to reveal unique genes that are linked to the neuromodulatory actions of Ang II in neuronal cultures from newborn rat hypothalamus and brainstem. Of several genes that were regulated, we focused on calmodulin and synapsin I. Ang II (100 nM; 1-24 h) elicited respective increases and decreases in the levels of calmodulin and synapsin I messenger RNAs, effects mediated by AT(1) receptors. This was associated with similar changes in calmodulin and synapsin protein expression. The actions of Ang II on calmodulin expression involve an intracellular pathway that includes activation of
phospholipase C
, increased intracellular calcium, and stimulation of protein kinase C. Taken together with studies that link calmodulin and synapsin I to axonal transport and exocytotic processes, the data suggest that Ang II regulates these two proteins via a Ca(2+)-dependent pathway, and that this may contribute to longer term or slower neuromodulatory actions of this peptide.
...
PMID:Gene expression profiling of rat brain neurons reveals angiotensin II-induced regulation of calmodulin and synapsin I: possible role in neuromodulation. 1118 13
Angiotensin II
interacts with specific cell surface angiotensin AT1 and AT2 receptors and, in some vertebrates, with an atypical angiotensin AT receptor. This study was designed to characterize the angiotensin receptor in the heart of Bothrops jararaca snake. A specific and saturable angiotensin II binding site was detected in cardiac membranes and yielded Kd=7.34+/-1.41 nM and B(max)=72.49+/-18 fmol/mg protein. Competition-binding studies showed an angiotensin receptor with low affinity to both angiotensin receptor antagonists, losartan (2-n-butyl-4-chloro-5-hydroxymethyl-1-[(2'-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)biphenyl-4-yl)methyl]imidazole) and PD123319 ((s)-1-(4-[dimethylamino]-3-methylphenyl)methyl-5-(diphenylacetyl)-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-1H-imidazo[4,5-c]pyridine-6-carboxylate). Studies on the intracellular signaling pathways showed that
phospholipase C
/inositol phosphate breakdown and adenylylcyclase/cyclic AMP generation were not coupled with this angiotensin receptor. An adenylylcyclase enzyme sensitive to forskolin was detected. The results indicate the presence of an angiotensin receptor in the heart of B. jararaca snake pharmacologically distinct from angiotensin AT1 and AT2 receptors. It seems to belong to a new class of angiotensin receptors, like some other atypical angiotensin AT receptors that have already been described.
...
PMID:Angiotensin receptor in the heart of Bothrops jararaca snake. 1130 Oct 56
Angiotensin
(Ang)-(1-7) is a biologically active peptide of the renin-angiotensin system that has both vasodilatory and antiproliferative activities that are opposite the constrictive and proliferative effects of angiotensin II (Ang II). We studied the actions of Ang-(1-7) on the Ang II type 1 (AT(1)) receptor in cultured rat aortic vascular smooth muscle cells to determine whether the effects of Ang-(1-7) are due to its regulation of the AT(1) receptor. Ang-(1-7) competed poorly for [(125)I]Ang II binding to the AT(1) receptor on vascular smooth muscle cells, with an IC(50) of 2.0 micromol/L compared with 1.9 nmol/L for Ang II. The pretreatment of vascular smooth muscle cells with Ang-(1-7) followed by treatment with acidic glycine to remove surface-bound peptide resulted in a significant decrease in [(125)I]Ang II binding; however, reduced Ang II binding was observed only at micromolar concentrations of Ang-(1-7). Scatchard analysis of vascular smooth muscle cells pretreated with 1 micromol/L Ang-(1-7) showed that the reduction in Ang II binding resulted from a loss of the total number of binding sites [B(max) 437.7+/-261.5 fmol/mg protein in Ang-(1-7)-pretreated cells compared with 607.5+/-301.2 fmol/mg protein in untreated cells, n=5, P<0.05] with no significant effect on the affinity of Ang II for the AT(1) receptor. Pretreatment with the AT(1) receptor antagonist L-158,809 blocked the reduction in [(125)I]Ang II binding by Ang-(1-7) or Ang II. Pretreatment of vascular smooth muscle cells with increasing concentrations of Ang-(1-7) reduced Ang II-stimulated
phospholipase C
activity; however, the decrease was significant (81.2+/-6.4%, P<0.01, n=5) only at 1 micromol/L Ang-(1-7). These results demonstrate that pharmacological concentrations of Ang-(1-7) in the micromolar range cause a modest downregulation of the AT(1) receptor on vascular cells and a reduction in Ang II-stimulated
phospholipase C
activity. Because the antiproliferative and vasodilatory effects of Ang-(1-7) are observed at nanomolar concentrations of the heptapeptide, these responses to Ang-(1-7) cannot be explained by competition of Ang-(1-7) at the AT(1) receptor or Ang-(1-7)-mediated downregulation of the vascular AT(1) receptor.
...
PMID:Angiotensin-(1-7) downregulates the angiotensin II type 1 receptor in vascular smooth muscle cells. 1130 16
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