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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)
Mechanical loading alters the metabolism of articular cartilage, possibly due to effects of shear stress on chondrocytes. In cultured chondrocytes, glycosaminoglycan synthesis increases in response to fluid-induced shear. This study tested the hypothesis that shear stress increases nitric oxide production in chondrocytes, and nitric oxide then influences glycosaminoglycan metabolism. Inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase, G proteins,
phospholipase C
,
potassium
channels, and calcium channels were also analyzed for effects on nitric oxide release and glycosaminoglycan synthesis. Fluid-induced shear was applied to primary high-density monolayer cultures of adult bovine articular chondrocytes using a cone viscometer. Nitric oxide release in chondrocytes increased in response to the duration and the magnitude of the fluid-induced shear. Shear-induced nitric oxide production was reduced in the presence of nitric oxide synthase inhibitors-but was unaffected by pertussis toxin, neomycin, tetraethyl ammonium chloride, or verapamil. The increase in glycosaminoglycan synthesis in response to shear stress was blocked by nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, pertussis toxin, and neomycin but not by tetraethyl ammonium chloride or verapamil. The
phospholipase C
inhibitor, neomycin, also decreased glycosaminoglycan synthesis in the absence of flow-induced shear. As studied here, shear stress increased nitric oxide production by chondrocytes, and the shear-induced change in matrix macromolecule metabolism was influenced by nitric oxide synthesis, G protein activation, and
phospholipase C
activation.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and G proteins mediate the response of bovine articular chondrocytes to fluid-induced shear. 906 31
Many ion transporters and channels appear to be regulated by ATP-dependent mechanisms when studied in planar bilayers, excised membrane patches, or with whole-cell patch clamp. Protein kinases are obvious candidates to mediate ATP effects, but other mechanisms are also implicated. They include lipid kinases with the generation of phosphatidylinositol phosphates as second messengers, allosteric effects of ATP binding, changes of actin cytoskeleton, and ATP-dependent phospholipases. Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) is a possible membrane-delimited messenger that activates cardiac sodium-calcium exchange, KATP
potassium
channels, and other inward rectifier
potassium
channels. Regulation of PIP2 by
phospholipase C
, lipid phosphatases, and lipid kinases would thus tie surface membrane transport to phosphatidylinositol signaling. Sodium-hydrogen exchange is activated by ATP through a phosphorylation-independent mechanism, whereas ion cotransporters are activated by several protein kinase mechanisms. Ion transport in epithelium may be particularly sensitive to changes of cytoskeleton that are regulated by ATP-dependent cell signaling mechanisms.
...
PMID:Cytoplasmic ATP-dependent regulation of ion transporters and channels: mechanisms and messengers. 907 61
1. The transient outward
potassium
current (Ito) is reduced in canine epicardial myocytes during the acute stage of infection with Trypanosoma cruzi (Chagas' disease). Sympathetic nerve terminals are also destroyed during the acute stage of this disease. To test whether the reduction of Ito is related to the absence of sympathetic innervation, acutely infected isolated epicardial myocytes were exposed in vitro to the sympathetic neurotransmitter noradrenaline (NA) and the effects of NA exposure on Ito were determined. 2. Continuous exposure to NA (1.0 microM) for 0-6 h had no effect on Ito density, whereas exposure to NA for 24 h significantly increased Ito density. Ito was also restored 24 h after a 1 h exposure to NA. Cell capacitance was not significantly affected by NA. 3. The alpha1-adrenergic receptor antagonist prazosin (0.1 microM) blocked the effects of NA on Ito, but the beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol (20 microM) did not. The beta-adrenergic receptor agonist isoprenaline (1 microM) had no effect on Ito. 4. Restoration of Ito by NA was prevented by pretreatment with neomycin (100 microM), a
phospholipase C
inhibitor, but not by pretreatment with 100-400 ng ml(-1) pertussis toxin (PTX). 5. The protein kinase C (PKC) activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (0.1 microM) mimicked the effect of NA on Ito, whereas the inactive analogue 4alpha-phorbol (20 microM) had no effect on Ito. Pretreatment with bisindolylmaleimide (0.1 microM), a specific PKC inhibitor, completely blocked the effect of NA on Ito. 6. Thus, NA restores Ito in chagasic canine epicardial myocytes. The induction of Ito by NA appears to result from alpha1-adrenergic stimulation of PKC via a PTX-insensitive signalling cascade. These results suggest that the reduction of Ito in chagasic myocytes during the acute stage of Chagas' disease may reflect the lack of the trophic effects of sympathetic innervation.
...
PMID:Restoration of the transient outward potassium current by noradrenaline in chagasic canine epicardium. 909 34
1. The electrophysiological effects of ATP on brain neurones are either due to the direct activation of P2 purinoceptors by the unmetabolized nucleotide or to the indirect activation of P1. purinoceptors by the degradation product adenosine. 2. Two subtypes of P2 purinoceptors are involved, a ligand-activated ion channel (P2X) and a G protein-coupled receptor (P2Y). Hence, the stimulation of P2X purinoceptors leads to a cationic conductance increase, while the stimulation of P2Y purinoceptors leads to a G protein-mediated opening or closure of
potassium
channels. 3. ATP may induce a calcium-dependent
potassium
current by increasing the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. This is due either to the entry of Ca2+ via P2X purinoceptors or to the activation of metabotropic P2Y purinoceptors followed by signaling via the G protein/
phospholipase C
/inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) cascade. Eventually, IP3 releases Ca2+ from its intracellular pools. 4. There is no convincing evidence for the presence of P2U purinoceptors sensitive to both ATP and UTP, or pyrimidinoceptors sensitive to UTP only, in the central nervous system (CNS). 5. ATP-sensitive P2X and P2Y purinoceptors show a wide distribution in the CNS and appear to regulate important neuronal functions.
...
PMID:Electrophysiological effects of ATP on brain neurones. 913 27
We investigated the action of histamine on C6-astroglioma cells using patch clamp recording and intracellular calcium measurement. Application of 100 microM histamine hyperpolarized the resting membrane potential and increased free intracellular calcium. Membrane hyperpolarization was accompanied by a decrease in input resistance. The effect of histamine was reversible and responses persisted following repeated applications. In voltage clamp experiments histamine elicited an outward current associated with a conductance increase and a reversal potential near the Nernst potential for
potassium
. The action of histamine was blocked by mepyramine but not by cimetidine or thioperamide suggesting that a H1 receptor mediated the response. Quinidine and charybdotoxin, but not apamin, blocked the hyperpolarization. Buffering internal calcium with BAPTA diminished the activation of the
potassium
channel, suggesting a calcium-dependent K(+)-channel, which was also found to be regulated by protein kinase C and phosphatases. The increase in intracellular calcium was not dependent on external calcium or sensitive to pertussis toxin, cholera toxin, forskolin or 8-bromo-cAMP. Both the hyperpolarization and the increase in intracellular calcium were blocked by thapsigargin or the
phospholipase C
inhibitor U73122. These results indicate that histamine liberates calcium from internal stores by activation of
phospholipase C
which in turn leads to an increase of intracellular Ca2+ and thereby to the activation of a calcium-dependent
potassium
channel in C6 glial cells.
...
PMID:Histamine H1 receptors in C6 glial cells are coupled to calcium-dependent potassium channels via release of calcium from internal stores. 915 Dec 92
Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus hemagglutinin (HAin) was readily adsorbed on mouse erythrocytes at 4, 22, or 37 degrees C, but not on goose erythrocytes. The adsorbed HAin could not be eluted from the cells by resuspending in phosphate buffered saline, by incubating at 37 or 50 degrees C, or by incubating in the presence of neuraminidase. The hemagglutinating activity was not dependent on the pH and NaCl molarity tested. The receptor of mouse erythrocytes for the HAin was relatively stable to trypsin, neuraminidase, sodium deoxycholate (DOC),
potassium
periodate (KIO4), dithiothreitol (DTT), 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) and formalin treatments. The HAin was inactivated by 2-ME and was gradually inactivated by pepsin, formalin and DTT, but not by beta-glucosidase, trypsin, alpha-amylase, papain,
phospholipase C
, neuraminidase, KIO4, and ethylendiamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) treatments. The HAin was stable at 37 degrees C or lower temperatures, but not at 56 degrees C or higher. The HAin was relatively resistant to ultraviolet irradiation and sonication. In the equilibrium centrifugation of the HAin preparation on a CsCl density gradient, the HAin activity showed a sharp peak at 1.17 g/cm2. In the SDS-PAGE analysis, the structural polypeptide of HAin in the peak fraction seems to be the nucleocapsid (N) polypeptide with molecular weight of 15 kDa.
...
PMID:Characterization of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus hemagglutinin. 915 37
Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) couple to heterotrimeric G-proteins and regulate cell excitability and synaptic transmission in the CNS. Considerable effort has been focused on understanding the cellular and biochemical mechanisms that underlie regulation of signaling by G-proteins and their linked receptors, including the mGluRs. Recent findings demonstrate that regulators of G-protein signaling (RGS) proteins act as effector antagonists and GTPase-activating proteins for Galpha subunits to inhibit cellular responses by G-protein-coupled receptors. RGS4 blocks Gq activation of phospholipase Cbeta and is expressed broadly in rat brain. The group I mGluRs (mGluRs 1 and 5) couple to Gq pathways to regulate several effectors in the CNS. We examined the capacity of RGS4 to regulate group I mGluR responses. In Xenopus oocytes, purified RGS4 virtually abolishes the mGluR1a- and mGluR5a-mediated but not the inositol trisphospate-mediated activation of a calcium-dependent chloride current. Additionally, RGS4 markedly attenuates the mGluR5-mediated inhibition of
potassium
currents in hippocampal CA1 neurons. This inhibition is dose-dependent and occurs at concentrations that are virtually identical to those required for inhibition of
phospholipase C
activity in NG108-15 membranes and reconstituted systems using purified proteins. These findings demonstrate that RGS4 can modulate mGluR responses in neurons, and they highlight a previously unknown mechanism for regulation of G-protein-coupled receptor signaling in the CNS.
...
PMID:RGS4 inhibits signaling by group I metabotropic glutamate receptors. 943 12
The effect of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) on voltage-gated membrane currents of cultured neurons derived from embryonic rat cerebral cortex was studied using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Treatment of neurons with TNF resulted in an increase in outward
potassium
current density, dependent upon the concentration of TNF and the incubation time, without affecting other membrane currents such as barium and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA). Long exposures (12-48 hr) to TNF (10-100 ng/ml) increased transient outward
potassium
current (A-current) density without affecting the parameters of activation and inactivation of the current. Prolonged exposures to TNF diminished its increasing effect on the A-current. Since the increase of A-current density induced by TNF is inhibited by both the anti-TNF receptor antibody and cycloheximide treatment, the effect of TNF might be mediated through receptors and by de novo synthesis of the channel protein itself and/or modulating proteins associated with the channel activities. Results indicate that phosphatidylcholine-specific
phospholipase C
and protein kinase C, but not ceramide, are involved in the signal transduction. In toxicological experiments, TNF had no neurotoxicity. Moreover, a 12 hr pretreatment of TNF protected neurons against NMDA-induced neurotoxicity. This protective effect of TNF was cancelled by 4-aminopyridine, an A-current blocker, suggesting that the increase of A-current densities induced by TNF contributes to the neuroprotection.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor enhancement of transient outward potassium currents in cultured rat cortical neurons. 945 13
A protective surface antigen (200 kDa) on C. salmositica was detected using a monoclonal antibody (mAb-001). Enzymatic studies on the epitope indicated that it was sensitive to nonspecific protease K and to site-specific trypsin and protease V8 but not to alpha-chymotrypsin. The reactivity of the epitope with mAb-001 was not affected when the antigen was denatured with 8 M urea; however, reduction of the antigen with dithiothreitol destroyed the epitope. The epitope was susceptible to sodium m-periodate oxidation and N-glycosidase F, but not to O-glycosidase or neuraminidase. It was also sensitive to mild
potassium
hydrochloride hydrolysis and to
phospholipase C
, which is specific for phosphatidylinositol. These results suggest that the epitope consists of a polypeptide, a carbohydrate, and probably a phospholipid. The asparagine-bound N-glycosidically linked hybrid-type carbohydrate chain has the minimum length of a chitobiose core unit. There is probably a phosphatidylinositol residue which anchors the polypeptide to the surface membrane. The antigen is extensively posttranslationally modified.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterisation of an epitope on the surface membrane antigen (Cs-gp200) of the pathogenic piscine haemoflagellate Cryptobia salmositica Katz 1951. 950 43
The neuropeptide oxytocin can depolarize parasympathetic preganglionic neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve of the rat by generating a sustained inward current, which is sodium-dependent and tetrodotoxin-insensitive. The second messenger activated by oxytocin receptor binding is, however, not yet known. In the present study, we attempted to characterize it by using the whole-cell recording technique and brainstem slices. When loaded with GTP-gamma-S, a non-hydrolysable analogue of GTP, vagal neurons generated a persistent inward current in the absence of agonist and the oxytocin effect was suppressed, suggesting that the peptide-evoked current was mediated by G-protein activation. Loading vagal neurons with the calcium chelator 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N',-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA) suppressed a calcium-dependent, slowly decaying
potassium
aftercurrent but did not affect the oxytocin response, suggesting that the latter was not mediated by an agonist-induced increase in the intracellular calcium concentration. Protein kinase C (PKC) activation was probably not involved, since the peptide-evoked current was not modified by loading neurons with the PKC inhibitor H7. Thus, the oxytocin-evoked current in vagal neurons was probably not mediated by
phospholipase C
-beta (PLC-beta) activation. Loading neurons with 8-Br-cAMP or with an adenylyl cyclase activator (forskolin) reduced the oxytocin-evoked current by about half. SQ 22536, an adenylyl cyclase inhibitor, reduced this current by a similar amount. However, the peptide-evoked current was unaffected by Rp-cAMPS and Sp-cAMPS, an inhibitor and an activator, respectively, of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). We suggest that oxytocin activates two distinct signalling pathways in vagal neurons: one which is cAMP-dependent, but PKA-independent, and one, unidentified, which is PLC-beta-and cAMP-independent. Each pathway accounts for about half of the peptide effect and both appear to involve G-protein activation.
...
PMID:The oxytocin-induced inward current in vagal neurons of the rat is mediated by G protein activation but not by an increase in the intracellular calcium concentration. 951 66
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