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)

Both phosphatidylethanolamine(PE)-N-methylation and phosphatidyl-inositol bisphosphate (PI-bisphosphate) breakdown potentially modify the microdomains in the sarcolemmal lipid bilayer. In this study the possibility of a mutual interaction between the enzymes responsible for these phospholipid reactions is examined. In sarcolemma purified from rat heart, prior hydrolysis of PI lipids by exogenous specific phospholipase C inhibited (to 75, 59 and 78% of control for sites I, II and II, respectively) the PE-N-methyltransferase system. In cultured rat cardiomyocytes the addition of L-methionine, a precursor for the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine, stimulated PE-N-methylation in a concentration (0.2-300 microM)-dependent manner. Methionine (50 microM) decreased the basal rate of PI-bisphosphate hydrolysis (to 72% of control), but had no effect on the phenylephrine-stimulated PI-bisphosphate hydrolysis. Maximal activation of the PI-bisphosphate breakdown by 30 microM phenylephrine did not affect the rate of PE-N-methylation in the presence of exogenous methionine (50 microM). These findings support the existence of interactions, although discrete, between the enzymes involved in the PE-N-methylation and PI turnover.
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PMID:Discrete interactions between phosphatidylethanolamine-N-methylation and phosphatidylinositolbisphosphate hydrolysis in rat myocardium. 257 24

Resting human T lymphocytes do not express receptors for interleukin-2, but expression is rapidly induced by exposure to PHA. After maximal expression 2-3 days after stimulation, a progressive decline in receptor number is observed. Receptor expression can be augmented by reexposure to PHA. In this study we show that activators of protein kinase C including phorbol diester, phospholipase C, and the diacylglycerol congener diC8 also increase IL-2 receptor expression. Moreover, 5-azacytidine, which inhibits cytosine methyltransferase, and hydroxyurea, which inhibits ribonucleotide reductase, also increased receptor number. These studies demonstrate that IL-2 receptor expression can be altered in vitro, and that IL-2 receptor number, in combination with IL-2 secretion, may contribute to the regulation of IL-2-dependent immune responses.
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PMID:Activators of protein kinase C and 5-azacytidine induce IL-2 receptor expression on human T lymphocytes. 258 Aug 52

Carboxylmethylation of ras-related proteins is stimulated immediately on exposure of myeloid cells to inflammatory agonists. When the methylation reaction is inhibited with prenylcysteine analogs, G-protein-mediated signal transduction responses are disrupted, but responses to phorbol ester, calcium ionophore, and phospholipase C (PLC) remain intact. Furthermore, prenylcysteine analogs block GTP gamma S-induced aggregation of permeabilized platelets. Together, these results suggest that protein prenylcysteine methylation can play a role in signal transduction. A number of studies with AdoMet antagonists have suggested a role for methylation in cell-cycle regulation and stimulus-response coupling. Because the compounds generally inhibit all cellular methylation events, however, their effects have been difficult to interpret. On the other hand, prenylcysteine analogs have proved to be specific inhibitors of protein prenylcysteine methylation, as opposed to other types of methylation reactions. This enables the segregation of the role of methylation at C-terminal prenylcysteine residues from methylation at other sites, such as the carboxyl terminus of the catalytic subunit of PP2A. It should be emphasized, however, that prenylcysteine tails of proteins may interact with other target sites in addition to the methyltransferase enzyme(s), and prenylcysteine analogs may compete for these sites as well. One cannot assume that the inhibition of a response by the drugs necessarily implicates the involvement of a prenylcysteine methylation reaction. Studies with the analogs must be interpreted in conjunction with other results to ascertain the locus of their effects.
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PMID:Prenylcysteine analogs to study function of carboxylmethylation in signal transduction. 765 Nov 53

An approach was developed for the isolation and characterization of soybean plasma membrane-associated proteins by immunoscreening of a cDNA expression library. An antiserum was raised against purified plasma membrane vesicles. In a differential screening of approximately 500,000 plaque-forming units with the anti-(plasma membrane) serum and DNA probes derived from highly abundant clones isolated in a preliminary screening, 261 clones were selected from approximately 1,200 antiserum-positive plaques. These clones were classified into 40 groups by hybridization analysis and 5'- and 3'-terminal sequencing. By searching nucleic acid and protein sequence data bases, 11 groups of cDNAs were identified, among which valosin-containing protein (VCP), clathrin heavy chain, phospholipase C, and S-adenosylmethionine:delta 24-sterol-C-methyltransferase have not to date been cloned from plants. The remaining 29 groups did not match any current data base entries and may, therefore, represent additional or yet uncharacterized genes. A full-length cDNA encoding the soybean VCP was sequenced. The high level of amino acid identity with vertebrate VCP and yeast CDC48 protein indicates that the soybean protein is a plant homolog of vertebrate VCP and yeast CDC48 protein.
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PMID:Identification of cDNA clones encoding valosin-containing protein and other plant plasma membrane-associated proteins by a general immunoscreening strategy. 775 26

The effects of progesterone and GTP gamma S on phospholipid N-methylation and sphingomyelin synthesis were studied in plasma-vitelline membranes isolated from amphibian (Rana pipiens) oocytes. Plasma-vitelline membranes were preincubated with S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine for 2 min at 20 degrees C and total phospholipids extracted at 0, 15, 30 and 60 s after addition of progesterone and/or GTP gamma S. Progesterone levels (3 microM) that induce meiosis in the intact oocyte stimulated [3H-methyl]incorporation into phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine (PME) 9-10-fold over the first 60 s, with smaller increases in phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine (PDE) and phosphatidylcholine (PC). [methyl-3H] labeling of sphingomyelin (SM) rises after 30 s, approaching that of [methyl-3H]PME by 60 s. 17 beta-Estradiol, a noninducer of meiosis, was inactive. When oocytes were prelabeled with [3H]palmitic acid, it was found that a fall in [3H]ceramide coincides with the transient increase in [3H]SM, indicating that the end product of N-methylation (PC) undergoes a transfer reaction with ceramide to form SM and 1,2-DG. GTP gamma S levels previously reported to stimulate PC-specific phospholipase C activity in oocyte plasma membranes (5 microM) also stimulated both [methyl-3H]PME and [methyl-3H]SM formation. An inhibitor of phospholipid N-methylation, 2-(methyl-amino)ethanol, blocked stimulation of [methyl-3H]SM synthesis by both progesterone and GTP gamma S as well as induction of meiosis by progesterone. Progesterone thus acts at the oocyte plasma membrane to stimulate PE N-methyltransferase and SM synthase. The finding that GTP gamma S mimics progesterone suggests that N-methyltransferase is mediated by G-protein(s). The transient increase in 1,2-DG which we had previously reported to occur within 1-2 min following progesterone stimulation of the Rana oocyte appears to arise from PC by two different pathways: SM synthesis and hydrolysis of PC by phospholipase C.
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PMID:Progesterone-induced phospholipid N-methylation and sphingomyelin synthesis in the amphibian oocyte plasma membrane: a second source of the 1,2-diacylglycerol second messenger associated with the G2/M transition. 780 20

Localized juvenile periodontitis (ljp) is an early onset form of periodontal disease characterized by unique localization to first molars and incisors and a high prevalence of neutrophil abnormalities, particularly chemotaxis. The intracellular transduction mechanisms that follow receptor-ligand coupling on the neutrophil surface and lead to chemotaxis are not clearly established. Chemotaxis and phagocytosis are modulated by a variety of receptors and involve several activation pathways; the role of intracellular calcium as a presumptive second messenger and mediator of these events is well established. The putative effector mechanisms for the chemotactic receptor of neutrophils also include the possible activation of a phospholipase, protein kinase C, methyltransferase, or adenylate cyclase. In normal neutrophils, a phosphoinositide pathway initiated by phospholipase C, which results in the activation of protein kinase C via diacylglycerol and the generation of IP3, has been implicated. In order to better understand the stages of neutrophil transduction, fluorescent probes were used to monitor neutrophil calcium changes. Chlorotetracycline (CTC) was used as an indirect probe of intracellular membrane-bound pool of calcium stores, and Quin-2 was used to monitor cytosolic free calcium levels of FMLP stimulated normal and LJP neutrophils. The results indicate that the early phase of the calcium response affiliated with the release of intracellularly sequestered calcium appears intact in LJP neutrophils, as the CTC fluorescence changes were similar to control values. The second phase of the calcium response, associated with membrane channel activation and an influx of extracellular calcium, appeared compromised in the neutrophils of the LJP population.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Defective chemotaxis and calcium response in localized juvenile periodontitis neutrophils. 839 75

The inhibitory effect of cromakalim on the mediator release from mast cells caused by antigenantibody reactions was in controversy with the specific antigen used. However, it has recently been observed that cromakalim inhibits the release of mediators from superfused tracheal and parenchymal strips or lung mast cells after passive sensitization with the IgG1 antibody. An attempt, therefore, was made to determine the inhibitory mechanisms of cromakalim on the release of mediators such as histamine and leukotriene released by the activation of enzymes during mast cell activation. Guinea pig lung mast cells were purified through enzyme digestion, rough percoll and continuous percoll density gradients. The purified mast cells were prelabeled with [3H]palmitic acid. PLD activity was assessed more directly by the production of labeled phosphatidylethanol by PLD-mediated transphosphatidylation in the presence of ethanol. In the cells labelled with [3H]myristic acid, [3H] DAG production was measured. The methyltransferase activity was assessed by measuring the incorporation of [3H]methyl moiety into phospholipids in sensitized mast cells labelled with L-[3H] methylmethionine. cAMP level was measured by radioimmunoassay. Cromakalim resulted in a decrease in the amount of histamine and leukotrienes releases by 30% in the ovalumin-induced mast cell. Cromakalim had little effect on phospholipase D activity enhanced by the activated mast cell. Cromakalim inhibited the initial increase of diacylglycerol production during mast cell activations. Cromakalim inhibited the phospholipid methylation increased in the activated mast cell. These results show that cromakalim decreases histamine release by inhibiting the initial increase of 1,2-diacylglycerol during the mast cell activation, which is mediated via the phosphatidylinositide-phospholipase C system rather than the phosphatidylcholine-phospholipase D system. Furthermore, cromakalim reduces phosphatidylcholine production by inhibiting the methyltransferase, which decreases the conversion of phosphatidylcholine into arachidonic acid and inhibits the production of leukotrienes.
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PMID:The effects of cromakalim on the mediator releases from guinea pig lung mast cell activated by specific antigen-antibody reactions. 899 65