Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The modulatory effect of bradykinin on electrically-induced noradrenaline release was assessed in isolated atria from normal and B2 knockout transgenic mice preincubated with [3H]noradrenaline. Concentrations of 1, 3 and 10 nM of bradykinin did not significantly alter the outflow of radioactivity whereas higher concentrations of bradykinin (30 and 100 nM) enhanced it. The facilitatory effect of 30 nM bradykinin was inhibited by a selective bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist. Hoe 140 (D-Arg-[Hyp3,Thi5,D-Tic7,Oic8]bradykinin, 30 nM), and by a protein kinase C inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide (1 microM). The co-administration of bradykinin (1 to 100 nM) with either [Leu8]des-Arg9-bradykinin (100 nM), AcLys[DbetaNal7,Ile8]des-Arg9-bradykinin (30 nM) (bradykinin B1 receptor antagonists) or diclofenac (1 microM) (a cyclooxygenase inhibitor), shifted the facilitatory effect of bradykinin to lower concentrations. The facilitatory effect of bradykinin also was enhanced by enalaprilat (1 microM) and mergetpa (1 microM), inhibitors of angiotensin-converting enzyme (kininase II) and kininase I, respectively. In contrast, selective bradykinin B1 receptor agonists, des-Arg9-bradykinin (1 to 100 nM) and Sar[D-Phe8]des-Arg7-bradykinin (1 to 100 nM), did not significantly affect the stimulation-induced outflow of radioactivity. Neither bradykinin (100 nM) nor des-Arg9-bradykinin (100 nM) had any modulatory effect in B2 knockout transgenic mice. These findings suggest that the facilitatory effect of bradykinin on noradrenaline release in the mouse atria is mediated exclusively by presynaptic bradykinin B2 receptors which are linked to protein kinase C. The greater release of noradrenaline with bradykinin under inhibition of prostaglandins production and kininases I and II activity might be of importance in pharmacotherapies.
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PMID:Modulatory effect of bradykinin on noradrenaline release in isolated atria from normal and B2 knockout transgenic mice. 965 56

Impaired microcirculatory perfusion appears to be crucial to the pathogenesis of both neuropathy and retinopathy in diabetics. This in turn reflects a hyperglycemically mediated perturbation of vascular endothelial function that entails overactivation of protein kinase C, reduced availability of nitric oxide, increased production of superoxide and endothelin, impaired insulin function, diminished synthesis of prostacyclin/PGE1, and increased activation and endothelial adherence of leukocytes. These dysfunctions may be addressed with a supplementation program that includes high-dose antioxidants, fish oil, gamma-linolenic acid, chromium, arginine, carnitine, and ginkgolides. Pharmaceuticals likely to be of benefit in this regard include pentoxifylline, probucol, replacement estrogens, and inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme and aldose reductase.
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PMID:Nitric oxide deficiency, leukocyte activation, and resultant ischemia are crucial to the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy/neuropathy--preventive potential of antioxidants, essential fatty acids, chromium, ginkgolides, and pentoxifylline. 968 24

Diabetic retinopathy is the most common systemic disease capable of leading to blindness. Laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy is standardized; in most cases it can prevent blindness, provided the diagnosis is made in good time. Since impairment of vision is a late complication, systemic screening examinations are of particular importance if we are to reliably determine the optimal time for treatment. Advances in vitreoretinal surgery make possible the treatment of such late manifestations as vitreous hemorrhage and tractive retinal detachment. Provided that stage-oriented and timely treatment is forthcoming, these formerly hopeless cases should become a rare exception. The currently sole confirmed medical treatment is optimal control of blood sugar--based on the HBA1c value--and of blood pressure. The clinical efficacy of inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme or protein kinase C is presently undergoing investigation.
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PMID:[Diabetic retinopathy--screening is a requirement. Don't wait until vision becomes impaired]. 1078 19

Endothelial dysfunction plays a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetic vascular disease. The endothelium controls the tone of the underlying vascular smooth muscle through the production of vasodilator mediators. The endothelium-derived relaxing factors (EDRF) comprise nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin, and a still elusive endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF). Impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation has been demonstrated in various vascular beds of different animal models of diabetes and in humans with type 1 and 2 diabetes. Several mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction have been reported, including impaired signal transduction or substrate availibility, impaired release of EDRF, increased destruction of EDRF, enhanced release of endothelium-derived constricting factors and decreased sensitivity of the vascular smooth muscle to EDRF. The principal mediators of hyperglycaemia-induced endothelial dysfunction may be activation of protein kinase C, increased activity of the polyol pathway, non-enzymatic glycation and oxidative stress. Correction of these pathways, as well as administration of ACE inhibitors and folate, has been shown to improve endothelium-dependent vasodilation in diabetes. Since the mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction appear to differ according to the diabetic model and the vascular bed under study, it is important to select clinically relevant models for future research of endothelial dysfunction.
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PMID:Endothelial dysfunction in diabetes. 1088 79

The main etiology for mortality and a great percent of morbidity in patients with diabetes mellitus is atherosclerosis. A hypothesis for the initial lesion of atherosclerosis is endothelial dysfunction, defined pragmatically as changes in the concentration of the chemical messengers produced by the endothelial cell and/or by blunting of the nitric oxide-dependent vasodilatory response to acetylcholine or hyperemia. Endothelial dysfunction has been documented in patients with diabetes and in individuals with insulin resistance or at high risk for developing type 2 diabetes. Factors associated with endothelial dysfunction in diabetes include activation of protein kinase C, overexpression of growth factors and/or cytokines, and oxidative stress. Several therapeutic interventions have been tested in clinical trials aimed at improving endothelial function in patients with diabetes. Insulin sensitizers may have a beneficial effect in the short term, but the virtual absence of trials with cardiovascular end-points preclude any definitive conclusion. Two trials offer optimism that treatment with ACE inhibitors may have a positive impact on the progression of atherosclerosis. Although widely used, the effect of hypolipidemic agents on endothelial function in diabetes is not clear. The role of antioxidant therapy is controversial. No data have been published regarding the effects of hormonal replacement therapy on endothelial dysfunction in postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:Diabetes and endothelial dysfunction: a clinical perspective. 1115 15

Based on studies presented here and other published experiments performed with surviving tissue preparations, with transfected cells and with cells that constitutively express the human angiotensin I converting enzyme ACE and B2 receptors, we concluded the following: ACE inhibitors and other endogenous peptides that react with the active site of ACE potentiate the effect of bradykinin and its ACE resistant peptide congeners on the B2 receptor. They also resensitize receptors which had been desensitized by the agonist. ACE and bradykinin receptors have to be sterically close, possibly forming a heterodimer, for the ACE inhibitors to induce an allosteric modification on the receptor. When ACE inhibitors augment bradykinin effects, they reduce the phosphorylation of the B2 receptor. The primary actions of bradykinin on the receptor are not affected by protein kinase C or phosphatase inhibitors, but the potentiation of bradykinin or the resensitization of the receptor by ACE inhibitors are abolished by the same inhibitors. The results with protein kinase C and phosphatase inhibitors indicate that another intermediate protein may be involved in the processes of signaling induced by ACE inhibitors, and that ACE inhibitors affect the signal transduction pathway triggered by bradykinin on the B2 receptor.
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PMID:Kinins, receptors, kininases and inhibitors--where did they lead us? 1125 70

1. Studies in isolated cells overexpressing ACE and bradykinin type 2 (B(2)) receptors suggest that ACE inhibitors potentiate bradykinin by inhibiting B(2) receptor desensitization, via a mechanism involving protein kinase C (PKC) and phosphatases. Here we investigated, in intact porcine coronary arteries, endothelial ACE/B(2) receptor 'crosstalk' as well as bradykinin potentiation through neutral endopeptidase (NEP) inhibition. 2. NEP inhibition with phosphoramidon did not affect the bradykinin concentration-response curve (CRC), nor did combined NEP/ACE inhibition with omapatrilat exert a further leftward shift on top of the approximately 10 fold leftward shift of the bradykinin CRC observed with ACE inhibition alone. 3. In arteries that, following repeated exposure to 0.1 microM bradykinin, no longer responded to bradykinin ('desensitized' arteries), the ACE inhibitors quinaprilat and angiotensin-(1-7) both induced complete relaxation, without affecting the organ bath fluid levels of bradykinin. This phenomenon was unaffected by inhibition of PKC or phosphatases (with calphostin C and okadaic acid, respectively). 4. When using bradykinin analogues that were either completely or largely ACE-resistant ([Phe(8)psi(CH(2)-NH)Arg(9)]-bradykinin and [deltaPhe(5)]-bradykinin, respectively), the ACE inhibitor-induced shift of the bradykinin CRC was absent, and its ability to reverse desensitization was absent or significantly reduced, respectively. Caveolar disruption with filipin did not affect the quinaprilat-induced effects. Filipin did however reduce the bradykinin-induced relaxation by approximately 25-30%, thereby confirming that B(2) receptor-endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) interaction occurs in caveolae. 5. In conclusion, in porcine arteries, in contrast to transfected cells, bradykinin potentiation by ACE inhibitors is a metabolic process, that can only be explained on the basis of ACE-B(2) receptor co-localization on the endothelial cell membrane. NEP does not appear to affect the bradykinin levels in close proximity to B(2) receptors, and the ACE inhibitor-induced bradykinin potentiation precedes B(2) receptor coupling to eNOS in caveolae.
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PMID:Bradykinin potentiation by ACE inhibitors: a matter of metabolism. 1220 85

The hemodynamic and anti-ischemic effects of nitroglycerin (NTG) are rapidly blunted due to the development of nitrate tolerance. With initiation of nitroglycerin therapy one can detect neurohormonal activation and signs for intravascular volume expansion. These so called pseudotolerance mechanisms may compromise nitroglycerin's vasodilatory effects. Long-term treatment with nitroglycerin is also associated with a decreased responsiveness of the vasculature to nitroglycerin's vasorelaxant potency suggesting changes in intrinsic mechanisms of the tolerant vasculature itself may also contribute to tolerance. More recent experimental work defined new mechanisms of tolerance such as increased vascular superoxide production and increased sensitivity to vasoconstrictors secondary to an activation of the intracellular second messenger protein kinase C. As potential superoxide producing enzymes, the NADPH oxidase and the nitric oxide synthase have been identified. Nitroglycerin-induced stimulation of oxygen-derived free radicals together with NO derived from nitroglycerin may lead to the formation of peroxynitrite, which may be responsible for the development of tolerance as well as for the development of cross tolerance to endothelium-dependent vasodilators. The oxidative stress concept of tolerance and cross tolerance may explain why radical scavengers such as vitamin C or substances which reduce oxidative stress, such as ACE-inhibitors, AT1 receptor blockers or folic acid, are able to beneficially influence both tolerance and nitroglycerin-induced endothelial dysfunction. New aspects concerning the role of oxidative stress in nitrate tolerance and nitrate induced endothelial dysfunction and the consequences for the NO/cyclicGMP downstream target, the cGMP-dependent protein kinase will be discussed.
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PMID:Mechanisms underlying nitrate-induced endothelial dysfunction: insight from experimental and clinical studies. 1237 19

Evidence implicates hyperglycemia-derived oxygen free radicals as mediators of diabetic complications. However, intervention studies with classic antioxidants, such as vitamin E, failed to demonstrate any beneficial effect. Recent studies demonstrate that a single hyperglycemia-induced process of overproduction of superoxide by the mitochondrial electron-transport chain seems to be the first and key event in the activation of all other pathways involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. These include increased polyol pathway flux, increased advanced glycosylation end product formation, activation of protein kinase C, and increased hexosamine pathway flux. Superoxide overproduction is accompanied by increased nitric oxide generation, due to an endothelial NOS and inducible NOS uncoupled state, a phenomenon favoring the formation of the strong oxidant peroxynitrite, which in turn damages DNA. DNA damage is an obligatory stimulus for the activation of the nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activation in turn depletes the intracellular concentration of its substrate NAD(+), slowing the rate of glycolysis, electron transport, and ATP formation, and produces an ADP-ribosylation of the GAPDH. These processes result in acute endothelial dysfunction in diabetic blood vessels that, convincingly, also contributes to the development of diabetic complications. These new findings may explain why classic antioxidants, such as vitamin E, which work by scavenging already-formed toxic oxidation products, have failed to show beneficial effects on diabetic complications and may suggest new and attractive "causal" antioxidant therapy. New low-molecular mass compounds that act as SOD or catalase mimetics or L-propionyl-carnitine and lipoic acid, which work as intracellular superoxide scavengers, improving mitochondrial function and reducing DNA damage, may be good candidates for such a strategy, and preliminary studies support this hypothesis. This "causal" therapy would also be associated with other promising tools such as LY 333531, PJ34, and FP15, which block the protein kinase beta isoform, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and peroxynitrite, respectively. While waiting for these focused tools, we may have other options: thiazolinediones, statins, ACE inhibitors, and angiotensin 1 inhibitors can reduce intracellular oxidative stress generation, and it has been suggested that many of their beneficial effects, even in diabetic patients, are due to this property.
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PMID:New insights on oxidative stress and diabetic complications may lead to a "causal" antioxidant therapy. 1271 23

Advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) have been postulated to play a role in the development of both nephropathy and large vessel disease in diabetes. However, it is still not clear which AGE subtypes play a pathogenetic role and which of several AGE receptors mediate AGE effects on cells. This review summarises the renoprotective effect of inhibitors of AGE formation, including aminoguanidine, and of cross-link breakers, including ALT-711, on experimental diabetic nephropathy and on mesenteric vascular hypertrophy. It also demonstrates similar effects of aminoguanidine and ramipril (an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor) on fluorescent and immunoassayable AGE levels, renal protein kinase C activity, nitrotyrosine expression, lysosomal function, and protein handling in experimental diabetes. These findings indicate that inhibition of the renin angiotensin system blocks both upstream and downstream pathways leading to tissue injury. We postulate that the chemical pathways leading to advanced glycation endproduct formation and the renin angiotensin systems may interact through the generation of free radicals, induced both by glucose and angiotensin II. There is also evidence to suggest that AGE-dependent pathways may play a role in the development of tubulointerstitial fibrosis in the diabetic kidney. This effect is mediated through RAGE and is TGF-beta and CTGF-dependent.
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PMID:Evolving concepts in advanced glycation, diabetic nephropathy, and diabetic vascular disease. 1456 9


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