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)

We have examined pulmonary effects of bradykinin (Bk) in vivo and in vitro in guinea pigs and their potential inhibition by antagonists of Bk B1 and B2 receptors. Bk was a potent bronchoconstrictor in vivo and caused contractions of isolated, epithelium-denuded trachealis. D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7]-Bk (NPC567) and D-arg[Hyp3,Thi5,8,D-Phe7]-Bk (NPC349), B2 receptor antagonists, were weak inhibitors of Bk-induced bronchoconstriction in vivo and were virtually inactive as antagonists of Bk-induced airway smooth muscle contraction. Several other B2 antagonists as well as B1 antagonist, des-Arg9-[Leu8]-Bk, did not inhibit Bk-induced tracheal contraction. The B1 receptor agonist des-Arg9-Bk was without effect on tracheal tone. Tracheal responses to Bk were unaffected by antagonists of muscarinic, histamine, serotonin, and catecholamine receptors. The inability of the antagonists to inhibit Bk is unlikely to be due to their degradation, because NPC567 was only weakly active in the presence of inhibitors of kininase I (EC 3.4.11.2), kininase II (EC 3.4.15.1), and neutral endopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.11). These studies were corroborated by ligand binding experiments in guinea pig and ovine airways. In [3H]Bk binding, the Bk antagonists had no effect in guinea pig trachea, slightly displaced [3H]Bk in ovine trachea, and inhibited approximately 60% of total specific binding in lung. des-Arg9-[Leu8]-Bk and several other agents, including atropine, neurokinin A, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide, had no effect on lung Bk binding. Bk and its analogs were not degraded during the binding assay. These data suggest that pulmonary tissue, particularly in the large airways, contains a novel Bk binding site, a B3 receptor, which may be involved in Bk-induced bronchoconstriction.
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PMID:Evidence for a pulmonary B3 bradykinin receptor. 254 44

Among the metabolic functions of the lungs are the formation, release, activation and inactivation of biologically active peptides. The following peptides may be present or formed in normal lung: vasoactive intestinal peptide or a peptide closely related to it, a spasmogenic peptide not yet fully identified, bradykinin, substance P, a bombesin-like peptide (especially in fetal and neonatal lung), and eosinophil-chemotactic peptides. These peptides are found in special neuroendocrine cells, in neurons, or in mast cells. Normal lung also inactivates bradykinin and activates angiotensin; both processes are catalysed by the same enzyme (kininase II or angiotensin-converting enzyme), located in pulmonary vascular endothelium. Pulmonary tumours and certain non-tumorous lesions can produce and release a variety of peptide hormones that are not normally generated by the lung in substantial amounts. This 'ectopic' secretion of hormones may be detectable only by sensitive assays or may result in specific clinical syndromes.
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PMID:The lung in relation to vasoactive polypeptides. 616 26

The purpose of this study was to determine whether vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) dilates resistance arterioles in the in situ systemic circulation and whether inhibitors of neutral endopeptidase (NEP) and angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE), two membrane-bound metalloenzymes that are widely distributed in the microcirculation and cleave and inactive VIP, potentiate this response. Using intravital microscopy, we found that VIP (0.05 and 0.1 nmol) induced significant vasodilation in the hamster cheek pouch (13 +/- 1 and 20 +/- 2% increase from baseline, respectively; mean +/- SE; P < 0.05). These responses were significantly potentiated by topical application of phosphoramidon and thiorphan, two relatively selective NEP inhibitors, but not by captopril, a relatively selective ACE inhibitor. Furthermore, suffusion of a mixture of proteinase inhibitors consisting of leupeptin, Bestatin, and DL-2-mercaptomethyl-3-guanidinoethylthiopropanoic acid to inhibit serine proteinases, including mast cell tryptase, aminopeptidases, and carboxypeptidase N, respectively, had no significant effects on VIP-induced responses. These data indicate that VIP elicits vasodilation in the in situ systemic microcirculation and that NEP modulates this response.
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PMID:Neutral endopeptidase modulates VIP-induced vasodilation in hamster cheek pouch vessels in situ. 877 Jan 40

1. In patients with congestive cardiac failure, treatment with angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors results in peripheral vasodilatation and an increase in cardiac output without an increase in heart rate, which suggests a positive inotropic effect. This cannot be explained by changes in angiotensin II and bradykinin concentrations that occur. ACE has been suggested to also metabolise vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), which is a positive inotrope. As VIP is synthesized by the heart and acts locally to increase cardiac output, we postulated that ACE inhibition would increase the myocardial concentration of VIP. 2. Male Sprague-Dawley rats received enalapril (2 mg/kg per day) in their drinking water or no therapy for 7 days. On day 7 the rats were anaesthetized and blood was sampled. Hearts and kidneys were then harvested and snap frozen by immersion in liquid nitrogen. Concentrations of VIP in plasma and tissue extracts were measured by radioimmunoassay. 3. Plasma and renal concentrations of VIP did not change in enalapril-treated rats. However, the myocardial concentration of VIP increased significantly in rats receiving enalapril compared with control animals (P < 0.0005). 4. We conclude that treatment with ACE inhibitors results in increased myocardial VIP concentrations and suggest that this may contribute to the improvement in cardiac function that occurs with these agents.
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PMID:Increases in the myocardial concentration of vasoactive intestinal peptide may explain the positive inotropic effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. 880 Jun 3

Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy results in an increase in cardiac output without an increase in heart rate suggesting a positive inotropic effect. This cannot be explained by changes in angiotensin II and bradykinin concentrations. Angiotensin converting enzyme may also metabolise vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a vasodilator and positive inotrope whose concentration in the heart declines in heart failure. We sought to determine whether changes in plasma VIP or its metabolism might explain the positive inotropic effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. We also measured VIP in the heart to determine whether a local increase in VIP might explain this effect. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomised to control and enalapril groups (2 mg kg(-1) day(-1)). After 7 days, rats were anaesthetised and underwent metabolic clearance studies for VIP or had hearts, lungs and kidneys removed and snap frozen. VIP concentrations in plasma, infusate and tissue extracts were measured by radioimmunoassay. Plasma concentrations of VIP were unchanged by treatment with enalapril (control: 7.7 +/- 0.8 pmol l(-1); enalapril: 7.9 +/- 0.8 pmol l(-1) ), while the metabolic clearance rate of) VIP increased significantly (control: 10.4 +/- 1.4 ml min(-1) 100 g(-1); enalapril: 17.3 +/- 1.6 ml min(-1) 100 g(-1); p < 0.005). Secretion rate) also increased in enalapril treated rats (139.1 +/- 25.0 pmol min(-1) 100 g(-1) compared with controls (96.3 +/- 13.4 pmol min (-1) 100 g(-1); P< 0.01). VIP in the heart increased after enalapril (control: 208.4 +/- 39.0 pmol g (-1); enalapril: 928.9 +/- 123.6 fmol g(-1); P < 0.0005). Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition increases the metabolism of VIP. However, the significant increase in the myocardial concentration of VIP may contribute to the beneficial haemodynamic inotrope effects of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors.
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PMID:Effects of enalapril on vasoactive intestinal peptide metabolism and tissue levels. 980 65

Vascular resistance in the mammalian pulmonary circulation is affected by many endogenous agents that influence vascular smooth muscle, right ventricular myocardium, endothelial function, collagen and elastin deposition, and fluid balance. When the balance of these agents is disturbed, e.g. by airway hypoxia from high altitude or pulmonary obstructive disorders, pulmonary hypertension ensues, as characterized by elevated pulmonary artery pressure (P(PA)). Among neuropeptides with local pulmonary artery pressor effects are endothelin-1 (ET-1), angiotensin II (AII), and substance P, and among mitigating peptides are calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), adrenomedullin (ADM), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and ET-3. Moreover, somatostatin28 (SOM28) exacerbates, whereas SOM14 decreases P(PA) in hypoxic rats, with lowering and increasing of lung CGRP levels, respectively. Pressure can also be modulated by increasing or decreasing plasma volume (VIP and ANP, respectively), or by induction or suppression of vascular tissue remodeling (ET-1 and CGRP, respectively). Peptide bioavailability and potency can be regulated through hypoxic up- and down- regulation of synthesis or release, activation by converting enzymes (ACE for AII and ECE for ET-1), inactivation by neutral endopeptidase and proteases, or by interaction with nitric oxide (NO). Moreover, altered receptor density and affinity can account for changed peptide efficacy. For example, upregulation of ET(A) receptors and ET-1 synthesis occurs in the hypoxic lung concomitantly with reduced CGRP release. Also, receptor activity modifying protein 2 (RAMP2) has been shown to confer ADM affinity to the pulmonary calcitonin-receptor-like receptor (CRLR). We recently detected the mRNA encoding for RAMP2, CRLR, and the CGRP receptor RDC-1 in rat lung. The search for an effective, lung selective treatment of pulmonary hypertension will likely benefit from exploring the imbalance and restoring the balance between these native modulators of intrapulmonary pressure. For example, blocking of the ET-1 receptor ET(A) and vasodilation by supplemental CGRP delivered i. v. or via airway gene transfer, have proven to be useful experimentally.
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PMID:The role of endogenous lung neuropeptides in regulation of the pulmonary circulation. 1119 57

The purpose of this study was to determine whether association of vasoactive intestinal peptide with sterically stabilized liposomes (VIP on SSL) amplifies DNA synthesis evoked by the peptide in cultured chemically transformed hamster oral keratinocytes (HCPC-1) and, if so, whether this response in mediated, in part, by SSL-induced inactivation of neutral endopeptidase 24.11 (NEP; EC 3.4.24.11) and angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE; EC 3.4.15.1), two ectoenzymes that modulate HCPC-1 cell growth, in these cells. We found that VIP (10(-9)-10(-6) M) alone elicited a modest, albeit significant, concentration-dependent increase in DNA synthesis in HCPC-1 cells that was maximal after 48-72-h incubation (p < 0.05). VIP on SSL potentiated DNA synthesis in these cells relative to VIP alone. The magnitude of VIP on SSL-induced responses was 1.2-1.6-fold higher than that of VIP alone with maximal effects observed at 10(-9) M and 10(-6) M after 72- and 48-h incubation, respectively. Empty SSL had no significant effects on DNA synthesis. Empty SSL and VIP on SSL had no significant effects on NEP 24.11 and ACE activity in HCPC-1 cells. Collectively, these data indicate that association of VIP with SSL potentiates DNA synthesis in cultured oral keratinocytes relative to VIP alone and that this response is not related to non-specific effects of SSL.
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PMID:Liposomal VIP potentiates DNA synthesis in cultured oral keratinocytes. 1131 38

The purpose of the present paper was to study at physiological pH the affinity between vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and four poly(amidoamine) dendrimers (PAMAMs) designed for drug delivery. Therefore, a fast and reproducible CE method was first developed to analyze the strongly basic peptide. To allow an accurate determination of binding constant (K) values, the ability to suppress peptide adsorption onto the silica capillary of nonpermanent coatings (poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), low and medium relative molecular masses poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (PDDA)) or poly(acrylamide) permanent coating (PAA) was evaluated. Very good intraday repeatability of VIP migration times and peak areas (0.1-0.6 and 2.9-4.9% RSD, respectively) was obtained using two of the investigated coatings (PEO and PDDA with medium molecular mass). ACE combined with these dynamic coatings was then employed to evaluate K between VIP and two amine-terminated PAMAM dendrimers of generation 2 and 5 (G2.NH2, G5.NH2) and two carboxyl-terminated PAMAM derivatives of generation 2 and 5 (G2.COOH, G5.COOH). Binding constant of (6.7 +/- 1.1) x 10(4)/M could be determined for the couple VIP/G5.NH2, while no affinity was evidenced between VIP and all other dendrimers investigated. These results suggest that G5.NH2 might be an interesting carrier for the delivery of VIP.
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PMID:Determination of binding constants of vasoactive intestinal peptide to poly(amidoamine) dendrimers designed for drug delivery using ACE. 1755 62

In the recent years, it has become increasingly clear that the immune response is also influenced by mediators which were first discovered as regulators in the nervous or also cardiovascular system. Here, small peptide hormones may play an important role. Kinins like bradykinins act on the endothelium and play a role for trafficking of lymphocytes over the blood-brain barrier. Neuropeptides like vasoactive intestinal peptide or neuropeptide Y also directly act on T cells and favour the differentiation of Th2 cells or regulatory T cell populations. Recently, the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) came into the focus of interest. Inhibition of the RAS at different levels may influence autoimmune responses and involve T cells as well as antigen-presenting cells, probably via different signalling pathways. Inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme and antagonists of the angiotensin 1 receptors are used in the treatment of hypertension, kidney disease or stroke by millions of people worldwide. These inexpensive and safe pharmaceuticals may also represent an interesting and innovative approach for the (combination) treatment of autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis.
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PMID:Small but powerful: short peptide hormones and their role in autoimmune inflammation. 1974 84