Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (collagenase)
18,340 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adenyl cyclase activity of rat pancreatic islet membrane was increased by secretin, pancreozymin, and isoproterenol, while ACTH, glucagon, growth hormone, and insulin had no effect. Both secretin and isoproterenol activations were enhanced by prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and GTP. Isoproterenol activation was additive with PGE1, as was that of secretin with PGE1, but only in the presence of GTP. Secretin activation in the presence of PGE1 and GTP was equivalent to NaF stimulation. Kinetic analysis indicated that secretin and GTP increased the maximum velocity of the adenyl cyclase and tended to decrease the apparent affinity of the enzyme for ATP. Glucagon activation of islet membrane adenyl cyclase was dependent upon prior treatment of the membrane preparation with EGTA and the use of inhibitors of proteolytic enzymes during the collagenase digestion phase of islet preparation. These results suggest that hormonal regulation of insulin secretion may be affected by PGE1 and guanine nucleotide modulation of the adenyl cyclase activation process.
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PMID:Hormonal regulation of pancreatic islet adenyl cyclase. 17 51

(1) In order to determine the cellular localization of the secretin- and pancreozymin-sensitive adenylate cyclase in rat pancreas, the occurence of this enzyme system has been investigated in isolated pancreatic cells. (2) Digestion of rat pancreatic lobules with collagenase yields a preparation of isolated cells which upon differential morphological analysis appears to consist for 97% of acinar cells and to contain for fewer centro-acinar and ductal cells than undissociated lobules. (3) Expressed per mg protein, the isolated cells contain the same amount of DNA, chymotrypsin and lactic dehydrogenase as the undissociated tissue. The stimulated adenylate cyclase activity is nearly entirely recovered in the isolated acinar cells, as is also the case for the low Km adenosine 3',5-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase activity and the adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) content. Marked losses are noted for the basal adenylate cyclase and the high Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities. (4) Washing the isolated acinar cells in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate medium containing 10 mM 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine causes a cyclic AMP level 2.6 times that in cells washed in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate alone. The cyclic AMP level is further increased by subsequently incubating the cells for 10 min in the presence of 3-10(-7) M pancreozymin-C-octapeptide or secretin to values 1.7 or 4.7 times the control level in cells incubated for 10 min with 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine alone. (5) It is suggested that the adenylate cyclase of the acinar cells may be involved, with another factor, in the stimulation of enzyme secretion, whereas a ductular cyclase would function in the regulation of the bicarbonate-dependent fluid secretion.
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PMID:Rat pancreas adenylate cyclase V. Its presence in isolated rat pancreatic acinar cells. 18 46

In collagenase isolated rat pancreatic islets, CCK-PZ, SHG, secretin and glucagon stimulated the accumulation of cAMP, in physiological ranges. The resulting increment of cAMP showed a good correlation with insulin release stimulated by either glucagon or secretin, but not by SHG or CCK-PZ. In the same system, 14CO2 production from glucose-U-14C was significantly increased by either SHG or CCK-PZ. The results presented in this report are compatible with the hypothesis that insulin release by gastrointestinal hormones may be mediated by cAMP in the B-cell in the case of either glucagon or secretin; whereas, in the case of either SHG or CCK-PZ, it may presumably be mediated by an unknown mechanism in glucose metabolism, other than c-AMP.
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PMID:Stimulation by gastro-intestinal hormones of cyclic adenosine 3': 5'-monophosphate accumulation and insulin release in isolated pancreatic islets of the rat. 20 18

Membrane currents were recorded from voltage-clamped Xenopus laevis oocytes, surrounded by their enveloping follicular and epithelial cells. Porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) generated a membrane current due to an increase in membrane conductance to K+. The VIP current was mimicked by the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin and was potentiated by phosphodiesterase inhibitors, suggesting that adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) plays a role in mediating the response. Though resembling the follicle's responses to catecholamines and adenosine in ionic basis and apparent mechanism, the response to VIP was not blocked by catecholaminergic or purinergic antagonists, indicating the presence of a specific VIP receptor in the follicle. Among the VIP related peptides, PHM-27 generated similar but smaller K+ currents and porcine secretin and glucagon neither elicited a response nor blocked that to VIP. After treating follicles with collagenase to remove the epithelial and follicular cells the responses to VIP were either substantially reduced or abolished, suggesting that the VIP receptors and K+ channels are both located in the follicular cells.
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PMID:Membrane currents elicited by porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) in follicle-enclosed Xenopus oocytes. 244 88

Interlobular duct fragments from the pancreas of the rat were isolated by collagenase digestion and filtration, embedded in a matrix of rat-tail collagen, and cultured in a 1:1 mixture of Dulbecco's minimal essential and Ham's F12 media supplemented with cholera toxin (CT, 100 ng/ml) and epidermal growth factor (EGF, 10 ng/ml) in addition to supplements used previously, thereby improving the yield of ducts by a factor of two compared with previous results. The ducts were harvested by digestion of the collagen matrix with collagenase and were then dissociated by treatment with EDTA in divalent cation-free salt suspended in collagen and cultured as were the ducts. Numerous cysts appeared as a function of time and some of these enlarged dramatically. Some of the larger cysts exhibited secondary tubular processes extending into the surrounding collagen. The addition of bovine pituitary extract (BPE, 50 micrograms/ml) doubled the number of cysts, whereas omission of serum or CT + EGF reduced the number. BPE or forskolin could substitute effectively for CT. Agents that stimulate (secretin) or inhibit (e.g., ouabain or acetazolamide) fluid-electrolyte secretion in vivo had no effect on the number or average diameter of the cysts. The cysts were 83 to 88% epithelial with the balance of the cells being fibroblastic in appearance. Some cysts consisted only of epithelium. The proliferative capacity of the cystic epithelium was shown by the presence of mitotic figures and by an autoradiographic labeling index of 22 to 30% after a 24-h exposure to [3H]thymidine. The labeling index was reduced by the omission of CT + EGF. Transmission electron microscopy showed that the cysts exhibited morphologic features of duct epithelium in vivo, including apical microvilli, lateral interdigitations of the plasma membrane, and typical cytoplasmic organelles.
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PMID:Rat pancreatic interlobular duct epithelium: isolation and culture in collagen gel. 276 30

Functional gastrin-containing tumor cells (GT cells) have been maintained in short-term culture on microporous membranes, and their response to selected agents has been determined. After dispersion of gastrinoma by collagenase-DNAase digestion coupled with mechanical disruption, dispersed cells were depleted in stromal material by selective attachment to a plastic substrate, then cultured for 72 hours on porous cellulose membranes. Cultures contained 68 +/- 5% GT cells with a viability of 92 +/- 2%. Secretin stimulated the rate of gastrin release from cultured GT cells in both a time- and a dose-dependent fashion. To examine the possible involvement of adenylate cyclase- and protein kinase C-mediated mechanisms in regulating gastrin release from the neoplastic GT cells, we evaluated the effects of 8-bromoadenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-BrcAMP; 10(-4) - 10(-2) mol/L), the diterpene forskolin (10(-5) mol/L), 12-0-tetradencanoylphorobol 13-acetate (TPA; 10(-8) - 10(-6) mol/L), and 4 alpha-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate (4 alpha PDD; 10(-8) - 10(-6) mol/L) on gastrin release. Among all compounds tested, 8-BrcAMP (10(-2) mol/L) was the most potent, stimulating the rate of gastrin release 263% above basal. Both 8-BrcAMP and TPA stimulated gastrin release in a dose-dependent fashion. The biologically inactive phorbol ester, 4 alpha PDD, was without effect at all concentrations. Somatostatin (10(-8) - 10(-6) mol/L) inhibited 8-BrcAMP-stimulated gastrin release in a dose-dependent fashion to a maximum of 75%.
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PMID:Control of gastrin release in cultured gastrinoma-derived G cells. 289 16

The effect of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) upon adenylate cyclase (AC) activity has been determined in defined microdissected renal tubules isolated from collagenase-treated rabbit kidneys. In the presence of 10 microM GTP, 1 microM VIP gave marked stimulations of AC over basal values in the bright portion of the distal convoluted tubule (DCTb) (10.1-fold), and in the collecting tubule isolated from the inner stripe of the outer medulla (OMCTi, 7.8-fold). Less pronounced effects of VIP were found in the medullary collecting tubule isolated from the outer stripe (2.5-fold) and in the granular portion of the distal convoluted tubule (2.0-fold). VIP stimulation of AC activity in these segments amounted to 25 to 40% of the effect elicited by other agonists (arginine vasopressin, calcitonin or parathyroid hormone) in their respective target segments. A low response to VIP was observed in the cortical thick ascending limb (1.8-fold) which represented less than 5% of the calcitonin-stimulated AC activity. In the thin descending limb VIP produced a slight and variable stimulation of AC. VIP was without effect upon AC in the convoluted and straight portions of the proximal tubule, the medullary thick ascending limb and the cortical collecting tubule. Half-maximal stimulation of AC by VIP was observed at 26 +/- 10 nM (n = 3) in OMCTi and at 19 nM (n = 2) in DCTb. Related peptides glucagon, secretin and PHI gave lower stimulations of AC compared to VIP in OMCTi. Conversely for rat OMCTi, under identical conditions, glucagon was much more effective than VIP.
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PMID:Distribution of vasoactive intestinal peptide-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity along the rabbit nephron. 317 93

1. The effect of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) upon adenylate cyclase activity was determined in purified cortical basolateral membranes and in glomeruli and tubular elements obtained from rabbit kidney. 2. In purified basolateral membranes prepared from cortex, 1 microM-VIP consistently stimulated adenylate cyclase activity above basal levels (1.55 +/- 0.09-fold (mean +/- S.E. of mean), n = 10 animals). Half-maximal stimulation was observed at 17 +/- 11 nM-VIP (S.D., n = 9). 3. Related peptides, e.g. secretin, glucagon, gastric inhibitory peptide, human pancreatic growth hormone releasing factor, and peptide having N-terminal histidine and C-terminal isoleucine amide (PHI), were without effect or gave lower stimulations of adenylate cyclase activity when tested at 1 microM. 4. Significant VIP degradation was observed under the assay conditions used but this did not substantially alter the response or selectivity to VIP. 5. In separate preparations of isolated glomeruli and proximal tubules addition of 1 microM-VIP resulted in a 3.3 +/- 1.1-fold (S.D., n = 3) and 2.2 +/- 1.0-fold (S.D., n = 3) stimulation (respectively) of adenylate cyclase activity. 6. In isolated medullary tubule suspensions, isolated by collagenase-hyaluronidase digestion of outer (red) medulla, and in thick ascending-limb-enriched preparations prepared by Percoll density gradient fractionation, 1 microM-VIP significantly increased adenylate cyclase activity by 2.4 +/- 0.6-fold (S.D., n = 3) and 2.1 +/- 0.7-fold (S.D., n = 3) respectively. 7. A possible role for VIP in the regulation of renal function in the rabbit is discussed in relation to the occurrence of VIP stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in several renal cellular elements.
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PMID:Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide regulation of rabbit renal adenylate cyclase activity in vitro. 365 72

Specific binding sites for cholecystokinin (CCK) have been identified and characterized in fundic glands isolated by collagenase treatment from guinea pig gastric mucosa using a biologically active 125I-labeled derivative of the C-terminal octapeptide of CCK (125IIE-CCK-8). The time course of binding to these glands was rapid, temperature dependent and saturable. At 24, 30 and 37 degrees C, half-maximal binding was reached at 5 min and full binding at 30 min. The addition of a large excess of CCK-8 after 15 and 30 min of binding at 24 degrees C caused a prompt and rapid decline in radioligand bound showing that the interaction was reversible. There was a progressive decline in the amount of 125IIE-CCK-8 bound to fundic glands with increasing concentrations of CCK-8 and other structurally related peptides. Gastrin II displaced 50% of the radioligand at 1.6nM, CCK-8 at 3.2nM, gastrin I at 16nM, and desulfated-CCK-8 and pentagastrin at 59nM. Secretin did not displace the radioligand from fundic glands at 1.0uM. The binding was also tissue specific as glands isolated from the antral mucosa did not contain specific binding sites for 125IIE-CCK-8. This data provides evidence for specific receptors for CCK on gastric fundic glands that may be involved in the control of acid and pepsinogen secretion.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of a specific receptor for cholecystokinin on isolated fundic glands from guinea pig gastric mucosa using a biologically active 125I-CCK-8 probe. 632 10

Most of the pancreatic exocrine epithelium consists of acinar and intralobular duct (ductular) cells, with the balance consisting of interlobular and main duct cells. Fragments of mouse acinar/ductular epithelium can be isolated by partial digestion with collagenase and purified by Ficoll density gradient centrifugation. We investigated whether previously developed culture conditions used for duct epithelium would result in the selective survival and proliferation of ductular cells from the acinar/ductular fragments. The fragments were cultured on nitrocellulose filters coated with extracellular matrix. After 2 to 4 wk the filters were covered with proliferating cells resembling parallel cultures of duct epithelium by the following criteria: protein/DNA ratio, light and electron microscopic appearance, the presence of duct markers (carbonic anhydrase [CA] activity, CA II mRNA, the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator), the near absence of acinar cell markers (amylase and chymotrypsin), a similar polypeptide profile after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the presence of spontaneous and secretin-stimulated electrogenic ion transport. Both duct and ductular epithelia formed fluid-filled cysts in collagen gels and both could be subcultured. We conclude that acinar/ductular tissue gives rise to ductular cells in culture by some combination of acinar cell death and/or transdifferentiation to a ductular phenotype, accompanied by proliferation of these cells and preexisting ductular cells. These cultures may be used to investigate the properties of this part of the pancreatic duct system, from which most of the pancreatic juice water and electrolytes probably originates.
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PMID:Mouse pancreatic acinar/ductular tissue gives rise to epithelial cultures that are morphologically, biochemically, and functionally indistinguishable from interlobular duct cell cultures. 752 26


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