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Query: EC:3.5.4.4 (
adenosine deaminase
)
5,136
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. The inhibitory effect of adenosine on the glucagon-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
activity of liver plasma membranes, prepared from PVG/c rats, was potentiated by insulin. In the presence of EGTA, such potentiating effect of insulin was lost. 2. Calcium (10 microM) potentiated the inhibitory effects of both adenosine and insulin on the glucagon-stimulated cyclase activity. The synergestic effect of calcium + insulin required the presence of adenosine as judged from the use of
adenosine deaminase
. 3. Insulin had no significant inhibitory effect on the glucagon-stimulated cyclase activity of liver plasma membranes, prepared from young Wistar rats, unless both adenosine (50 microM) and calcium (10 microM) were added externally. 4. Results demonstrate an interaction of calcium and insulin at membrane level that, in the presence of adenosine, results in the inhibition of the glucagon-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
activity.
...
PMID:Involvement of calcium in the inhibition by insulin of the glucagon-stimulated adenylate-cyclase activity. 44 85
Adenosine caused a dose-dependent stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
in homogenates from rat striatum and tuberculum olfactorium (200 and 300% stimulation by 100 muM adenosine). The effect of adenosine was not antagonized by haloperidol. Subcellular fractionation suggested that adenosine stimulates a different
adenylate cyclase
than dopamine. Basal
adenylate cyclase
activity in freshly prepared homogenates was reduced by dialysis and by the addition of
adenosine deaminase
. Basal
adenylate cyclase
activity was enchanced by papaverine and dipyridamole, but reduced by theophylline and isobutylmethylxanthine. The results are compatible with the opinion that endogenous adenosine is capable of activating
adenylate cyclase
in these areas of the rat brain.
...
PMID:Activation of adenylate cyclase from rat striatum and tuberculum olfactorium by adenosine. 59 2
Stimulation of cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation in rat cortex slices by 1 microM forskolin (F) was markedly reduced (96%) by treatment with
adenosine deaminase
(
ADA
). The effect of
ADA
was progressively less at higher concentrations of F, but still inhibited the response by 50% at 100 microM F.
ADA
-mediated inhibition of the cAMP response to 1 microM F was completely reversed by 5 microM 2-chloroadenosine (CA), an
ADA
-resistant analogue. Stimulation by F (controls) and F plus CA (
ADA
treated) in cortex slices was significantly inhibited by 200 microM caffeine (CAF) and by 10 microM 8-phenyltheophylline. cAMP accumulation in
ADA
-treated cortex slices stimulated with CA at concentrations from 5 to 100 microM was markedly enhanced by 1 microM F. Neither
ADA
treatment nor 200 microM CAF significantly affected cAMP accumulation in slices stimulated by 1 microM vasoactive intestinal polypeptide or
adenylate cyclase
in membranes stimulated by 1 microM F. CAF (1 mM) did not significantly increase basal cAMP levels in cortex slices, whereas 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine caused a significant 80% increase and 100 microM rolipram enhanced cAMP levels by 4.5-fold. F-stimulated cAMP accumulation (1 microM) in cortex slices was inhibited 98% by 1 mM CAF and 49% by 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, and was enhanced 2.5-fold by 100 microM rolipram. These data have been interpreted to indicate that the stimulation of cAMP accumulation in rat cortex slices by 1 microM F is predominantly due to synergistic interaction with endogenous adenosine and that the inhibition of this response by CAF is largely due to blockade of adenosine receptors.
...
PMID:Forskolin stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation in rat brain cortex slices is markedly enhanced by endogenous adenosine. 130 35
1. The presence of adenosine receptors linked to
adenylate cyclase
activity and their functional role in calcium-evoked 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) release was investigated in rat basophilic leukaemia (RBL) cells, a widely used model for studying the molecular mechanisms responsible for stimulus-secretion coupling. 2. In [3H]-5-HT-loaded cells triggered to release by the calcium ionophore A23187, a biphasic modulation of 5-HT secretion was induced by adenosine analogues, with inhibition of stimulated release at nM and potentiation at microM concentrations, suggesting the presence of adenosine receptor subtypes mediating opposite effects on calcium-dependent release. This was also confirmed by results obtained with other agents interfering with adenosine pharmacology, such as
adenosine deaminase
and the non-selective A1/A2 antagonist 8-phenyl-theophylline. 3. Similar biphasic dose-response curves were obtained with a variety of adenosine analogues on basal
adenylate cyclase
activity in RBL cells, with inhibition and stimulation of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) production at nM and microM concentrations, respectively. The rank order of potency of adenosine analogues for inhibition and stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
activity and the involvement of G-proteins in modulation of cyclic AMP levels suggested the presence of cyclase-linked A1 high-affinity and A2-like low-affinity adenosine receptor subtypes. However, the atypical antagonism profile displayed by adenosine receptor xanthine antagonists on cyclase stimulation suggested that the A2-like receptor expressed by RBL cells might represent a novel cyclase-coupled A2 receptor subtype.4. Micromolar concentrations of adenosine analogues could also increase inositol phospholipid hydrolysis and inositol tris-phosphate formation in both unstimulated cells and in cells triggered to release by the calcium ionophore. The stimulation was constant, small and additive to that exerted by the calcium ionophore.5. It is concluded that RBL cells express both A1 and A2-like adenosine receptors which exert opposite effects on 5-HT release and intracellular cyclic AMP levels. However, besides modulation of cyclic AMP levels, additional transduction pathways, such as modulation of phospholipase C activity, may contribute to the release response evoked by adenosine analogues in this cell-line.
...
PMID:Adenosine receptors in rat basophilic leukaemia cells: transductional mechanisms and effects on 5-hydroxytryptamine release. 131 28
In FRTL-5 thyroid cells, extracellular ATP, a P2-agonist, not only stimulates phospholipase C but also inhibits forskolin- or thyrotropin (TSH)-induced stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
in a pertussis toxin-sensitive manner [Okajima, Sato, Nazarea, Sho, & Kondo (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 13029-13037]. We have now found that, in pertussis toxin-treated cells, ATP can directly stimulate
adenylate cyclase
. Although
adenylate cyclase
modulation occurs through ATP metabolites such as AMP and adenosine, we show that extracellular ATP itself also regulates cyclic AMP production, based on the following: (1) the actions of ATP were imitated by hydrolysis-resistant ATP analogues, (2) the elimination of adenosine by
adenosine deaminase
decreased the effect of ATP only partially, at least at concentrations greater than 10 microM-ATP, and (3) the amount of AMP produced from ATP was too low to account for the ATP effects. To identify the respective receptors for the three different actions of ATP, we established an antagonist profile. Suramin, which has been reported to be a P2-receptor antagonist, inhibited ATP-induced phospholipase C activation in a competitive fashion, but did not affect ATP-induced
adenylate cyclase
modulation. On the other hand, 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-diphenylxanthine competitively antagonized both the stimulatory and inhibitory ATP actions on cyclic AMP levels, but did not influence the activation of phospholipase C by ATP. The order of potency for various xanthine derivatives was clearly different with respect to their antagonistic effects on the stimulation and inhibition of
adenylate cyclase
induced by ATP. We conclude that ATP activates three receptors, each of which is coupled to a different signal transduction system in FRTL-5 cells, i.e. phospholipase C activation, and
adenylate cyclase
activation and inhibition.
...
PMID:Extracellular ATP stimulates three different receptor-signal transduction systems in FRTL-5 thyroid cells. Activation of phospholipase C, and inhibition and activation of adenylate cyclase. 131 67
The mechanism of inhibition of neutrophil phagocytic functions by cAMP-elevating agents has not yet been clarified. In the present work, the effects of
adenylate cyclase
agonists on protein phosphorylation in the formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP)-stimulated human neutrophils were studied. Before stimulation, 32Pi-labelled cells were incubated with
adenosine deaminase
to remove the endogenously produced adenosine, an
adenylate cyclase
agonist itself. A protein of about 52,000 molecular weight was rapidly and transiently phosphorylated when neutrophils were stimulated with fMLP in the presence of isoproterenol, prostaglandin E1, histamine or 2-chloroadenosine. This phosphorylation was blocked by the antagonists of the receptors for the above-listed agents. No phosphorylation of the 52,000 molecular weight protein could be observed if either fMLP or the cAMP-elevating agent were applied alone. A calcium ionophore A23187 and dibutyryl-cAMP could replace fMLP and a cAMP-elevating agent, respectively. Phosphorylation of the 52,000 molecular weight protein was also demonstrated in cell lysates in the presence of cAMP, and in membrane preparations in the presence of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. These data suggest that phosphorylation of the 52,000 molecular weight protein in intact cells is dependent on the cross-talk between the fMLP- and the cAMP-signalling pathways, and may thus be involved in the cAMP-regulatory mechanism.
...
PMID:Cross-talk between cAMP and formylmet-leu-phe in human neutrophils: phosphorylation of a 52,000 molecular weight protein. 132 1
Extracellular ATP has been shown to induce intracellular Ca2+ mobilization and
adenylate cyclase
inhibition via P2 purinoceptors in several species of cells. Now we found that in calf vascular smooth muscle cells the addition of ATP to the medium did not induce inhibition but stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation, in addition to stimulation of inositol phosphate production. Adenosine and AMP also induced cyclic AMP accumulation but their efficacy was much less than that of ATP. The ATP action was not influenced by the presence of either
adenosine deaminase
or of an ATP regenerating system, whereas the AMP action was increased by the regenerating system. The results indicate that the cyclic AMP accumulation by ATP is due to ATP itself but neither to adenosine nor to AMP, both of which are produced from ATP. ATP receptor coupled to the cyclic AMP generation was shown to be different from that coupled to phospholipase C based on the difference in the potency order of the receptor agonists and in the sensitivity of P2 receptor agonists to 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (CPX)- and suramin-induced antagonism. We conclude that in the aortic smooth muscle cells a novel P2-type receptor directly coupled to
adenylate cyclase
activation exists in addition to the previously known P2 receptor linked to phospholipase C activation.
...
PMID:P2 purinoceptor-mediated cyclic AMP accumulation in bovine vascular smooth muscle cells. 133 Jun 37
In 32PO4-labeled adipocytes, isoproterenol (ISO) or physiologically relevant concentrations of insulin rapidly increased phosphorylation of a particulate 135-kDa protein which has been identified as a cGMP-inhibited "low Km" cAMP phosphodiesterase (CGI-PDE) by several criteria, including selective immunoprecipitation with anti-CGI-PDE IgG (Degerman, E., Smith, C.J., Tornqvist, H., Vasta, V., Belfrage, P., and Manganiello, V.C. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 533-537). The time courses and concentration dependences for phosphorylation of CGI-PDE by ISO and insulin correlated with CGI-PDE activation in the presence of these agents; effects of ISO were somewhat more rapid than those of insulin. Adenosine deaminase, which metabolizes the
adenylate cyclase
inhibitor adenosine, also rapidly induced phosphorylation and activation of CGI-PDE. Phenylisopropyladenosine (an
adenosine deaminase
-resistant adenosine analog) prevented or reversed both
adenosine deaminase
-stimulated phosphorylation and activation of CGI-PDE (IC50 approximately 0.2 nM). Incubation of adipocytes with 0.1 nM insulin in the presence of ISO rapidly produced 30-200% greater activation and phosphorylation of CGI-PDE than the expected added effects of insulin and ISO individually; both effects preceded the insulin-induced decreases in protein kinase A activity and inhibition of lipolysis. These and other results indicate that CGI-PDE can be phosphorylated at distinct sites and activated by cAMP-dependent and insulin-dependent serine kinase(s), that the activation state of CGI-PDE reflects its relative phosphorylation state, and that synergistic phosphorylation/activation of CGI-PDE may be important in the antilipolytic action of insulin.
...
PMID:Hormone-sensitive cyclic GMP-inhibited cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in rat adipocytes. Regulation of insulin- and cAMP-dependent activation by phosphorylation. 164 89
Fat-cells were isolated from patients of body-mass indices (BMIs) ranging from 17.9 to 83.9 kg/m2. Isoprenaline-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in cells prepared from obese subjects as compared with normal-weight subjects, was less sensitive to inhibition by the adenosine agonist N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine (PIA) (P = 0.047). The inhibition of 7 beta-desacetyl-7 beta-[gamma-(N-methylpiperazino) butyryl]-forskolin-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
by PIA in the presence of
adenosine deaminase
was also much attenuated in crude plasma membranes of adipocytes prepared from massively obese patients as compared with lean controls (P = 0.0143). This difference was probably not due to different cell size, because
adenylate cyclase
of crude plasma membranes of large adipocytes was actually more sensitive to PIA than was
adenylate cyclase
of membranes of smaller fat-cells co-isolated from the same individual. The stimulatory effect of PIA on glucose uptake in the presence of
adenosine deaminase
was depressed in adipocytes prepared from obese subjects and correlated with BMI at r = -0.626 (P = 0.007) at 100 nM-PIA. The adenosine receptors were studied by using the adenosine antagonist 1,3-[3H]dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine. The binding was rapid and proportional to protein concentration. There was no difference in the affinities of receptors in membranes of obese and normal-weight subjects; Kd values of all patients averaged 3.3 nM. Bmax values were 54 and 130 fmol/mg of protein in membranes prepared from seven obese and five control patients respectively. The Bmax values calculated per mg of protein correlated with BMI at r = -0.539 (P = 0.047). The adenosine content of adipose tissue was higher in obese than in control subjects. These results demonstrate an attenuated response of cyclic AMP accumulation,
adenylate cyclase
and glucose uptake to adenosine in fat-cells prepared from obese subjects, and suggest that this change is at least partly due to changes in the amount of adenosine receptors, but not their affinity. The decreased receptor number could be due to higher adenosine content. A higher adenosine concentration in adipose tissue could explain why lipolysis is inhibited in situ in obesity, and the desensitization could explain the diminished response to adenosine analogues in isolated fat-cells.
...
PMID:Attenuated adenosine-sensitivity and decreased adenosine-receptor number in adipocyte plasma membranes in human obesity. 165 38
The cyclic adenosine-3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) elevation caused by exposure of human neutrophils to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 was prevented when endogenously produced adenosine was either removed by preincubation with
adenosine deaminase
or blocked from binding to the adenosine receptor by antagonists [theophylline or (E)-4-(1,2,3,6-tetrahydro-1,3-dimethyl-2,6-dioxo-9H-purin-8-yl)cinnamic acid]. In the absence of endogenous adenosine, A23187 potentiated the neutrophil cAMP response to 2-chloroadenosine, prostaglandin E1, and isoproterenol. When neutrophil suspensions were preincubated with concentrations of Ro 20-1724, which appeared to maximally inhibit cAMP phosphodiesterase, A23187 was still able to substantially elevate cAMP levels, suggesting that A23187 increases cAMP by amplifying
adenylate cyclase
responsiveness to the agonist rather than by inhibiting cAMP phosphodiesterase. The ability of A23187 to augment the cAMP elevation caused by 2-chloroadenosine was persistent over a 10-min period. The neutrophil cAMP elevations caused by chemoattractants leukotriene B4, C5a, and N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine (FMLP) were all prevented when endogenously produced adenosine was eliminated from the cell suspensions by the addition of
adenosine deaminase
. The A23187-induced cAMP elevation was inhibited completely by the calmodulin inhibitors chlorpromazine, trifluoperazine and N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide, whereas cAMP levels induced by FMLP, leukotriene B4 and C5a were less affected. It appears that A23187 raises cAMP in human neutrophils by a calmodulin-dependent potentiation of
adenylate cyclase
responsiveness to endogenously produced adenosine while the chemoattractant-induced cAMP elevations (FMLP), leukotriene B4, and C5a), although possibly Ca2+ dependent, are less sensitive to calmodulin inhibitors and may involve additional biochemical events.
...
PMID:Ca2+ ionophore-induced cyclic adenosine-3',5'-monophosphate elevation in human neutrophils. A calmodulin-dependent potentiation of adenylate cyclase response to endogenously produced adenosine: comparison to chemotactic agents. 166 48
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