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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)
Male Wistar rats, 3 weeks old, were thyroidectomized surgically, kept for 1 month at 25 degrees C and then fasted for 3 days, with or without daily intraperitoneal injection of 3,5,3'-triiodo-L-thyronine (4.6 nmol T3/100 g body weight). Age-matched fed euthyroid rats were used as controls. All the experiments were carried out using isolated epididymal adipocytes. Basal lipolysis was higher during fasting in euthyroid or T3-treated adipocytes than in hypothyroid adipocytes. Adipocytes of fed hypothyroid rats were quite unresponsive to theophylline alone or combined with adrenaline or isoproterenol, whereas lipolysis was stimulated by these drugs in euthyroid or T3-treated adipocytes. Such a stimulated lipolysis was increased partially by fasting in hypothyroid adipocytes and was restored to a euthyroid level in T3-treated adipocytes. Lipolysis was more stimulated by
adenosine deaminase
in fasted euthyroid adipocytes than in fed ones. Hypothyroid and T3-treated adipocytes were unresponsive to
adenosine deaminase
except in fasted T3-treated rats. In these adipocytes, lipolysis was activated by the combination of
adenosine deaminase
plus theophylline. Finally, lipolysis was inhibited strongly in hypothyroidism while it was activated weakly by fasting. Lipolysis was inhibited slightly in fasted hypothyroid rats and
thyroid hormone
restored lipolysis. The findings are discussed in terms of the dual regulation of lipolysis by fasting and thyroid hormones.
...
PMID:Influence of prolonged fasting on thyroid hormone modulation of lipolysis in isolated epididymal adipocytes of Wistar rats. 795 63
Hypothyroidism profoundly reduces the capacity of brown adipose tissue (BAT) to generate cAMP in response to adrenergic stimulation. Evidence obtained with isolated brown adipocytes suggests a postreceptor defect that offsets the hypothyroidism-induced increase in beta3-adrenergic receptors. The goal of the present studies was to identify the defect in the cAMP generation pathway for which we studied cAMP generation in isolated cells and purified BAT membranes from normal and hypothyroid rats. Studies with
adenosine deaminase
and the adenosine receptor-1 agonist r-phenyl isopropyl adenosine (R-PIA) show that hypothyroid cells are not more sensitive to adenosine (same EC50) but more inhibited by high concentrations of R-PIA. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin reduced the gap in cAMP generation between eu- and hypothyroid cells and the inhibition mediated by R-PIA, but did not normalize the cAMP response to forskolin in hypothyroid cells. Although purified euthyroid BAT membranes increased cAMP production with GTP concentrations up to submillimolar range, to plateau or slightly decrease at higher levels, hypothyroid membranes were weakly stimulated by low concentrations of GTP and markedly inhibited (>50%) at concentrations > or = 10(-4) M. When assayed at 0.3 mM ATP and 1 microM GTP, hypothyroid membranes actually generated more cAMP in response to forskolin, but this was reversed when GTP concentration was 1 mM. Immunoblotting studies showed no significant effects of hypothyroidism on the abundance of G(alpha)i or Gbeta subunits, and ADP ribosylation of G(alpha)i was only 45% increased in hypothyroidism in contrast to a 2.5-fold increase in hypothyroid white adipose tissue membranes from the same rats. Hypothyroid membranes also exhibited different kinetics regarding ATP, with higher cAMP generation at submillimolar concentrations but less at >1 mM ATP. Actually, at ATP concentrations >0.6 mM, cAMP generation was markedly inhibited in hypothyroid membranes. Fixing the concentration of free Mg++ in these experiments indicates that most of the inhibition seen in hypothyroid membranes is caused by ATP, whereas euthyroid membranes are more sensitive to changes in free Mg++. Ca++ +/- calmodulin did not stimulate adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity. On the contrary, AC activity was inhibited by Ca++ in a concentration-dependent manner, by as low as 100 nM free Ca++, and to greater extent in hypo- than in euthyroid membranes (maximal inhibition 60 vs. 25-30%). Our results suggest that, functionally, hypothyroidism causes a change in the AC of BAT membranes consistent with a relative or absolute increase in the type VI AC (AC-VI). The effects on this AC of nucleotides, Ca++, and Mg++ at concentrations prevailing in the hypothyroid brown adipocyte are probably the major factor in the reduced capacity of these cells to generate cAMP. These results also open the possibility of a novel, differential effect of
thyroid hormone
on AC expression, and support the concept that
thyroid hormone
affects the adrenergic signal transduction pathways in a tissue-selective manner.
...
PMID:Effects of hypothyroidism on brown adipose tissue adenylyl cyclase activity. 894 Mar 79
The A1 adenosine and M2 muscarinic receptors exert protective (including energy consumption limiting) effects in the heart. We investigated the influence of
adenosine deaminase
(
ADA
) inhibition on a representative energy consumption limiting function, the direct negative inotropic effect elicited by the A1 adenosinergic and M2 muscarinergic systems, in eu- and hyperthyroid atria. Furthermore, we compared the change in the interstitial adenosine level caused by
ADA
inhibition and nucleoside transport blockade, two well-established processes to stimulate the cell surface A1 adenosine receptors, in both thyroid states. A classical isolated organ technique was applied supplemented with the receptorial responsiveness method (RRM), a concentration estimating procedure. Via measuring the contractile force, the direct negative inotropic capacity of N(6)-cyclopentyladenosine, a selective A1 receptor agonist, and methacholine, a muscarinic receptor agonist, was determined on the left atria isolated from 8-day solvent- and thyroxine-treated guinea pigs in the presence and absence of 2'-deoxycoformycin, a selective
ADA
inhibitor, and NBTI, a selective nucleoside transporter inhibitor. We found that
ADA
inhibition (but not nucleoside transport blockade) increased the signal amplification of the A1 adenosinergic (but not M2 muscarinergic) system. This action of
ADA
inhibition developed in both thyroid states, but it was greater in hyperthyroidism. Nevertheless,
ADA
inhibition produced a smaller rise in the interstitial adenosine concentration than nucleoside transport blockade did in both thyroid states. Our results indicate that
ADA
inhibition, besides increasing the interstitial adenosine level, intensifies the atrial A1 adenosinergic function in another (
thyroid hormone
-sensitive) way, suggesting a new mechanism of action of
ADA
inhibition.
...
PMID:The effect of adenosine deaminase inhibition on the A1 adenosinergic and M2 muscarinergic control of contractility in eu- and hyperthyroid guinea pig atria. 2587 65