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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Electroretinographic (ERG), morphometric and biochemical studies on retinas from monkeys or rats reveal that moderate level developmental lead (Pb) exposure produces long-term selective rod deficits and degeneration. The present studies determined whether similar alterations occur following low level developmental Pb exposure. Long-Evans rats, exposed to Pb only via dam's milk from parturition to weaning, had mean blood Pb of 18.8 micrograms/dl at weaning and 6.6 micrograms/dl at 90 days of age. Morphometric and ultrastructural studies revealed no signs of rod loss or degeneration although the presence of glycogen in some rod mitochondria suggests the occurrence of a metabolic dysfunction. Retinal sensitivity and rhodopsin content per eye were decreased in a manner such that, they followed the established log-linear relationship. A- and b-wave voltage- and latency-log intensity functions, generated from single-flash ERGs in fully dark-adapted rats, revealed that low level Pb exposure caused a 25% and 15% decrease in mean amplitude, a 0.5 and a 0.5 log unit decrease in absolute sensitivity, and a 23% and 16% increase in mean latency, respectively. Scotopic (rod-mediated) and photopic (cone-mediated) flicker fusion frequency measures revealed selective rod deficits. Adult rats had a 15% inhibition of retinal cGMP-
phosphodiesterase
resulting in a 19% and 12% increase in cGMP in dark- and light-adapted states, respectively. The above data confirm and extend our previous studies conducted in rats with blood lead levels of 59 micrograms/dl during development. The rhodopsin and cyclic nucleotide metabolism data, as well as our recent data showing an inhibition of retinal Na+, K(+)-
ATPase
, are entirely consistent with the observed ERG changes. The fact that rat rods are similar to monkey and human rods suggests the relevance and applicability of these data to low level pediatric Pb poisoning. Thus, these data suggest that alterations in rod sensitivity and temporal processing may occur in children exposed to low levels of lead during perinatal development.
...
PMID:Low level developmental lead exposure decreases the sensitivity, amplitude and temporal resolution of rods. 166 51
The inotropic actions of various drugs known to increase force of contraction in isolated mammalian cardiac muscle were investigated in electrically driven (1 Hz) guinea-pig left atria under both normal [K+]o (4.7 mM) and high [K+]o (22 mM). Under normal [K+]o a concentration-dependent increase in force of contraction could be confirmed with the beta-adrenoceptor agonist, isoprenaline, the cyclase activator, forskolin, the inhibitors of the cyclic AMP-
phosphodiesterase
(
PDE
), amrinone, IBMX, and OPC 8212, the Na+ channel activators, DPI 201-106, SDZ 210-921, veratridine, and ATX II, the Na(+)-ionophore monensin, the inhibitor of Na+/K(+)-
ATPase
, ouabain, and the Ca2+ channel activators, Bay K 8644, CGP 28 H 392, and SDZ 202-791. Partial depolarization of the muscle preparations by increasing [K+]o in the organ bath to 22 mM completely abolished the positive inotropic action of the Na+ channel-activating drugs. In contrast, the effects of the other compounds were still present, although changes in the maximal force development were observed. The efficacy of the
PDE
inhibitors amrinone and IBMX were slightly increased; the maximal effects of isoprenaline, monensin, forskolin, and OPC 8212 were unchanged; the effect of ouabain decreased to about half maximal values; while the efficacy of the Ca2+ channel activators were either unchanged (CGP 28 392) or decreased (Bay K 8644 and SDZ 202-791). The results suggest that inactivation of cardiac fast Na+ channels by partially depolarizing isolated, electrically driven atria is a suitable model to distinguish between cardiotonic agents acting through activation of Na+ channels and those with other mechanisms of action.
...
PMID:Identification of cardiotonic sodium channel activators by potassium depolarization in isolated guinea-pig atria. 170 Feb 27
EMD 53 998, a novel thiadiazinone derivative, increases the contractile force of cardiac tissue in vitro through both an inhibition of
phosphodiesterase
III (PDE III) and a sensitization of cardiac contractile proteins to Ca2+. Guinea pig ventricular PDE III is selectively inhibited by EMD 53 998 (IC50 = 60 nM) without major effects on other PDE isoenzymes. Consonant with this is an increase in cAMP content of rat ventricular cells and a potentiation by EMD 53 998 of the cAMP-elevating action of isoprenaline (increase by 50% at 1.3 microM). Sensitization to Ca2+ by EMD 53 998 (3-30 microM) finds its expression in a leftward shift of the Ca2+ response curve for force generation in skinned fibers from porcine ventricular muscle and failing human heart as well as for activation of bovine cardiac myofibrillar actomyosin
ATPase
. Interestingly, EMD 53 998 elevates the maximum of the Ca(2+)-response curve for both parameters. Pimobendan studied under identical conditions was 100 times less potent than EMD 53 998. EMD 53 998 increases force development of guinea pig papillary muscle in a concentration-dependent manner with an EC50 of 3.6 microM, thus being 10 times more potent than pimobendan. In contrast to pimobendan, the positive inotropic effect of EMD 53 998 is barely affected by carbachol. Further evidence for a Ca(2+)-sensitizing effect of EMD 53 998 is provided by an additional increase in force generation in the presence of supramaximal isoprenaline concentrations. It is concluded that the positive inotropic action of EMD 53 998 is mediated through both cAMP-independent and cAMP-dependent mechanisms, with the former probably prevailing. We are not aware of other compounds with a similarly high Ca(2+)-sensitizing potency. On these grounds. EMD 53 998 appears to be a promising inotropic agent.
...
PMID:The novel cardiotonic agent EMD 53 998 is a potent "calcium sensitizer". 171 87
Effect of protein deficient diet on hepatic plasma membrane fluidity has been studied in rats using (i) steady state fluorescence polarization and anisotropy, (ii) phospholipid and cholesterol contents, (iii) phospholipid fatty acid composition, (iv) turnover of phosphatidyl choline (PC), and (v) activities of membrane-bound enzymes as parameters and rats fed casein (20%) diet as standard group. A significant increase in steady state fluorescence and anisotropy values was registered in the deficient group, indicating increased resistance and hence decrease in fluidity of the plasma membrane. Supplementation of the diet with lysine and threonine improved these values, thereby suggesting the significance of diet for membrane fluidity. Simultaneous significant alterations in other parameters, viz. (i) decrease in PC, PE and free cholesterol and increase in esterified cholesterol contents, (ii) decrease in unsaturation of fatty acids of PC, (iii) decrease in incorporation of NaH2 32PO4, [CH3-14C]choline and [CH3-14C]methionine into plasma membrane PC, and (iv) decrease in activities of plasma membrane 5'-nucleotidase and
phosphodiesterase
along with increase of (Na(+)-K+)
ATPase
and adenyl cyclase, were observed in the deficient group which on supplementation with lysine and threonine showed improvement over alterations.
...
PMID:Hepatic plasma membrane fluidity and dietary proteins. 175 32
Long-term amiodarone therapy is invariably associated with some side effects. Although its mechanism of action, as an antiarrhythmic drug is well understood, the side effect profile of amiodarone is not yet established. To determine possible mechanisms, the interaction of amiodarone and its major metabolite desethylamiodarone with calmodulin was investigated, since calmodulin is known to regulate Ca2+ transport, cell proliferation and the enzymes involved in signal transduction and nucleotide metabolism. The interaction between the drugs and calmodulin was studied by monitoring intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence of calmodulin and by using a fluorescent probe, N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine (NPN). 14C-Chlorpromazine displacement studies were conducted to differentiate the specific binding sites. The effect on the biological activity of calmodulin was determined with calmodulin dependent
phosphodiesterase
and Ca2(+)-
ATPase
. The dansyl calmodulin was used as fluorescent probe to study the effect of these drugs on complex formation between calmodulin and
phosphodiesterase
. Both amiodarone and desethylamiodarone decreased tyrosine fluorescence of calmodulin with IC50 of 4.9 and 4.4 microM respectively and these interactions were Ca2(+)-dependent. NPN fluorescence was also affected in a concentration dependent manner. These drugs also displaced bound 14C-chlorpromazine from calmodulin and the effect was biphasic. However, desethylamiodarone was more potent than amiodarone. The binding of 3H-amiodarone to calmodulin was modified by a variety of compounds, one class of compounds decreased and the other increased 3H-amiodarone binding to calmodulin. Only, desethylamiodarone inhibited the
phosphodiesterase
activation by calmodulin with IC50 of 13.2 microM without changing the basal enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Modulation of calmodulin properties by amiodarone and its major metabolite desethylamiodarone. 184 30
In this study we seek to elucidate the interaction of capsaicin with the calmodulin mediated signal pathways in macrophages, by comparing its action on macrophage functions with a known calmodulin antagonist, fluphenazine. Kinetics of capsaicin uptake by macrophages (10(3) cells) revealed that a maximum of 200 microM capsaicin was taken up within 10 min. Ca2+ ionophore triggered generation of superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide by macrophages was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by fluphenazine (IC50, 20 microM and 12 microM, respectively) and also by capsaicin (IC50, 30 microM and 9 microM, respectively), suggesting an involvement of calmodulin in the regulation of NADPH oxidase. In vitro both fluphenazine and capsaicin inhibited Ca2(+)-Mg2+
ATPase
and cAMP-
phosphodiesterase
from macrophages and this inhibition was reversed by exogenous addition of calmodulin. Fluorescence studies revealed a direct Ca2+ dependent interaction of capsaicin with calmodulin. From these results we suggest that capsaicin acts via calmodulin to inhibit stimulus-induced macrophage oxidative burst and also that calmodulin regulates the oxidative burst in macrophages.
...
PMID:Capsaicin inhibits calmodulin-mediated oxidative burst in rat macrophages. 196 91
Previous reports have suggested that the physical properties of cell membranes and calcium homeostasis in both the central and peripheral nervous system are changed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). This study has examined the biophysical properties of erythrocyte and platelet membranes by measuring the fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) and possible related changes in lipid peroxidation. In addition, we have studied calcium homeostasis by measuring thrombin-stimulated changes in intraplatelet free calcium and Ca2(+)-
ATPase
activity in AD and healthy age and sex-matched controls. Our results show that there was no significant difference in the fluorescence anisotropy of DPH in erythrocyte membranes isolated from the three groups. There was also no significant difference in lipid peroxidation levels in erythrocytes and plasma of AD patients compared to controls. However, there was a significant reduction in the fluorescence anisotropy of DPH in platelet membranes from AD patients, compared with healthy controls. Recent evident suggests that the increase in platelet membrane fluidity results from alterations in internal membranes. We measured the specific activities of enzyme markers associated with intracellular and plasma membranes in platelets from AD patients and healthy controls. There was a significant reduction in the specific activity of antimycin A-insensitive NADH-cytochrome-c reductase (a specific marker for smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER)), in AD patients compared to controls, but no change in the specific activity of bis(p-nitrophenyl)phosphate
phosphodiesterase
(a specific marker for plasma membrane). We have also shown that SER mediated [Ca2+] homeostasis is possibly impaired in AD platelets, i.e., the percentage of thrombin-stimulated increase in intraplatelet [Ca2+] above basal levels was significantly higher in AD compared to matched controls and there were significant reductions in the specific activities of Ca2+/Mg2(+)-
ATPase
and Ca2(+)-
ATPase
(but not Mg2(+)-
ATPase
) in AD platelets. Finally electron microscopic analysis of platelets showed that there was a significant increase in the incidence of abnormal membranes in AD patients compared to controls. The ultrastructural abnormalities seem to consist of proliferation of a system of trabeculated cisternae bounded by SER. These results suggest that both SER structure and function might be defected in AD platelets, which could explain the fluidity changes observed here.
...
PMID:Platelet and erythrocyte membrane changes in Alzheimer's disease. 214
Most of the currently available calmodulin (CaM) antagonists inhibit the actions of CaM by binding directly to it. These CaM-binding drugs tend to be relatively nonselective, because they inhibit the interaction of CaM with most, if not all, of its target enzymes. In order to develop more selective CaM antagonists, we synthesized covalent adducts of CaM and several drugs, including chlorpromazine (CPZ), fluphenazine-N-mustard (FNM), and phenoxybenzamine (PBZ), and examined the effects of these adducts on various CaM and Ca2(+)-dependent enzymes. One of the adducts (CPZ-CaM) selectively inhibited the CaM-induced activation of
phosphodiesterase
and myosin light chain kinase, without affecting the basal activity of either enzyme. The inhibition of these enzymes by CPZ-CaM was competitive with respect to CaM. CPZ-CaM did not inhibit CaM-sensitive Ca2(+)-
ATPase
or CaM-dependent protein kinase or the CaM-insensitive enzyme protein kinase C. The FNM-CaM and PBZ-CaM adducts did not inhibit the effects of CaM on any of the enzymes, but they selectively activated two of the enzymes; FNM-CaM slightly activated the CaM-dependent protein kinase, and PBZ-CaM slightly activated
phosphodiesterase
. These results show that certain covalently linked drug-CaM adducts can differentially inhibit or activate various CaM-sensitive enzymes, and they provide further evidence that it may be possible to develop new classes of CaM antagonists that are directed against the CaM recognition sites on CaM-sensitive enzymes.
...
PMID:Differential inhibition of calcium-dependent and calmodulin-dependent enzymes by drug-calmodulin adducts. 214 88
A novel molecule from the arylalkylamine family of drugs, KHL-8430, has been identified as a potent and specific inhibitor of calmodulin activity. The effect of this drug on calmodulin-mediated enzymatic actions has been analyzed to exemplify how to model the mechanism of action of a functional calmodulin antagonist. The approach used includes both binding and enzyme kinetic studies. In both types of experiments, the effects of drugs on calmodulin-phosphofructokinase [ATP:D[fructose-6-phosphate-1-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.11] and calmodulin-
phosphodiesterase
(3':5' cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase,
EC 3.6.1.3
) interactions have been investigated. We have found that KHL-8430, in contrast to trifluoperazine, a classical anticalmodulin drug, competes with neither phosphofructokinase nor
phosphodiesterase
for calmodulin binding, yet it liberates phosphofructokinase from calmodulin inhibition and
phosphodiesterase
from calmodulin stimulation. The anticalmodulin activity occurs at lower KHL-8430 than trifluoperazine concentrations. These findings might establish the functional importance of these differences in the specificity of these drugs. The synthesis of the data suggests that (i) whereas trifluoperazine antagonizes both phosphofructokinase and
phosphodiesterase
binding to calmodulin, KHL-8430 interacts with calmodulin complexed with enzymes; (ii) KHL-8430 binds to the calmodulin-phosphofructokinase complex with an affinity constant of 0.8 microM, whereas the binding constant of trifluoperazine is 2.5 microM (iii) within the ternary complex the dimeric form of the kinase preserves activity that is otherwise inactive; and (iv) the binding of trifluoperazine and KHL-8430 to calmodulin exhibits negative cooperativity. The approach used in this study makes it possible to screen for the calmodulin antagonist effect of other drugs as well.
...
PMID:Dissimilar mechanisms of action of anticalmodulin drugs: quantitative analysis. 214 57
The role of 48-kDa protein in visual transduction remains unresolved. Two hypotheses for its role in quenching the light activation of cyclic GMP cascade suggest that the protein binds to either
phosphodiesterase
or phosphorylated rhodopsin. Since the protein is also reported to bind ATP, we anticipated that the protein may have ATP hydrolyzing activity, and in analogy with the GTP-binding protein of the rod outer segments, such activity may be greatly enhanced by the elements of transduction cyclic GMP cascade, permitting the protein to function cyclically as GTP-binding protein does. We found that purified 48-kDa protein hydrolyzes ATP but at a slow rate of 0.04-0.05 per min. The Km for ATP is about 45-65 microM. The activity is inhibited noncompetitively by ADP with a Ki of about 50 microM. The
ATPase
activity of 48-kDa protein is not affected by rhodopsin, bleached rhodopsin, phosphorylated rhodopsin, unactivated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase, or
phosphodiesterase
(
PDE
) activated by GMP PNP-bound G-protein. These data show that although 48-kDa protein has
ATPase
activity, lack of regulation of this activity by the elements of visual transduction makes it unlikely for this activity to have a role in quenching the light activation of cyclic GMP cascade.
...
PMID:Photoreceptor rod outer segment 48-kDa protein has ATPase activity. 215 Jul 55
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