Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.6.1.1 (adenylate cyclase)
19,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 31-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl were diagnosed as pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP) Type I because of a failure to respond to the administration of parathyroid hormone (PTH) with increased urinary excretion of phosphate and cyclic adenosine-3', 5'-monophosphate (cAMP). A 22-year-old woman was diagnosed as PHP Type II because there was no increase in the urinary excretion of phosphate despite of a marked increase in urinary cAMP excretion. With the combined calcium-PTH infusion or PTH infusion after vitamin D therapy, renal response was improved in these patients. Also dibutyryl adenosine-3'-5'-cyclic monophosphate (dbcAMP) infusion evoked an increased urinary phosphate excretion in all of the patients. The metabolic defect of our patients with PHP Type I may be caused not by a lack or defective form of PTH-sensitive receptor adenylate cyclase complex but rather by an abnormal conformation in the plasma membrane-associated receptor adenylate cyclase enzyme complex in kidney. In the patient with PHP Type II, as cAMP generation is intact, the metabolic defect might be related to a defect of calcium mobilization in renal tubular cells in response to PTH.
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PMID:Effect of calcium administration on renal responsiveness to parathyroid hormone in pseudohypoparathyroidism type I and II -- in comparison with normals, idiopathic and surgical hypoparathyroidism. 22 61

A simple method to determine adenylate cyclase activity in isolated single nephron segments is described. Segments of the proximal convoluted tubule or the cortical collecting tubule were isolated from rabbit kidney slices pretreated with collagenase. After the tubule membranes were made permeable by adding hypotonic medium and freezing-thawing, each sample was incubated at 30 degrees C for 30 min in a medium containing ATP and theophylline. Generated cAMP was succinylated and served for radioimmunoassay. Addition of the incubation medium did not interfere the radioimmunoassay. Recovery of added cAMP was 96%. In the proximal convoluted tubule, either 8 mM NaF or 1 U/ml parathyroid hormone (PTH) markedly stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but 1 mU/ml arginine vasopressin (AVP) did not. By contrast, in the cortical collecting tubule, either 8 mM NaF or 1 mU/ML AVP markedly stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but 1 U/ml PTH did not. These data imply that this method is sensitive enough to detect either specific or nonspecific response of adenylate cyclase activity in single nephron segments.
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PMID:A simple method to determine adenylate cyclase activity in isolated single nephron segments by radioimmunoassay for succinyl adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate. 22 39

With dopamine (0.5 microgram/kg/min) infusion into the renal artery of thyroparathyroidectomized dogs, urine output and inorganic phosphate excretion increased significantly (p less than 0.05), but the increase in sodium excretion was low and not statistically significant. However, natriuresis and phosphaturia due to the infusion of dopamine were accelerated more markedly by the pretreatment with phenoxybenzamine. Dopamine was infused into the renal artery indoses too small to affect renal hemodynamics (0.02-0.05 microgram/kg/min) after the treatment with phenoxybenzamine and alprenolol with the result that phosphate and sodium excretion increased significantly (p less than 0.05). The excretion rate of cAMP did not change. This suggests that the effect of dopamine on sodium and phosphate excretion is directly influenced by alpha adrenergic activity in the kidney. The mechanism of natriuresis and phosphaturia by dopamine is, however, independent of changes in parathyroid hormone and the adenyl cyclase-cAMP system.
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PMID:The effects of dopamine on renal excretion of sodium, phosphate and cyclic AMP in thyroparathyroidectomized dogs. 23 36

A 15.5-yr-old black male is reported with hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and severe osteitis fibrosa cystica. While hypocalcemic and hyperphosphatemic, the circulating parathyroid hormone (PTH) level and urinary cAMP excretion were increased. An infusion of exogenous PTH produced a normal maximal excretion of urinary cAMP but failed to increase phosphate excretion. Correction of the hypocalcemia by administration of 200,000 U vitamin D daily lowered the endogenous PTH level and basal excretion of cAMP to normal; at that time, infusion of PTH produced both a normal rise in urinary cAMP and a normal phosphaturic response. This pattern of response suggests pseudohypoparathyroidism with a calcium-sensitive defect in renal phosphate transport distal to the PTH receptor adenyl cyclase mechanism, producing hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia, and secondary hyperparathyroidism. The osteitis fibrosa cystica was presumably due to the increased PTH, suggesting that resistance to PTH was present in kidney but not bone.
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PMID:Renal-resistant hormonoplethoric hypoparathyroidism with evidence for a defective response to cAMP. 23 78

It has been demonstrated that parathyroid hormone (PTH) inhibits the proximal tubular reabsorption of bicarbonate, and increases the urinary excretion of that ion. There is also a qualitative similarity between the alterations of the proximal tubular reabsorption of phosphate, sodium, and water after PTH administration and after acetazolamide administration. These findings suggest that the renal effect of PTH is possibly mediated through the inhibition of carbonic anhydrase in proximal tubules. Therefore, a possible inhibitory effect of PTH on carbonic anhydrase was evaluated in the homogenate of rat renal cortex by an indicator titration method. Incubation of cortical homogenates with PTH for 10 min at 37degreesC inhibited carbonic anhydrase activity. The inhibitory effect of PTH was ATP-, Mg++-, and K+-dependent and temperature-dependent; inactivation of PTH by heating at 100degreesC abolished the effect of PTH both to activate adenylate cyclase and to inhibit carbonic anhydrase. Calcium 5 mM also partially abolished effects of PTH to activate adenylate cyclase and to inhibit carbonic anhydrase. The inhibitory effect of PTH on carbonic anhydrase was specific to renal cortex. Cyclic AMP, the intracellular messenger substance for PTH, also inhibited carbonic anhydrase in renal cortex. The cyclic AMP-induced inhibition was also Mg++ dependent and temperature dependent, and required preincubation at 37degreesC. But 5'-AMP, a metabolic derivative of cyclic AMP without its biological effect, had no inhibitory effect on carbonic anhydrase. All the above results are consistent with the hypothesis that PTH inhibits proximal tubular reabsorption of bicarbonate and phosphate through the inhibition of carbonic anhydrase, and that inhibitory effect is mediated through the cyclic AMP system.
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PMID:Inhibition of carbonic anhydrase by parathyroid hormone and cyclic AMP in rat renal cortex in vitro. 23 68

Adenylate cyclase activity in particulate fractions from a transplantable rat osteogenic sarcoma was stimulated in a dose-dependent manner by prostaglandins E1 and E2 (PGE1 and PGE2) and parathyroid hormone (PTH). Prostaglandin F2alpha was active at a high concentration (3 x 10(-4) mol/l). Pretreatment of membranes with collagenase plus hyaluronidase reduced the magnitude of the PTH effect but did not affect the size of the PGE1 effect. Guanosine 5'-triphosphate and its synthetic analogue 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) activated adenylate cyclase in particulate preparations from the osteogenic sarcoma. The latter agent produced much larger effects, although the concentrations required for half-maximal enzyme activation were the same for both agonists (approximately 2 x 10(-6) mol/l). The effects of PTH and Gpp(NH)p were supra-additive at some concentrations of hormone. The effects of PGE1 and Gpp(NH)p were supra-additive at all hormone concentrations tested. Pre-incubation of membrane particles for 6 min with PTH produced an enzyme activation which was not reversed by dilution through washing; pre-incubation with PGE1 did not produce this effect. The response of membrane adenylate cyclase to Gpp(NH)p (10(-4) mol/l) was 75% greater in preparations pre-incubated with PTH than in membranes pre-incubated in buffer alone or in buffer containing PGE1. The basal rate of cyclic AMP production in the adenylate cyclase assay system decreased over a 35 min incubation period. This decrease was prevented by addition of PTH or PGE1. Addition of NaF or Gpp(NH)p produced a steady increase in the rate of production of cyclic AMP with time. Membrane preparations did not reduce the biological activity of PTH and did not degrade 125I-labelled PTH. The results demonstrate that the PTH- and PGE-responsive adenylate cyclases of the osteogenic sarcoma have distinctly different properties and that particulate preparations of the tumour do not metabolize PTH.
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PMID:Membranes from a transplantable osteogenic sarcoma responsive to parathyroid hormone and prostaglandins: regulation of adenylate cyclase and of hormone metabolism. 27 36

Activation of adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1] by parathyroid hormone (PTH) and calcitonin was measured as a function of stage of development in embryonic chicken limb buds. Responsiveness to both hormones develops in the tissue at the time when nascent bone is forming. In addition, a temporal sequence of development of hormone response was observed, with a PTH-activated adenylate cyclase appearing earlier than the calcitonin-activated enzyme. The responsiveness to the two hormones was additive, indicating the presence of two receptor populations. Undifferentiated cells obtained from limb buds prior to appearance of hormonal responsiveness were cultured and were found to develop a PTH-activated adenylate cyclase in vitro. However, a calcitonin-stimulated enzyme did not appear in such cultures. The PTH-activated enzyme was found to be similar to that present in bone in regard to its sensitivity to PTH. The enzyme did not respond to other hormones, and myoblast cultures did not develop a PTH-activated adenylate cyclase, indicating that a true bone adenylate cyclase was being measured.
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PMID:Development of parathyroid hormone- and calcitonin-activated adenylate cyclases in embryonic chicken limb and in cultured cells from embryonic chicken limb. 27 2

The effects of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on adenylate cyclase have been tested using renal tubular membranes and renal glomeruli isolated from rats. E. Coli LPS did not stimulate glomerular and tubular basal adenylate cyclase activity whereas it was an activator in the presence of fluoride. The effect of E. Coli LPS was immediate but was greater after 20 min preincubation. Maximum stimulation of both glomerular and tubular fluoride sensitive adenylate cyclase occurred at 125 microgram/ml of E. Coli LPS with an apparent Km (dose corresponding to 50% of maximum stimulation) of 30 microgram/ml. Above 125 microgram/ml there was a decrease in adenylate cyclase activity. E. Coli LPS produced an increase in the maximum velocity of both enzymes but did not affect their affinity for adenosine triphosphate. E. Coli LPS did not potentiate the effect of parathyroid hormone on glomerular and tubular adenylate cyclase. The lipid A moiety which is common to all LPS whatever the original strain gave results similar to those obtained with the entire LPS. This effect was specific and did not depend on the phospholipidic structure in general since no activation was obtained in the presence of phosphatidylserine.
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PMID:Effects of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide on renal glomerular and tubular adenylate cyclase. 33 75

An osteogenic sarcoma was induced in an inbred strain of the Sprague Dawley rat using seven serial injections of 32P-orthophosphate. The tumor was maintained by transplantation over a 3-year period in the same inbred strain. During this time it retained its bone-like differentiation. Tumor membranes and freshly isolated tumor cells also retained responsiveness to parathyroid hormone and to prostaglandins of adenylate cyclase and cyclic nucleotide formation respectively. The potencies of these agents and their analogues and metabolites were found to be proportional to their efficacies as bone resorbing agents. Thus, the tumor was shown to be a model for the study of hormone-responsiveness for tumor growth and differentiation, and also of the effects of agonists which act on bone-like cells.
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PMID:Radiation induced osteogenic sarcoma in the rat as a model of hormone-responsive differentiated cancer. 33 78

A woman with metastatic carcinoma of the breast developed hypercalcemia 39 months after mastectomy. The hypercalcemia remitted after treatment but recurred 12 months later, accompanied by elevated levels of serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (PTH). A urea/HC1 extract of hepatic metastases contained immunoreactive PTH, material which stimulated the resorption of fetal rat bone in tissue culture, and material which stimulated chick renal adenylate cyclase activity. These findings strongly suggest that this breast cancer produced a PTH-like substance.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the breast associated with hypercalcemia and the presence of parathyroid hormone-like substances in the tumor. 42 76


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