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Query: EC:4.6.1.1 (
adenylate cyclase
)
19,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Briefly reviewed herein are some of the contemporary findings on the metabolism of vitamin D, and the biochemical and physiological effects of this steroid in the animal. Certainly the most accepted major action of vitamin D is to enhance the intestinal absorption of calcium. Historically, there is also considerable evidence that the vitamin D is required for the resorption of calcium from bone, thereby aiding in maintaining normal serum calcium levels. Increasing evidence is becoming available that vitamin D does have a direct effect at the kidney level, and that the absorption and metabolism of the phosphate ion is also significantly affected by this steroid. As a consequence of vitamin D administration to the rachitic animal, some molecular changes in the intestine have been identified and these include the induction of the vitamin D dependent
calcium binding protein
, an increase in intestinal levels of alkaline phosphatase and calcium ATPase, and a stimulation of the
adenylate cyclase
system. A hallmark of recent efforts is a further understanding of the metabolism of vitamin D and the formation of its most active form, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol. All of this knowledge will prove valuable in the rational treatment of certain abnormalities of calcium and bone metabolism for which examples are already available.
...
PMID:Metabolism, function and clinical aspects of vitamin D. 16 68
The effect of free calcium (Ca2+) on
adenylate cyclase
(AC) activity of rat anterior pituitary gland have been investigated in order to shed some light on the interrelationships between the two second messengers (cAMP and calcium) which operate in pituitary cells. Anterior pituitary homogenates or crude membranes preparations (obtained using buffers free of divalent cation chelators) were assayed and the concentrations of Ca2+ in the assay mixture containing EGTA were calculated by a computer program for each addition of CaCl2. A wide range of Ca2+ concentrations (from 2 X 10(-9) to 6 X 10(-4)M) was spanned. Ca2+ was found to markedly inhibit pituitary AC and the mathematical analysis of data indicated the presence of two inhibition The two KiS were: 1.78 +/- 0.48 X 10(-7) M and 2.47 +/- 0.52 X 10(-4) M for the homogenates and 1.71 +/- 0.45 X 10(-7) M and 3.15 +/- 0.85 X 10(-4) M for the membrane preparations. No stimulation of the enzyme could be detected at any Ca2+ concentration tested. Furthermore, because of our experimental conditions it is unlikely that there was substantial loss of endogenous calmodulin, or other
calcium binding protein
(s) required to mediate AC stimulation by calcium. The lack of a calcium-calmodulin stimulation of pituitary AC was confirmed by experiments with anticalmodulin drugs (trifluoperazine and calmidazolium, R24571) and experiments with EGTA-washed membranes in the presence of exogenous calmodulin. At any Ca2+ concentration, the same AC activity was observed in the presence and in the absence of anticalmodulin drugs or added calmodulin. The mechanism of pituitary AC inhibition by Ca2+ was investigated focusing on a range of Ca2+ concentrations near the Ki for the high affinity calcium site and thus similar to the intracellular Ca2+ concentrations. Ca2+ was found to act as a competitive inhibitor of the Mg2+ activation of AC and as a noncompetitive inhibitor with respect to the MgATP2-, the substrate of the enzyme. The effects of Ca2+ on AC were also studied in cell populations and tissues extremely rich in PRL-secreting cells (cell fractions purified from rat anterior pituitaries and human prolactinomas). The pattern of Ca2+ action was found to be nearly superimposable on that observed in total pituitary.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of calcium on adenylate cyclase of rat anterior pituitary gland. 349 97
Calmodulin (CaM), the
calcium binding protein
that modulates the activity of a number of key regulatory enzymes, is present at high levels in sperm. To determine whether CaM regulates
adenylate cyclase
in mammalian sperm, the actions of EGTA and selected CaM antagonists on a solubilized
adenylate cyclase
from mature equine sperm were examined. The activity of equine sperm
adenylate cyclase
was inhibited by EGTA in a concentration-dependent manner with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 2 mM. Equine sperm
adenylate cyclase
was also inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by the CaM antagonists chlorpromazine and calmidazolium (IC50 = 400 and 50 microM, respectively). The inhibition of enzyme activity by these agents correlated with their known potency and specificity as anti-CaM agents. The activity of the enzyme in the presence of 200 microM calmidazolium was restored by the addition of authentic CaM (EC50 = 15 microM); full activity was restored by the addition of 50 microM CaM. La3+, an ion that dissociates CaM from tightly bound CaM-enzyme systems, inhibited equine sperm
adenylate cyclase
(IC50 = 1 mM). Incubation of equine sperm
adenylate cyclase
with La3+ dissociated endogenous CaM from the enzyme so that most of the enzyme bound to a CaM-Sepharose column equilibrated with Ca2+. Specific elution of CaM-binding proteins from the CaM-Sepharose column with EGTA yielded a CaM-depleted
adenylate cyclase
fraction that was stimulated 2-fold by the addition of exogenous CaM.
...
PMID:Calmodulin-mediated adenylate cyclase from mammalian sperm. 359 92
Melanotropin (MSH) receptor activity in the M2R mouse melanoma cell line is tightly controlled by calcium by an unknown mechanism. The possibility that calcium regulation is mediated by calmodulin or a calmodulin-related
calcium binding protein
has been addressed in this report by studying the effects of two known calmodulin antagonists, fluphenazine and melittin, on MSH receptor function. Stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
(AC) in M2R plasma membranes by beta MSH was strongly inhibited by both antagonists. The concentrations of fluphenazine and melittin yielding half-maximal inhibition (IC50) of AC were 16 microM and 2.4 microM, respectively. Both fluphenazine and melittin also inhibit prostaglandin E1-, GTP gamma S, and forskolin-stimulated AC activity, as well as that of unstimulated enzyme, although inhibition is shown to occur at significantly higher concentrations of antagonist. We have shown that the calcium-dependent rate-limiting step in MSH stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
, that of hormone binding, is strongly inhibited by these antagonists at concentrations identical to, if not lower than, those required for the inhibition of AC activity (fluphenazine-IC50, 14 microM; melittin-IC50, 0.7 microM). The actions of these antagonists, furthermore, appear to be calcium insensitive, as melittin affects the stability of both the high affinity (calcium containing) and low affinity (calcium depleted) receptor-MSH complexes. The sensitivity of the MSH receptor to inhibition by calmodulin antagonists resembles that described for purified calmodulin-sensitive enzyme systems, which suggests a possible role for calmodulin in MSH receptor function. Among peptide hormone receptors, this effect by calmodulin antagonists appears to be unique for the MSH receptor.
...
PMID:Inhibition by melittin and fluphenazine of melanotropin receptor function and adenylate cyclase in M2R melanoma cell membranes. 366 46
Calmodulin (CaM), a multifunctional
calcium binding protein
with no known enzymatic activity, has been purified to homogeneity from bovine adrenal cortex. The purification included anion exchange on DE-52 cellulose, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and separation by molecular sieving on Sephadex G-150. The yield of CaM from 900 g of whole adrenal was 150 mg. Adrenocortical CaM showed a molecular weight of 18,000 on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, an isoelectric point of 4.1, and demonstrated a characteristic shift in mobility on polyacrylamide gels in the presence of calcium. The spectral properties of adrenocortical CaM differed slightly from those of CaM isolated from bovine brain. Minor differences were observed in peptide maps and amino acid composition between adrenocortical and brain CaM, but adrenocortical CaM contained a single trimethyl-lysine residue characteristic of all mammalian forms of CaM isolated to date. Adrenocortical CaM is biologically active in the stimulation of activator-deficient phosphodiesterase, and showed a half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) of 3 nM for stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
from Bordetella pertussis.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of calmodulin from adrenal cortex. 397 May 28
This study investigated the sex- and age-related alterations in calcium homeostasis in 39- to 82-week-old rats raised from weaning on a vitamin D deficient (-D) diet. It was found that vitamin D deprivation decreased the life span of male, but not female, rats. Female -D animals exhibited a steady increase in serum calcium with age from 39 to 82 weeks, although circulating calcium of -D animals never reached normocalcemic levels. There was no attenuation of the secondary hyperparathyroidism. Serum calcium of -D males was significantly lower than that of age-matched females at all ages when sufficient males were alive to make the comparison. Serum parathyroid hormone levels were decreased in -D females when serum calcium was elevated to hypercalcemic levels by calcium injection. Similarly, administration of vitamin D3 or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 elevated serum calcium and depressed parathyroid hormone in 14- and 22-month-old -D females. These animals also exhibited increased intestinal
calcium binding protein
content. Administration of vitamin D3 or dihydroxyvitamin D3 repaired renal
adenylate cyclase
refractoriness to parathyroid hormone. The sex- and diet-related alterations in serum phosphorus that were found at earlier ages disappeared by 67 weeks of age. Serum calcitonin was elevated in mature and aging +D males and females and -D females relative to younger animals. In -D males, calcitonin levels were less markedly elevated. The results of this study indicate that there are several important sex differences related to the regulation of calcium homeostasis in mature and aging rats. In addition, it was found that mature (14 month) and old (22 month) chronically -D female rats were able to respond to repletion with dihydroxyvitamin D3 or vitamin D within 10 days.
...
PMID:Effects of long-term vitamin D deficiency and response to vitamin D repletion in the mature and aging male and female rat. 632 33
An
adenylate cyclase
activity stimulated by serotonin and calmodulin is present in the segmental ganglia of the leech Hirudo medicinalis. Removal of the endogenous
calcium binding protein
does not alter the responsiveness of the enzyme to serotonin. The calmodulin antagonist, trifluoperazine, drastically reduces the amine stimulatory effect on both intact and calmodulin-depleted membranes. We suggest that calmodulin-sensitive and serotonin-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
are, at least functionally, independent.
...
PMID:Adenylate cyclase activity from Hirudo medicinalis segmental ganglia: modulation by calcium and calmodulin. 786 78