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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)
The glucose-specific phosphocarrier protein (IIIGlc) of the bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS) is a major signal transducer that mediates the intricate interplay among extracellular signals (PTS and non-PTS sugars), cytoplasmic and membrane proteins (PTS and non-PTS transporters), and
adenylate cyclase
. To further define the central role of IIIGlc in these multiplex signaling mechanisms, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to construct three mutant IIIGlc proteins containing single amino acid changes; Phe-3 was replaced with
tryptophan
[( Trp3]IIIGlc), and His-75 and the active-site His-90 were replaced with glutamine [( Gln75]IIIGlc and [Gln90]IIIGlc, respectively). [Trp3]IIIGlc resembles the wild-type protein in most properties and should be valuable for spectrophotometric experiments. In contrast, clear differences between mutant and wild-type proteins were observed with both [Gln75]IIIGlc and [Gln90]IIIGlc in in vitro sugar phosphorylation assays. As predicted, [Gln90]IIIGlc with a modified active site cannot be phosphorylated. Unexpectedly, [Gln75]IIIGlc accepts but cannot transfer phosphoryl groups, suggesting His-75 may also be a critical amino acid for IIIGlc-mediated signaling mechanisms. The physiological effects of these mutations are briefly described.
...
PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the phosphocarrier protein. IIIGlc, a major signal-transducing protein in Escherichia coli. 265 35
The synthesis of monofluorescein, monorhodamine, and mono-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD) derivatives of glucagon is reported. The fluorescent groups were introduced by converting
tryptophan
-25 to 2-thioltryptophan using thiol-specific fluorescent reagents. All derivatives retained the ability to activate
adenylate cyclase
when compared to glucagon and thus were considered full agonists. IC50 values of 6.8.10(-9), 1.7.10(-8), 1.8.10(-8) and 5.4.10(-9) M were measured in rat liver membranes for NBD-, fluorescein-, rhodamine-Trp25-glucagon and native glucagon, respectively. From the IC50 values Kd values of 2.16.10(-9), 4.10(-9), 2.10(-9) and 1.72.10(-9) M were calculated for the binding of NBD-, fluorescein-, rhodamine-Trp25-glucagon and native glucagon, respectively. The highest quantum yield (0.18) of the monomer derivatives was obtained with fluorescein-Trp25-glucagon in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4). Difluorescein-glucagon was also prepared by reacting the amino groups of histidine-1 and lysine-12 with fluorescein isothiocyanate and dimer derivatives were prepared using fluorescein-labelled 2-thiolTrp25-glucagon. Difluorescein-glucagon bound only weakly to glucagon receptors and displayed antagonist properties. The dimer derivative formed from two difluorescein-2-thiolTrp25-glucagon molecules had similar poor binding qualities, whereas the dimer formed from difluorescein-2-thiolTrp25-glucagon and 2-thiolTrp25-glucagon exhibited, at low concentrations, properties similar to monofluorescein-glucagon. Both dimer derivatives were only sparingly soluble in aqueous medium. Specific binding of fluorescein-Trp25-glucagon and difluorescein-glucagon to rat hepatocytes was followed using flow cytometry.
...
PMID:Fluorescent glucagon derivatives. I. Synthesis and characterisation of fluorescent glucagon derivatives. 284 91
A gene library of Bordetella pertussis DNA was constructed in Escherichia coli using the broad-host-range cosmid vector pLAFR1. The average insert size was 24.9 kb. From 500 members of the gene library, clones were identified which complemented trpE, glnA and Thr- mutations in E. coli but none which complemented trpD, trpC, trpB, trpA, proA or Leu- mutations. Four clones were identified which complemented trpE in E. coli. Anthranilate synthase activity was detected in a trpE strain only when it harboured a plasmid from one of these clones; activity was repressed when
tryptophan
was included in the growth medium. Two clones were identified which complemented glnA of E. coli. A recombinant plasmid from one of these clones also restored some of the nitrogen acquisition functions of glnG and glnL in E. coli. Expression of several B. pertussis virulence-associated products (haemolysin, heat-labile toxin,
adenylate cyclase
, filamentous haemagglutinin, and the cell-envelope polypeptide of Mr 30,000) was not detected in 500 independent clones. However, by transferring the recombinant plasmids to a mutant of B. pertussis deficient in haemolysin and
adenylate cyclase
, a plasmid was identified which restored both these activities.
...
PMID:Complementation of mutations in Escherichia coli and Bordetella pertussis by B. pertussis DNA cloned in a broad-host-range cosmid vector. 288 29
The onset of therapeutic effectiveness of carbamazepine is generally very rapid in the treatment of seizure and paroxysmal pain disorders, shows some lag in the treatment of mania, and exhibits the longest lag in depression. These time course variations may indicate that different mechanisms underlie the efficacy of carbamazepine in the differential neuropsychiatric syndromes. Biochemical and pharmacological data suggest that the anticonvulsant effects of carbamazepine are related to "peripheral-type" benzodiazepine and alpha 2-noradrenergic receptor systems and to its ability to stabilize sodium channels. GABAB (baclofen-like) actions appear to be involved in antinociceptive, but not anticonvulsant, effects. The relatively acute time course of antimanic efficacy may be related to the above-mentioned mechanisms or to other effects related to systems postulated to be altered in the manic syndrome. These effects might include carbamazepine's ability to increase acetylcholine in the striatum, decrease probenecid-induced levels of CSF homovanillic acid (HVA) in man and dopamine turnover in animals, decrease CSF norepinephrine in manic patients, inhibit
adenylate cyclase
activity (in response to norepinephrine, dopamine, adenosine, or ouabain), decrease GABA turnover, or act as a vasopressin agonist. Efficacy in depression may be related to actions in man that take time or chronic drug administration to develop, such as increases in plasma
tryptophan
, decreases in CSF somatostatin, decreases in thyroid indices, and increases in urinary free cortisol excretion and, in animals, increases in substance P sensitivity and increases in brain adenosine receptors. The ability of carbamazepine to block the development of lidocaine- and cocaine-induced seizures also requires chronic administration, suggesting that these seizure models may provide a unique perspective for understanding mechanisms of time-dependent effects.
...
PMID:Time course of clinical effects of carbamazepine: implications for mechanisms of action. 328 May 60
Bull seminalplasmin antagonizes with high potency and selectivity the activating effect of calmodulin on target enzymes [Gietzen & Galla (1985) Biochem. J. 230, 277-280]. In the present paper we establish that seminalplasmin forms a 1:1, Ca2+-dependent and urea-resistant complex with calmodulin. The dissociation constant equals 1.6 nM. In the absence of Ca2+ a low-affinity complex is formed that is disrupted by 4 M-urea. On the basis of these properties, a fast affinity purification of seminalplasmin was developed. The high specificity of seminalplasmin as a calmodulin antagonist was demonstrated for the multipathway-regulated
adenylate cyclase
of bovine cerebellum. Far-u.v. c.d. properties are consistent with a random form of seminalplasmin in aqueous solution; 23% alpha-helix is induced on interaction with calmodulin. The fluorescence properties of the single
tryptophan
residue of seminalplasmin are markedly changed on formation of the complex. These studies allowed us to locate tentatively the peptide segment that interacts with calmodulin, and to ascertain the structural homology between seminalplasmin and other calmodulin-binding peptides. Additional material, showing the inhibition of calmodulin-mediated activation of bovine brain phosphodiesterase by melittin and seminalplasmin and also the near-u.v. spectrum of affinity-purified seminalplasmin, has been deposited as supplement SUP 50135 (4 pages) at the British Library Lending Division, Boston Spa, Wetherby, West Yorkshire LS23 7BQ, U.K., from whom copies may be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1986) 233, 5.
...
PMID:Affinity purification of seminalplasmin and characterization of its interaction with calmodulin. 381 96
Structural modifications within the active site of the ACTH molecule have produced analogs that inhibit the hormone sensitive
adenylate cyclase
system of bovine adrenal cortical plasma membranes. It is demonstrated that the
tryptophan
residue of the ACTH molecule is essential for stimulation of the enzyme. Substitution of
tryptophan
by phenylalanine or by N(alpha)-methyltryptophan as in [Gln(5), Phe(9)]corticotropin(1-20) amide or [N(alpha)-Metrp(9)]corticotropin(1-24) provides ACTH analogs that exhibit high affinity for the ACTH receptor(s) but fail to activate the
adenylate cyclase
system. It is concluded that affinity for the receptors alone is not sufficient for expression of hormonal activity. The observation that adrenal cortical
adenylate cyclase
activated by fluoride ion is not inhibited by the antagonists indicates that hormonal and fluoride activation proceed via different mechanisms.
...
PMID:ACTH antagonists. 435 33
The influence of 2-(2-oxo-3-piperidyl)-1,2-benzisothiazoline-3-one-1, 1-dioxide (supidimide), a representative of a new class of sedative drugs, on the noradrenergic, dopaminergic, serotoninergic and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic neuronal systems of rodent brains was investigated. In each case the brain transmitter levels after administration of supidimide were determined. Utilisation of noradrenaline (norepinephrine, NE), dopamine (DA), and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) was also investigated ex vivo. The study was complemented with in vitro investigations of biosynthesis, synaptosomal uptake, degradation, and receptor binding of the transmitters. Based on a preliminary study of the distribution of [35S]-supidimide in rat brain, in vitro effects observed at greater than 10(-4) mol/l were considered irrelevant. Similarly, in vivo effects requiring dosages higher than 300 mg/kg i.p. were not regarded adequate to explain the sedative and antiaggressive efficacy of supidimide. With the above restrictions, the following parameters can be rated as not influenced by supidimide: levels of
tryptophan
in rat brain and serum (free and total); 5-HT biosynthesis in vivo (rat brain; 5-HT accumulation after monoamine oxidase (MAO) blockade); activity of MAO-A and MAO-B (rat brain mitochondria); uptake of 5-HT, NE and DA (rat synaptosomes); 5-HT receptor binding ( [3H]-LSD binding assay in rat cortical membranes); tyrosine hydroxylase activity (rat adrenal glands); catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT) (rat liver); NE binding to central alpha 1- and alpha 2-receptors (rat brain; radioligand assay with [3H]-dihydroergocryptine, [3H]-prazosin and [3H]-WB 4101 (2',6'-dimethoxy-(G-3H]-phenoxy]-ethylaminomethylbenzo-1,4-dioxane ); DA levels (whole rat brain and striata); dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) levels (whole rat brain without cerebellum and striata); elevated DOPAC levels after pretreatment with haloperidol; DA-dependent
adenylate cyclase
in vitro (rat striatum); D2 receptor binding ( [3H]-spiperone binding assay, rat striatum); GABA levels (mouse brain); GABA transaminase activity (mouse brain stem); sodium-independent [3H]-GABA receptor binding (rat brain) and benzodiazepine binding (rat cortical membranes, [3H]-diazepam binding assay). Two effects on the GABAergic system were induced by supidimide. Starting at 300 mg/kg i.p., supidimide slowed down the GABA accumulation in brains of aminooxyacetate-treated mice. At 10(-4) mol/l supidimide caused a significant inhibition of GABA uptake (rat synaptosomes).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Influence of supidimide on brain neurotransmitter systems of rats and mice. 608 11
1. To study the effects of maternal alcohol ingestion on brain parameters in offspring, rats were given ethanol for drinking (25% w/v) from the time of mating until sacrifice. Controls drank tap water. 2. Alcohol ingestion reduced daily food and liquid consumption but total caloric intake was only slightly diminished. 3. Maternal body weight increased and offspring body weight, size and brain weight were reduced in the animals receiving alcohol. 4. Brain concentrations of
tryptophan
, tyrosine and GABA were augmented in ethanol treated mothers at 1 day post-partum. 5. Comparison of brain parameters in offspring of alcoholic mothers with those of controls showed that
tryptophan
and 5HT concentrations were augmented in 4 day old neonates, NA was increased in 21 day fetuses and 1 day old neonates, and
adenylate cyclase
activity was also greater in the brains of 21 day fetuses and the cerebellums of 4 day old neonates. 6. Neither phosphodiesterase nor cyclic-AMP concentrations differed in offspring of alcoholic and control mothers. 7. Data showed alterations in brain NA and 5HT systems in the offspring of alcoholic mothers.
...
PMID:Effects of maternal ethanol ingestion on cerebral neurotransmitters and cyclic-AMP in the rat offspring. 612 83
1. The effect of the plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and the chemically related compounds: serotonin,
tryptophan
, I. pyruvic, I. butyric, I. propionic and tryptamine on the growth of 3T3 cells has been studied. 2. Each of these compounds increases the cell number in a variable degree. The increase is related to the presence of the serum in the medium. 3. The kinetic relation between IAA, foetal calf serum and cell growth was studied. 4. It may be that IAA and related compounds affect the cell growth through
adenylate cyclase
and cAMP-cGMP systems.
...
PMID:The effect of the plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid and chemically related compounds on the growth of mouse fibroblast 3T3 cells. 613 92
1. Analogues of the C-terminal octapeptide and tetrapeptide of pancreozymin with a modified
tryptophan
residue have been tested on the rat pancreas
adenylate cyclase
activity, on the enzyme and fluid secretion of the rat pancreas in vivo and on the amylase release from rabbit pancreatic fragments. 2. Fluorination of the
tryptophan
residue in position 5 or 6 does not influence the effect of the peptides on any of the measured parameters. 3. Methylation of the nitrogen atom in the indolyl ring, which eliminates hydrogen bond formation, markedly reduces the affinity of the peptides for the
adenylate cyclase
activity and for the amylase release in rabbit pancreatic fragments. The effects on fluid and enzyme secretion in the rat pancreas in vivo are reduced nearly as much. 4. Tetrafluorination of the
tryptophan
residue, which reduces its charge donor capacity, causes a still larger reduction in activity and affinity of the octapeptide. 5. The tetrafluorinated tetrapeptide stimulates the
adenylate cyclase
activity and the enzyme and fluid secretion in vivo more than the unmodified tetrapeptide, which may be due to its increased hydrophobicity. 6. Replacement of the nitrogen atom in the indolyl ring of
tryptophan
by a sulfur or an oxygen atom, which also reduces the charge donor capacity, leads again to a large reduction in the affinity and activity of both the octapeptide and the tetrapeptide. 7. These findings suggest that the charge donor capacity of the
tryptophan
residue is of primary importance for the biologic activity of pancreozymin, while hydrogen bond formation and hydrophobicity are of secondary importance.
...
PMID:Role of the tryptophan residue in the interaction of pancreozymin with its receptor. 615 46
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