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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 occurrence and distribution of adrenergic, peptidergic and nitrergic nerve fibers were investigated within the part of the rat urethra that corresponds to the external urethral sphincteric mechanism. At this level, the urethral wall was found to be composed of the following layers: mucosa/urothelium, lamina propria, smooth muscle, mixed smooth and striated muscle and striated muscle. Nerve fibers containing immunoreactivity against either nitric oxide synthase (NOS) or any of the following peptides were visualised in various amounts in all three muscle layers of rats of both sexes: neuropeptide Y (NPY), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), substance P (SP),
cholecystokinin
(
CCK
), gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) and pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide. (PACAP) Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), marker for nonadrenergic nerves, was only found in nerve fibers of the smooth and mixed muscle layers, while enkephalin 8 (ENK-8) was only found in the striated muscle layer. The great number of putative neuromessengers and different nerve fiber populations suggest a complex innervation pattern of the sphincter area.
...
PMID:Distribution of neuropeptide-, tyrosine hydroxylase- and nitric oxide synthase containing nerve fibers in the external urethral sphincter of the rat. 890 70
Cell isolation may impair secretory chief cell functions. To evaluate whether a monolayer culture results in a recovery, we compared the effects of
cholecystokinin
(
CCK
) octapeptide (
CCK
-8) on pepsinogen release from freshly isolated and from cultured porcine chief cells.
CCK
-8 had no significant effect on freshly isolated porcine chief cells but stimulated pepsinogen release from 36- and 60-hour cultured cells with EC50 values of 180 and 130 nmol/l, respectively. Maximal stimulation, achieved at a concentration of 1 micromol/l, amounted to 289 +/- 63 (p <0.01) and 401 +/- 64% (p <0.01) of the respective control value. In addition, the
CCK
-8 concentration-response curve for 60-hour, but not for 36-hour cultured chief cells displayed a second stimulatory peak at a
CCK
-8 concentration of 100 pmol/l (266 +/- 55% of control value, p < 0.05) with an EC50 value of 16 pmol/l. The CCKA-receptor antagonist devazepide (10 nmol/l) prevented the stimulatory effect of 1 micromol/l
CCK
-8 on pepsinogen release of 60-hour cultured cells. The
adenylate cyclase
activator forskolin (10 micromol/l) potentiated the low concentration
CCK
-8 effect, shifting the peak stimulation to a
CCK
-8 concentration of 10 pmol/l, and inhibited the high concentration
CCK
-8 effect on 60-hour cultured cells. These results indicate a time-dependent recovery of the
CCK
response of porcine gastric chief cells in monolayer culture and suggest that this model has an advantage over freshly isolated chief cells with regard to the pharmacological characterization of
CCK
effects.
...
PMID:Recovery of cholecystokinin response of porcine gastric chief cells during monolayer culture. 901 5
Following electroconvulsive treatment (ECT) of rabbits, preprotachykinin-A (PPT-A) mRNA was detected by Southern blot analysis of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified products in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and aqueous humor of the eye. In contrast, no PPT-A mRNA could be detected in samples from untreated animals. In addition, several neuropeptides (substance P, neuropeptide Y,
cholecystokinin
, calcitonin gene-related peptide and pituitary
adenylate cyclase
activating peptide) were released into the CSF (and aqueous humor) following ECT. The results suggest that PPT-A mRNA was released together with neuropeptides into the CSF and aqueous humor in response to ECT. Indeed, previous studies have suggested that neurons can release neuropeptide mRNAs and that neurons are capable of taking up and expressing foreign mRNA. If neuropeptide mRNA can be taken up and utilized by another neuronal population, it might explain instances when neurons display 'phenotypic switch', i.e. the transient expression of novel neuropeptides.
...
PMID:Electroconvulsive treatment evokes release of preprotachykinin-A mRNA into the cerebrospinal fluid and ocular aqueous humor of rabbits. 917 89
The aims of this study were to determine the effect and mechanism of action of pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide (PACAP) on gallbladder muscle. Guinea pig gallbladder muscle strips were studied isometrically. In noncontracted muscle strips, PACAP-27 and PACAP-38 caused dose-dependent contractions, whereas vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) caused dose-dependent relaxation. PACAP-27 contractions were resistant to tetrodotoxin, atropine, and the substance P receptor antagonist [D-Arg1,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]substance P (Spantide) but were inhibited by the selective PACAP receptor antagonist PACAP-(6-38) and slightly increased with the VIP receptor antagonist [4-chloro-D-Phe6,Leu17]VIP. In
cholecystokinin
-precontracted muscle strips, both VIP and PACAP caused relaxations. This relaxant effect of PACAP-27 was inhibited by PACAP-(6-38) and [4-chloro-D-Phe6,Leu17]VIP, but not by tetrodotoxin. These studies suggest that PACAP has dual excitatory and inhibitory effects on guinea pig gallbladder muscle. The contractile effect of PACAP is a direct action on muscle through PACAP-preferring receptors. The relaxant effect of PACAP is seen in precontracted muscle strips and mediated through VIP/ PACAP-preferring receptors.
...
PMID:Dual effects of PACAP on guinea pig gallbladder muscle via PACAP-preferring and VIP/PACAP-preferring receptors. 922 79
The mechanism whereby somatostatin (SS) produces beneficial effects in established pancreatitis induced by pancreaticobiliary duct ligation (PBDL) is still not clear. The aim of the work was to evaluate the possibility of a direct action of SS on pancreatic acinar cells from rats with acute pancreatitis. For this purpose, we studied the SS-receptor-
adenylate cyclase
system in pancreatic acinar membranes from both, control rats and rats with experimentally induced acute pancreatitis. On the other hand, it has been reported that
cholecystokinin
(
CCK
) diminishes the number of SS receptors in pancreatic acinar cells. Proglumide, a
CCK
receptor antagonist reduces the severity of acute pancreatitis in the rat. Therefore, we have also examined the effect of proglumide on the somatostatinergic system in controls and rats with acute pancreatitis. Fourteen hours after PBDL, the SS receptors, the capacity of the SS analogue SMS 201-995 to inhibit forskolin-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
activity and PTX-catalyzed [32P] ADP-ribosylation of the alpha1 subunits of Gi proteins could not be detected in pancreatic acinar membranes. One month after reopening the closed pancreaticobiliary duct (PBD), the pancreas showed regeneration of acinar cells, and the above-mentioned parameters were significantly lower than in the control group. Two months after reopening the closed PBD, all these parameters had returned to control values. The administration of proglumide (20 mg/kg i.p.), a cholecystokinin receptor antagonist, accelerated pancreatic regeneration and approached all these parameters to control values one month after reopening the closed PBD. The present study suggests that the beneficial effects of SS on established pancreatitis induced by PBDL may not be due to a direct action of the peptide on pancreatic acinar cells at least at 14 hours after PBDL. In addition, these findings suggest that in established pancreatitis the effect of proglumide on the SS receptor-
adenylate cyclase
system could be due to its action on pancreatic regeneration.
...
PMID:The somatostatin receptor-adenylate cyclase system in rat pancreatic acinar membranes after temporary pancreaticobiliary duct ligation. 940 49
ECL cells are numerous in the acid-producing part of the rat stomach. They are rich in histamine and pancreastatin, a chromogranin A-derived peptide, and they secrete these products in response to gastrin. We have examined how isolated ECL cells respond to a variety of neuromessengers and peptide hormones. Highly purified (85%) ECL cells were collected from rat stomach using repeated counter-flow elutriation and cultured for 48 h before experiments were conducted. The ECL cells responded to gastrin, sulphated
cholecystokinin
-8 and to high K+ and Ca2+ with the parallel secretion of histamine and pancreastatin. Glycine-extended gastrin was without effect. Forskolin, an activator of
adenylate cyclase
, induced secretion, whereas isobutylmethylxanthine, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, raised the basal release without enhancing the gastrin-evoked stimulation. Maximum stimulation with gastrin resulted in the release of 30% of the secretory products. Numerous neuromessengers and peptide hormones were screened for their ability to stimulate secretion and to inhibit gastrin-stimulated secretion. Pituitary
adenylate cyclase
activating peptide (PACAP)-27 and -38 stimulated secretion of both histamine and pancreastatin with a potency greater than that of gastrin and with the same efficacy. Related peptides, such as vasoactive intestinal peptide, helodermin and helospectin, stimulated secretion with lower potency. The combination of EC100 gastrin and EC50 PACAP produced a greater response than gastrin alone. None of the other neuropeptides or peptide hormones tested stimulated secretion. Serotonin, adrenaline, noradrenaline and isoprenaline induced moderate secretion at high concentrations. Muscarinic receptor agonists did not stimulate secretion, and histamine and selective histamine receptor agonists and antagonists were without effect. This was the case also with GABA, aspartate and glutamate. Somatostatin and galanin, but none of the other agents tested, inhibited gastrin-stimulated secretion. Our results reveal that not only gastrin but also PACAP is a powerful excitant of the ECL cells, that not only somatostatin, but also galanin can suppress secretion, that muscarinic receptor agonists fail to evoke secretion, and that histamine (and pancreastatin) does not evoke autofeedback inhibition.
...
PMID:Neurohormonal regulation of histamine and pancreastatin secretion from isolated rat stomach ECL cells. 941 89
Examination of neuropeptide families can provide information about phyletic relationships and evolutionary processes. In this article the oxytocin/vasopressin family, growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) superfamily and the substance P/tachykinin family have been considered in detail because they have been isolated from an extraordinarily diverse array of species from several vertebrate classes and invertebrate phyla. More important is that the nucleotide sequence of mRNA or cDNA encoding many of these peptides has been determined, which has allowed evolutionary distances to be estimated based on the DNA mutation rate. The origin of a given family lies in a primordial gene that arose many millions of years ago, and through time, exon duplication and insertion, gene duplication, point mutation and exon loss, the family developed into the forms that are now recognised. For example, in birds, GRF and pituitary
adenylate cyclase
activating peptide (PACAP) are encoded by the same gene, which probably arose as a result of exon duplication and tandem insertion of the ancestral GRF gene. In mammals GRF is the sole product on one gene, and PACAP is the product of a gene that also produces PACAP-related peptide (PRP), which is homologous to GRF. Thus it appears that between birds and mammals the GRF/PACAP gene duplicated: exon loss gave rise to the mammalian GRF gene, while mutation led to the formation of the mammalian PRP/PACAP gene. The neuropeptide Y superfamily is considered briefly, as is cionin, which is an invertebrate peptide that is closely related to the mammalian gastrin/
cholecystokinin
family.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide families: evolutionary perspectives. 953 70
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) causes relaxation of smooth muscle cells via both VIP-specific receptor coupled to nitric oxide synthase and VIP-preferring receptor coupled to
adenylate cyclase
. Because the mechanism of interaction among VIP, pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide (PACAP), and PTH is still unclear, the characteristics of the receptors for PACAP and PTH in circular muscle cells obtained from the guinea pig cecum were investigated. The effects of an inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase [cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphorothioate (Rp-cAMPS)], guanylate cyclase inhibitors, antagonists of these peptides, and the selective receptor protection on the relaxing effect produced by PACAP, VIP, and PTH were examined. PACAP-induced relaxation was significantly inhibited by a VIP antagonist, a PTH antagonist, Rp-cAMPS, and an inhibitor of particulate guanylate cyclase. VIP-induced relaxation was significantly inhibited by a PACAP antagonist and a PTH antagonist. PTH-induced relaxation was significantly inhibited by a VIP-specific receptor antagonist and Rp-cAMPS, but not by a PACAP antagonist. A PTH antagonist significantly inhibited a VIP-preferring receptor agonist-induced relaxation. The muscle cells in which
cholecystokinin
octapeptide and PTH receptors were protected completely abolished the inhibitory responses to VIP and PACAP. The muscle cells in which
cholecystokinin
octapeptide and VIP or PACAP receptors were protected completely abolished the inhibitory response to PTH. This study shows that PACAP induces relaxation of these muscle cells via both VIP-preferring receptor coupled to
adenylate cyclase
and PACAP-specific receptor, and that PTH induces relaxation of the muscle cells via PTH-specific receptor coupled to
adenylate cyclase
. In addition, the results of a selective receptor protection show that PTH does not bind to VIP receptors, and that VIP does not bind to PTH receptor. Therefore, this study first demonstrates the presence of one-way inhibitory mechanisms from the PTH-specific receptor to the VIP-preferring receptor, and from the VIP-specific receptor to the PTH-specific receptor in the mechanisms of interaction between VIP and PTH.
...
PMID:Interactive mechanisms among pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide, vasoactive intestinal peptide, and parathyroid hormone receptors in guinea pig cecal circular smooth muscle cells. 960 96
Guinea pig caecal circular smooth muscle cells were used to determine whether brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) can inhibit the contractile response produced by
cholecystokinin
-octapeptide (CCK-8). In addition, we examined the effect of an inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, an inhibitor of particulate or soluble guanylate cyclase, an atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) antagonist (ANP 1-11), and selective receptor protection on the BNP-induced relaxation of these muscle cells. The effect of BNP on cAMP formation was also examined. BNP inhibited the contractile response produced by CCK-8 in a dose-response manner, with an IC50 value of 8.5 nM, and stimulated the production of cAMP. The inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and the inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase significantly inhibited the relaxation produced by BNP. In contrast, the inhibitor of particulate guanylate cyclase did not have any significant effect on the relaxation produced by BNP. ANP 1-11 significantly but partially inhibited the relaxation produced by BNP. The muscle cells where CCK-8 and ANP binding sites were protected completely preserved the inhibitory response to ANP, but partially preserved the inhibitory response to BNP. The muscle cells where CCK-8 and BNP binding sites were protected completely preserved the inhibitory response to both ANP and BNP. This study demonstrates that BNP induces relaxation of these muscle cells via both ANP binding sites coupled to soluble guanylate cyclase and distinct BNP binding sites coupled to
adenylate cyclase
.
...
PMID:Interaction between brain natriuretic peptide and atrial natriuretic peptide in caecal circular smooth muscle cells. 1067 11
The contractile effect of capsaicin in the guinea-pig small intestine involves an activation of enteric cholinergic neurons. Our present data show that the P(2) purinoceptor antagonist pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulphonic acid (PPADS, 30 microM) significantly reduces the contractile response to capsaicin (2 microM) in the presence, but not in the absence, of the tachykinin receptor antagonists [O-Pro(9), (Spiro-gamma-lactam)Leu(10), Trp(11)]physalaemin (1-11) (GR 82334; 3 microM) and (S)-(N)-(1-(3-(1-benzoyl-3-(3, 4-dichlorophenyl)piperidin-3-yl)propyl)-4-phenylpiperidine-4-yl)-N -methylacetamide (SR 142804: 100 nM) (for blocking tachykinin NK1 and NK3 receptors, respectively). PPADS (30 microM) fails to influence submaximal cholinergic contractions evoked by
cholecystokinin
octapeptide (CCK-8; 2-3 nM) or senktide (1 nM), or the direct smooth muscle-contracting effect of histamine (100-200 nM). A higher concentration (300 microM) of PPADS is also without effect against the stimulatory action of
cholecystokinin
octapeptide. This means that PPADS can probably be safely used as a purinoceptor antagonist in intestinal preparations. The putative pituitary
adenylate cyclase
activating peptide (PACAP) receptor antagonist PACAP-(6-38) (3 microM) significantly reduces the contractile effect of PACAP-(1-38) (10 nM) and abolishes that of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP; 10 nM). PACAP-(6-38) (3 microM) fails to influence the effect of capsaicin (2 microM) both in the absence and in the presence of tachykinin receptor antagonists. The nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NOARG; 100 microM) also fails to inhibit the capsaicin-induced motor response. We conclude that an endogenous ligand of PPADS-sensitive P(2) purinoceptors (possibly ATP), but not a VIP/PACAP-like peptide or NO, is involved in the nontachykininergic activation of cholinergic neurons in the course of the capsaicin-induced contraction.
...
PMID:Evidence for the involvement of ATP, but not of VIP/PACAP or nitric oxide, in the excitatory effect of capsaicin in the small intestine. 1076 72
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