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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)
Inosine
is a potent primary stimulus of insulin secretion from isolated mouse islets. The inosine-induced insulin secretion was totally depressed during starvation, but was completely restored by the addition of 5 mM-caffeine to the medium and partially restored by the addition of 5 mM-glucose. Mannoheptulose (3 mg/ml) potentiated the effect of 10 mM-inosine in islets from fed mice. The mechanism of the stimulatory effect of inosine was further investigated, and it was demonstrated that pancreatic islets contain a nucleoside phosphorylase capable of converting inosine into hypoxanthine and ribose 1-phosphate.
Inosine
at 10 mM concentration increased the lactate production and the content of ATP, glucose 6-phosphate (fructose 1,6-diphosphate + triose phosphates) and cyclic AMP in islets from fed mice. In islets from starved mice inosine-induced lactate production was decreased and no change in the concentration of cyclic AMP could be demonstrated, whereas the concentration of ATP and glucose 6-phosphate rose.
Inosine
(10 mM) induced a higher concentration of (fructose 1,6-diphosphate + triose phosphates) in islets from starved mice than in islets from fed mice suggesting that in starvation the activities of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase or other enzymes below this step in glycolysis are decreased. Formation of glucose from inosine was negligible.
Inosine
had no direct effect on
adenylate cyclase
activity in islet homogenates. The observed changes in insulin secretion and islet metabolism mimic what is seen when glucose and glyceraldehyde stimulate insulin secretion, and as neither ribose nor hypoxanthine-stimulated insulin release, the results are interpreted as supporting the substrate-site hypothesis for glucose-induced insulin secretion according to which glucose has to be metabolized in the beta-cells before secretion is initiated.
...
PMID:Inosine-stimulated insulin release and metabolism of inosine in isolated mouse pancreatic islets. 18 35
Field electrical stimulation (ES), K+ (50 mM) or ionophore X-537A (0.01 mM) induced tritium release from cat cerebral arteries preincubated with [3H]noradrenaline (NA). Adenosine and AMP (0.5 mM) did not modify tritium release caused by ionophore X-537A, but these agents and ATP (0.5 mM) significantly reduced that elicited by ES and K+; this reduction was antagonized by 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine (MIX; 0.05 mM).
Inosine
(0.5 mM) and the agonist of purinergic A2-receptors, 5'N-ethyl-carboxamide adenosine (NECA; 0.5 mM) had no effect, but the agonist of purinergic A2-receptors L-N6-phenylisopropyl adenosine (L-PIA; 0.1 mM) diminished tritium efflux caused by ES and K+. The adenosine inhibition of ES-induced radioactivity release was not affected by indomethacin (0.05 mM). MIX (0.05 mM) increased tritium release evoked by ES and K+. Agents that increase intracellular cyclic (c)AMP levels, such as dibutyryl cAMP (0.5 mM), the phosphodiesterase inhibitor Ro 20-1724 (0.1 mM), and the activators of
adenylate cyclase
, forskolin (0.005 mM) and NaF (2 mM) reduced tritium secretion elicited by ES and K+. However, the intracellular increase of cyclic GMP (cGMP) caused by 8-Br-cGMP did not affect this secretion. Dipyridamole (0.05 mM) and the adenosine deaminase inhibitor erythro-9-2-hydroxy-3 nonyl adenosine (EHNA; 0.1 mM) also produced inhibition of tritium secretion elicited by ES and K+. Dipyridamole reduced both the uptake of [3H]NA and [3H]adenosine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of presynaptic purinoceptors and cyclic AMP on the noradrenaline release in cat cerebral arteries. 198 Feb 88
Adenosine produced a concentration-related enhancement of antigen-induced 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) release from rat serosal mast cells. This potentiation was maximal following the simultaneous addition of adenosine with antigen. Enhancement of 5-HT release was accompanied by potentiation of the adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) response to challenge. The cyclic AMP response, which was antagonized by 8-phenyltheophylline, was characterized as an A2-purinoceptor-mediated effect by the use of 5'-N-ethylcarboxamideadenosine (NECA) and L-N6-phenylisopropyladenosine (L-PIA). Enhancement of 5-HT release, conversely, was not blocked by 8-phenyltheophylline suggesting it to be mediated by a cyclic AMP-independent mechanism. The effect of adenosine on 5-HT release was not reduced by the inhibition of the facilitated uptake of adenosine with dipyridamole, hexobendine or p-nitrobenzylthioguanosine, therefore, suggesting it to be mediated by a cell surface receptor. The receptor mediating enhancement of 5-HT does not appear to belong to the P2-purinoceptor subtype as adenosine was more potent than both adenosine monophosphate (AMP) and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and alpha, beta-methylene ATP was inactive. Furthermore, the effects of AMP were blocked by alpha, beta-methylene ADP, which inhibits the conversion of AMP to adenosine. Adenosine, NECA, L- and D-PIA were all of equal potency in enhancing 5-HT release.
Inosine
and 3-deazaadenosine were also active. The rank order of potency of these adenosine analogues is not consistent with an effect at A1- or A2-purinoceptors. There appear to be two adenosine receptors on rat mast cells, an A2-purinoceptor which stimulates
adenylate cyclase
and a separate purinoceptor, stimulation of which produces enhancement of mediator release by an unknown mechanism. The effects mediated by these receptors appear to be independent of each other.
...
PMID:Studies on the receptor mediating cyclic AMP-independent enhancement by adenosine of IgE-dependent mediator release from rat mast cells. 242 Apr
Adenosine inhibits TSH-stimulated [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA in FRTL5 thyroid follicular cells by both inhibiting cAMP generation and acting at a locus beyond
adenylate cyclase
. On the other hand, adenosine markedly potentiates DNA synthesis in FRTL5 stimulated by insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). The mechanisms of this latter effect are unknown, but require the coincubation of adenosine and IGF-I and not mediated by an increase in intracellular cAMP concentration. Adenosine increases the maximal response of FRTL5 to [3H]thymidine incorporation stimulated by IGF-I and increases the sensitivity of FRTL5 to IGF-I. These effects of adenosine are reflected by an increase in nuclear labeling as well as by an increase in [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA. Adenosine also plays a role as an autocrine growth factor in FRTL5, since adenosine deaminase increases the response of these cells to TSH. The effects of adenosine on both TSH- and IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis are shared by guanosine and inosine, although with different potencies for the various guanine nucleosides.
Inosine
potentiates IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis, but inhibits TSH-stimulated DNA synthesis only weakly. Adenosine interacts with multiple receptors and with multiple postreceptor pathways in FRTL5 to produce divergent effects on the control of cell replication by two growth factors (TSH and IGF-I) that act through different postreceptor pathways.
...
PMID:Adenosine has divergent effects on deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in FRTL5 cells: inhibition of thyrotropin-stimulated and potentiation of insulin-like growth factor-I-stimulated thymidine incorporation. 247 35
Erythrocytes, which show little or no guanylate or
adenylate cyclase
activity, take up cyclic nucleotides from blood. Studies were done by incubating human erythrocytes in isotonic medium with the dibutyryl derivatives of cAMP and cGMP and in a hypotonic medium in which the cells are partially hemolyzed and, therefore, freely permeable to cAMP and cGMP. At cAMP and cGMP concentrations of 50 microM and above, the amount of 14CO2 generated from 1-14C-glucose was decreased significantly. This effect was suppressed by 4.6 mM theophylline.
Inosine
and ribose, which are catabolites of cAMP and cGMP also decreased formation of 14CO2 from 1-14C-glucose. Accordingly, it is postulated that in the absence of theophylline, the activity of phosphodiesterase resulted in AMP and GMP formation. These mononucleotides enter into the purine salvage pathways to form ribose phosphate. Additionally, the production of lactate and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) was measured in human erythrocytes after incubation with the dibutyryl derivatives of cAMP (bt2-cAMP) and cGMP (bt2-cGMP). At a concentration of 0.1 microM, bta2-cGMP inhibits lactate production at 60 min (p less than 0.01). Slight increases in 2,3-DPG were not statistically significant. Catabolism of cyclic nucleotides may prevent diffusion equilibria allowing for the erythrocyte's continuous uptake of cyclic nucleotides and providing a detoxification mechanism that could compensate for conditions in which elevations of these substances are observed.
...
PMID:Cyclic nucleotide metabolism in the human erythrocyte. 609 72