Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:4.6.1.1 (
adenylate cyclase
)
19,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Activation of the purified guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component (G/F) of
adenylate cyclase
by F- requires the presence of Mg2+ and another factor. This factor, which contaminates commercial preparations of various nucleotides and disposable glass test tubes, has been identified as Al3+. In the presence of 10 mM Mg2+ and 5 mM F-,
AlCl3
causes activation of G/F with an apparent activation constant of approximately 1-5 muM. The requirement for Al3+ is highly specific; of 28 other metals tested, only Be2+ promoted activation of G/F by F-.
...
PMID:Aluminum: a requirement for activation of the regulatory component of adenylate cyclase by fluoride. 628 22
The liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, has a very active
adenylate cyclase
which can be stimulated by NaF or by serotonin and guanine nucleotides. Micromolar amounts of
AlCl3
augment the activation by F-. In contrast, when the enzyme is activated with serotonin and guanine nucleotides,
AlCl3
inhibits the activation. Aluminum also inhibits the activation by forskolin. Gallium mimics the effects of aluminum.
...
PMID:The dual effects of aluminum as activator and inhibitor of adenylate cyclase in the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica. 668 57
Bordetella pertussis produces a number of virulence factors whose expression is coordinately regulated by the bvgAS locus. Transcription of virulence genes is repressed by environmental factors such as low temperature (25 degrees C) and chemical stimuli. Temperature shift of bacterial cultures from 25 degrees C to 37 degrees C activates two classes of bvg-regulated virulence genes: the early genes, which are activated within 10 min, and late genes, which require 2-4 h for activation. During the interval between the activation of the early and late genes, the intracellular concentration of BvgA increases 50-fold. It has been proposed that this increased concentration may be required for the activation of the late genes. Here we have analysed the response of the bvg locus to intermediate temperature and to repeated temperature shifts. Temperature shifts of B. pertussis cultures from 22 degrees C to 28 degrees C or 35 degrees C resulted in the synthesis of low, intermediate, and high amounts of BvgA. This implied that the intracellular concentration of BvgA is temperature-dependent. We have also observed that the amount of virulence factors produced correlates with the BvgA concentration. When bacteria grown at 37 degrees C were shifted to 22 degrees C, transcription from the
adenylate cyclase
toxin haemolysis promoter (
PAC
) was repressed after 30 min, while transcription from the bvg (P1) and filamentous haemagglutinin (PFHA) promoters was repressed after 2 h. During this time, the amount of BvgA did not decrease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Response of the bvg regulon of Bordetella pertussis to different temperatures and short-term temperature shifts. 758 12
The addition of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) markedly enhanced cAMP formation induced by carbacyclin, a stable prostacyclin analogue, in cultured mast cells (IC2 cells), but did not enhance basal or NaF plus
AlCl3
-induced cAMP formation. On the other hand, W-7, a calmodulin (CaM) inhibitor, almost completely suppressed the enhancing activity of TPA, suggesting the involvement of CaM in the enhancement by TPA of carbacyclin-induced cAMP formation. The enhancing activity of TPA disappeared in TPA-treated cells permeabilized with saponin in the presence of Ca2+, but reconstitution with CaM in the permeable cells resulted in remarkable restoration of the action of TPA. On the other hand, TPA treatment induced the phosphorylation and translocation of myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) from the membrane to the cytosol. Exogenously added protein kinase C (PKC) also phosphorylated MARCKS and induced its translocation in the cells permeabilized with saponin. Whereas the addition of CaM did not enhance the carbacyclin-stimulated GTPase activity and
adenylate cyclase
activity in the control permeable cells, in which MARCKS bound to the membrane, CaM markedly enhanced those activities in the PKC-treated permeable cells, which lost endogenous membrane-bound MARCKS. When MARCKS was added to the PKC-treated permeable cells, MARCKS bound to the membrane and inhibited the effects of CaM. These results suggest that activation of PKC enhances the prostacyclin-activated
adenylate cyclase
through a CaM/MARCKS system.
...
PMID:Enhancement by protein kinase C of prostacyclin receptor-mediated activation of adenylate cyclase through a calmodulin/myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) system in IC2 mast cells. 838 May 84
Prostaglandin (PG) EP4 receptor is coupled to Gs, stimulating
adenylate cyclase
. We tested whether cytoskeleton modulates the signal transduction of the EP4 receptor. A microtubule depolymerizing agent, colcemid, enhanced the PGE2-induced cAMP formation in the cloned EP4 receptor-expressing Chinese hamster ovary cells, but enhanced neither NaF plus
AlCl3
nor forskolin-induced cAMP formation. Other microtubule depolymerizing agents, including colchicine, also induced the enhancement. These effects stemmed from the action of the agents on microtubules, because beta-lumicolchicine, an inactive isomer of colchicine, had no effect. In contrast, the microfilament depolymerizing agents did not affect the PGE2-induced cAMP formation but potentiated the enhancing effect of colcemid. This enhancement by colcemid was not due to the suppression of the desensitization of the EP4 receptor. The enhancing effect of colcemid was also observed in another Gs-coupled PGE receptor subtype, EP2 receptor. These results demonstrate that the state of microtubule assembly modulates the signal transduction of the EP4 receptor in concert with microfilament.
...
PMID:Cytoskeletal regulation of the signal transduction of prostaglandin EP4 receptor. 951 73
Pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide (PACAP) type 1 (
PAC
(1)) and common PACAP/vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) type 1 and 2 (VPAC(1) and VPAC(2), respectively) receptors were detected in the human lung by RT-PCR. The proteins were identified by immunoblotting at 72, 67, and 68 kDa, respectively. One class of PACAP receptors was defined from (125)I-labeled PACAP-27 binding experiments (dissociation constant = 5.2 nM; maximum binding capacity = 5.2 pmol/mg protein) with a specificity: PACAP-27 approximately VIP > helodermin approximately peptide histidine-methionine (PHM) >> secretin. Two classes of VIP receptors were established with (125)I-VIP (dissociation constants of 5.4 and 197 nM) with a specificity: VIP approximately helodermin approximately PACAP-27 >> PHM >> secretin. PACAP-27 and VIP were equipotent on adenylyl cyclase stimulation (EC(50) = 1.6 nM), whereas other peptides showed lower potency (helodermin > PHM >> secretin). PACAP/VIP antagonists supported that PACAP-27 acts in the human lung through either specific receptors or common PACAP/VIP receptors. The present results are the first demonstration of the presence of
PAC
(1) receptors and extend our knowledge of common PACAP/VIP receptors in the human lung.
...
PMID:Expression, pharmacological, and functional evidence for PACAP/VIP receptors in human lung. 1040 29
Pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating polypeptides (PACAP) have potent regulatory and neurotrophic activities on superior cervical ganglion (SCG) sympathetic neurons with pharmacological profiles consistent for the PACAP-selective
PAC
(1) receptor. Multiple
PAC
(1) receptor isoforms are suggested to determine differential peptide potency and receptor coupling to multiple intracellular signaling pathways. The current studies examined rat SCG
PAC
(1) receptor splice variant expression and coupling to intracellular signaling pathways mediating PACAP-stimulated peptide release.
PAC
(1) receptor mRNA was localized in over 90% of SCG neurons, which correlated with the cells expressing receptor protein. The neurons expressed the
PAC
(1)(short)HOP1 receptor but not VIP/PACAP-nonselective VPAC(1) receptors; low VPAC(2) receptor mRNA levels were restricted to ganglionic nonneuronal cells. PACAP27 and PACAP38 potently and efficaciously stimulated both cAMP and inositol phosphate production; inhibition of phospholipase C augmented PACAP-stimulated cAMP production, but inhibition of adenylyl cyclase did not alter stimulated inositol phosphate production. Phospholipase C inhibition blunted neuron peptide release, suggesting that the phosphatidylinositol pathway was a prominent component of the secretory response. These studies demonstrate preferential sympathetic neuron expression of PACAP-selective receptor variants contributing to regulation of autonomic function.
...
PMID:Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptides directly stimulate sympathetic neuron neuropeptide Y release through PAC(1) receptor isoform activation of specific intracellular signaling pathways. 1048 12
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) exhibits effects on cell proliferation. Here, VIP, as well as the related peptide, pituitary
adenylate cyclase
activating peptide (PACAP), promoted human keratinocyte division. Stearyl-Nle(17)-VIP (SNV) was identified as a superior mitogen for the keratinocytic cell line, HaCaT, both in potency (fM-nM concentrations) and efficacy. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction detected in keratinocytes only PACAP mRNA and the relevant type 1 (VPAC(1)R) and type 2 (VPAC(2)R) receptors, while VIP and the third receptor (
PAC
(1)) transcripts were absent. Upon serum deprivation of HaCaT, the VPAC(1)R mRNA was apparently increased, while the VPAC(2)R transcript remained constant. Incubation of HaCaT with VIP or SNV increased nitric oxide and cGMP formation. In contrast to VIP, SNV did not augment cAMP. Thus, the paracrine VIP, and autocrine PACAP, related pathways leading to keratinocyte proliferation may involve VPAC(1)R/VPAC(2)R and nitric oxide/cGMP production.
...
PMID:VIP and the potent analog, stearyl-Nle(17)-VIP, induce proliferation of keratinocytes. 1085 92
Pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide (PACAP) is transiently expressed in ovarian granulosa/lutein cells from eCG/hCG-treated rats, and in vitro immunoneutralization of endogenously released PACAP inhibits acute progesterone secretion and subsequent luteinization in such cells. This suggests that PACAP mediates locally some of the effects of the LH surge, but the putative PACAP receptor(s) involved in such an auto or paracrine activity is presently unknown. Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction with specific primers to the three cloned PACAP-binding receptors called
PAC
(1), VPAC(1), and VPAC(2) demonstrated both
PAC
(1) and VPAC(2) mRNA in extracts from preovulatory follicular cells. Radioligand-binding assays revealed the presence of high-affinity binding sites with characteristics of these two receptors on the intact cells, and autoradiography demonstrated that the binding was restricted to a minor proportion of the follicular cells as well as the oocytes. Pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating peptide and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) dose-dependently stimulated cAMP accumulation and acute progesterone accumulation. Forskolin and db-cAMP also stimulated acute progesterone accumulation, and the protein kinase A inhibitor H89 dose-dependently inhibited peptide induced acute progesterone accumulation, suggesting involvement of cAMP and the protein kinase A pathway in the process. In conclusion, two of the three PACAP binding receptors are present on preovulatory follicular cells and are involved in the effects of PACAP on acute progesterone production. The data provide further evidence to establish PACAP as an auto- or paracrine regulator of LH-induced acute progesterone production in rat preovulatory follicles.
...
PMID:Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide stimulates acute progesterone production in rat granulosa/Lutein cells via two receptor subtypes. 1085 61
The direct effects of pituitary
adenylate cyclase
-activating polypeptides (PACAP) on sympathetic neurons were investigated using rat superior cervical ganglion neurons. Electrophysiological and pharmacological analyses were used to evaluate PACAP modulation of sympathetic neuron membrane potentials and to investigate potential ionic and intracellular signaling mechanisms mediating the responses. More than 90% of the sympathetic neurons were depolarized by the PACAP peptides even when stimulated release was blocked, indicating that the PACAP peptides elicited primary responses in the postganglionic neurons. The response profile was consistent for activation of PACAP-selective
PAC
(1) receptors: nanomolar concentrations of PACAP27 and PACAP38 were required to stimulate depolarization, whereas vasoactive intestinal peptide failed to evoke any response. Furthermore, depolarizations elicited by PACAP27 were reduced by the
PAC
(1) receptor antagonist PACAP(6-38). Both sodium influx and inhibition of a potassium current contributed to the peptide-induced depolarizations. Activation of neither pertussis toxin- nor cholera toxin-sensitive G-proteins was required for generation of the depolarizations. cAMP and diacylglycerol production and activation of protein kinase A or protein kinase C also were not requisite for the responses. By contrast, phospholipase C (PLC)-dependent inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP(3)) synthesis was crucial to the PACAP-mediated depolarizations. Although calcium release from IP(3)-sensitive stores was not required for the PACAP-induced responses, inhibition of IP(3) receptors reduced the depolarizations. Thus, among the many signal transduction pathways coupled to the
PAC
(1) receptor, the PACAP-induced depolarization of sympathetic neurons appears to require activation of PLC and subsequent generation of IP(3).
...
PMID:Mechanisms mediating pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide depolarization of rat sympathetic neurons. 1100 93
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>