Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.6.1.1 (adenylate cyclase)
19,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In present study interactions of some adrenergic drugs with the binding of 3H-norepinephrine (NE) and response of some enzymatic systems in the heart of rats with pharmacological hyperthyroidism have been investigated. Binding of NE to cardiac particles was inhibited by isoproterenol, propranolol and in lower concentrations by another beta-blocking drug trimepranol both in control and hyperthyroid hearts in the same degree. However, after addition of nonradioactive norepinephrine (10(-3) M) the degree of displacement was lower in hyperthyroid than in euthyroid group. Activity of adenylate cyclase was lower in hyperthyroid cardiac particles. This difference remained preserved after stimulation by norepinephrine or NaF. The activities of hormone-sensitive lipase and lipoprotein lipase were increased in preparation of hyperthyroid hearts. The phosphorylase "a" activity was also increased in hyperthyroid cardiac particles. There was no change in cardiac adrenergic binding sites properties in hyperthyroidism with the exception of less displacement of NE by nonlabelled hormone. The results indicate that the increased lipolytic and phosphorylase "a" activities in hyperthyroid hearts are not necessarily linked to elevated activity of adenylate cyclase.
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PMID:Adrenergic binding sites and enzyme activities in the heart of hyperthyroid rats. 0 59

Carbenoxolone slightly but significantly decreased the release of FFA from rat epididymal fat pads. The antilipolytic action of carbenoxolone was not blocked by 10(-3)M 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, a potent inhibitor of phosphodiesterase. The findings suggest that carbenoxolone exerts its antilipolytic activity by acting on adenylate cyclase, thereby decreasing cyclic AMP concentrations and the activity of the hormone-sensitive lipase in adipose tissue.
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PMID:Effect of carbenoxolone on lipolysis in rat adipose tissue. 2 44

The adrenergic regulation of lipolysis was studied, before and after 30 min of submaximal exercise, in isolated adipocytes removed from the abdominal and gluteal regions of healthy non-obese men and women. Noradrenaline-induced lipolysis was significantly enhanced in gluteal adipocytes from men but not in women after exercise. However, the pure beta-adrenergic responsiveness was equally increased in gluteal adipocytes of both sexes after exercise, as judged by the effect of isoprenaline. Furthermore, the alpha 2-adrenergic anti-lipolytic responsiveness was more apparent after exercise in females than in males thereby counter-balancing the increase in the beta-adrenergic effect in the gluteal region in the former. The increased beta-adrenergic responsiveness induced by exercise in gluteal adipocytes of males could be mimicked by agents acting at the levels of adenylate cyclase, coupling proteins, phosphodiesterase, and protein kinase and seems to be due to an adaptive enhancement at the hormone-sensitive-lipase level. There was no change in the stoichiometric properties of beta-adrenoceptors of gluteal adipocytes after exercise. Abdominal adipocytes of both sexes were four to five times more responsive to noradrenaline than gluteal ones. However, exercise induced no further enhancement of the catecholamine-stimulated lipolysis rate in fat cells from this site. Thus, the influence of exercise on catecholamine-stimulated lipolysis is regional and sex dependent. Men, but not women, have a greater ability to adapt lipolysis to increasing energy demands during exercise that are due to an acute increase in the effectiveness of the hormone-sensitive lipase complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adrenergic regulation of lipolysis in human fat cells during exercise. 175 92

High-performance liquid chromatography-purified 125I-vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) bound to T-47D human breast cancer cells in a specific, saturable, and reversible manner. Scatchard plots were compatible with the presence of one class of VIP receptors with high affinity (Kd = 4.5 X 10(-10) M VIP, and Bmax = 293 fmol/mg protein). The neuropeptide and its natural analogues inhibited the binding of 125I-VIP and stimulated cyclic AMP (cAMP) generation in T-47D cells 96-fold (EC50 = 7 X 10(-10) M VIP), in the following order of potency: VIP greater than helodermin greater than human peptide with N-terminal histidine and C-terminal methionine greater than human pancreatic growth hormone-releasing factor greater than human secretin. In contrast, 125I-VIP binding was not displaced by pancreatic glucagon, human oxyntomodulin, truncated glucagon-like peptide-1, glucagon-like peptide-2, the somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995, gastric inhibitory peptide, and a series of steroid hormones or peptides unrelated to VIP. VIP also increased cAMP generation in seven other human breast cancer cell lines: H4-66B, HSL 53, HSL 78, MCF 7, MDA-MB231, T-47D2, and ZR75-1. Adenylate cyclase activity rose from 72.2 +/- 14 to 1069 +/- 66 pmol cAMP/min mg protein after the addition of 10(-7) M VIP to T-47D plasma membranes. In agreement with our pharmacological results and the Scatchard analysis of the binding data, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilized receptor in the T-47D membranes permitted identification of one autoradiographic band with a molecular weight of 69,000. The sensitivity of the Mr 69,000 binding site to GTP and low doses of VIP implies that in T-47D cells, this component constitutes the membrane domain involved in the functional regulation of adenylate cyclase by VIP receptors. Our results indicate a role for the VIP receptor-cAMP system in human breast cancer cells.
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PMID:Pharmacology, molecular identification and functional characteristics of vasoactive intestinal peptide receptors in human breast cancer cells. 284 44

Adipocytes from trained rats release more free fatty acids in response to hormonal challenge compared to fat cells from sedentary rats. Lipolysis results from increased triglyceride hydrolysis that is catalyzed by a hormone-sensitive lipase, which, in turn, is activated by a phosphorylation mechanism involving cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. Cyclic AMP levels within the fat cell are regulated by beta-adrenergic receptor/adenylate cyclase interactions and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity. This review focuses on cyclic AMP regulation of lipolysis in adipocytes from trained and sedentary animals. Although lipolysis is elevated in fat cells from trained rats, no differences are found in beta-adrenergic receptor number or affinity, adenylate cyclase activity, protein kinase activity, or partially purified hormone-sensitive lipase activity when compared to sedentary rats. The major lipolytic alteration induced by exercise training appears to occur at a site distal to hormonal regulation of the beta-adrenergic receptor.
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PMID:Cyclic AMP regulation of fuel metabolism during exercise: regulation of adipose tissue lipolysis during exercise. 285 68

The objective of this work was to examine the mechanism by which dietary saturated fatty acids, as compared with polyunsaturated fatty acids, lower hormone-sensitive lipolysis in rat adipocytes. Rats were fed a purified diet containing 14% of a fat with a high concentration of either saturated fatty acids (coconut oil or beef fat) or polyunsaturated fatty acids (safflower oil) as a control. In addition, each diet contained 2% corn oil. The animals were fed these diets for 4 wk. Norepinephrine-stimulated lipolysis was 50% lower when diets rich in saturated fatty acids, regardless of their chain length, were fed than when a diet containing a high concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids was fed. The specific activities of adenylate cyclase, 3',5'-cyclic nucleotide (cAMP) phosphodiesterase and hormone-sensitive lipase were lower when saturated fatty acids were fed than when polyunsaturated fatty acids were fed. Accumulation of cAMP upon stimulation with 10(-5) M norepinephrine was lower when saturated fatty acids were fed than when polyunsaturated fatty acids were fed. Moreover, adipocytes were larger when saturated fatty acids were fed than when polyunsaturated fatty acids were fed. The data obtained suggest that dietary saturated fats exert their inhibitory effect on hormone-stimulated lipolysis by influencing several points in the lipolytic cascade.
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PMID:Effect of dietary saturated fatty acids on hormone-sensitive lipolysis in rat adipocytes. 301 93

Adipocytes from spontaneously hypertensive rats demonstrated a blunted lipolytic response to isoproterenol and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. (-)-[3H]Dihydroalprenolol binding was examined in adipocytes from normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats. Increasing concentrations of isoproterenol decreased total (-)-[3H]dihydroalprenolol binding to intact cells from normotensive rats, and the efficacy of competition was decreased in adipocytes from spontaneously hypertensive rats. Scatchard analysis indicated that the number of (-)-[3H]dihydroalprenolol binding sites and the affinity of dihydroalprenolol binding were comparable between normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats. Isoproterenol- and Gpp(NH)p-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was consistently depressed in adipocyte membranes from spontaneously hypertensive rats as compared to normotensive rats. No difference in fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was observed. The blunted lipolytic and cyclic AMP response to isoproterenol in these cells suggest a postreceptor lesion of the lipolytic pathway (possibly the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein) in adipocytes from spontaneously hypertensive rats. The blunted lipolytic response to dibutyryl cyclic AMP suggests defective regulation of lipolytic enzymes at the protein kinase-hormone-sensitive lipase level.
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PMID:Lipolysis and beta-adrenergic receptor binding on adipocytes of spontaneously hypertensive rats. 303 23

Young swine (28 days of age) were fed an isocaloric and isonitrogenous diet with either a high fat or a low fat content for 3 to 4 weeks. The adipose tissue lipolytic rate was higher in the group fed the high fat diet. However, there was no effect of diet on the activities of several of the enzymes controlling the lipolytic process, i.e., adenylate cyclase, phosphodiesterase and hormone-sensitive lipase. No effect of diet on the activity of lipoprotein lipase was detected. Fasting for 72 hr, but not for 24 or 48 hr, caused an increase in the lipolytic rate. There was also a decrease in cell size after a 72-hr fast (P greater than .05) such that the increased rate was not significant when the data were expressed on a cell basis. Inexplicable transient changes in adenylate cyclase activity, as well as a decrease in the activity of the low affinity phosphodiesterase (doubtful physiological significance), were detected during starvation. Starvation depressed the adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase activity but had no effect on the hormone-sensitive lipase activity.
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PMID:Effect of nutritional status on swine adipose tissue lipolytic activities. 627 20

The influence of thyroid hormones on the adrenergic regulation of lipolysis was studied in isolated adipocytes removed from the gluteal region of hyper- and hypothyroid women and compared in adipocytes from euthyroid normal women. Noradrenaline significantly enhanced lipolysis in hyperthyroid patients, whereas noradrenaline inhibited lipolysis in hypothyroid patients compared to that in controls. Moreover, beta-adrenergic sensitivity and responsiveness were 10- and 2-fold increased, respectively, in hyperthyroid patients. In hypothyroid patients, beta-adrenoceptor responsiveness was reduced by 50%, whereas beta-adrenergic sensitivity remained unchanged compared with that in controls. Furthermore, the alpha 2-adrenergic and adenosine-induced antilipolytic effects were similar in all thyroid states. The lowered beta-adrenergic responsiveness seen in hypothyroidism could be mimicked by agents acting at the levels of phosphodiesterase (enprofylline), adenylate cyclase (forskolin) and protein kinase (dibutyryl cAMP). In hyperthyroidism, the increased beta-adrenergic sensitivity and responsiveness were not seen when lipolysis was stimulated at the adenylate cyclase, phosphodiesterase, or protein kinase levels. There was no change in the numbers of adipocyte beta- and alpha 2-adrenoceptors in hypothyroidism. However, the number of beta-adrenergic binding sites was doubled, whereas the fraction and affinities of isoprenaline high affinity sites remained unchanged in hyperthyroidism. Thus, the influence of thyroid hormone on catecholamine-stimulated lipolysis in man acts through different mechanisms when adipocytes are exposed to high or low levels of thyroid hormones. In hyperthyroidism, lipolysis adapts to increasing energy demands through an increase in the beta-adrenoceptor number and, thus, a more effective coupling of the adenylate-cyclase complex. In hypothyroidism, the low lipolytic effect of catecholamines seems to be mainly due to an impairment at the protein kinase level or to the hormone-sensitive lipase itself.
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PMID:Adrenergic regulation of lipolysis in fat cells from hyperthyroid and hypothyroid patients. 815 18

The mechanisms responsible for the diminished lipolytic response of adipocytes to catecholamines after litter removal from lactating rats and their modulation by growth hormone have been investigated. Lactation, litter removal and growth-hormone treatment did not alter the ability of noradrenaline to activate protein kinase A (A-kinase), showing that the defect in signal transduction in rats after litter removal is after A-kinase. Litter removal had no effect on hormone-sensitive lipase activity itself, but the proportion of the lipase associated with the fat droplet was decreased; growth-hormone treatment increased hormone-sensitive lipase activity and the proportion associated with the fat droplet. In addition, a number of other adaptations in the beta-adrenergic signal-transduction system occur during the lactation cycle and in response to growth hormone treatment, including changes in receptor number, adenylate cyclase activity and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity, but a defect in the ability of hormone-sensitive lipase to associate with the lipid droplet appears to be the major reason for the diminished response to catecholamines on litter removal.
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PMID:Mechanisms involved in the adaptations of the adipocyte adrenergic signal-transduction system and their modulation by growth hormone during the lactation cycle in the rat. 838 54


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