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)

Sarcoplasmic reticulum fragments isolated from dog cardiac muscle possess a calcium-accumulating system associated with a series of enzymes linked to glycogenolysis. These enzymes include: adenylate cyclase, cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, phosphorylase b kinase, phosphorylase (b/a, 30/1),"debrancher" enzyme, and glycogen (0.3 to 0.7 mg/mg of protein). The sarcoplasmic reticulum preparation produced glucose 1-phosphate and glucose from either endogenous or exogenous glycogen. Both the calcium-accumulating and glycogenolytic enzymes sediment in a single peak at 33% sucrose on a linear continous sucrose density gradient, and the complex remains intact throughout repeated washing. Glycogen particles appear to be associated with the sarcoplasmic reticulum in situ as well as in the isolated microsomal fraction. The sarcoplasmic reticulum-glycogenolytic complex, monitored by a linked enzyme spectrophotometric assay, shows several features: (a) activation of phosphorylase activity to peak rate occurs over a very rapid time course which cannot be duplicated using combinations of purified enzymes; (b) activation is inhibited by protein kinase inhibitor; (c) phosphorylase b functions as in the purified form with respect to AMP (Km, 0.3 mM); (d) in the presence of limiting amounts of glycogen, optimal phosphorylase b activity in the sarcoplasmic reticulum requires the presence of debrancher, and the activity is sensitive to inhibitors of that enzyme such as Tris, which suggests the possiblity that the enzymes bear a specific structual relationship to the glycogen present. Phosphorylase b leads to a activation in the sarcoplasmic reticulum was completely resistant to ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl either)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Inhibition of calcium accumulation by or release of bound calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum by X537A (RO 2-2985) did not alter the EGTA resistance. These results suggest that cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum is a complex organelle containing functions that may be related to excitation-contraction coupling and intermediary metabolism.
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PMID:Association of gylcogenolysis with cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. 0 55

1. The 3':5'-cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in the microsomal fraction of baker's yeast is highly specific for cyclic AMP, and not inhibited by cyclic GMP, cyclic IMP or cyclic UMP. Catalytic activity is abolished by 30 micrometer-EDTA. At 30 degrees C and pH8.1, the Km is 0.17 micrometer, and theophylline is a simple competitive inhibitor with Ki 0.7 micrometer. The pH optimum is about 7.8 at 0.25 micrometer-cyclic AMP, so that over the physiological range of pH in yeast the activity changes in the opposite direction to that of adenylate cyclase [PH optimum about 6.2; Londesborough & Nurminen (1972) Acta Chem. Scand. 26, 3396-3398].2. At pH 7.2, dissociation of the enzyme from dilute microsomal suspensions increased with ionic strength and was almost complete at 0.3 M-KCl. MgCl2 caused more dissociation than did KCl or NaCl at the same ionic strength, but at low KCl concentrations binding required small amounts of free bivalent metal ions. In 0.1 M-KCl the binding decreased between pH 4.7 and 9.3. At pH 7.2 the binding was independent of temperature between 5 and 20 degrees C. These observations suggest that the binding is electrostatic rather than hydrophobic. 3. The proportion of bound activity increased with the concentration of the microsomal fraction, and at 22 mg of protein/ml and pH 7.2 was 70% at I0.18, and 35% at I0.26. Presumably a substantial amount of the enzyme is particle-bound in vivo. 4. At 5 degrees C in 10 mM-potassium phosphate, pH 7.2, the apparent molecular weight of KCl-solubilized enzyme decreased with enzyme concentration from about 200 000 to 40 000. In the presence of 0.5M-KCl, a constant mol.wt. of about 55 000 was observed over a 20-fold range of enzyme concentrations.
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PMID:Characterization of an adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase from baker's yeast. Its binding to subcellular particles, catalytic properties and gel-filtration behaviour. 1 35

Thyroid hormone formation requires the coincident presence of peroxidase, H2O2, iodide, and acceptor protein at one anatomic locus in the cell. The peroxidase enzyme appears to be a protoporphyrin lX containing heme protein, with binding sites for both iodide and tyrosine. It is probable that both iodide and tyrosine are oxidized to free radical forms which unite to form iodotyrosine. The peroxidase is also involved through an uncertain mechanism in iodotyrosine coupling and probably in oxidation of sulfhydryl bonds in thyroglobulin. H2O2 may be supplied by microsomal NADPH-cytochrome c reductase or NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase. Other possible intracellular H2OI generating systems include monoamine oxidase and xanthine oxidase. The usual acceptor for iodide is thyroglobulin, which is currently believed to be iodinated within apical secretory vesicles at the cell border just prior to liberation into the colloid, or possibly after liberation into the colloid. Other soluble an insoluble proteins are also iodinated within the gland. The peroxidase is present in numerous cellular structures, but iodination activity occurs primarily, if not only, at the apical cell border. The controls of iodination are imperfectly known. Thyrotrophin modulation of iodide uptake, H2O2 generation, thyroglobulin synthesis, and peroxidase enzyme level obviously are the main regulations. Many of these actions are thought to involve mediation of adenyl cyclase and subsequent activation of intracellular phosphokinases. Antithyroid drugs of the thiocarbamide group are competitive inhibitors of iodination under some circumstances, but if much iodide is present, they react with the oxidized iodine intermediate and are irreversibly inactivated themselves. Clinical problems involving defective peroxidase function are among the most frequent hereditary defects of thyroid hormone formation. Recognized abnormalities include deficient peroxidase, abnormality in binding of the peroxidase apoprotein to its prosthetic group, and other less well-identified abnormalities in peroxidase structure and function. Peroxidase is typically elevated in thyroid tissue from patients with hyperthyroidism sometimes deficient in cold thyroid nodules, and frequently diminished in tissue from patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis.
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PMID:Biosynthesis of thyroid hormone: basic and clinical aspects. 6 47

Sarcolemmal Ca++-ATPase, Mg++-ATPase, and (Na+-K+)-ATPase activities were increased in late stages of heart failure in myopathic hamsters (BIO 14.6) without any changes in the adenylate cyclase activity. On the other hand, these hamsters at early and moderate stages of heart failure showed depressions in mitochondrial calcium binding and uptake and microsomal calcium binding. Sarcolemmal (Na+-K+)-ATPase was decreased in failing hearts because of substrate lack, oxygen lack, and perfusion with Ca++-free, Na+-free, or K+-free medium. Both Mg++-ATPase and Ca++-ATPase activities of sarcolemma did not change on perfusing the hearts with substrate-free, hypoxic, Na+-free, or K+-free medium. Adenylate cyclase activity decreased on substrate-free or Ca++-free perfusion. Intracellular calcium overload produced by perfusing the hearts with medium containing calcium after Ca++-free perfusion was associated with decrease in all the sarcolemmal-bound enzyme activities. All types of failing hearts employed in this study showed a dramatic shift in the electrolyte composition. Failure of the cardiac muscle to generate contractile force on treatment with trypsin was associated with defects in the functions of sarcolemma, mitochondria, and sarcoplasmic reticulum, whereas such an effect on treatment with phospholipase C was limited to alterations in the activities of sarcolemma. The data suggest that abnormality at the level of sarcolemma plays an important role in the pathogenesis of heart dysfunction; however, the degree and direction of alterations in the sarcolemmal functions seem to be dependent upon the type of heart failure.
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PMID:Role of sarcolemmal changes in cardiac pathophysiology. 13 Jun 63

Different antiarrhythmic agents such as quinidine, procaine amide, and lodocaine at 1 mM concentrations were found to depress the ability of an isolated perfused rat heart to generate contractile force. Quinidine, but not procaine amide or lidocaine, decreased calcium uptake by both mitochondrial and microsomal fractions at different concentrations of calcium. The mitochondrial phosphorylation rate, respiratory control index, and state 3 oxygen consumption, but not ADP:O ratio and state 4 oxygen consumption, were depressed by only quinidine. None of these agents had any effect on myofibrillar Mg2+-ATPase or Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activities. On the other hand, sarcolemmal Mg2+-ATPase and Ca2+-ATPase activities, but not Na+-K+-ATPase activity, were increased by all these drugs. The sarcolemmal adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) activity was decreased by quinidine only. These results suggest some similarities and differences in the sites of action of quinidine, procaine amide, and lidocaine within the myocardium.
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PMID:Subcellular and functional effects of quinidine, procaine amide, and lidocaine on rat myocardium. 13 Sep 65

We studied hearts from sham-operated and uninfected catheterized rabbits as well as from rabbits at early and late stages of cardiomyopathy and failure after 3 and 6 days of infection with Streptococcus viridans. No ultrastructural abnormalities or biochemical changes in membrane and myofibrillar activities were seen in 3-day uninfected hearts. In 6-day uninfected hearts there were decreased sarcolemmal M2+ ATPase, Na+-K+ ATPase, adenylate cyclase and calcium binding, microsomal calcium binding and uptake, and myofibrillar Ca2+-stimulated ATPase as well as increased mitochondrial calcium uptake. Slight ultrastructural changes also were apparent in 6-day uninfected hearts. At both early and late stages of infective cardiomyopathy and failure there were varying degrees of depression in sarcolemmal Mg2+ ATPase, Na+-K+ ATPase, adenylate cyclase and calcium binding, microsomal calcium binding, calcium uptake and basal ATPase, and myofibrillar Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activities. However, sarcolemmal Ca2+ ATPase and myofibrillar Mg2+ ATPase activities were decreased only after 6 days of infection. Mitochondrial calcium binding and uptake were increased in early stages but decreased in late stages of disease. Furthermore in infected hearts there were defects in mitrochondrial respiration and phosphorylation. Generalized severe myocardial cell damage involving myofibrils, mitochondria, and the sarcotubular system was seen only in late stages of infection. The results demonstrate impairment of different membrane and contractile protein functions as well as ultrastructural abnormalities in bacterial cardiomyopathic hearts which were absent or of lesser magnitude in hearts with only hypertrophy. The findings reported here suggest to use that there is an association between heart failure and changes in function of cellular components during bacterial infective cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Abnormalities in heart membranes and myofibrils during bacterial infective cardiomyopathy in the rabbit. 13 11

Cytochemical techniques have been employed to study the localization of adenylate cyclase and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-stimulated ATPase activities in platelets after fixation. Biochemical analysis of adenylate cyclase demonstrated a 70% reduction in activity in homogenates from fixed cells, but the residual activity could be stimulated 10--20 times by prostaglandin E1 (1 micrometer) under the same incubation conditions as employed in the cytochemical studies (e.g. media containing 2 mM lead nitrate and 10 mM NaF). Adenylate cyclase activity employing 5'-adenylyl-imiodiphosphate (AMP-P(NH)P) as substrate was found to be associated with the dense tubular system (smooth endoplasmic reticulum) in intact fixed platelets, and was apparent only when the cells were incubated with prostaglandin E1. Less activity was found along the membranes of the surface connected open canalicular system and occasionally at the outer cell surface. Enzymatic activity was blocked by the adenylate cyclase inhibitor 9-(tetrahydro-2-furyl) adenine and was not due to AMP-P(NH)P phosphohydrolase activity. The low adenylate cyclase activity in the surface membranes may be due to enzyme inactivation as a result of fixation, since a surface membrane fraction obtained by the glycerol lysis technique from unfixed cells had an adenylate cyclase specific activity equivalent to that in the microsomal membrane fraction. (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-stimulated ATPase activity was found associated with the membranes of the surface connected open canalicular system in unfixed cells. After brief fixation (5--15 min) with glutaradehyde, strong (Ca2+ + Mg2+)ATPase activity became apparent in the dense tubular system. Longer periods of fixation inactivated enzymatic activity. Addition of Ca2+ (1.0 mM) to incubation medium with low Mg2+ (0.2 mM), or increasing Mg2+ to 4.0 mM, in both cases strongly stimulated enzyme activity. The ATPase activity in the platelet membranes was not inhibited by ouabain. It is suggested that the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase and adenylate cyclase activities in the dense tubules may possibly be involved in regulation of intracellular Ca2+ transport.
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PMID:Cytochemical localization of adenylate cyclase and of calcium ion, magnesium ion-activated ATPases in the dense tubular system of human blood platelets. 15 Aug 66

The effects of sodium pentobarbital on ATPase, Ca2+ binding and adenylate cyclase activities of the rat heart sarcolemmal preparations were investigated. The Na+ - K+ ATPase activity was diminished by pentobarbital in concentrations as low as 0.3 mM. Mg2+ ATPase, Ca2+ ATPase and adenylate cyclase activities were also depressed but required 10 to 15 mM of this agent. Pentobarbital in concentrations of 10 mM, however, caused an increase in sarcolemmal Ca2+ binding. Mitochondrial and microsomal ATPase activities were decreased by 1 and 5 mM concentrations of pentobarbital respectively, while myofibrillar ATPase activity was unaltered even at a concentration of 20 mM. These data suggest that cardiodepressant effects of high doses of pentobarbital may partly be explained on the basis of its actions on heart sarcolemma.
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PMID:Effects of sodium pentobarbital on rat heart sarcolemma. 15 80

The purpose of this study was to determine whether the previously reported differences in adenylate cyclase activity between the sarcolemma of normal and dystrophic chick muscles are also found in the SR, to search for a possible relationship between the adenylate cyclase changes and the pathophysiology of dystrophy, and to investigate whether the findings can be extended to Duchenne human muscular dystrophy by studying the adenylate cyclase and ATPase activities of erythrocyte ghosts from DMD patients and carriers. Microsomes were separated by standard techniques from the pectoralis muscles of normal and dystrophic ckeckens of various ages. The microsomal yields were significantly larger in dystrophic muscles. Adenylate cyclase activities in dystrophic microsomes were higher than those in matched controls and increased with the progression of the disease. The ratio between the two rose from one at 2 weeks of age to nine at about 9--10 weeks. Kinetic analyses showed that the ks for MgATP2- was about 40 microM (at 3 mM Mg2+ and 0.3 mM Ca2+) both in normal and dystrophic microsomes, that calcium caused umcompetitive inhibition of the enzyme (Ki = 0.2 mM), that the effect of calcium was noncooperative (Hill coefficient, nH = 1), that calcium did not affect the cooperativity for MgATP2-, and that magnesium competitively removed the calcium inhibition and caused additional, cooperative stimulation of the enzymatic activity (ka = 1.5 mM; NH =2). The major difference between normal and dystrophic adenylate cyclase was a higher enzymatic velocity in the latter, suggesting a larger amount of enzyme. We investigated whether altered cAMP levels may effect calcium accumulation. Calcium uptake measured (in the presence of oxalate) at several ages revealed no difference between normal and dystrophic chickens. The extent of calcium binding was also similar, although the kd for Ca2+ was lower in dystrophic microsomes. Binding was enhanced in the presence of exogenous protein kinase, but the responses of normal and dystrophic tissues were similar. We concluded that the elevation of adenylate cyclase in dystrophy was not related to microsomal calcium accumultion. Ivestigation of the localization of microsomal adenylate cyclase supported this view. Separation of calcium-loaded microsomes on a discontinuous sucrose gradient into four fractions demonstrated that adenylate cyclase activity, measured in the presence of Lubrol-PX and EGTA, was inversely related to calcium-accumulating activity. Na+, K+-ATPase comigrated with adenylate cyclase. Highest specific activities were found in the lightest fraction. These observations were confirmed by histochemical studies. The reaction product from adenylate cyclase activity was present predominantly in the terminal cisternae of the SR. In the context of the literature, our findings suggest that the rises in adenylate cyclase and Na+, K+-ATPase in avian dystrophy are compensatory changes, elicited by a defect in ECC at the calcium release step...
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PMID:Adenylate cyclase in muscular dystrophy. 15 10

As it was shown previoulsy by others, the membrane-bound phosphodiesterase (cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate phosphodiesterase) of rat epididymal fat cells was stimulated when intact cells were exposed to insulin. The levels of stimulation observed in the present study in the cell homogenate and microsomal fraction were approximately 2.0- to 2.5-fold and 2.5- to 3.0-fold, respectively, when the initial substrate level was 100 nM and insulin concentration was 1 to 3 nM. When the microsomal fraction was subjected to a sucrose density gradient centrifugation, most of the insulin-sensitive phosphodiesterase activity was fractionated into the "light" microsomal fraction which was rich in NADH2:potassium ferricyanide:oxidoreductase) and low in 5'-AMPase, adenylate cyclase, and insulin-binding activities. The latter three activities were mostly fractionated into the "heavy" microsomal fraction. Both basal and insulin-stimulated phosphodiesterase activities were low when cells were homogenized in the presence of N-ethylmaleimide or p-chloromercuribenzoate. The insulin-stimulated enzyme activity was also low when cells were homogenized in the presence of --SH compounds (e.g. dithiothreitol) or certain metal-chelating agents (e.g. ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ehter)-N,N'-tetraacetate (EGTA)), or in a nitrogen atmosphere. The effect of EGTA was prevented by the addition of certain heavy metal ions but not by the addition of Ca2+ or Ca2+ plus Mg2+ ions. When cells were homogenized in the presence of certain oxidants (e.g. diamide, sodium tetrathionate, or air), a high plus-insulin activity was observed; this activity was not lowered by subsequent treatment of the enzyme with N-ethylmaleimede, EGTA, or fresh cell homogenate that was prepared in the presence of EGTA. However, the activity of an apparently oxidized enzyme could still be lowered by treatment woth dithiothreitol. A partially purified enzyme in the enzyme in the microsomal fraction was fairly stable both in basal and insulin-stimulated states (fully active after 35 days when kept at -20degrees). EGTA added to the homogenization buffer lowered the basal phosphodiesterase activity, but this effect was reversed by the addition of Ca2+ ions. EGTA also decreased the enzyme activity that was stimulated by norepinephrine. However, neither EGTA nor dithiothreitol had any effect on the activities of 5'-AMPase, NADH-dehydrogenase, and malate dehydrogenase of fat cells. The above data indicate that most of the insulin-sensitive phosphodiesterase and the so-called "cell membrane markers" are associated with different subcellular particles in the cell homogenate. In addition, the data seem to indicate that the insulin-stimulated phosphodiesterase has certain --SH groups and that the activity of the enzyme is stabilized when the --SH groups are oxidized by certain oxidants including molecular oxygen. It is suggested that the air oxidation of the enzyme is catalyzed by a trace of certain heavy metal ions and, therefore, can be blocked by a metal-chelating agent.
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PMID:Insulin-sensitive phosphodiesterase. Its localization, hormonal stimulation, and oxidative stabilization. 17 Feb 71


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