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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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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 biochemical events initiated by mitogen in T lymphocytes are the subject of this paper. Following interaction of the mitogen with its receptors, a transmembrane 'trigger-type' signal is propagated which has both positive and negative correlates. The negative signal occurs with high mitogen concentrations and is associated with membrane freezing, microtubular aggregation, receptor capping,
adenylate cyclase
activation, and cellular cyclic AMP increases. The positive signal occurs with optimal mitogen concentrations and is associated with changes in membrane permeability and transport with influx of calcium and potassium ion and efflux of sodium, in transport processes for glucose, amino acids, and nucleosides, and in a collected series of early membrane lipid changes which can be considered essential for the positive signal. These lipid changes include the uptake of arachidonic acid and other fatty acids, choline, phosphate and other molecules, their incorporation into membrane phospholipids, particularly phosphatidylinositol (PI), and a turnover of PI with the production of inositol triphosphate, which can be related to calcium mobilization and diacylglycerol which activates a cytoplasmic protein kinase C. A key event associated with mitogen action is arachidonic acid release. Arachidonic acid may give rise to prostaglandins and thromboxanes as part of negative components of the signal through effects on the
adenylate cyclase
/cyclic AMP system. Arachidonic acid gives rise to eicosanoids like 5-, 11-, possibly 12- and 15-hydroxyperoxy and hydroxy eicosatetraenoic acids and leukotrienes B4 and C4. The activation of the 5-lipoxygenase, a critical calcium-dependent step, leads via the production of 5-HPETE and 5-HETE to the activation of membrane and soluble guanylate cyclase and the production of cyclic GMP. Cyclic GMP appears to be essential for mitogen activation and is associated with cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase activation and the phosphorylation of a number of substrates. Calcium ion influx is clearly central to mitogen action. Calcium through its influx and mobilization from cellular stores is thought to contribute directly and indirectly through the action of calmodulin and protein kinase C to the activation of a number of enzymatic processes involved in the positive signal including phospholipase C,
diglyceride kinase
and lipase, 5-lipoxygenase, and guanylate cyclase. Cyclic GMP and calcium ion both participate in nuclear processes leading to RNA and protein synthesis. Interleukin 2 is associated with midcycle increases in cyclic GMP and entry into DNA synthesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Transduction of signals in the activation of T lymphocytes: relation to leukemia. 304 Mar 20
Although PTH is known to stimulate both the
adenylate cyclase
/protein kinase-A system and the phospholipase-C/protein kinase-C second messenger systems, the relative roles of these second messenger pathways remain unclear. The present studies were designed to examine the effect of triamcinolone on PTH-stimulated second messenger systems and phosphate transport in confluent cultures of opossum kidney cells. Triamcinolone was added to these cultures at a concentration of 10 nM for 24-48 h. Neither cell number nor protein content was changed by this treatment. The addition of triamcinolone did not alter PTH receptor binding or competitive displacement radioligand binding assay curves. PTH-stimulated cAMP generation and activation of protein kinase-A were not altered by triamcinolone. The glucocorticoid, however, increased basal phosphate uptake from 1.0 +/- 0.1 to 1.28 +/- 0.1 pmol/5 min.culture (P < 0.01). Phosphate transport was significantly decreased by PTH (0.01 nM) in the triamcinolone-treated cultures, but not in control cultures. Phosphate uptake in the presence of maximal doses of PTH was similar in both control and triamcinolone-treated cultures. Thus, the PTH-responsive component of phosphate transport was preserved, and the threshold dose for the effect of PTH was reduced after treatment with triamcinolone. Studies were then performed to evaluate the alternate second messenger pathway. In control cultures, PTH rapidly increased the level of diglyceride mass, as measured by
diglyceride kinase
assay, from 0.18 +/- 0.01 to a peak of 0.26 +/- 0.02 mol/100 mol total phospholipid (P < 0.002), 1 min after addition of the hormone. Triamcinolone pretreatment for 48 h, however, elevated the basal diglyceride levels, but the increase after the addition of PTH was totally abolished. The absence of an increase in diglyceride upon stimulation with PTH correlated with elimination of the PTH-stimulated increase in the activity of particulate protein kinase-C. Thus, in triamcinolone-treated cells, the effect of PTH on phosphate transport was preserved, and the threshold dose of PTH-induced alteration in phosphate transport was reduced in the absence of stimulation of this alternate second messenger pathway. These data show that triamcinolone in opossum kidney cells does not alter PTH activation of the cAMP/protein kinase-A system, but eliminates the increase in diglyceride and the activation of protein kinase-C in response to PTH. These studies emphasize the major role of the protein kinase-A system in the regulation of phosphate transport by PTH.
...
PMID:Effect of triamcinolone on parathyroid hormone-stimulated second messenger systems and phosphate transport in opossum kidney cells. 750 8