Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.6.1.2 (guanylate cyclase)
8,497 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Guanylin and uroguanylin are intestinal peptides that stimulate chloride secretion by activating a common set of receptor-guanylate cyclase signaling molecules located on the mucosal surface of enterocytes. High mucosal acidity, similar to the pH occurring within the fluid microclimate domain at the mucosal surface of the intestine, markedly enhances the cGMP accumulation responses of T84 human intestinal cells to uroguanylin. In contrast, a mucosal acidity of pH 5.0 renders guanylin essentially inactive. T84 cells were used as a model epithelium to further explore the concept that mucosal acidity imposes agonist selectivity for activation of the intestinal receptors for uroguanylin and guanylin, thus providing a rationale for the evolution of these related peptides. At an acidic mucosal pH of 5.0, uroguanylin is 100-fold more potent than guanylin, but at an alkaline pH of 8.0 guanylin is more potent than uroguanylin in stimulating intracellular cGMP accumulation and transepithelial chloride secretion. The relative affinities of uroguanylin and guanylin for binding to receptors on the mucosal surface of T84 cells is influenced dramatically by mucosal acidity, which explains the strong pH dependency of the cGMP and chloride secretion responses to these peptides. The guanylin-binding affinities for peptide-receptor interaction were reduced by 100-fold at pH 5 versus pH 8, whereas the affinities of uroguanylin for these receptors were increased 10-fold by acidic pH conditions. Deletion of the N-terminal acidic amino acids in uroguanylin demonstrated that these residues are responsible for the increase in binding affinities that are observed for uroguanylin at acidic pH. We conclude that guanylin and uroguanylin evolved distinctly different structures, which enables both peptides to regulate, in a pH-dependent fashion, the activity of receptors that control intestinal salt and water transport via cGMP.
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PMID:Regulation of intestinal uroguanylin/guanylin receptor-mediated responses by mucosal acidity. 912 60

Uroguanylin is an intestinal peptide hormone that may regulate epithelial ion transport by activating a receptor guanylyl cyclase on the luminal surface of the intestine. In this study, we examined the action of uroguanylin on anion transport in different segments of freshly excised mouse intestine, using voltage-clamped Ussing chambers. Uroguanylin induced larger increases in short-circuit current (Isc) in proximal duodenum and cecum compared with jejunum, ileum, and distal colon. The acidification of the lumen of the proximal duodenum (pH 5.0-5.5) enhanced the stimulatory action of uroguanylin. In physiological Ringer solution, a significant fraction of the Isc stimulated by uroguanylin was insensitive to bumetanide and dependent on HCO3- in the bathing medium. Experiments using pH-stat titration revealed that uroguanylin stimulates serosal-to-luminal HCO3- secretion (Js-->lHCO3-) together with a larger increase in Isc. Both Js-->lHCO3- and Isc were significantly augmented when luminal pH was reduced to pH 5.15. Uroguanylin also stimulated the Js-->lHCO3- and Isc across the cecum, but luminal acidity caused a generalized decrease in the bioelectric responsiveness to agonist stimulation. In cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) knockout mice, the duodenal Isc response to uroguanylin was markedly reduced, but not eliminated, despite having a similar density of functional receptors. It was concluded that uroguanylin is most effective in acidic regions of the small intestine, where it stimulates both HCO3- and Cl-secretion primarily via a CFTR-dependent mechanisms.
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PMID:Regulation of intestinal Cl- and HCO3-secretion by uroguanylin. 957 44