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

Recent progress in understanding phototransduction has come primarily from studies on cell-free systems. To investigate the transduction process under physiological conditions, a fully functional preparation of retinal rod outer segments without attached inner segments was developed that allows electrical recording of light-sensitive current during intracellular dialysis with defined solutions. No light-sensitive current is recorded from detached outer segments dialyzed with nucleotide-free solutions, whereas cells detached from the retina into Ringer's solution containing 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor) develop a light-sensitive inward dark current. This indicates that there is a basal level of cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase activity in the dark. Detached outer segments dialyzed with greater than or equal to 20 microM cGMP rapidly develop a light-suppressible current. A current of similar magnitude is generated more slowly during dialysis with a 50-fold greater concentration of GTP. Apparently, cGMP can be synthesized from GTP by guanylate cyclase in the outer segment. Cells dialyzed with cGMP alone show a reduced light sensitivity that is restored to normal by addition of 20 microM GTP. This action of GTP is antagonized by guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate. These findings are in good agreement with biochemical evidence indicating that a GTP-binding protein (transducin) plays a pivotal role in the generation of responses to light. The recovery of photocurrent following a brief flash is delayed or abolished by dialysis with solutions that lack ATP or contain guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate, a nonhydrolyzable GTP analog. These results support the view that both GTP hydrolysis by activated transducin and ATP-dependent phosphorylation of a rhodopsin photoproduct are necessary for termination of the transduction process.
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PMID:Intracellular biochemical manipulation of phototransduction in detached rod outer segments. 282 76

A rich variety of mechanisms govern the inactivation of the rod phototransduction cascade. These include rhodopsin phosphorylation and subsequent binding of arrestin; modulation of rhodopsin kinase by S-modulin (recoverin); regulation of G-protein and phosphodiesterase inactivation by GTPase-activating factors; and modulation of guanylyl cyclase by a high-affinity Ca(2+)-binding protein. The dependence of several of the inactivation mechanisms on Ca2+i makes it difficult to assess the contributions of these mechanisms to the recovery kinetics in situ, where Ca2+i is dynamically modulated during the photoresponse. We recorded the circulating currents of salamander rods, the inner segments of which are held in suction electrodes in Ringer's solution. We characterized the response kinetics to flashes under two conditions: when the outer segments are in Ringer's solution, and when they are in low-Ca2+ choline solutions, which we show clamp Ca2+i very near its resting level. At T = 20-22 degrees C, the recovery phases of responses to saturating flashes producing 10(2.5)-10(4.5) photoisomerizations under both conditions are characterized by a dominant time constant, tau c = 2.4 +/- 0.4 s, the value of which is not dependent on the solution bathing the outer segment and therefore not dependent on Ca2+i. We extended a successful model of activation by incorporating into it a first-order inactivation of R*, and a first-order, simultaneous inactivation of G-protein (G*) and phosphodiesterase (PDE*). We demonstrated that the inactivation kinetics of families of responses obtained with Ca2+i clamped to rest are well characterized by this model, having one of the two inactivation time constants (tau r* or tau PDE*) equal to tau c, and the other time constant equal to 0.4 +/- 0.06 s.
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PMID:The kinetics of inactivation of the rod phototransduction cascade with constant Ca2+i. 874 28

The kinetics of the dark-adapted salamander rod photocurrent response to flashes producing from 10 to 10(5) photoisomerizations (Phi) were investigated in normal Ringer's solution, and in a choline solution that clamps calcium near its resting level. For saturating intensities ranging from approximately 10(2) to 10(4) Phi, the recovery phases of the responses in choline were nearly invariant in form. Responses in Ringer's were similarly invariant for saturating intensities from approximately 10(3) to 10(4) Phi. In both solutions, recoveries to flashes in these intensity ranges translated on the time axis a constant amount (tauc) per e-fold increment in flash intensity, and exhibited exponentially decaying "tail phases" with time constant tauc. The difference in recovery half-times for responses in choline and Ringer's to the same saturating flash was 5-7 s. Above approximately 10(4) Phi, recoveries in both solutions were systematically slower, and translation invariance broke down. Theoretical analysis of the translation-invariant responses established that tauc must represent the time constant of inactivation of the disc-associated cascade intermediate (R*, G*, or PDE*) having the longest lifetime, and that the cGMP hydrolysis and cGMP-channel activation reactions are such as to conserve this time constant. Theoretical analysis also demonstrated that the 5-7-s shift in recovery half-times between responses in Ringer's and in choline is largely (4-6 s) accounted for by the calcium-dependent activation of guanylyl cyclase, with the residual (1-2 s) likely caused by an effect of calcium on an intermediate with a nondominant time constant. Analytical expressions for the dim-flash response in calcium clamp and Ringer's are derived, and it is shown that the difference in the responses under the two conditions can be accounted for quantitatively by cyclase activation. Application of these expressions yields an estimate of the calcium buffering capacity of the rod at rest of approximately 20, much lower than previous estimates.
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PMID:Kinetics of recovery of the dark-adapted salamander rod photoresponse. 941 32

We examined the effect of NO on acid secretion in vitro using isolated preparations of Bullfrog stomach. The bullfrog fundic mucosa was bathed in unbuffered Ringer solution gassed with 100% O2 on the mucosal side and HCO3- Ringer's solution gassed with 95% O2/5% CO2 on the serosal side, and the acid secretion was measured at pH 5.0 using the pH-stat method and by adding 5 mM NaOH. Serosal addition of a NO donor NOR-3 (10(-5) approximately 10(-3) M: (+/-)-(E)-ethyl-2-[(E)-hydroxyimino]-5-nitro-3-hexnamine) caused an increase of acid secretion in a dose-dependent manner, the effect lasting about 1 hr and reaching a maximal level of 2-fold the basal values. The acid stimulatory effect of NOR-3 was mimicked by another NO donor SNAP (10(-3) mol/L: S-nitroso-O-N-acetyl-penicillamine) and markedly and markedly inhibited by prior administration of cimetidine (10(-5) mol/L) as well as compound 48/80 (the mast cell degranulator). Likewise, the increased acid response to NOR-3 was significantly mitigatd by pretreatment with carboxy-PTIO (a NO scavenger) or superoxide dismutase (SOD), but not by indomethacin or methylene blue (a guanylyl cyclase inhibitor). Neoither L-NAME, L-arginine nor dibutyryl guanosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (dbcGMP) has any effect on the basal acid secretion. Serosal addition of NOR-3 caused a significant increase in the luminal release of histamine, and this response was inhibited by pretreatment with either compound 48/80, carboxy-PTIO or SOD. These results suggest that the NO donor increases gastric acid secretion in the isolated frog stomach in vitro, and this action is mediated by endogenous histamine released from mast cells, the process being cGMP-independent but requiring the presence of superoxide radicals. In addition, it was speculated that the histamine releasing action of NO may be due to peroxynitrite produced by NO and superoxide radicals.
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PMID:Stimulation by nitric oxide of gastric acid secretion in bullfrog fundic mucosa in vitro. 1132 16