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)

The mature rat testis contains both a soluble guanylate cyclase and a soluble adenylate cyclase. Both these soluble enzymes prefer manganous ion for activity. It is known that guanylate cyclase can, when activated by a variety of agents, catalyze the formation of cyclic AMP. The following experiments were performed to determine whether the testicular soluble adenylate and guanylate cyclase activities were carried on the same molecule. Analysis of supernatants from homogenized rat testis by gel filtration and sucrose density gradient centrifugation showed that the two activities were clearly separable. The molecular weight of guanylate cyclase is 143 000, while that of adenylate cyclase is 58 000. Treatment of the column fractions with 0.1 mM sodium nitroprusside allowed guanylate cyclase activity to be expressed with Mg(2+) as well as with Mn(2+). Sodium nitroprusside did not affect the metal ion or substrate specificity of adenylate cyclase. These experiments show that adenylate and guanylate cyclase activities are physically separable.
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PMID:Separation of soluble adenylate and guanylate cyclases from the mature rat testis. 3 43

The response of the cyclic nucleotide system (cAMP, cGMP, adenylate cyclase, guanylate cyclase, and specific phosphodiesterases) to two gastric acid secretagogues, histamine and acetylcholine, and two secretory inhibitors, prostaglandin E2 and secretin, was studied in vivo and in vitro in canine gastric fundic mucosa. Histamine and acetylcholine in vivo failed to stimulate cAMP but significantly increased cGMP; in vitro they affected neither adenylate cyclase nor guanylate cyclase. Prostaglandin E2 and secretin, however, increased cAMP in vivo and significantly stimulated adenylate cyclase in vitro. Specific phosphodiesterases were unaffected by these compounds. The changes, while not specifically localized to the acid-producing cells, are consistent with the suggestion that the control of canine gastric acid secretion may be mediated by changes in mucosal cAMP and cGMP.
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PMID:Cyclic nucleotides and the regulation of canine gastric acid secretion. 3 56

Guanylate cyclase [EC 4.6.1.2] activity in Tetrahymena pyriformis cells was associated with particulate fractions, but not with soluble fractions. Mg2+ was much more effective than Mn2+ in activating the cyclase activity. Both specific and total cyclase activities with Mg2+ in the particulate fraction were very much lower than those in the original homogenate. The addition of the soluble fraction resulted in a marked enhancement of the particulate-bound cyclase activity, while the adenylate cyclase [EC 4.6.1.1] activity was not enhanced. The enhancement was dependent on Ca2+, and the activating factor is suggested to be a protein.
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PMID:Magnesium-sensitive guanylate cyclase and its endogenous activating factor in Tetrahymena pyriformis. 3 68

The 105 000 X g gupernatant fractions from homogenates of various rat tissues catalyzed the formation of both cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP from GTP and ATP, respectively. Generally cyclic AMP formation with crude or purified preparations of soluble guanylate cyclase was only observed when enzyme activity was increased with sodium azide, sodium nitroprusside, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, sodium nitrite, nitric oxide gas, hydroxyl radical and sodium arachidonate. Sodium fluoride did not alter the formation of either cyclic nucleotide. After chromatography of supernatant preparations on Sephadex G-200 columns or polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the formation of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP was catalyzed by similar fractions. These studies indicate that the properties of guanylate cyclase are altered with activation. Since the synthesis of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP reported in this study appears to be catalyzed by the same protein, one of the properties of activated guanylate cyclase is its ability to catalyze the formation of cyclic AMP from ATP. The properties of this newly described pathway for cyclic AMP formation are quite different from those previously described for adenylate cyclase preparations. The physiological significance of this pathway for cyclic AMP formation is not known. However, these studies suggest that the effects of some agents and processes to increase cyclic AMP accumulation in tissue could result from the activation of either adenylate cyclase or guanylate cyclase.
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PMID:Synthesis of adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate by guanylate cyclase, a new pathway for its formation. 3 26

In an attempt to determine the mechanism by which the tripeptide l-prolyl-l-leucyl-glycine amide (PLG, MIF-I) exerts its antiparkinsonian effect, the action of this substance on various postsynaptic components of striatal dopaminergic nerves was studied. It was shown that injection of rats with MIF-I (1 mg/kg, IPX5, 24 hr intervals) did not alter tyrosine hydroxylase, dopa decarboxylase, choline acetyltransferase and glutamic acid decarboxylase activities in the striatum under the conditions tested. The activities of adenylate cyclase, dopamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase, and guanylate cyclase were not altered in vitro by various concentrations of MIF-I (0.1 to 1000 micrometer), although VIP and neurotensin had some effect. Also the rate of uptake of 3H-dopamine by rat striatal synaptosomes was unchanged, as was the binding of 3H-dopamine and 3H-spiperone to beef caudate membranes. This series of studies indicates that MIF-I does not act directly on the striatal dopamine postsynaptic receptor under the conditions tested, although it is possible that MIF-I could act indirectly at this or another site in vivo by releasing or activating some other factor.
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PMID:MIF-I and postsynaptic receptor sites for dopamine. 3 65

Enterotoxin derived from three clinical isolates of Yersinia enterocolitica was compared with the heat-stable enterotoxin of Escherichia coli. Both toxins were biologically active in infant mice examined at 2 h and in ligated rabbit ileal loops at 6 h. Neither substance, however, produced changes in ligated ileal loops at 18 h or in Chinese hamster ovary or Y1 adrenal tissue cultures. In addition, both Y. enterocolitica enterotoxin concentrated approximately 20 times by ammonium sulfate precipitation and ultrafiltration and a similarly prepared sample of E. coli heat-stable enterotoxin stimulated the activity of guanylate cyclase but not that of adenylate cyclase in infant mouse intestine. These findings suggest that the role of enterotoxin in the pathogenesis of intestinal Y.enterocolitica infection may be similar to that of heat-stable enterotoxin in E. coli diarrhea.
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PMID:Mechanism of action of Yersinia enterocolitica enterotoxin. 3 94

The guanylate cyclase activity of axoneme--basal apparatus complexes isolated from bovine retinal rods has been investigated. The Mg2+ and Mn2+ complexes of GTP4- serve as substrates. Binding of an additional mole of Mg2+ or Mn2+ per mole of enzyme is required. Among cations which are ineffective are Ca2+, Ni2+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Zn2+, and Co2+. The kinetics are consistent with a mechanism in which binding of Mg2+ or Mn2+ to the enzyme must precede binding of MgGTP or MnGTP. The apparent dissociation constants of the Mg--enzyme complex and the Mn--enzyme complex are 9.5 x 10(-4) and 1.1 x 10(-4) M, respectively. The apparent dissociation constants for binding of MgGTP and MnGTP to the complex of the enzyme with the same metal are 7.9 x 10(-4) and 1.4 x 10(-4) M, respectively. The cyclase activity is maximal and independent of pH between pH 7 and 9. KCl and NaCl are stimulatory, especially at suboptimal concentrations of Mg2+ or Mn2+. Ca2+ and high concentrations of Mg2+ and Mn2+ are inhibitory. Ca2+ inhibition appears to require the binding of 2 mol of Ca2+ per mol of enzyme. The dissociation constant of the Ca2--enzyme complex is estimated to be 1.4 x 10(-6) M2. The axoneme--basal apparatus preparations contain adenylate cyclase activity whose magnitude is 1--10% that of the guanylate cyclase activity.
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PMID:Guanylate cyclase of isolated bovine retinal rod axonemes. 4 May 95

Proctolin at concentrations 10(-8)-10(-7) M elevated by 40% brain adenylate cyclase activity of adult Locusta migratoria migratoriodes R.F. In moulting individuals, proctolin caused a decrease in brain adenylate cyclase activity, and it proved to be ineffective in the larvae. Proctolin caused only a slight decrease on guanylate cyclase activity of the brain at every developmental stage.
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PMID:The effect of proctolin on the adenylate and guanylate cyclases in the Locusta brain at various developmental stages. 4 Aug 10

Isolated rat renal glomeruli contain an adenylate cyclase system and guanylate cyclase system. Adenylate cyclase was strikingly activated by purified parathyroid hormone, epinephrine, prostaglandin I2 and histamine. The demonstration of PTH activated adenylate cyclase in glomeruli raises the possibility of a role of this hormone in regulation of glomerular filtration rate. Guanylate cyclase was strikingly activated by CA2+, nitrate derivatives such as sodium nitroprusside. Its role remained still unknown.
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PMID:[Adenylate cyclase and guanylate cyclase activity in the isolated kidney glomerulus of the rat]. 4 22

This study was designed to test whether cyclic nucleotides play a role in the regulation of bacterial killing by human monocytes. Agents were tested for their ability to activate monocyte adenylate or guanylate cyclase in cell-free preparations, to increase cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) or cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP) in intact human monocytes, and to modulate monocyte-induced killing of Staphylococcus aureus in vitro. Prostaglandin E1 and cholera toxin activated monocyte adenylate cyclase and inhibited monocyte killing of S. aureus. An adenylate cyclase inhibitor, RMI 12330A, reversed the prostaglandin E1-mediated inhibition of bacterial killing, thus implicating cAMP as the intracellular mediator of this inhibition. In contrast, monocyte cGMP levels were increased 5- and 17-fold by 5-hydroxytryptamine and N-methyl-N' -nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, respectively, but neither agent was effective in modulating monocyte bactericidal activity. Thus, modulation of bactericidal activity in human monocytes did not conform to the yin/yang theory of opposing actions by cAMP and cGMP, for although monocyte-mediated killing of S. aureus was inhibited by cAMP agonists, it was not enhanced by cGMP agonists.
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PMID:Human monocyte killing of Staphylococcus aureus: modulation by agonists of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate and cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate. 4 4


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