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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 crude soluble
guanylate cyclase
(GC) from bovine mesenteric artery was stimulated by ultraviolet (UV) light (366 nm). Addition of free radical scavengers, dimethylsulfoxide or superoxide dismutase and/or
catalase
to the GC assay did not abolish the stimulatory effect of UV light. On the contrary, the UV light-induced activation was enhanced in the presence of these scavengers. KCN (1 mM) did not affect the UV light-induced activation, while 0.1 mM of CO potentiated the activation. These results may indicate that UV light is operating through a direct interaction with the ferrous form of the GC-heme.
...
PMID:Effects of hydroxyl radical scavengers KCN and CO on ultraviolet light-induced activation of crude soluble guanylate cyclase. 286 91
The mechanism of activation of soluble
guanylate cyclase
purified from bovine lung by high molecular weight, nitrosyl-hemoprotein complexes is reported. Heme-containing, heme-deficient, and heme-reconstituted forms of
guanylate cyclase
were studied. Nitric oxide (NO) and nitroso compounds activated heme-containing and heme-reconstituted enzymes (over 50-fold), with an accompanying shift in the Soret absorption peak from 431 to 398 nm, but failed to activate or alter the spectral characteristics of heme-deficient enzyme. In contrast, preformed NO-hemoprotein complexes as well as low molecular weight NO-heme activated all forms of
guanylate cyclase
. Heme-deficient
guanylate cyclase
was first reacted with excess amounts of NO-hemoglobin, NO-myoglobin, or NO-
catalase
and then rapidly separated from the NO-hemoprotein by column chromatography. Spectrophotometric analysis indicated that the NO-heme moiety was transferred from each of the NO-hemoproteins to heme-deficient
guanylate cyclase
. Approximately 1 mol of NO-heme was bound per mol of holoenzyme and the specific activity of this enzyme form was over 50-fold greater than that of unreacted, heme-deficient enzyme. NO-heme was tightly bound to
guanylate cyclase
as no transfer of enzyme-bound NO-heme to apohemoglobin was evident. Enzyme activated by NO-hemoproteins closely resembled, kinetically, that activated by NO or NO-heme. In contrast, reactions between heme-deficient
guanylate cyclase
and hemoproteins did not result in heme transfer, whereas heme alone rapidly reconstituted the enzyme. These observations indicate that soluble
guanylate cyclase
can be readily reconstituted with, and thereby activated by, NO-heme through an exchange reaction with NO-hemoproteins.
...
PMID:Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by NO-hemoproteins involves NO-heme exchange. Comparison of heme-containing and heme-deficient enzyme forms. 287 64
Guanylate cyclase activity in the soluble extract of bovine pulmonary arteries is activated by hydrogen peroxide generated by glucose oxidase only in the presence of
catalase
. This mechanism of
guanylate cyclase
activation is not blocked by scavengers for superoxide anion or hydroxyl radical, but is selectively inhibited by methylene blue, inactivation of
catalase
and ethanol. The time dependency of increases in
guanylate cyclase
activity in the presence of peroxides that are substrates for
catalase
are associated with the spectral detection of compound I, a species of
catalase
formed during the metabolism of peroxide. Thus, activation of soluble
guanylate cyclase
appears to be elicited by compound I of
catalase
or by a mediator generated by this species.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide elicits activation of bovine pulmonary arterial soluble guanylate cyclase by a mechanism associated with its metabolism by catalase. 288 44
Hydrogen peroxide produces concentration-dependent relaxation of precontracted isolated bovine intrapulmonary arterial rings by a mechanism which is independent of the endothelium or prostaglandin mediators. Relaxant responses to hydrogen peroxide concentrations of up to 100 microM were markedly attenuated by the inhibitor of soluble
guanylate cyclase
activation, methylene blue (10 microM). Micromolar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide elicit time- and concentration-dependent increase in arterial levels of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate that are associated with decreases in force. Soluble
guanylate cyclase
activity is markedly activated by enzymatically generated hydrogen peroxide in a manner that is most closely associated with the concentration of
catalase
present in the assay, by a mechanism that is inhibited by superoxide anion and the inactivation of
catalase
. Our data are most consistent with the involvement of compound I, a species of
catalase
formed during the metabolism of peroxide, in the mechanism of
guanylate cyclase
activation. The nature of this mechanism of arterial relaxation suggests that it could contribute to the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone by oxygen tension.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide elicits pulmonary arterial relaxation and guanylate cyclase activation. 288 94
1. Two directly-acting stimulants of soluble
guanylate cyclase
, glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM) and sodium azide (10 microM), and a receptor-mediated stimulant of particulate
guanylate cyclase
, atriopeptin II (10 nM), each elevated the cyclic GMP content of primary cultures of pig aortic endothelial cells without affecting the cyclic AMP content. 2. Two receptor-mediated stimulants of adenylate cyclase, glucagon (1 microM) and isoprenaline (10 microM), had no effect on the cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP content of these cells, but the directly acting stimulant, forskolin (30 microM), induced a small increase in cyclic AMP content. 3. Three agents that release endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF); bradykinin (0.1 microM), ATP (10 microM) and ionophore A23187 (0.1 microM), each markedly elevated the cyclic GMP content of pig aortic endothelial cells, but acetylcholine (1 microM) had no effect. None of these agents had any effect on cyclic AMP content. 4. Two agents that potentiate the actions of EDRF; M & B 22948 (100 microM) and superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1), each elevated the cyclic GMP content of pig aortic endothelial cells without affecting the cyclic AMP content. Pretreating cells with
catalase
(100 units ml-1) did not affect the rise in cyclic GMP content induced by superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1). 5. Pretreatment of pig aortic endothelial cells with haemoglobin (10 microM) reduced the resting content of cyclic GMP and blocked the increase in cyclic GMP content induced by glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM), sodium azide (10 microM), bradykinin (0.1 microM), ATP (10 microM), ionophore A23187 (0.1 microM), M & B 22948 (100 microM) and superoxide dismutase (30 units ml-1), but not that induced by atriopeptin II (10 nM). 6. Pretreatment of pig aortic endothelial cells with an inhibitor of soluble
guanylate cyclase
, methylene blue (20 microM), had no effect on the resting content of cyclic GMP. Methylene blue (20 microM) blocked the increase in cyclic GMP content induced by glyceryl trinitrate (0.1 microM), M & B22948 (100 microM) and bradykinin (0.1 microM), but not that induced by atriopeptin II (10 nM). 7. The data show that soluble
guanylate cyclase
, particulate
guanylate cyclase
and adenylate cyclase are present in pig aortic endothelial cells. They further suggest that EDRF, produced spontaneously or in response to vasoactive agents, elevates endothelial cyclic GMP content by stimulating soluble
guanylate cyclase
. It is possible that this may serve as a feedback loop by which the endothelial cell modulates EDRF production.
...
PMID:Endothelium-derived relaxing factor and atriopeptin II elevate cyclic GMP levels in pig aortic endothelial cells. 289 77
Inhibitors of arachidonate metabolism and perturbants of the oxidation-reduction state of the cell were employed to develop a pharmacologic profile for muscarinic receptor-mediated cyclic GMP formation in murine neuroblastoma cells (clone N1E-115). Several lipoxygenase inhibitors [eicosatetraynoic acid (ETYA), nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), FPL 57231, FPL 55712, BW755c, propylgallate, and AA861] blocked the elevation of [3H]cyclic GMP induced by muscarinic receptor activation. The cyclooxygenase inhibitors indomethacin and ibuprofen were two orders of magnitude less potent in blocking the muscarinic receptor-mediated [3H]cyclic GMP response than in blocking cyclooxygenase in other systems. ETYA and NDGA did not affect the muscarinic inhibition of the prostaglandin E1-mediated increases in [3H]cyclic AMP levels in N1E-115 cells. ETYA did not have a reproducible effect on the muscarinic receptor-induced release of inositol phosphates. Thus, these lipoxygenase inhibitors appeared to be selective for the effector system coupled to the low-affinity muscarinic agonist-receptor conformation, i.e. that which induces cyclic GMP formation. Other effective inhibitors of the cyclic GMP response were methylene blue,
catalase
, bromphenacyl bromide, retinal, dithiothreitol, quinacrine, and oxidized glutathione. The antioxidant alpha-tocopherol in the concentration range of 100 microM to 1 mM potentiated the receptor response. Arachidonic acid itself was an inhibitor of the muscarinic receptor-mediated cyclic GMP response (IC50 = 45 microM). Linoleic acid and oleic acid were less potent (IC50 = 130 and 190 microM, respectively), and stearic acid was ineffective. When arachidonic acid was air-oxidized, its inhibitory potency was increased 10-fold. Most but not all of the spontaneously-produced oxidative metabolites, separable by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography, were inhibitory to the receptor response. Enzymatically synthesized 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid and 15-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid inhibited the muscarinic receptor [3H]cyclic GMP response, with IC50 values of 17 and 8 microM respectively. Catalase was effective in blocking the muscarinic cyclic GMP response (IC50 = 5 microM) while having no effect on either the muscarinic receptor-induced inositol phosphate release or the reduction of cyclic AMP levels. Thus, the effector system for increasing cyclic GMP in these cells displays may of the expected characteristics for the involvement of a lipoxygenase or a related enzyme that oxidatively metabolizes arachidonate in order to activate the
guanylate cyclase
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Blockade of N1E-115 murine neuroblastoma muscarinic receptor function by agents that affect the metabolism of arachidonic acid. 301 48
Oxygen free radicals contribute significantly to ischemia-reperfusion myocardial damage in vivo. We studied the effect of reactive products of O2 generated by electrolysis of the saline perfusate on coronary vasomotor tone and endothelium-mediated vasodilator responsiveness in 41 isolated rabbit hearts. Under constant flow conditions, electrolysis induced a progressive increase in perfusion pressure associated with a modest reduction in myocardial contractile function. The responses to the endothelium-independent vasodilators papaverine and adenosine tended to be increased by 1.5- to 2-fold, indicating that the increase in perfusion pressure was due, at least in part, to increased resistance vessel tone. However, resistance vessel dilations to the endothelium-dependent agents acetylcholine and serotonin were markedly reduced. Various degrees of protection against increases in perfusion pressure and inhibition of endothelium-dependent dilation during electrolysis were obtained with
catalase
, a scavenger of hydrogen peroxide; superoxide dismutase, a scavenger of superoxide; and desferrioxamine, which chelates iron and thereby inhibits hydroxyl radical production. Furthermore the action of nitroprusside, a direct-acting stimulator of soluble
guanylate cyclase
, was not diminished during the electrolytic treatment. We conclude that inhibition of endothelium-dependent dilation is a prominent action of reactive products of O2 in the coronary resistance bed. In combination with a free radical-induced increase in resistance vessel tone this might limit recovery of myocardial perfusion post ischemia.
...
PMID:Free radicals inhibit endothelium-dependent dilation in the coronary resistance bed. 317 68
A soluble, sodium-nitroprusside-stimulated
guanylate cyclase
as been purified from bovine lung by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, ammonium sulfate precipitation, chromatography on Blue Sepharose CL-6B and preparative gel electrophoresis. Apparent homogeneity was obtained after at least 7000-fold purification with a yield of 3%. A single stained band (Mr 72000) was observed after gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The purified enzyme migrated as one band also under non-denaturing conditions in acrylamide gels (5-12%). The mobility of this band corresponded to an Mr of 145000. The enzyme sedimented on sucrose gradients with an S20, w of 7.0 S. Gel filtration yielded a Stokes' radius of 4.6 nm. These data suggest that the enzyme has an Mr of approximately 150000 and consists of two, presumably identical, subunits of Mr 72000. Sodium nitroprusside stimulated the purified enzyme 15-fold and 140-fold to specific activities of 8.5 and 15.7 mumol of cGMP formed min-1 mg-1 in the presence of Mn2+ and Mg2+, respectively. Formation of cGMP was proportional to the incubation time and to the amount of enzyme added. The stimulatory effect of sodium nitroprusside was half-maximal at about 2 microM, was observed immediately after addition and could be reversed either by dilution or by removal of sodium nitroprusside on a Sephadex G-25 column. The purified enzyme in the absence of
catalase
was stimulated by sodium nitroprusside, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and 3-morpholino-sydnonimine and in the presence of
catalase
by sodium nitrite and sodium azide. In the presence of Mn2+ and sodium nitroprusside, the purified enzyme catalyzed the formation of cAMP from ATP at a rate of 0.6 mumol min-1 mg-1.
...
PMID:Purification of a soluble, sodium-nitroprusside-stimulated guanylate cyclase from bovine lung. 611 59
Distribution of adenylate cyclase and
guanylate cyclase
activities in neuronal perikarya and glial cells separated from rat brain, and cellular differences in activation between of adenylate cyclase by NaF and of
guanylate cyclase
by NaN3 have been studied. Adenylate cyclase activity was higher in the glial cells than in the neuronal fraction, while
guanylate cyclase
activity was equally detected in both cell fractions. Adenylate cyclase was mainly derived from the particulate fraction of both brain cell homogenates, whereas the major portion of
guanylate cyclase
activity was found in their soluble rather than in the particulate fractions. Although bulk-separated neurons and glial cells almost failed to change intracellular cyclic nucleotide levels in response to some putative neurotransmitters, activation of adenylate cyclase by NaF was found to be greater in neuronal than in glial cell fractions, and was observed more clearly in the soluble than in the particulate fractions. Sodium azide greatly increased
guanylate cyclase
in the particulate fraction, but did not affect it considerably in the soluble one. Addition of
catalase
to the reaction mixture together with NaN3 further stimulated
guanylate cyclase
both int he soluble and the particulate fractions. These results suggest that adenylate cyclase and
guanylate cyclase
without intimate coupling to the transmitter-receptor system, but with activation by NaF or NaN3, may be distributed ubiquitously in the cells separated from rat cerebral cortex.
...
PMID:Distribution and different activation of adenylate cyclase by NaF and of guanylate cyclase by NaN3 in neuronal and glial cells separated from rat cerebral cortex. 611 97
The mechanism of activation of soluble
guanylate cyclase
purified from bovine lung by phenylhydrazine is reported. Heme-deficient and heme-containing forms of
guanylate cyclase
were studied. Heme-deficient enzyme was activated 10-fold by NO but was not activated by phenylhydrazine. Catalase or methemoglobin enabled phenylhydrazine to activate
guanylate cyclase
10-fold and enhanced activation by NO to over 100-fold. Heme-containing enzyme was activated only 3-fold by phenylhydrazine but over 100-fold by NO. Added hemoproteins enhanced enzyme activation by phenylhydrazine to 12-fold without enhancing activation by NO. Reducing or anaerobic conditions inhibited, whereas oxidants enhanced enzyme activation by phenylhydrazine plus
catalase
, and KCN had no effect. In contrast, enzyme activation by NO and NaN3 was inhibited by oxidants or KCN. NaN3 required native
catalase
, whereas phenylhydrazine also utilized heat-denatured
catalase
for enzyme activation. Thus, the mechanism of
guanylate cyclase
activation by phenylhydrazine differed from that by NO or NaN3. Guanylate cyclase activation by phenylhydrazine resulted from an O2-dependent reaction between phenylhydrazine and hemoproteins to generate stable iron-phenyl hemoprotein complexes. These complexes activated
guanylate cyclase
in the absence of O2, but lost activity after acidification, basification, or heating. Gel filtration of prereacted mixtures of [U-14C]phenylhydrazine plus hemoproteins resulted in co-chromatography of radioactivity, protein, and
guanylate cyclase
stimulating activity, and yielded a phenyl-hemoprotein binding stoichiometry of four under specified conditions (one phenyl/heme). [14C]Phenyl bound to heme-containing but not heme-deficient
guanylate cyclase
and binding correlated with enzyme activation. Moreover, reactions between enzyme and iron-[14C] phenyl hemoprotein complexes resulted in the exchange or transfer of iron-phenyl heme to
guanylate cyclase
and this correlated with enzyme activation.
...
PMID:Guanylate cyclase from bovine lung. Evidence that enzyme activation by phenylhydrazine is mediated by iron-phenyl hemoprotein complexes. 614 58
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