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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)
1. Experiments were performed to investigate the effects of human recombinant interleukin-1 beta on the production of vasoactive substances by human aortic smooth muscle cells in culture. Smooth muscle cells were cultured either on microcarrier beads for bioassay experiments, or in multiwell plates for the determination of nitrite levels. 2. Cells were grown on microcarrier beads, treated with interleukin-1 beta or vehicle (control) for 24 h, and packed in a column which was perfused with oxygenated Krebs-Ringer solution in the presence of indomethacin. The activity of the perfusates was bioassayed by measuring the changes in tension of a contracted ring of Wistar rat aorta without endothelium, and by evaluating the modulation of thrombin-induced platelet aggregation. 3. Perfusates from interleukin-1 beta treated cells evoked relaxations of the contracted detector tissues, and microcarrier beads covered with treated cells inhibited thrombin-induced platelet aggregation. Superoxide dismutase enhanced these effects whereas Methylene Blue abolished them. Control cells evoke neither relaxation nor inhibition of platelet aggregation.
Interleukin-1 beta
induced a time- and concentration-dependent production of nitrite. Cycloheximide and nitro-L-arginine inhibited the relaxations and the production of nitrite evoked by interleukin-1 beta-treated cells. L-Arginine but not D-arginine overcame the blockade elicited by nitro-L-arginine. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 reduced the interleukin-1 beta-dependent generation of nitrite by cultured smooth muscle cells and relaxation of contracted bioassay tissues. 4.
Interleukin-1 beta
, transforming growth factor-beta 1, Methylene Blue and L-arginine-related compounds did not induce significant variations of tension of the detector rings. 5. These data demonstrate that the inflammatory and immunological mediator interleukin-1 can stimulate the production of a nitric oxide-like substance(s) in cultured human smooth muscle cells leading to the activation of soluble
guanylate cyclase
. Liberation of transforming growth factor-beta by activated platelets may inhibit these reactions.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cytokine-induced nitric oxide production by transforming growth factor-beta 1 in human smooth muscle cells. 128 59
We have recently shown that transforming growth factor-beta (TGF beta) acts in an autocrine manner to maintain the beating rate of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes cultured in serum-free medium on cardiac fibroblast matrix.
Interleukin-1 beta
(IL-1 beta) suppresses the myocyte-beating rate, and TGF beta antagonizes this effect. We now show that TGF beta and IL-1 beta also have antagonistic effects on the secretion of nitric oxide (NO) by these myocytes, and that NO secretion, the activity of NO synthase (NOS), and expression of the inducible form of NOS correlate inversely with the effects of these two agents on the beating rate. Western blot analysis shows that treatment of myocytes with TGF beta antagonizes the induction of NOS after treatment with IL-1 beta. Release of NO, induced by IL-1 beta, is dependent upon the availability of the substrate, L-arginine, and is suppressed by a competitive inhibitor, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine. L-Arginine (> 0.25 mM) also suppresses, and NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (> 0.5 mM) enhances the myocyte-beating rate. Treatment with IL-1 beta, but not TGF beta, increases cellular cGMP, presumably by activation of
guanylate cyclase
by NO. Methylene blue, an inhibitor of
guanylate cyclase
, reverses the suppression of beating caused by IL-1 beta. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide, present in the serum-free medium, is a coinducer of NO secretion. The suppressive effects of NO on the beating rate can be overcome by altering either the set of cytokines employed to induce NO or the matrix on which the myocytes are cultured, demonstrating that additional parameters are also involved in regulation of the beating rate.
...
PMID:Role of nitric oxide in antagonistic effects of transforming growth factor-beta and interleukin-1 beta on the beating rate of cultured cardiac myocytes. 128 74