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)

Mesangial cells possess a variety of receptors for hormones and autacoids. They are also equipped with ectoenzymes whose function may be to control the availability of autacoids and hormones at their receptor sites. Several examples are considered. Receptors for angiotensin II (AII) are present both on murine and human mesangial cells. One single group of receptors has been demonstrated in each of these preparations. Mesangial cell AII receptors are linked to phospholipase C via a G protein. They belong to the AT1 subtype because (125I)AII is displaced from its binding sites preferentially by AT1 antagonists such as DUP 753 and EXP 3,174, whereas AT2 antagonists are much less potent. AT1 antagonists suppress the biological effects of AII in mesangial cells, including the stimulation of intracellular calcium concentration and the increase of prostaglandin synthesis and of (3H)leucine incorporation. Mesangial cells also have receptors for atrial natriuretic factor, but the distribution between B receptors with guanylate cyclase activity and clearance (C) receptors varies with the species. Both types are present in murine mesangial cells, whereas only C receptors are found in human mesangial cells. In contrast, human epithelial cells possess both B and C receptors. Ecto-5'-nucleotidase activity results in the production of adenosine, which acts on mesangial cells through A1 and A2 receptors. This enzyme is markedly induced in rat mesangial cells by interleukin-1, whose effect is mediated in part by prostaglandin E2 and cAMP. Various other cAMP-stimulating agents also induce 5'-nucleotidase expression in rat mesangial cells. Ectopeptidases are present in all glomerular cell types but essentially in epithelial cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cell surface receptors and ectoenzymes in mesangial cells. 131 10

Hepatocytes are stimulated to produce nitric oxide (NO.) from L-arginine in response to conditioned Kupffer cell medium or a combination of cytokines. Associated with the production of NO.in hepatocytes, there is a profound decrease in total protein synthesis ([3H]leucine incorporation). This report demonstrates that authentic NO.and the NO.-generating compound S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine inhibit hepatocyte total protein synthesis in a reversible and concentration-dependent fashion. In parallel with the suppression of hepatocyte total protein synthesis, authentic NO.inhibits the production of two specific hepatocyte proteins, albumin and fibrinogen, without influencing the quantity of albumin mRNA. Although authentic NO.induces a rapid increase in cGMP levels in hepatocytes, the addition of the cGMP analog 8-bromoguanosine 3':5' cyclic monophosphate to unstimulated HC cultures does not reproduce the inhibition of total protein synthesis. These data show that NO.is the hepatocyte L-arginine metabolite that inhibits protein synthesis. Furthermore, these findings indicate that NO.does not inhibit hepatocyte protein synthesis solely through the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase but appears to affect a translational or posttranslational process.
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PMID:Nitric oxide and nitric oxide-generating compounds inhibit hepatocyte protein synthesis. 170 21

We examined whether L-arginine is a substrate for nitric oxide (NO) production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (MNC) in vitro. Minimal extracellular arginine (0.04 mmol/L) is required for maximal lymphocyte proliferation after phytohemagglutinin stimulation. In the absence of arginine, proliferation was 41% of normal without loss of viability. In contrast, MNC total protein synthesis (as assessed by tritiated leucine incorporation) or lymphokine synthesis (interleukin-2, as assessed by cytotoxic lymphoid line (CTLL) proliferation) were not affected by the absence or presence of arginine in the medium. Exogenous nitric oxide provided as sodium nitroprusside could replace L-arginine for maximal blastogenic proliferation. The addition of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (NMMA; 0.1 mmol/L), a specific inhibitor of the NO synthetic pathway, significantly reduced DNA synthesis both at 0 and 0.1 mmol/L arginine concentrations; this effect was reversed to 91% of normal by excess arginine (1.0 mmol/L). Homoarginine (0.1 mmol/L; a known substrate for NO production) partially substituted for arginine, and this effect was also abrogated by NMMA. Nitrite levels (an end product of NO metabolism) were reduced when L-arginine was absent or NMMA was added to L-arginine-containing media. Cytosol from phytohemagglutinin-stimulated MNC-enhanced cyclic guanosine monophosphate production in the presence of L-arginine as substrate. The data suggest that the inductive effects of L-arginine on MNC DNA synthesis are not related to its nutrient requirement for protein synthesis, but rather caused by its role as a substrate for NO production. MNC actively synthesize NO during mitogenic proliferation. NO appears to be a promoter of MNC DNA synthesis, probably by its well-known effect as an activator of guanylate cyclase, which increases cyclic guanosine monophosphate levels.
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PMID:Nitric oxide generation from L-arginine is required for optimal human peripheral blood lymphocyte DNA synthesis. 185 40

Vascular remodeling is central to the pathophysiology of hypertension and atherosclerosis. Recent evidence suggests that vasoconstrictive substances, such as angiotensin II (AII), may function as a vascular smooth muscle growth promoting substance. To explore the role of the counterregulatory hormone, atrial natriuretic polypeptide (ANP) in this process, we examined the effect of ANP (alpha-rat ANP [1-28]) on the growth characteristics of cultured rat aortic smooth muscle (RASM) cells. ANP (10(-7) M) significantly suppressed the proliferative effect of 1% and 5% serum as measured by 3H-thymidine incorporation and cell number, confirming ANP as an antimitogenic factor. In quiescent RASM cells, ANP (10(-7), 10(-6) M) significantly suppressed the basal incorporations of 3H-uridine and leucine by 50 and 30%, respectively. ANP (10(-7), 10(-6) M) also suppressed AII-induced RNA and protein syntheses (by 30-40%) with the concomitant reduction of the cell size. Furthermore, ANP also significantly attenuated the increase of 3H-uridine and leucine incorporations caused by transforming growth factor-beta (4 x 10(-11), 4 x 10(-10) M), a potent hypertrophic factor. These results indicate that ANP possesses an antihypertrophic action on vascular smooth muscle cells. Down-regulation of protein kinase C by 24-h treatment with phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate did not inhibit ANP-induced suppression on 3H-uridine incorporation. Based on the observation that ANP was more potent than a ring-deleted analogue of ANP on inhibiting 3H-uridine incorporation, we conclude that the ANP's inhibitory effect is primarily mediated via the activation of a guanylate cyclase-linked ANP receptor(s). Indeed 8-bromo cGMP mimicked the antihypertrophic action of ANP. Accordingly, we speculate that in addition to its vasorelaxant and natriuretic effects, the antihypertrophic action of ANP observed in the present study may serve as an additional compensatory mechanism of ANP in hypertension.
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PMID:Atrial natriuretic polypeptide inhibits hypertrophy of vascular smooth muscle cells. 217 26

The response to small peptides such as Arg-vasopressin, oxytocin and tachykinins was investigated in cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells. The production of endothelium-derived nitric oxide was assessed indirectly by the accumulation of cyclic GMP, a response that is due to the increased activity of soluble guanylate cyclase of the endothelial cells after release of the mediator. Arg-vasopressin, oxytocin, substance P and physalae-min (an analog of substance P, pGlu-Ala-Asp-Pro-Asn-Lys-Phe-Tyr-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2) markedly and transiently stimulated the production of cyclic GMP without affecting that of cyclic AMP. Treatment of endothelial cells with either hemoglobin or methylene blue reduced significantly both the basal and stimulated level of cyclic GMP. The production of cyclic GMP evoked by Arg-vasopressin and substance P was inhibited selectively by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine but not by its D-enantiomer. The neurohypophyseal hormones and related peptides stimulated the accumulation of cyclic GMP in a concentration-dependent manner, with the following relative order of potency: oxytocin greater than Lys-vasopressin greater than Arg-vasopressin much greater than [deamino-Cys1, D-Arg8]-vasopressin. The production of cyclic GMP evoked by oxytocin was inhibited selectively by [d(CH2)5, Tyr(OMe)2, Orn8]-vasotocin, an oxytocin antagonist. The production of cyclic GMP evoked by Arg-vasopressin and Lys-vasopressin was inhibited by [beta-mercapto-beta, beta-cyclopentamethylene-propionyl1, O-Me-Tyr2, Arg8]-vasopressin, a selective V1-receptor antagonist. The moderate production of cyclic GMP evoked by [deamino-Cys1, D-Arg8]-vasopressin was inhibited significantly by the V1-receptor antagonist. The peptide antagonists affected only minimally or not at all the production of cyclic GMP evoked by a donor of nitric oxide, SIN-1 (3-Morpholino-Sydnonimine). These observations indicate that 1) neurohypophyseal hormones and tachykinins stimulate the accumulation of cyclic GMP in cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells by increasing the production of endothelial-derived nitric oxide, which in turn enhances the activity of soluble guanylate cyclase; 2) the production of cyclic GMP in response to oxytocin is due to activation of oxytocinergic receptors; and 3) the production of cyclic GMP evoked by Arg-vasopressin and Lys-vasopressin is due mostly to activation of V1-vasopressinergic receptors.
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PMID:Neurohypophyseal peptides and tachykinins stimulate the production of cyclic GMP in cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells. 217 9

Two peptides, speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly) and resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Gly-Arg-Leu-NH2), which activate sperm respiration and motility and elevate cyclic GMP concentrations in a species-specific manner, were tested for effects on guanylate cyclase activity. The guanylate cyclase of sea urchin spermatozoa is a glycoprotein and it is localized entirely on the plasma membrane. When intact sea urchin sperm cells were incubated with the appropriate peptide for time periods as short as 5 s and subsequently homogenized in detergent, guanylate cyclase activity was found to be as low as 10% of the activity of cells not treated with peptide. The peptides showed complete species specificity and analogues of one peptide (speract) caused decreases in enzyme activity coincident with their receptor binding properties. The peptides did not inhibit enzyme activity when added after detergent solubilization of the enzyme. When detergent-solubilized spermatozoa were incubated at 22 degrees C, guanylate cyclase activity declined in previously nontreated cells to the peptide-treated level. The rate of decline was dependent on temperature and protein concentration. When spermatozoa were first incubated with 32P, the decrease in guanylate cyclase activity was accompanied by a shift in the apparent molecular weight of a major plasma membrane protein (160,000-150,000) and a loss of 32P label from the 160,000 band. Other agents (Monensin A, NH4Cl) which were capable of stimulating sperm respiration and motility also caused decreases of guanylate cyclase activity when added to intact but not detergent-solubilized spermatozoa. The maximal decrease in guanylate cyclase activity occurred 5-10 min after addition of these agents. The enzyme response to Monensin A required extracellular Na+ suggestive that the ionophore caused the effect on guanylate cyclase activity by virtue of its ability to catalyze Na+/H+ exchange. These studies demonstrate that guanylate cyclase activity of sperm cells can be altered by the specific interaction of egg-associated peptides with their plasma membrane receptors.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated regulation of guanylate cyclase activity in spermatozoa. 286 Dec 1

The sea urchin egg peptides speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly) and resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Arg-Leu-NH2) bind to spermatozoa of the homologous species (Lytechinus pictus or Arbacia punctulata, respectively) and cause transient elevations of cyclic GMP concentrations (Hansbrough, J. R., and Garbers, D. L. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1447-1452). The addition of these peptides to spermatozoan membrane preparations caused a rapid and dramatic (up to 25-fold) activation of guanylate cyclase. The peptide-induced activation of guanylate cyclase was transient, and the subsequent decline in enzyme activity coincided with conversion of a high Mr (phosphorylated) form of guanylate cyclase to a low Mr (dephosphorylated) form. When membranes were incubated at pH 8.0, the high Mr form was converted to the low Mr form without substantial changes in basal enzyme activity. However, the peptide-stimulated activity of the low Mr form of guanylate cyclase was much less than the peptide-stimulated activity of the high Mr form. Activation of the low Mr form by peptide was not transient and persisted for at least 10 min. In addition, the pH 8.0 treatment that caused the Mr conversion of guanylate cyclase also caused an increase in the peptide-binding capacity of the membranes. We propose a model in which activation of the membrane form of guanylate cyclase is receptor-mediated; the extent of enzyme activation is modulated by its phosphorylation state.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated activation of spermatozoan guanylate cyclase. 287 90

GGGYG-resact (Gly-Gly-Gly-Tyr-Gly-Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Gly-Arg -Leu-NH2) was synthesized and shown to possess the same respiration-stimulating activity and receptor-binding ability as resact. The incubation of intact sperm cells with radioiodinated peptide, 125I-GGGYG-resact, and the chemical cross-linking reagent, disuccinimidyl suberate, resulted in the appearance of a single, major radioactive band of apparent molecular weight 160,000 (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis). The interaction was specific since 150 nM nonradioactive resact but not speract (200 nM) blocked formation of the radioactive band. The radioactive, cross-linked protein co-migrated with 32P-labeled guanylate cyclase and could be immunoprecipitated with a polyclonal antibody raised in rabbits against the sperm guanylate cyclase. The incubation of intact cells with NH4Cl resulted in the partial dephosphorylation of guanylate cyclase and a change in its apparent molecular weight from 160,000 to 150,000; NH4Cl also caused the same conversion in the apparent molecular weight of the cross-linked protein. These data demonstrate that an analogue of resact can be covalently coupled to guanylate cyclase with the specificity predicted for the peptide receptor.
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PMID:Covalent coupling of a resact analogue to guanylate cyclase. 287 82

Speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly), a peptide obtained from the culture medium of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs, stimulates the respiration and motility of S. purpuratus spermatozoa under appropriate conditions. Resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Gly-Arg-LeuNH2), a peptide obtained from Arbacia punctulata eggs also stimulates the metabolism and motility of A. punctulata spermatozoa, however, it fails to stimulate S. purpuratus spermatozoa. Early biochemical responses of the spermatozoa to the egg peptides include a net H+ efflux and elevations of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP concentrations. In addition, in A. punctulata spermatozoa, a major plasma membrane protein is modified in response to resact such that its apparent molecular weight shifts from 160,000 to 150,000. If cells are incubated with 32P, the 160,000 molecular weight form of the protein becomes radiolabeled; subsequent addition of resact causes a rapid loss of 32P from the protein. The plasma membrane protein appears to be the enzyme, guanylate cyclase; coincident with the shift in apparent molecular weight, enzyme activity decreases by as much as 90%. Since speract fails to cause these responses in A. punctulata, it can be concluded that the events are receptor-mediated.
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PMID:Peptides associated with eggs: mechanisms of interaction with spermatozoa. 288 30

Speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly), a peptide obtained from eggs, has been shown to bind to a plasma membrane receptor of Lytechinus pictus spermatozoa. Here, we show that the addition of speract to intact cells caused the appearance of a new protein-staining band (Mr = 140,000) on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gels; concomitantly, a protein of apparent molecular weight (Mr) 150,000 disappeared. Guanylate cyclase activity also decreased approximately 50% after the addition of speract to intact cells. Plasma membranes were subsequently prepared from spermatozoa in the presence of fluoride at pH 6.0, conditions that resulted in retention of the speract receptor and the Mr 150,000 protein. Addition of speract to the membranes resulted in a disappearance of the Mr 150,000 protein and the appearance of a Mr 140,000 protein. Coincident with the apparent change in molecular weight, guanylate cyclase activity decreased 30% at maximal speract concentrations. A physiological event that occurs in the intact cell in response to speract can now be reproduced in isolated plasma membranes; it should, therefore, now be possible to define the molecular events that occur as a result of speract: receptor interaction.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated responses of plasma membranes isolated from Lytechinus pictus spermatozoa. 288 84


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