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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)
Studies were performed to examine the regulation of atrial natriuretic peptide- (ANP) stimulated
guanylate cyclase
in the the inner medulla. Primary cultures of rat inner medullary collecting tubular cells exposed to 10(-7) M ANP increased cGMP formation to 31.2 +/- 1.8 compared to the basal production of 2.1 +/- 0.6 fm/micrograms protein. This response did not appear to be transduced via a Gi protein, as preincubation with pertussis toxin did not alter the response to 10(-7) M ANP, and saponized cells exposed to 10 microM GTP gamma S did not enhance the response to ANP (77.3 +/- 5.9 vs. 86.7 +/- 6.3 g/micrograms). Likewise, changes in extracellular Ca2+ from 0.5 to 3.0 mM, decrements in intracellular Ca2+ with EGTA or increments in intracellular Ca2+ with ionomycin (5 microM) did not significantly alter the response to ANP. Neither activation of protein kinase A with forskolin (36.5 +/- 5.1) nor of protein kinase C with s,n-1,2-dioctanoylglycerol (33.2 +/- 2.5) altered the response to 10(-7) M ANP (32.2 +/- 3.3, NS). As the inner medullary environment was hypertonic, the effect of altering tonicity was studied. Cells grown for 48 hours in hypertonic media (600 mOsm/kg H2O) displayed enhanced response to 10(-8) and 10(-7) M ANP when osmolality was raised by either
Na+
alone or in combination with urea, but not by urea alone. Our studies demonstrate that ANP-stimulated
guanylate cyclase
is insensitive to alterations in either intra- or extracellular Ca2+, is not subject to inhibition by protein kinase, and does not involve a pertussis-sensitive G protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Regulation of atrial natriuretic peptide-stimulated cGMP production in the inner medulla. 131 78
N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor activation generates nitric oxide (NO) and cyclic GMP (cGMP) and produces 'excitotoxic' neuronal injury. To examine the possible role of cGMP in excitotoxicity, we evaluated the effects of agents that stimulate or inhibit cGMP activity on the release of lactate dehydrogenase from neuron-enriched cortical cultures. cGMP analogs exhibited no toxicity, and inhibitors of
guanylate cyclase
or of cGMP-dependent enzymes failed to protect cultures from the toxic effects of NMDA or the NO donor
sodium
nitroprusside. These findings argue against a role for cGMP in the pathogenesis of excitotoxic neuronal injury.
...
PMID:Cyclic GMP modulators and excitotoxic injury in cerebral cortical cultures. 131 71
One of the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) receptors is a 180 kDa protein (180 kDa mGC) which possesses the extraordinary characteristic of being bifunctional: it is both a receptor and a
guanylate cyclase
. In addition to the 180 kDa mGC, there exists another 120-130 kDa protein which is also bifunctional and a 120 kDa disulfide-linked dimeric cell surface protein that is an ANF receptor, but is not a part of
guanylate cyclase
. A fundamental question that needs to be resolved is: Are these three apparently biochemically distinct ANF receptors structurally similar? With the aid of affinity crosslinking techniques, a highly specific antibody to the 180 kDa mGC, and GTP-affinity techniques, we now demonstrate the presence of three immunologically similar proteins in rat adrenal gland and testes. These proteins migrate as 180 kDa, 130 kDa and 65 kDa under denaturing
sodium
dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and specifically bind ANF, raising one or more of the following possibilities about their relationships: 1) Degradation of 180 kDa to 130 kDa and 65 kDa occurs during purification; 2) 180 kDa bears a precursor-product relationship with 130 kDa and 65 kDa, suggesting the role of a protease in the processing procedure; 3) these proteins are a result of gene splicing; or 4) they are the products of three separate, but very closely related genes.
...
PMID:Three immunologically similar atrial natriuretic factor receptors. 131 50
1. In co-axial bioassays, in the presence of indomethacin, addition of histamine (100 microM) or methacholine (100 microM) to guinea-pig trachea produced an epithelium-dependent relaxation of precontracted rat aorta which was associated with an approximately 2 fold elevation in tissue levels of guanosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP). Removal of the airway epithelium abolished the histamine-induced relaxation of rat aorta and the associated increase in intracellular cyclic GMP. 2. Epithelium-dependent relaxation was not associated with altered adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) levels in rat aorta. Unstimulated intact or denuded guinea-pig trachea also did not affect the levels of cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP in rat aorta. 3. Methylene blue (10 microM) abolished the methacholine-induced, endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF)-mediated rise in intracellular cyclic GMP in rat endothelium-intact aorta alone. In contrast, methylene blue (10 microM) did not affect the methacholine-induced epithelium-dependent rise in intracellular cyclic GMP in rat endothelium-denuded aorta in the co-axial bioassay. 4. Relaxation of the rat aorta without endothelium was associated with increased levels of cyclic GMP (but not cyclic AMP) in response to
sodium
nitroprusside (5 nM) and of cyclic AMP (but not cyclic GMP) in response to isoprenaline (1 microM). 5. These results provide evidence that the postulated epithelium-derived inhibitory factor (EpDIF) may produce relaxation of vascular tissue via elevation in cyclic GMP levels. Furthermore, some data suggest that EpDIF may act by stimulation of the particulate, rather than the soluble form of
guanylate cyclase
.
...
PMID:Correlation between airway epithelium-induced relaxation of rat aorta in the co-axial bioassay and cyclic nucleotide levels. 132 58
The relaxant effect of the vasodilator drug, nicorandil, was studied in circular strips of bovine coronary arteries. To differentiate between relaxation caused by cyclic GMP (cGMP) and by hyperpolarization, the influence of cGMP was blocked with methylene blue and that of hyperpolarization with the inhibitor of ATP-dependent K+ channels, glibenclamide. Methylene blue and glibenclamide inhibited nicorandil-induced relaxation to similar extents. Cromakalim-induced relaxation but not that due to
sodium
nitroprusside (nitroprusside-Na) was inhibited by glibenclamide. Methylene blue inhibited the relaxation caused by nitroprusside-Na but not that due to cromakalim. The different modes of action of the two components of relaxation caused by nicorandil were studied in agonist-agonist interaction experiments. The interaction between nicorandil and nitroprusside-Na or 3-morpholino-sydnonimine (SIN-1) was overadditive in the absence of glibenclamide but additive, i.e. competitive, in the presence of glibenclamide. The interaction of nicorandil with cromakalim or pinacidil was overadditive in the absence of methylene blue but additive, i.e. competitive, in the presence of methylene blue. The results show that nicorandil relaxes smooth muscle through two independent mechanisms: ATP-dependent activation of K+ channels and stimulation of
guanylyl cyclase
resulting in increases in cGMP.
...
PMID:Pharmacological interaction experiments differentiate between glibenclamide-sensitive K+ channels and cyclic GMP as components of vasodilation by nicorandil. 132 62
Hyperglycemia has been shown to diminish Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity in rabbit aorta. To examine the basis for this effect, aortic rings were incubated for 3 h in Krebs-Henseleit solution containing 5.5 or 44 mM glucose, and Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity was then quantified on the basis of ouabain-sensitive (OS) 86Rb-uptake. Incubation with 44 mM glucose medium caused a 60% decrease in Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity in rings with intact endothelium (from 0.22 +/- 0.01 to 0.091 +/- 0.006 nmol/min per mg dry wt; P less than 0.01). Similar decreases (45%; P less than 0.01) in Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity were seen when rings incubated with 5.5 mM glucose were exposed to NG-monomethyl L-arginine (300 microM), an inhibitor of endothelium-derived nitric oxide (EDNO) synthesis or when the endothelium was removed (43% decrease). The decrease in Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity induced by hyperglycemia was totally reversed upon adding to the medium either L-arginine, a precursor of EDNO biosynthesis or
sodium
nitroprusside, which bypasses endothelium and directly activates the soluble
guanylate cyclase
in vascular smooth muscle. A decrease in Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity (42%; P less than 0.05), only seen in the presence of endothelium, was also observed in aortas taken directly from alloxan-induced diabetic rabbits. These studies suggest that the decrease in vascular Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity induced by hyperglycemia is related, at least in part, to a decrease in the basal release of EDNO. They also suggest that alterations in basal EDNO release and possibly Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity contribute to the impairment in vascular relaxation caused by hyperglycemia and diabetes.
...
PMID:Endothelium-dependent inhibition of Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity in rabbit aorta by hyperglycemia. Possible role of endothelium-derived nitric oxide. 132 96
We have examined the interaction of zaprinast, a selective inhibitor of cGMP phosphodiesterase, with
guanylate cyclase
activators on vascular smooth muscle relaxation in vitro and in vivo. Isolated porcine coronary arterial rings precontracted with prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) were relaxed dose dependently by the
guanylate cyclase
activators nitroglycerin and nitroprusside, the cGMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor zaprinast and the endothelium-dependent agent bradykinin. A 1 h pretreatment with 0.5 mM nitroglycerin shifted the dose-response curve to nitroglycerin to the right by a factor of 90, reflecting the development of tolerance. The dose-response curve to
sodium
nitroprusside was also affected, albeit to a much lesser degree (9-fold increase in IC50). Both zaprinast and bradykinin remained unaffected by nitroglycerin pretreatment. A 30 min pretreatment of rings with zaprinast (1 microM) had no effect on nitroglycerin- or nitroprusside-induced relaxation in control rings, but enhanced vasorelaxation to both nitrovasodilators 7- and 2-fold, respectively, in tolerant rings. Similarly, a 30 min pretreatment of rings with 0.1 microM nitroprusside enhanced zaprinast-induced vasorelaxation 4- and 8-fold, respectively, in control and tolerant rings. Similar observations were made in vivo in anesthetized spontaneously hypertensive rats where zaprinast (0.1-3.0 mg/kg i.v.), caused dose-dependent reductions in mean arterial pressure. This effect was enhanced when rats had been pretreated with nitroprusside (1 micrograms/kg per min). In comparison, in zaprinast-pretreated rats the magnitude of depressor responses to nitroprusside (0.5-5.0 micrograms/kg) was not altered, but the duration of hypotensive response to the highest dose of nitroprusside was enhanced by zaprinast. These data demonstrate an enhanced vasodilatory response of nitrocompounds in combination with peak I-selective phosphodiesterase inhibitors.
...
PMID:In vitro and in vivo interactions of nitrovasodilators and zaprinast, a cGMP-selective phosphodiesterase inhibitor. 132 38
1. The mechanical and biochemical effects of agents that relax vascular smooth muscle either through elevation of guanosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) or adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) levels were compared in isolated ring preparations of human umbilical artery and rat aorta. Tone was established by preconstriction with 5-hydroxytryptamine. 2. The endothelium-dependent vasodilator calcium ionophore (A23187) (which stimulates endothelium-derived relaxing factor [EDRF] release and thus acts through soluble guanylyl cyclase),
sodium
nitroprusside (which stimulates soluble guanylyl cyclase directly), and atrial natriuretic peptide (which stimulates particulate
guanylyl cyclase
) relaxed rat aorta but not human umbilical artery. 3. Sodium nitroprusside, 10 microM, increased cyclic GMP levels from 10 to 390 pmol mg-1 protein at 2 min in rat aorta, as compared with a slower, relatively attenuated rise from 5 to 116 pmol mg-1 protein after 15 min in human umbilical artery. The rise in cyclic GMP in the umbilical artery was not significantly augmented by the cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, MB22948. Atrial natriuretic peptide increased cyclic GMP levels in rat aorta but not in human umbilical artery. 4. Forskolin, 10 microM, which stimulates both soluble and particulate adenylyl cyclase, maximally relaxed rat aorta and increased cyclic AMP levels from 15 to 379 pmol mg-1 protein at 15 min, but did not significantly relax or increase cyclic AMP levels in human umbilical artery. After preincubation with the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor, IBMX, 10 microM forskolin increased cyclic AMP levels to 1365 pmol mg-1 protein at 30 min in human umbilical arteries, but these high levels were not accompanied by mechanical relaxation.5. 8-Bromo-cyclic GMP and 8-bromo-cyclic AMP which are lipophilic analogues of cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP, both maximally relaxed the rat aorta at a concentration of 10 microM, but did not significantly relax the human umbilical artery.6. The findings indicate that elevated cyclic nucleotide levels are not associated with mechanical relaxation of the post-partum human umbilical artery, as in other vessels such as rat aorta. This impaired response to cyclic nucleotides may contribute to closure of the umbilical artery after birth.
...
PMID:Impaired cyclic nucleotide-mediated vasorelaxation may contribute to closure of the human umbilical artery after birth. 132 77
The mechanism of modulation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) accumulation by methylene blue (MB), a putative inhibitor of soluble
guanylate cyclase
, was investigated in cultured rabbit pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (RPASM). Control or MB-pretreated RPASM were stimulated with
sodium
nitroprusside (SNP), nitrosothiols or endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) released basally from bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells, in short-term co-cultures. The putative EDRF, S-nitroso-L-cysteine (CYSNO), a stable deaminated analog of CYSNO, S-nitroso-3-mercaptoproprionic acid (MPANO) and SNP produced concentration-dependent (1-100 microM) increase (1.5- to 12-fold) in RPASM cGMP levels. MB pretreatment inhibited CYSNO and SNP-induced cGMP accumulation by 51% to 100%, but MPANO-mediated responses were not altered by MB. The inhibition profile of MB on nitrovasodilator-induced cGMP accumulation was quantitatively reproduced by extracellular generation of superoxide anion with xanthine (100 microM) and xanthine oxidase (5 mU). Similarly to MB pretreatment, superoxide anion generation had no effects on base-line cGMP levels or cGMP responses elicited by MPANO. Furthermore, MB induced a dose- and time-dependent generation of superoxide anion from RPASM, as evidenced from spectrophotometric determination of cytochrome c reduction. Inhibition of cGMP accumulation in response to CYSNO and SNP by MB was completely prevented by superoxide dismutase but not catalase. Selective pretreatment of endothelial cells with MB before co-culture with untreated RPASM produced a reduction in RPASM cGMP levels of a magnitude comparable with that seen in co-cultures of MB-pretreated RPASM with untreated endothelial cells, and which was partially prevented by superoxide dismutase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Methylene blue inhibits nitrovasodilator- and endothelium-derived relaxing factor-induced cyclic GMP accumulation in cultured pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells via generation of superoxide anion. 132 4
Blood vessels show a heterogeneous response to the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP). In our experiments thoracic aorta from the guinea pig relaxed in response to atriopeptin III (AP; rat ANP-103-126) and to
sodium
nitroprusside (SNP). In contrast, in perfused guinea pig hearts, AP III produced no change in coronary flow, while SNP increased flow. In smooth muscle cells cultured from the coronary system (CASM) and from the thoracic aorta (TASM), we compared receptor binding and the effects on guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) production of AP III. AP III bound specifically with equal affinity and with equivalent numbers of binding sites in both cell types. AP III produced a dose-dependent increase in cGMP in TASM (50% effective concentration approximately 3 nM) with a maximum 11-fold increase over basal at 1 microM AP III. In contrast, in CASM, AP III failed to increase cGMP. Nitroprusside increased cGMP in both cell types. Autoradiograms of 125I-labeled AP III linked to cell membranes showed bands at 70 kDa (ANP-C receptor) in both cell types. A second band at 140 kDa (ANP-B receptor) was only seen in TASM. These results suggest that smooth muscle cells of coronary resistance vessels of the guinea pig do not express the particulate
guanylyl cyclase
that is activated by ANP.
...
PMID:Difference in effect of atrial natriuretic peptide on cGMP in aortic and coronary smooth muscle cells. 132 36
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