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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)
In isolated coronary arteries, hypoxia induces an increase in tone by releasing an unidentified endothelium-derived contracting factor (EDCF). Isometric force was measured in an isolated rabbit coronary artery ring at 37 degrees C in control and high K+ (40 mM) pre-contracted conditions. Hypoxia (15 mmHg pO2) induced by equilibrating the perfusate with
nitrogen
. Hypoxia did not affect the resting tone but induced an endothelium-dependent contraction on pre-contracted rings. Inhibitors of nitric oxide (NO) were tested, L-NAME (10(-4) M) totally and L-NMMA (10(-4) M) partially convert the hypoxic contraction to an hypoxic relaxation. The addition of L-arginine (10(-4) or 10(-3) M) did not restore the response. Methylene blue (10( -5) M) and ODQ (1 H-[1,2,4] oxadiazolo-[4,3-a] quinoxalin-1-one, 10(-5) M), both inhibitors of
guanylate cyclase
, also changed the hypoxic contraction into a hypoxic relaxation. Catalase (1200 U/ml), which decomposes hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and superoxide dismutase (150 U/ml, SOD), a free radical scavenger, did not change the hypoxic response but quinacrine (50 microM), an inhibitor of phospholipase A2, significantly decreased it. Inhibitors of arachidonic acid metabolism (indomethacin, diethylcarbamazine, miconazole) however did not affect the hypoxic response. We conclude that in K+ pre-contracted rabbit coronary artery rings, hypoxia induces a contraction which is nitric oxide and arachidonic acid dependent.
...
PMID:Possible role of nitric oxide and arachidonic acid pathways in hypoxia-induced contraction of rabbit coronary artery rings. 1147 Oct 68
Nitric oxide (NO)-derived species could potentially react with arachidonic acid to generate novel vasoactive metabolites. We studied the reaction of arachidonic acid with
nitrogen
dioxide (NO2), a free radical that originates from NO oxidation. The reaction mixture contained lipid products that relaxed endothelium-removed bovine coronary arteries. Relaxation to the lipid mixture was inhibited approximately 20% by indomethacin and approximately 70% by a soluble
guanylate cyclase
(sGC) inhibitor (ODQ). Thus, novel lipid products, which activate sGC presumably through a mechanism involving NO, appeared to have contributed to the observed vasorelaxation. Lipids that eluted at 9 to 12 min during high-performance liquid chromatography fractionation accounted for about one-half of the vasodilator activity in the reaction mixture, which was inhibited by ODQ. Lipid products in fractions 9 to 12 were identified by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry to be eight isomers having molecular weight of 367 and a fragmentation pattern indicative of arachidonic acid derivatives containing nitro and hydroxy groups and consistent with the structures of vicinal nitrohydroxyeicosatrienoic acids. These lipids spontaneously released NO (183 +/- 12 nmol NO/15 min/micromol) as detected by head space/chemiluminescence analysis. Mild alkaline hydrolysis of total lipids extracted from bovine cardiac muscle followed by isotopic dilution gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis detected basal levels of nitrohydroxyeicosatrienoic acids (6.8 +/- 2.6 ng/g tissue; n = 4). Thus, the oxidation product of NO, NO2, reacts with arachidonic acid to generate biologically active vicinal nitrohydroxyeicosatrienoic acids, which may be important endogenous mediators of vascular relaxation and sGC activation.
...
PMID:Vicinal nitrohydroxyeicosatrienoic acids: vasodilator lipids formed by reaction of nitrogen dioxide with arachidonic acid. 1160 73
Nitric oxide (NO) in the low nanomolar range acts as a transcellular messenger molecule to initiate regulatory and physiological responses in nearby target cells via binding to the soluble
guanylate cyclase
heme moiety. Higher NO concentrations, as synthesized by the inducible NO synthase (iNOS) during inflammatory processes, show additional effects: NO may react with O2, yielding
nitrogen
oxides like N2O3 that are able to nitrosate thiols. A variety of proteins involved in very different functions of the cell contain cysteine-Zn2+ complexes. Effects of NO on different proteins containing cysteine-Zn2+ domains and playing essential roles during transcription, protein folding, and proteolysis are discussed. It is suggested that iNOS-derived NO acts as a signal molecule targeting cysteine-Zn2+ linkages, thus enabling cells to react toward nitrosative stress.
...
PMID:Cysteine-Zn2+ complexes: unique molecular switches for inducible nitric oxide synthase-derived NO. 1168 76
Na(+)-dependent and -independent transport sites were elucidated for glycine and L-leucine, respectively, in Chang liver cells, a human culture cell line. Findings of acceleration of the L-leucine uptake by the cells in the acidic medium and synchronized acidification within the cell membrane vesicles with the uptake by them all suggested contransport of L-leucine and proton and the uptake of L-leucine dependent on the inward proton gradient in Chang liver cells. Cotransport of L-leucine and proton was also demonstrated in human peripheral lymphocytes and accelerated by the addition of concanavalin A, probably accompanied by membrane hyperpolarization. It was shown that the Na(+)-gradient-dependent uptake of glycine can be regulated by insulin and 17 beta-estradiol in the rat uterus and by Ca(2+)-calmodulin and membrane potential in Chang liver cells. D-Aspartate uptake as a model of glutamate transport was characterized in rat hippocampal slices and found to consist of Na(+)-dependent (higher-affinity) and -independent (lower-affinity) components. The vulnerability of hippocampal neurons to the Alzheimer beta-amyloid protein was confirmed in vitro with primary cultured rat hippocampal neurons in the presence of the amyloid protein beta 1-42 or its core fragments. The toxicity of the amyloid protein could be blocked by the addition of insulin and several other growth factors to the medium. The addition of genipin, a plant-derived iridoid, was demonstrated to prevent the toxicity of a synthetic fragment of beta 1-42, beta 25-35. Genipin had a neuritogenic activity in PC12h cells, a rat pheochromocytoma cell line, an activity extremely sensitive to inhibitors of the
nitrogen
oxide (NO) synthase and soluble
guanylate cyclase
and an NO scavenger. It was also demonstrated in PC12h cells that the activation of the MAP kinase cascade was essential for the neuritogenesis of genipin. These properties of genipin are very comparable to those of nerve growth factor in the cells. It is considered likely that various useful, neurotrophic substances and their extracts will be found in plants in future.
...
PMID:[Studies on the cytological function of the biomembrane and the neurons]. 1240 Jan 54
Nitric oxide (*NO) and *NO-derived reactive species rapidly react with lipids during both autocatalytic and enzymatic oxidation reactions to yield nitrated derivatives that serve as cell signaling molecules. Herein we report the synthesis, purification, characterization, and bioactivity of nitrolinoleate (LNO2). Nitroselenylation of linoleic acid yielded LNO2 that was purified by solvent extraction, silicic acid chromatography, and reverse-phase HPLC. Structural characterization was performed by IR spectroscopy, 15N-NMR, LC-negative ion electrospray mass spectroscopy (MS), and chemiluminescent
nitrogen
analysis. Quantitative MS analysis of cell and vessel LNO2 metabolism, using L[15N]O2 as an internal standard, revealed that LNO2 is rapidly metabolized by rat aortic smooth muscle (RASM) monolayers and rat thoracic aorta, resulting in nitrite production and up to 3-fold increases in cGMP (ED50 = 30 microM for RASM, 50 microM for aorta). LNO2 induced endothelium-independent relaxation of preconstricted rat aortic rings, which was unaffected by L(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester addition and inhibited by the
guanylate cyclase
inhibitor 1H-[1,2,4] oxadiazole[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one and the *NO scavenger HbO2. These results reveal that synthetic LNO2, identical to lipid derivatives produced biologically by the reaction of *NO and *NO-derived species with oxidizing unsaturated fatty acids (e.g., linoleate), can transduce vascular signaling actions of *NO.
...
PMID:Nitrolinoleate, a nitric oxide-derived mediator of cell function: synthesis, characterization, and vasomotor activity. 1244 58
Cytochrome c ' (cyt c ') is found in the periplasmic space of denitrifying bacteria where it is thought to mediate the transfer of NO between the
nitrogen
-cycle enzymes dissimilatory nitrite reductase and nitric oxide reductase. It contains a 5-coordinate (5c) His-ligated haem that shares spectroscopic and ligand-binding properties with the haem group in the sensory domain of soluble
guanylate cyclase
(sGC). The latter is an extremely important enzyme involved in the control of vasodilation and blood clotting. Curiously, the enzyme is activated up to 200-fold by the binding of NO to the haem, whereas the binding of CO gives rise to only a mild stimulation of activity. Through X-ray crystallography we have studied NO and CO binding to cyt c '. CO binds to the distal face to give a 6-coordinate (6c) adduct. By contrast, NO binding gives rise to a 5c adduct through the displacement of the proximal His, to give a novel and unexpected proximal binding mode for NO. These results are also supported by a range of spectroscopies. In the absence of a crystal structure for sGC we propose that cyt c ' provides a structural model for the haem domain of this enzyme and thereby helps to explain the differential effects of NO and CO on its activity.
...
PMID:A two-faced molecule offers NO explanation: the proximal binding of nitric oxide to haem. 1277 55
The role of nitric oxide (NO) in cellular physiology and signaling has been an important aspect in biomedical science over the last decade. As NO is a small uncharged radical, the chemistry of NO within the redox environment of the cell dictates the majority of its biological effects. The mechanisms that have received the most attention from a biological perspective involve reactions with oxygen and superoxide, despite the rich literature of metal-NO chemistry. However, NO and its related species participate in important chemistry with metalloproteins. In addition to the well known direct interactions of NO with heme proteins such as soluble
guanylate cyclase
and oxyhemoglobin, there is much important, but often underappreciated, chemistry between other
nitrogen
oxides and heme/metal proteins. Here the basic chemistry of nitrosylation and the interactions of NO and other
nitrogen
oxides with metal-oxo species such as found in peroxidases and monoxygenases are discussed.
...
PMID:Heme proteins and nitric oxide (NO): the neglected, eloquent chemistry in NO redox signaling and regulation. 1288 Apr 85
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive
nitrogen
species (RNS) have an impact on many cellular processes, often serving as signal transducers in both physiological and pathological situations. These small molecules can act as ligands for receptors as is the case for nitric oxide and
guanylate cyclase
. However, they can also modify proteins, changing their function and establishing a baseline for other signals in a process that we have termed "redox tone." In this review, we discuss the different mechanisms of redox cell signaling, and give specific examples of RNS participation in cell signaling via classical and redox tone pathways.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and cell signaling: modulation of redox tone and protein modification. 1466 Oct 93
Nitric oxide (NO), which is synthesized from the guanidino
nitrogen
of l-arginine by nitric oxide synthase (NOS), plays an important role in many physiological and pathological processes. Most of the effects of NO are mediated by cyclic guanosine 3'5 monophosphate (cGMP), which is synthesized by soluble
guanylate cyclase
(sGC) and degraded by phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Although the NO/cGMP pathway has been extensively studied, remarkably little is known about the regulation of NO release. Furthermore, controversial studies have indicated that intervention of the sGC/cGMP pathway modulates the release of NO. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that drugs that affect the sGC/cGMP pathway may modulate NO release and, if so, is there a correlation between NO levels and blood pressure effect? To this end, we investigated the effects of the PDE 5 inhibitor zaprinast on mean arterial pressure (MAP), nitrite/nitrate levels and cGMP in normotensive male Sprague Dawley rats. The results of the current study indicated that zaprinast dose-dependently increased plasma cGMP levels at 18, 24 and 36 mg/kg and decreased MAP at 24 and 36 mg/kg. However, zaprinast at 18, 24 and 36 mg/kg did not affect NO levels either in serum or aortic tissue. We have concluded that the PDE 5 inhibitor zaprinast has no regulatory effect on NO release in serum and aortic tissue, and NO was not involved in the hypotensive effect of zaprinast.
...
PMID:Effect of zaprinast on nitric oxide levels in serum and aortic tissue. 1498 37
Nitric oxide (NO) is a mobile, highly reactive signal molecule, and changes the expression of specific genes in effector cells. Under physiological conditions, NO reacts with molecular oxygen and with reactive oxygen species (ROS) to produce intermediates known as reactive
nitrogen
species (RNS). The production of NO and RNS in the cell is controlled by hormones, neurotransmitters, cytokines, and growth factors. Hence NO and its derivatives act as secondary paracrinous factors and transmit the signal from NO-producing to neighboring cells. Intracellular reception of NO and RNS is due to Src-related tyrosine protein kinases, G-protein Ras, cytochrome oxidase, and
guanylate cyclase
. Receptor proteins mostly contain heme, active thiol, or iron-sulfur groups, and are both on the plasma membrane and in internal cell compartments. Many of the NO receptors are the key components of cell regulatory systems controlling the transcription factors AP-1, HIF-1, NF-kappa B, and p53 and the expression of their target genes. A distinguishing feature of NO signaling is that changes in redox potential of the cell switch the NO receptor and, consequently, modify the NO effect. Depending on the ROS level, NO activates different signal transduction pathways to induce (or suppress) different gene sets. The data considered indicate that antioxidants may be used to directionally change the transcriptional response of the cell to NO.
...
PMID:[Redox-dependent regulation of gene expression induced by nitric oxide]. 1504 36
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