Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.6.1.2 (guanylate cyclase)
8,497 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cardiac myocytes have recently been shown to express a constitutive Ca(2+)-sensitive isoform of NO synthase (NOS3), although the mechanism(s) responsible for activation of NOS3 and its physiological function remain to be determined. Since the activity of NOS3 is known to be regulated in part by the intracellular Ca2+ activity ([Ca2+]i) in endothelial cells, we determined whether increasing myocyte [Ca2+]i by uniform electric field pacing was accompanied by an increase in NOS3 activity, detected as nitrite accumulation in the medium. A higher [Ca2+]i with increasing pacing frequencies was shown to be accompanied by a time-dependent accumulation of nitrite in medium that bathed adult rat ventricular myocytes stimulated at 3 Hz. Nitrite release by paced cells was significantly attenuated by treatment with either the NO synthase inhibitor nitro-L-arginine (L-NA, 1 mmol/L) or the intracellular Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM (20 mumol/L). Paced myocytes also exhibited a frequency- and time-dependent increase in intracellular cGMP content that could be inhibited significantly by either L-NA or the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor LY83583 (5 mumol/L). To determine whether the increase in NOS3 activity with pacing affected contractile function, myocytes were sequentially paced at frequencies from 0.5 to 3 Hz. Methylene blue, L-NA, and LY83583 all increased the amplitude of shortening of myocytes paced at 3 Hz. Furthermore, a significantly greater positive inotropic response to high extracellular Ca2+ (3 mmol/L) was demonstrated by myocytes pretreated with L-NA compared with control cells. These data indicate that myocyte NOS3 activity is regulated in part by [Ca2+]i, whether induced by changes in pacing frequency or [Ca2+]o, and depresses myocyte contractile responsiveness to higher stimulation frequencies.
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PMID:Frequency-dependent activation of a constitutive nitric oxide synthase and regulation of contractile function in adult rat ventricular myocytes. 857 64

We examined the role of endogenous NO in the autonomic regulation of atrioventricular (AV) nodal function by studying spontaneous action potentials (SAPs) and L-type Ca2+ current (ICa-L) in isolated single AV nodal cells from adult rabbit hearts. Both the perforated and the membrane-ruptured patch-clamp techniques in the whole-cell configuration were used under conditions known to alter NO production. Three NO donors, 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1, 0.1 mmol/L), S-nitroso-acetylcysteine (0.1 mmol/L), and sodium nitroprusside (0.1 mmol/L), suppressed the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (ISO, 1 mumol/L)-stimulated increase in ICa-L. SIN-1 also decreased the frequency and amplitude of SAPs. In cells in which ICa-L had been previously attenuated by the muscarinic agonist carbamylcholine (CCh, 1 mumol/L), SIN-1 had no additive effect. CCh activated an acetylcholine-sensitive outward K+ current (IK(ACh)) in AV nodal cells, in addition to the ICa-L inhibition. Intracellular dialysis with the NO synthase inhibitor N-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, 0.5 mmol/L) blocked CCh-induced, but not SIN-1-induced, ICa.L attenuation. However, intracellular dialysis with methylene blue (20 mumol/L), which inhibits NO-mediated activation of guanylyl cyclase and cGMP production, blocked the effects of both CCh and SIN-1 on ICa-L. In these cells, neither L-NMMA nor methylene blue affected the CCh-activated IK(ACh). Direct application of cGMP (10 mumol/L) via internal dialysis significantly inhibited ISO-stimulated ICa-L. In AV nodal cells internally perfused with either a nonhydrolyzable cAMP analogue, 8-Br-cAMP (0.5 mmol/L), or a high concentration of cAMP (0.5 mmol/L), CCh did not inhibit, ICa-L but still activated IK(ACh). CCh-induced ICa-L attenuation could be abolished or quickly reversed by the nonselective phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (20 mumol/L). However, CCh still significantly suppressed ISO-stimulated ICa-L after the cGMP-inhibited PDE isozyme (PDE3) had been selectively inhibited by milrinone (5 mumol/L). Immunohistochemical staining identified the presence of the endothelial constitutive NO synthase (ecNOS or NOS3) in both single AV nodal cells in vitro and in cryostat sections of AV nodal tissue in situ. These results demonstrate that endogenous NO is involved in the muscarinic cholinergic attenuation of ICa-L in AV nodal cell; the mechanism likely involves the cGMP-stimulated PDE.
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PMID:Nitric oxide synthase (NOS3)-mediated cholinergic modulation of Ca2+ current in adult rabbit atrioventricular nodal cells. 863 50

Nitric oxide (NO) acts as an autocrine- and paracrine-acting signaling autacoid that, among other functions, has been shown to regulate cardiac contractile responsiveness to beta-adrenergic and muscarinic cholinergic agonists. Nitric oxide (NO) is formed by the oxidation of one of two equivalent guanidino nitrogens in L-arginine by O2 to form NO and L-citrulline. This reaction is catalyzed by a family of enzymes termed NO synthases. Three distinct isoforms of NOS have been identified, each the product of a separate gene. Cellular constituents of cardiac muscle, including ventricular myocytes as well as microvascular endothelial cells, have been shown to express the "endothelial constitutive" isoform of NO synthase (ecNOS or NOS3) in vivo, and both cell types also express the NO synthase isoform induced by specific inflammatory cytokines (iNOS or NOS2) in vivo and in vitro. While NO-dependent intracellular signalling in cardiac myocytes clearly involves the activation of guanylate cyclase and downstream signalling by cGMP, there is accumulating evidence that non-cGMP-dependent regulatory signalling events are also initiated by NO. In addition, decreased contractile responsiveness of cardiac myocytes to beta-adrenergic agonists, following induction of NOS2 by inflammatory cytokines, requires the presence of insulin and the co-induction of enzymes responsible for production of tetrahydrobiopterin, a NOS co-factor. Inappropriate or excessive production of NO by cardiac myocytes and by microvascular endothelial cells likely contributes to the cardiac contractile dysfunction characteristic of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and cardiac allograft rejection.
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PMID:The role of the NO pathway in the control of cardiac function. 895 72

The role of nitric oxide in the autonomical regulation of atrioventricular (AV) spontaneous action potentials and L-type calcium current (ICa-L) in isolated single AV nodal cells from rabbit heart was examined by using the whole cell patch clamp technique, immunohistochemical staining and single cell reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis. The nitric oxide donor 3-morpholino-sydnonimine (SIN-1) (0.1 mmol/L) suppressed the beta-agonist isoproterenol- (1 mumol/L) stimulated increase in ICa-L and decreased the frequency and amplitude of spontaneous action potentials. In cells in which ICa-L had been previously attenuated by the muscarinic agonist carbamylcholine (CCh, 1 mumol/L), SIN-1 had no additive effect. Intracellular dialysis with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, 0.5 mmol/L) blocked CCh- but not SIN-1-induced ICa-L attenuation. However, intracellular dialysis with methylene blue (20 mumol/L), which inhibits nitric oxide-mediated activation of guanylyl cyclase and cGMP production blocked the effects of both CCh and SIN-1 on ICa-L. In these cells, neither L-NMMA nor methylene blue affected the CCh-activated potassium current (IK(ACh)). Internal dialysis with cGMP (10 mumol/L) significantly inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated ICa-L without affecting IK(ACh). In AV nodal cells internally perfused with either a nonhydrolyzable cAMP analogue, 8-Br-cAMP (0.5 mmol/L), or a high concentration of cAMP (0.5 mmol/L), CCh did not inhibit ICa-L but still activated IK(ACh). CCh-induced ICa-L attenuation could be abolished or quickly reversed by the nonselective phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (20 mumol/L) but not by milrinone (5 mumol/L), which only inhibits the cGMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase isozyme (PDE3). Immunohistochemical staining identified the presence of the endothelial constitutive nitric oxide synthase (NOS3) in both single AV node cells in vitro and in cryostat sections of AV node tissue in situ. These results demonstrate that endogenous nitric oxide is involved in the muscarinic cholinergic attenuation of ICa-L in AV nodal cells; the mechanism likely involves the cGMP-stimulated phosphodiesterase.
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PMID:Nitric oxide regulation of atrioventricular node excitability. 944 2

The isoform of nitric oxide synthase (eNOS or NOS3) originally described in endothelial cells is also expressed in a number of other cell types, including cardiac myocytes. eNOS is activated in both atrial and ventricular myocytes, including specialized pacemaker cells, by M2AChR agonists, among other stimuli. In cardiac myocytes, as in endothelial cells, eNOS is targeted to sarcolemmal caveolae, due to both co-translational myristoylation and later palmitoylation, and by the presence of a caveolin binding domain in eNOS which interacts with the caveolin scaffolding domain. In the absence of ligand, the M2AChR is not associated with caveolar microdomains, but translates into caveolae upon agonist (but not antagonist) binding. Finally, the role of M2AChR-induced eNOS activation in regulating I(Ca-L) via activation of guanylyl cyclase has been confirmed in ventricular myocytes of mice that lack functional eNOS (i.e., eNOS(null)).
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PMID:Muscarinic cholinergic signaling in cardiac myocytes: dynamic targeting of M2AChR to sarcolemmal caveolae and eNOS activation. 1006 12

Nitric oxide (NO) is an ubiquitous signaling molecule produced from L-arginine by NO synthase (NOS). In the vasculature, NO mediates parasympathetic endothelium-dependent vasodilation. NO may also mediate the parasympathetic control of myocardial function. This is supported by the observations that NOS3, the endothelial constitutive NOS, is expressed in normal cardiac myocytes from rodents and human, and NOS and/or guanylyl cyclase inhibitors antagonize the effect of muscarinic agonists on heart rate, atrio-ventricular conduction, contractility and L-type calcium current. Here we examine the autonomic regulation of the heart in genetically engineered mice deficient in NOS3 (NOS3-KO). We show that the chronotropic and inotropic responses to both beta-adrenergic and muscarinic agonists were unaltered in isolated cardiac tissue preparations from NOS3-KO mice, although these mice have a defective parasympathetic regulation of vascular tone. Similarly, beta-adrenergic stimulation and muscarinic inhibition of the calcium current did not differ in cardiac myocytes from NOS3-KO mice and those from wild-type mice. RT-PCR did not demonstrate upregulation of other NOS isoforms. Similarly, Gi/Go proteins and muscarinic receptor density were unaltered. These data refute the idea that NOS3 is obligatory for the normal autonomic control of cardiac muscle function.
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PMID:Muscarinic and beta-adrenergic regulation of heart rate, force of contraction and calcium current is preserved in mice lacking endothelial nitric oxide synthase. 1008 91

1. Activation of PAR2 in second-order mesenteric arteriole (MA) rings from C57BL/6J, NOS3 (-/-) and PAR2 (-/-) mice was assessed for the contributions of NO, cyclo-oxygenases, guanylyl cyclase, adenylyl cyclase, and of K(+) channel activation to vascular smooth muscle relaxation. 2. PAR2 agonist, SLIGRL-NH(2) (0.1 to 30 microM), induced relaxation of cirazoline-precontracted MA from C57BL/6J and NOS3 (-/-), but not PAR2 (-/-) mice. Maximal relaxation (E(max)) was partially reduced by a combination of L-(G)N-nitroarginine methyl ester (L-NAME), 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) and indomethacin. An ODQ/L-NAME/indomethacin resistant relaxation was also caused by trypsin (30 nM) in PAR2 (+/+), but not in PAR2 (-/-) mice. Relaxation was endothelium-dependent and inhibited by either 30 mM KCl-precontraction, or pretreatment with apamin, charybdotoxin, and their combination; iberiotoxin did not substitute for charybdotoxin nor did scyllatoxin substitute fully for apamin. 3. Tetraethylammonium (TEA), glibenclamide, tetrodotoxin, 17-octadecynoic acid, carboxy-2-phenyl-4,4,5,5,-tetramethyl-imidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, SQ22536, carbenoxolone, arachidonyl trifluoromethyl ketone, 7-nitroindazole, N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl)acetamidine (1400W), N-(2-cyclohexyloxy-4-nitrophenyl)-methanesulfonamide (NS-398) and propanolol did not inhibit relaxation. 4-aminopyridine significantly increased the potency of SLIGRL-NH(2). A combination of 30 microM BaCl(2) and 10 microM ouabain significantly reduced the potency for relaxation, and in the presence of L-NAME, ODQ and indomethacin, E(max) was reduced. 4. We conclude PAR2-mediated relaxation of mouse MA utilizes multiple mechanisms that are both NO-cGMP-dependent, and -independent. The data are also consistent with a role for endothelium-dependent hyperpolarization of vascular smooth muscle that involves the activation of an apamin/charybdotoxin-sensitive K(+) channel(s) and, in part, may be mediated by K(+).
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PMID:Multiple mechanisms of vascular smooth muscle relaxation by the activation of proteinase-activated receptor 2 in mouse mesenteric arterioles. 1178 91

Endostatin is a 20 kDa carboxyl-terminal fragment of collagen XVIII that, when added exogenously, inhibits endothelial proliferation and migration in vitro and angiogenesis and tumor growth in vivo. Previous results showed endostatin/collagen XVIII labeling in few endothelial cells in human glioblastoma multiforme. We have now observed constitutive release of endostatin from one of four endothelial cell lines. Induction of endostatin release was observed after H2O2, an in vitro model of cell stress, CoCl2, a model of hypoxia, and by IFN-gamma challenge. Endostatin expression and release was reduced by the nitric oxide synthase inhibitors aminoguanidine and L-NAME and induced by the NO synthase-independent NO donors sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and spermine-NONO-ate. SNP-mediated endostatin induction was abrogated by the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor 1H-(1.2.4) oxadiazolo (4,3-A) quinoxalin-1-one. Adenoviral endostatin transduction resulted in the release of endostatin from endothelial cells and in down-regulation of iNOS (NOS2) and eNOS (NOS3), and surprisingly in a 10% induction of PCNA. These results describe the modulation of endostatin release by the NO signaling cascade and provide important new pharmacological information for the systemic induction of endogenous endostatin release by common NO donor pharmacotherapy.
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PMID:Endothelial endostatin release is induced by general cell stress and modulated by the nitric oxide/cGMP pathway. 1283 91

Several cell types, including cardiac myocytes and vascular endothelial cells, produce nitric oxide (NO) via both constitutive and inducible isoforms of NO synthase. NO attenuates cardiac contractility and contributes to contractile dysfunction in heart failure, although the precise molecular mechanisms for these effects are poorly defined. Adenylyl cyclase (AC) isoforms type 5 and 6, which are preferentially expressed in cardiac myocytes, may be inhibited via a direct nitrosylation by NO. Because endothelial NO synthase (eNOS and NOS3), beta-adrenergic (betaAR) receptors, and AC6 all can localize in lipid raft/caveolin-rich microdomains, we sought to understand the role of lipid rafts in organizing components of betaAR-G(s)-AC signal transduction together with eNOS. Using neonatal rat cardiac myocytes, we found that disruption of lipid rafts with beta-cyclodextrin inhibited forskolin-stimulated AC activity and cAMP production, eliminated caveolin-3-eNOS interaction, and increased NO production. betaAR- and G(s)-mediated activation of AC activity were inhibited by beta-cyclodextrin treatment, but prostanoid receptor-stimulated AC activity, which appears to occur outside caveolin-rich microdomains, was unaffected unless eNOS was overexpressed and lipid rafts were disrupted. An NO donor, SNAP, inhibited basal and forskolin-stimulated cAMP production in both native cardiac myocytes and cardiac myocytes and pulmonary artery endothelial cells engineered to overexpress AC6. These effects of SNAP were independent of guanylyl cyclase activity and were mimicked by overexpression of eNOS. The juxtaposition of eNOS with betaAR and AC types 5 and 6 results in selective regulation of betaAR by eNOS activity in lipid raft domains over other G(s)-coupled receptors localized in nonraft domains. Thus co-localization of multiple signaling components in lipid rafts provides key spatial regulation of AC activity.
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PMID:Nitric oxide inhibition of adenylyl cyclase type 6 activity is dependent upon lipid rafts and caveolin signaling complexes. 1500 69

Beta-adrenergic agonists stimulate cardiac contractility and simultaneously blunt this response by coactivating NO synthase (NOS3) to enhance cGMP synthesis and activate protein kinase G (PKG-1). cGMP is also catabolically regulated by phosphodiesterase 5A (PDE5A). PDE5A inhibition by sildenafil (Viagra) increases cGMP and is used widely to treat erectile dysfunction; however, its role in the heart and its interaction with beta-adrenergic and NOS3/cGMP stimulation is largely unknown. In nontransgenic (control) murine in vivo hearts and isolated myocytes, PDE5A inhibition (sildenafil) minimally altered rest function. However, when the hearts or isolated myocytes were stimulated with isoproterenol, PDE5A inhibition was associated with a suppression of contractility that was coupled to elevated cGMP and increased PKG-1 activity. In contrast, NOS3-null hearts or controls with NOS inhibited by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, or soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) inhibited by 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxaline-1-one, showed no effect of PDE5A inhibition on beta-stimulated contractility or PKG-1 activation. This lack of response was not attributable to altered PDE5A gene or protein expression or in vitro PDE5A activity, but rather to an absence of sGC-generated cGMP specifically targeted to PDE5A catabolism and to a loss of PDE5A localization to z-bands. Re-expression of active NOS3 in NOS3-null hearts by adenoviral gene transfer restored PDE5A z-band localization and the antiadrenergic efficacy of PDE5A inhibition. These data support a novel regulatory role of PDE5A in hearts under adrenergic stimulation and highlight specific coupling of PDE5A catabolic regulation with NOS3-derived cGMP attributable to protein subcellular localization and targeted synthetic/catabolic coupling.
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PMID:cGMP catabolism by phosphodiesterase 5A regulates cardiac adrenergic stimulation by NOS3-dependent mechanism. 1557 51


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