Gene/Protein
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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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)
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is a channel and regulator protein that is crucially involved in transepithelial ion transport. In the exocrine pancreas, the CFTR-mediated secretion of an electrolyte-rich fluid is a major but as yet incompletely understood function. We show here that the peptide guanylin is a specific activator of CFTR function in the human pancreas implicating regulation of pancreatic electrolyte secretion. Guanylin and its affiliated signaling and effector proteins including
guanylate cyclase
C, cGMP-dependent protein kinase II, CFTR, and the epithelial Cl-/HCO3- exchanger,
anion exchanger
2, are highly expressed in the human pancreas. Guanylin is localized specifically to the typical centroacinar cells and proximal duct cells which, based on its additional presence in the pancreatic juice, is obviously released luminally into the pancreatic ducts. The guanylin receptor and the respective functional downstream proteins are all confined to the apical membrane of the duct cells implicating an as yet unknown route of luminal regulatory pathway of electrolyte secretion in the ductal system. Functional studies in two different human pancreatic duct cell lines expressing the CFTR Cl- channel that is functionally intact in CAPAN-1 cells but defective (delta F508) in CFPAC-1 cells clearly identify guanylin as a specific regulator of pancreatic CFTR channel function. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in CAPAN-1 cells revealed that forskolin induces an increase of Cl- conductance mediated by cAMP. In contrast, guanylin increased Cl- conductance in the same cells via cGMP but not cAMP; the respective membrane current was largely blockable by the sulfonylurea glibenclamide. In CFPAC-1 cells, however, neither guanylin nor forskolin produced a current activation. Based on the present findings we conclude that guanylin is an intrinsic pancreatic regulator of Cl- current activation in pancreatic duct cells via cGMP and CFTR. Remarkably, in the pancreas guanylin may exert its function through an intriguing luminocrine mode via the pancreatic juice.
...
PMID:Guanylin in the human pancreas: a novel luminocrine regulatory pathway of electrolyte secretion via cGMP and CFTR in the ductal system. 1144 48
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-mediated secretion of an electrolyte-rich fluid is a major but incompletely understood function of the salivary glands. We provide molecular evidence that guanylin, a bioactive intestinal peptide involved in the CFTR-regulated secretion of electrolyte/water in the gut epithelium, is highly expressed in the human parotid and submandibular glands and in respective clinically most relevant tumors. Moreover, in the same organs we identified expression of the major components of the guanylin signaling pathway, ie, guanylin-receptor
guanylate cyclase
-C, cGKII, and CFTR, as well as of the epithelial Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-)
anion exchanger
type 2 (AE2). At the cellular level, guanylin is localized to epithelial cells of the ductal system that, based on its presence in the saliva, is obviously released into the salivary gland ducts. The guanylin-receptor
guanylate cyclase
-C, cGKII, CFTR, and AE2 are all confined exclusively to the apical membrane of the same duct cells. These findings implicate guanylin as intrinsic regulator of electrolyte secretion in the salivary glands. We assume that duct epithelial cells synthesize and release guanylin into the saliva to regulate electrolyte secretion in the ductal system by an intraductal luminocrine signaling pathway. Moreover, the high expression of guanylin in pleomorphic adenoma and Warthin tumors (cystadenolymphoma), the most common neoplasms of salivary glands, predicts guanylin as a significant marker in tumor pathology.
...
PMID:Guanylin and functional coupling proteins in the human salivary glands and gland tumors : expression, cellular localization, and target membrane domains. 1216 90