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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)
A large amount of biochemical, physiological, and pharmacological data has been obtained which supports a mechanistic role of oxygen free radical-induced lipid peroxidation (LP) in post-traumatic spinal cord degeneration. Biochemical evidence of early and progressive lipid peroxidative reactions occurring in the injured spinal cord includes: an increase in polyunsaturated fatty acid peroxidation products (e.g., malonyldialdehyde), a decrease in cholesterol and the appearance of cholesterol oxidation products, an increase in cyclic GMP presumably due to free radical activation of
guanylate cyclase
, a decrease in tissue anti-oxidant levels (e.g., alpha tocopherol, reduced ascorbate), and inhibition of membrane-bound enzymes such as Na+ + K+-
ATPase
. In vitro CNS tissue studies have provided support for the possibility that LP may contribute to other early post-traumatic events including intracellular calcium accumulation and arachidonic acid release. Moreover, spinal tissue lactic acidosis, which occurs early after injury, can exacerbate LP reactions. The involvement of LP in the development of progressive post-traumatic spinal white matter ischemia has been strongly inferred from pharmacological studies in cats with known inhibitors of LP. For example, the dose-response curves for the ability of the glucocorticoid methylprednisolone (MP) to inhibit post-traumatic LP and to retard ischemia development are identical. This relationship between LP and post-traumatic ischemia is more directly implied from studies showing that pretreatment of cats with high doses of anti-oxidants (e.g., d-alpha tocopherol plus selenium p.o. or 1-ascorbic acid i.v.) can also significantly antagonize the progressive decrease in spinal cord blood flow that follows severe blunt injury. However, a similar efficacy of certain calcium and prostaglandin antagonists suggests an interrelationship between aberrant calcium fluxes, vasoconstrictor/platelet aggregating prostanoids, and LP in the post-traumatic ischemic phenomenon. In addition to a role of LP in ischemia development, the action of intensive d-alpha tocopherol and selenium pretreatment to retard anterograde cat motor nerve fiber degeneration after nerve section suggests that LP may also be a fundamental mechanism of "Wallerian" axonal degeneration after neural injury. Finally, a critical role of LP in the acute pathophysiology of CNS injury in general has been supported by the finding of an excellent correlation, in terms of efficacy and potency, between the action of glucocorticoid and nonglucocorticoid steroids to inhibit neural tissue LP in vitro and to promote early neurological recovery in severely head-injured mice.
...
PMID:Role of lipid peroxidation in post-traumatic spinal cord degeneration: a review. 355 50
Administration of the glucocorticoid methylprednisolone (MP) (30 mg/kg body wt for 3 days) to rats increased intestinal mucosal
guanylate cyclase
and Na-K-
ATPase
activities, short-circuit current (Isc), electrical potential difference (PD), net Na absorption, and net Cl secretion and reversed HCO3 transport from secretion to absorption. In the MP-treated animals, removal of HCO3 from both the mucosal and serosal bathing solutions increased Cl secretion but did not alter the Isc, PD, and net Na flux. Removal of Cl abolished the MP-induced increase in Isc but did not affect the MP-induced changes in net Na and HCO3 fluxes. At 6 h, after a single dose of MP, stimulation of
guanylate cyclase
activity was already maximal, whereas Na-K-
ATPase
activity was not detectably altered. The changes in intestinal transport properties present 6 h after MP treatment and associated with the increased
guanylate cyclase
activity were an increase in Isc and PD and a reversal of net Cl absorption to net secretion. These results suggest that an initial response to MP administration is a persistent increase in intestinal
guanylate cyclase
activity that mediates an electrogenic Cl secretory process, then is followed by a superimposed effect of increased Na-K-
ATPase
activity that mediates an increase in net Na absorption.
...
PMID:Effects of methylprednisolone on electrolyte transport by in vitro rat ileum. 611 81
Cytochemical and biochemical characteristics of the surface membrane components of avian dystrophic muscle were examined. A Mg2+- or Ca2+-activated ("basic") adenosine triphosphate (
ATPase
) was localized cytochemically in fixed, intact dystrophic muscle slices in a medium containing Mg2+ or Ca2+, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and 1 microM free Pb2+ to capture enzymatically released phosphate ions. Electron-dense staining precipitates were found to be associated with the plasmalemma and its tortuous invaginations, and the transverse components of the T-system membrane and its associated proliferated networks. Enzymatic analysis of microsomal fractions isolated from 7-day-old and 90-day-old normal and dystrophic muscle showed a complex behavior. Specific activity of "basic"
ATPase
decreased with maturity in normal and dystrophic animals. The specific activities of the surface membrane associated enzymes, leucyl beta-naphthylamidase, adenylate cyclase, and
guanylate cyclase
, remained at various elevated levels in the mature dystrophic animals, in contrast to the normal muscle, which showed decreases in the specific activity of all three enzymes with maturation. The persistent high levels in some but not all enzyme activities in 90-day-old dystrophic muscle indicates a complicated developmental pattern in the dystrophic chicken muscle.
...
PMID:Biochemical and cytochemical comparison of surface membranes from normal and dystrophic chickens. 611 29
The stability of dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase,
guanylate cyclase
,
ATPase
, and GTPase was measured in homogenates of rat striatal tissue frozen from 0 to 24 h postmortem.
ATPase
, GTPase, and Mg2+-dependent
guanylate cyclase
activities showed no significant change over this period. Mn2+-dependent
guanylate cyclase
activity was stable for 10 h postmortem. Basal and dopamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity decreased markedly during the first 5 h. However, when measured in washed membrane preparations, these adenylate cyclase activities remained stable for at least 10 h. Therefore, the postmortem loss of a soluble activator, such as GTP, may decrease the adenylate cyclase activity in homogenates. These results are not consistent with an earlier suggestion that there is a postmortem degradation of the enzyme itself. Other kinetic parameters of dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase can also be measured independently of postmortem changes. Thus, it is possible to investigate kinetic parameters of dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase,
guanylate cyclase
,
ATPase
, and GTPase in human brain obtained postmortem.
...
PMID:Postmortem stability of dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase, guanylate cyclase, ATPase, and GTPase in rat striatum. 612 Sep 96
To investigate the involvement of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) in the cholinergic activation of gastric acid and pepsinogen secretion, we studied the subcellular and cellular relation between particulate
guanylate cyclase
and muscarinic cholinergic receptor sites. Subcellular fractionation of homogenates from rabbit gastric glands showed that particulate
guanylate cyclase
and muscarinic receptors were distributed in similar patterns, which differed from the pattern found for Na+-K+-
ATPase
, a marker for basal-lateral plasma membranes. Assuming a basal-lateral membrane localization for particulate
guanylate cyclase
and cholinergic receptors, these results suggested a heterogeneity of glandular basal-lateral membranes. The distributions of these markers among fractions enriched in isolated canine parietal or chief cells were also followed. Na+-K+-
ATPase
correlated with parietal cell distribution (r = 0.86) and
guanylate cyclase
with chief cell distribution (r = 0.76). The distribution of quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) binding sites indicated association of muscarinic receptors with both cell types. The similar subcellular and cellular distributions of
guanylate cyclase
and QNB binding sites may reflect a functional relationship of these markers in muscarinic-activated pepsinogen secretion. As seen in most other tissues, gastric glandular
guanylate cyclase
was not stimulated by various gastric secretagogues. We found that small changes in Ca2+ concentration, within the micromolar range, can regulate glandular
guanylate cyclase
activity. These results are discussed in terms of the cholinergic activation of parietal and chief cell function.
...
PMID:Muscarinic receptors and guanylate cyclase in mammalian gastric glandular cells. 614 Aug 59
A great deal of knowledge has been gained concerning the activation of adenylate and
guanylate cyclase
in epidermal cells. Adenylate cyclase is activated by 4 different independent receptors-responding respectively to catecholamine (beta), to prostaglandins (E), to histamine (H2), and to adenosine and it phosphorylated derivatives. Upon activation, each of these receptors becomes unresponsive to further stimulation by its specific stimulator. Guanylate cyclase, on the other hand, is activated by histamine (H1) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). Unlike EGF, the histamine activation is extremely rapid (less than 5 minutes). Epidermal cells are permeable (leak) to cyclic GMP but not cyclic AMP. When the skin is traumatized or injured in any way (even by intradermal injection) there is a sudden catastrophic change in the intracellular levels of the cyclic nucleotides (and of ATP). Cyclic AMP rapidly rises to perhaps 5-10 times its normal resting level while cyclic GMP falls to 10-20% of its level in vivo. The rise in cyclic AMP is due to activation of adenylate cyclase while the fall in cyclic GMP is due in major part to activation of cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (and perhaps the fall in ATP is due to activation of
ATPase
). The changes in ATP and cyclic AMP can be reversed by incubating the tissue in a buffered salt solution containing glucose, but this does not normalize the cyclic GMP content. The fall in cyclic GMP can be prevented by a phosphodiesterase inhibitor (IBMX ). This series of events has been called the "ischemia effect." However, it implies that a lack of oxygen is at fault, and that has not been shown to be the case. Its underlying cause and possible physiologic significance are not known. Do these changes in cyclic nucleotides have effects on epidermal proliferation? And does EGF? Agents which increase cyclic AMP do inhibit the epidermal outgrowth and mitotic activity of explant cultures of pig skin. Cyclic GMP does increase outgrowth at a particular concentration. Histamine, which elevates both cyclic nucleotides, has a biphasic action depending on its concentration. These findings imply that these nucleotides do act as one of the controls of epidermal proliferation. The action of cyclic GMP is not accompanied by detectably increased phosphorylation of epidermal proteins. On the other hand, EGF action which also enhances epidermal outgrowth is characterized by an increased protein phosphorylation that precedes any increase in cellular cyclic GMP. We conclude that the action of EGF is independent of the cyclic nucleotide system.
...
PMID:Cyclic GMP system in the epidermis. 626 50
A procedure was developed for the large scale preparation of membranes from pig atria which are enriched 10-13 fold in the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor. The procedure involved differential centrifugation and sucrose-gradient centrifugation in solutions containing 150 mM-NaClO4 and 5 mM-EDTA to minimize membrane aggregation. The final membrane preparation bound about 1.1 pmol of L-quinuclidinyl benzilate/mg of protein. Comparable results were obtained with either fresh or frozen tissue. About the same yield (120 pmol of L-quinuclidinyl benzilate sites/100 g of tissue) and specific activity of membranes were obtained from different regions of the atria. The final preparation was stable at -80 degrees C in buffered sucrose solutions. The membranes appeared mostly as sheets or fragments and partly as closed vesicles in the electron microscope and were heterogeneous in isopycnic Percoll gradients. Marker enzyme studies showed that the receptor was enriched in parallel with the plasma membrane markers
guanylate cyclase
(particulate form) and (Na+ + K+)-activated
ATPase
. Some contamination by mitochondrial outer and endoplasmic reticulum membranes was evident from the distribution of monoamine oxidase and glucose-6-phosphatase activity, but the preparation was largely free of sarcoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrial inner, and lysosomal membranes.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of muscarinic-acetylcholine-receptor-enriched membranes from pig atria. 709 26
The effect of chloramphenicol (CAP) on the intestinal motility of mice was studied. Acute and chronic CAP treatment significantly increased the food transit time. CAP produced concentration-dependent inhibition of motility of the isolated ileum of mice. Prazosin, propranolol, atropine, ouabain and chlorpromazine all failed to modulate or counteract the CAP-induced inhibition of ileal motility. However, naloxone and hexamethonium slightly modified the inhibitory response of CAP. The inhibitory response of CAP was markedly counteracted by cystine, a
guanylate cyclase
inhibitor. CAP increased the activity of Ca(++)-
ATPase
in the ileum in all experiments. Our results suggest that the CAP-induced inhibition of the intestinal motility is not mediated through adrenergic, cholinergic and cAMP or through inhibition of the electrogenic pump. Compared to thiamphenicol (TAP), CAP, with a p-NO2 group in its structure, exhibited more pronounced alteration of both intestinal motility and Ca(++)-
ATPase
activity. We, therefore, suggest that greater inhibition of ileal motility induced by CAP is possibly a p-NO2-cGMP-Ca(++)-
ATPase
-mediated mechanism.
...
PMID:Mechanism of chloramphenicol-induced modulation of mouse ileal motility. 747 3
1 The effect of the Ca(2+)-
ATPase
inhibitor, cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), was studied on rat thoracic aortic ring preparations. 2 At concentrations above 0.3 microM, CPA induced relaxation in the arteries precontracted with phenylephrine. Removal of the endothelium abolished CPA-induced relaxation. 3 The nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor NG-nitro L-arginine (3-300 microM), the free radical scavenger haemoglobin (0.1-3 microM), the soluble
guanylate cyclase
inhibitor, LY83583 (0.1-10 microM), each inhibited the endothelium-dependent relaxation to CPA. The potassium channel blocker, glibenclamide (10 microM) and cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin (100 microM for 60 min and then washed out) did not alter the action of CPA. 4 The calmodulin inhibitors calmidazolium (3-10 microM) and W-7 (100 microM) also abolished CPA-induced relaxation. 5 CPA (10 microM) increased guanosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) levels in arteries with an intact endothelium, without affecting adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) levels. 6 The inhibitors of NO synthesis and actions, the calmodulin inhibitor and removal of the endothelium abolished the CPA-stimulated increase in the levels of cyclic GMP. 7 In Ca(2+)-free solution, CPA failed to induce relaxation or to stimulate cyclic GMP production. Relaxation to nitroprusside was not affected under these conditions. 8 These results suggest that CPA can stimulate NO synthesis, possibly by inhibiting a Ca(2+)-
ATPase
, which replenishes Ca2+ in the intracellular storage sites in endothelial cells. Depletion of the Ca2+ store in the endothelium may then trigger influx of extracellular Ca2+, contributing to an increase in free Ca2+ in the endothelial cells, which activates NO synthase and NO formation.
...
PMID:Relaxation of rat thoracic aorta induced by the Ca(2+)-ATPase inhibitor, cyclopiazonic acid, possibly through nitric oxide formation. 751 25
Amphiphiles are known to modulate the activity of
ATPase
, phospholipase A2, adenylate and
guanylate cyclase
amongst others and relax vascular smooth muscle. The effect of two amphiphiles, lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) and digitonin on the activity of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), as measured by conversion of radiolabeled L-arginine to L-citrulline, has been studied. Neither digitonin (0.01 mmol/l) nor LPC (0.01 mmol/l) influenced NOS activity in endothelial cell homogenates. Digitonin but not LPC stimulated NOS in intact endothelial cells. NOS activity was markedly inhibited by L- but not by D-omega-nitroarginine (D-NNA, 0.1 mmol/l). L-NNA or D-NNA data demonstrate no effect of amphiphiles on isolated NOS. NOS activation may occur as a result of detergent action on the membrane.
...
PMID:Effect of amphiphiles on nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells. 751 49
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