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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was designed to determine the cellular signaling mechanisms responsible for mediating the effects of angiotensin II on proximal tubular Na+,K+-ATPase activity. Angiotensin II produced a biphasic effect on Na+,K+-ATPase activity: stimulation at 10(-13) - 10(-10) M followed by inhibition at 10(-7) - 10(-5) M of angiotensin II. The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of angiotensin II were antagonized by losartan (1nM) suggesting the involvement of
AT1
receptor. Angiotensin II produced inhibition of forskolin-stimulated
cAMP
accumulation at 10(-13) - 10(-10) M followed by a stimulation in basal
cAMP
levels at 10(-7) - 10(-5) M. Pretreatment of proximal tubules with losartan (1nM) antagonized both the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of angiotensin II on
cAMP
accumulation. Pretreatment of the proximal tubules with pertussis toxin (PTx) abolished the stimulation of Na+,K+-ATPase activity but did not affect the inhibition of Na+,K+-ATPase activity produced by angiotensin II. Pretreatment of the tubules with cholera toxin did not alter the biphasic effect of angiotensin II on Na+,K+-ATPase activity. Mepacrine (10microM), a phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitor, reduced only the inhibitory effect of angiotensin II on Na+,K+-ATPase activity. These results suggest that the activation of
AT1
angiotensin II receptors stimulates Na+,K+-ATPase activity via a PTx-sensitive G protein-linked inhibition of adenylyl cyclase pathway, whereas the inhibition of Na+,K+-ATPase activity following
AT1
receptor activation involves multiple signaling pathways which may include stimulation of adenylyl cyclase and PLA2.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II AT1 receptor/signaling mechanisms in the biphasic effect of the peptide on proximal tubular Na+,K+-ATPase. 960 7
Expression of the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1-R) mRNA in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) is down-regulated by a variety of agonists, including growth factors, agonists of Galphaq protein-coupled receptors, and activators of adenylyl cyclase. To determine whether
cAMP
-dependent protein kinases (PKA) participates in
AT1
-R mRNA down-regulation controlled by multiple classes of receptors, a PKA inhibitor peptide (PKIalpha) was developed and expressed in rat VSMC as a fusion with the enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP). PKA activity elicited both by forskolin and angiotensin II is suppressed in cells expressing this fusion protein (PKIalpha-eGFP), but platelet-derived growth factor-BB does not stimulate PKA activity in this preparation. PKIalpha-eGFP expression fully inhibits the forskolin-stimulated down-regulation of
AT1
-R mRNA levels and blocks 50% of the effect elicited by angiotensin II. This indicates that PKA plays a substantial role in angiotensin II-stimulated
AT1
-R mRNA down-regulation. However, inhibition of PKA has no effect on
AT1
-R mRNA down-regulation caused by platelet-derived growth factor-BB. These findings show how agonists such as angiotensin II that are not normally considered as activators of PKA can use PKA-dependent processes to modulate gene expression. These findings also provide definitive evidence that PKA-dependent pathways are involved in modulation of
AT1
-R mRNA levels in VSMC.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cyclic AMP-dependent kinase by expression of a protein kinase inhibitor/enhanced green fluorescent fusion protein attenuates angiotensin II-induced type 1 AT1 receptor mRNA down-regulation in vascular smooth muscle cells. 973 Sep 10
-Dopamine and angiotensin II (Ang II) receptors have been reported to exhibit an interaction in renal proximal tubules. The present study was designed to investigate the regulation by a D2-like dopamine receptor of Ang II-mediated stimulation of Na,K-ATPase activity in the renal proximal tubules. Ang II (10(-13) to 10(-9) mol/L) stimulated Na,K-ATPase activity in the proximal tubules that was completely abolished when the tubules were pretreated with the D2-like receptor agonist bromocriptine (1 micromol/L) for 30 minutes. The effect of bromocriptine on Ang II response was prevented by domperidone (1 micromol/L), a D2-like dopamine receptor antagonist. Similarly, the inhibition of forskolin (1 micromol/L)-induced
cAMP
accumulation caused by Ang II (10 pmol/L) was also abolished in bromocriptine-pretreated tubules. Basal and forskolin-stimulated
cAMP
was not significantly different in bromocriptine-treated tubules compared with the control. [3H]-Ang II binding sites (angiotensin type 1 [
AT1
] receptors) were reduced by approximately 65% in bromocriptine-treated proximal tubules, a result that was further substantiated by Western blot analysis revealing a 50% decrease in
AT1
receptors in bromocriptine-treated tubules compared with the control. Western blot analysis of G proteins revealed a 2-fold increase in Gsalpha and a 20% decrease in Gialpha1 and Gialpha2 in the bromocriptine-treated proximal tubules. Bromocriptine (1 micromol/L) alone stimulated Na,K-ATPase activity during the first 30 minutes of incubation, and thereafter the stimulation fell to the basal level. Similarly, bromocriptine-mediated inhibition of
cAMP
lasted only up to 20 minutes. The data suggest that preactivation of D2-like dopamine receptors abolishes Ang II-mediated stimulation of Na,K-ATPase activity and inhibition of
cAMP
accumulation. This phenomenon may be a consequence of a decrease in
AT1
receptors and alterations in G protein levels in the proximal tubules. We propose that such a regulation of Ang II response by bromocriptine is the result of heterologous desensitization of the D2-like receptor system.
...
PMID:Bromocriptine regulates angiotensin II response on sodium pump in proximal tubules. 985 73
Angiotensin II is a key element in regulating the volume of extracellular liquid. It acts indirectly through aldosterone secretion by adrenals and directly on the renal tubule too: It regulates luminal Na+/H+ antiporters (NHE3 and possibly NHE2) after binding to membrane
AT1
receptors located both on the basolateral and on the apical side of the cells. The main site of Ang II action is proximal tubule, mainly the S1 segment which has a high level of
AT1
receptors. Circulating Ang II concentrations (10(-12) to 10(-10) M), increased NaCl, water and NaHCO3 reabsorption via NHE3 in the proximal tubule. There is also a synthesis of Ang II within the cells of proximal tubule, which is secreted within the lumen where the physiological concentration is stable 10(-8) M, i.e. 100 to 1000 times higher than the circulating concentration. Luminal ANG II originating from kidney has a physiological autocrine function on NaCl, water and probably NaHCO3 reabsorption, since inhibiting Ang II synthesis, by conversion enzyme inhibition, or effect, by
AT1
receptor antagonists, induces a reduction of proximal tubule reabsorption. The stimulatory effects of circulating and intrarenal Ang II seem to be explained by protein kinase C stimulation and possibly by a reduction of
cAMP
production or by a stimulation of a non-receptor tyrosine kinase. When pharmacological doses of Ang II (> 10(-8) M) are applied in the peritubular or the luminal medium of isolated microperfused proximal tubule in vitro, a paradoxical inhibition of NHE3 was observed. These effects appear to involve arachidonic acid metabolites through the cytochrome P450 pathway and possibly a rise in cytosolic free Ca++. The physiological significance of these supraphysiological effects are unknown.
...
PMID:[Effect of angiotensin ii on Na+/H+ exchangers of the renal tubule]. 985 78
Different signal transduction pathways, i.e. Ca2+- and
cAMP
-dependent, involved in mediating the effects of angiotensin II (AII) were investigated separately using the short-circuit current (Isc) technique and radioimmunoassay (RIA) in a cystic fibrosis pancreatic cell line (CFPAC-1) which exhibits defective
cAMP
-dependent but intact Ca2+-dependent anion secretion. The AII-induced Isc could be inhibited by the specific antagonist for
AT1
, losartan (1 microM), but not the antagonist for AT2, PD123177 (up to 10 microM). The AII-induced Isc was also reduced by the treatment of the cells with a Ca2+ chelator, BAPTA-AM (100 microM), indicating a dependence of the AII-induced anion secretion on the intracellular Ca2+. Treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin (0.1 microg/ml) or a phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor, U73122 (5 microM), resulted in a substantial reduction in the AII-induced Isc indicating involvement of Gi and PLC in the Ca2+-dependent anion secretion. RIA measurements showed that AII stimulated an increase in
cAMP
production which could be reduced by losartan, pertussis toxin and U73122 but not BAPTA-AM. In addition, inhibitors of cyclooxygenase, indomethacin (10 microM) and piroxicam (10 microM), did not have any effect on the AII-induced
cAMP
production, excluding the involvement of prostaglandins. Our results suggest that both AII-stimulated
cAMP
and Ca2+-dependent responses are mediated by the
AT1
receptor and Gi-coupled PLC pathway. However, the AII-stimulated
cAMP
production in CFPAC-1 cells is not dependent on Ca2+ or the formation of prostaglandins.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II-mediated signal transduction events in cystic fibrosis pancreatic duct cells. 1020 4
We tested the possibility that bovine adrenal capillary endothelial cells (ECs) stimulate aldosterone secretion from bovine zona glomerulosa (ZG) cells by the release of a transferable factor. In coincubations of ZG cells and ECs in serum-free medium, aldosterone release was stimulated approximately 17-fold, and the stimulation was related to the concentration of ECs. The maximal stimulation by ECs was 75% of the maximal response to ACTH. In contrast, adrenal pericytes and fibroblasts were without effect. ECs incubated alone without ZG cells did not produce aldosterone. Conditioned medium from ECs (EC-CM), but not adrenal fibroblasts, stimulated aldosterone release approximately 3-fold. The stimulation increased with the concentration of EC-CM and the duration of conditioning time. Steroidogenic activity in EC-CM was abolished by pronase treatment, indicating that the active factor was a protein. However, the activity in EC-CM was distinct from that of endothelin-1 (ET-1), an endothelial peptide that also stimulates aldosterone secretion, as it was not blocked by the ET(B) receptor antagonist PD-145065, it did not alter [125I]ET-1 binding to ZG cells, and its release occurred before the release of ET-1. Neither ECs nor EC-CM stimulated the production of cortisol from zona fasciculata cells. The activity of EC-CM was not blocked by an angiotensin II
AT1
receptor antagonist or a bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist. EC-CM stimulated increased intracellular calcium in fura-2-loaded ZG cells, but did not increase the production of
cAMP
. Using gel filtration, this peptide had an approximate molecular mass of 3000 Da and migrated earlier than ET-1. This study demonstrates that ECs in vitro alter steroidogenesis through the release of a transferable substance and suggests the existence of an endothelium-derived steroidogenic factor that is produced by adrenal capillary ECs. This endothelium-derived steroidogenic factor may function in the adrenal gland as a paracrine regulator of aldosterone secretion.
...
PMID:Adrenal capillary endothelial cells stimulate aldosterone release through a protein that is distinct from endothelin. 1049 93
Ionizing radiation (IR) enhances double-strand-break (DSB)-repair fidelity in plasmids processed in normal lymphoblasts but not in lymphoblasts from
ataxia telangiectasia
(
A-T
) patients. Putatively, signal-transduction pathways mediate this DNA-repair induction. Because IR inhibition of DNA synthesis is defective in
A-T
cells and is mediated by a calmodulin (caM)-dependent pathway, we evaluated the involvement of caM-dependent pathways in DSB-repair induction. Human lymphoblasts were gamma-irradiated with or without treatment with caM antagonists and the cells' abilities to repair shuttle pZ189 carrying a single DSB (linDNA) were assessed. In untreated controls, IR enhanced DSB-rejoining fidelity if transfection occurred promptly but diminished fidelity if transfection was delayed. Treatment with two caM antagonists, W-7 and W-13, prior to irradiation blocked this IR-enhancement of DSB-rejoining fidelity. Vinpocetine, a caM-dependent phosphodiesterase inhibitor, and 8-bromo-
cAMP
also inhibited IR enhancement of repair fidelity, but caM-dependent protein kinase II inhibitor KN62 had no effect. Other protein kinase inhibitors, staurosporine and genistein, also did not inhibit IR enhancement of DSB repair fidelity. However, staurosporine blocked the twofold reduction in DSB-repair fidelity seen if linDNA transfection was delayed 2 h after irradiation. These findings point to the involvement of caM/
cAMP
-dependent pathway(s) in mediating IR-enhancement of DSB-rejoining fidelity in mammalian cells.
...
PMID:Calmodulin antagonists and cAMP inhibit ionizing-radiation-enhancement of double-strand-break repair in human cells. 1085 32
In the rat and the rabbit, a number of studies have reported the effects of angiotensin II (ANG II) on Na(+) reabsorption by the proximal (PT) and distal (DT) convoluted tubules of the kidney. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of ANG II on Ca(2+) uptake by the luminal membranes of the PT and DT of the rabbit. Incubation of PT and DT with 10(-12) M ANG II enhanced the initial Ca(2+) uptake in the two segments. Dose-response experiments revealed, for Ca(2+) as well as for Na(+) transport, a biphasic action with a maximal effect at 10(-12) M. Ca(2+) transport by the DT luminal membrane presents a dual kinetic. ANG II action influenced the high-affinity Ca(2+) channel, increasing maximal velocity from 0.72 +/- 0.03 to 0.90 +/- 0.05 pmol x microg(-1) x 10 s(-1) (P < 0.05, n = 3) and leaving the Michaelis-Menten constant unchanged. The effect of ANG II was abolished by losartan, suggesting that the hormone is acting through
AT1
receptors. In the PT, calphostin C inhibited the effect of the hormone. It is therefore probable that protein kinase C is involved as a messenger. In the DT, however, neither Rp
cAMP
, calphostin C, nor econazole (a phospholipase A inhibitor) influenced the hormone action. Therefore, the mechanisms involved in the hormone action remain undetermined. Finally, we questioned whether ANG II acts in the same DT segment as does parathyroid hormone on Ca(2+) transport. The two hormones increased Ca(2+) transport, but their actions were not additive, suggesting that they both influence the same channels in the same segment of the distal nephron, i.e., the segment responsible for the high-affinity calcium channel.
...
PMID:Effect of angiotensin II on calcium reabsorption by the luminal membranes of the nephron. 1135 Jul 74
Angiotensin II (Ang II) via the activation of
AT1
receptors and subsequent stimulation of the tubular sodium transporters increases sodium and water reabsorption in the proximal tubule. An enhanced tubular action of Ang II is implicated in obesity related hypertension; however, the mechanism of such a phenomenon is unknown. Present study was designed to determine the
AT1
receptor numbers and function in the proximal tubule of obese and lean Zucker rats. Obese Zucker rats were hypertensive and hyperinsulinemic. The plasma renin activity was similar in the lean and obese rats. Angiotensin II stimulated the Na,H-exchanger (NHE) activity in the proximal tubule, but the stimulatory response was markedly greater in obese than in lean rats. Similarly, Ang II caused greater inhibition in
cAMP
accumulation in the proximal tubule of obese compared to lean rats. The (125I]sar-Ang II binding revealed a 100% increase in the
AT1
receptor number in the brush border membrane (BBM) of obese compared to lean rats. The Western blot analysis revealed a 36-51% increase in the Gi(alpha)1 and Gi(alpha)3 in the BBM of obese compared to lean rats. We conclude that increases in the
AT1
receptor number and abundance of the Gi(alpha) on BBM may be responsible for the enhanced signaling and subsequent greater stimulation of NHE by Ang II in proximal tubules of obese rats. The greater stimulation of NHE by Ang II may contribute to the increased tubular sodium reabsorption and to the hypertension in obese Zucker rats.
...
PMID:Increased renal angiotensin II AT1 receptor function in obese Zucker rat. 1259 23
In transgenic hypertensive TGR(mREN2)27 rats (TGR) harboring the murine Ren-2 gene an inverse 24h blood pressure (BP) profile was described in relation to a normal pattern in heart rate (HR) and motility (MA), normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats (SDR) were used as controls. Transgenic rats as an animal model of human secondary hypertension (non-dipper) was studied in detail at different levels: (1) Radiotelemetry was applied to document gross circadian rhythms/rhythm disturbances in cardiovascular functions, MA and body temperature under normal LD conditions, under DD and after a light pulse. (2) Signal transduction of the overexpressed renin-angiotensin in TGR was studied by determation of
AT1
-receptors in kidney glomeruli together with kidney functions. (3) Expression of key processes involved in increased sympathetic regulation in TGR, mRNAs, the tyrosine-hydroxylase (TH) and norepinephrine (NE) reuptake1-carrier were determined. (4) In the SCN mRNA of c-fos and c-jun were determined under LD and after light pulse. (5) In primary cultures of pinealocytes the effects of adrenergic agonists and antagonists were evaluated on second messenger (
cAMP
, cGMP) accumulation and melatonin release. The results of these studies clearly demonstrate that the additional mouse renin genin in TGR greatly affected not only the renin-angiotensin-system and led--as expected--to an increased BP in this rat but also disturbed circadian rhythms from the BP pattern down to the level of hormones, processes of signal transduction, and expression of transcription factors and clock genes. In conclusion, the expression of a single additional gene is able to disturb the circadian system of an animal in a highly complex way. These findings are importance for chronobiologic as well as pharmacologic research.
...
PMID:Transgenic TGR(mREN2)27 rats as a model for disturbed circadian organization at the level of the brain, the heart, and the kidneys. 1291 22
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