Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Exposure of C6 glioma cells to 1 microM isoproterenol leads to fast desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor/adenylyl cyclase system and transient receptor sequestration. It also triggers a very rapid and transient translocation to the plasma membrane of beta-adrenergic receptor kinase (beta ARK), a specific cytoplasmic kinase that phosphorylates only the agonist-occupied form of several G protein-coupled receptors. beta ARK-mediated receptor phosphorylation appears to be a suitable mechanism for the rapid regulation of adrenergic receptor function in the nervous tissue.
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PMID:Rapid agonist-induced beta-adrenergic receptor kinase translocation in C6 glioma cells. 131 49

We previously reported that when the oligosaccharide of ganglioside GM1 is covalently attached to cell surface proteins of GM1-deficient rat glioma C6 cells, the cells bind large amounts of cholera toxin (CT) but their cAMP response to CT is not enhanced [Pacuszka, T., & Fishman, P. H. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7673-7668]. We now report that when such cells were exposed to CT in the presence of chloroquine, an acidotropic agent, they accumulated cAMP. This raised the possibility that CT bound to cell surface "neoganglioproteins" may be entering the cells through a different pathway from that of CT-bound GM1. To further explore this phenomenon, we covalently attached GM1 oligosaccharide to human transferrin (Tf). The modified protein (GM1OS-Tf) bound with high affinity to Tf receptors on HeLa cells and increased the binding of CT to the cells. The bound CT, however, was unable to activate adenylyl cyclase as measured by cyclic AMP accumulation. By contrast, treatment of HeLa cells with GM1 increased both CT binding and stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation. Control cells and cells treated with either GM1 or GM1OS-Tf were exposed to CT in the presence of chloroquine. Whereas chloroquine had little or no effect on the response of control or GM1-treated cells to CT, it made the cells treated with GM1OS-Tf responsive to the toxin. Our results indicate that CT bound to its natural receptor GM1 enters the cells through a pathway different from that of toxin bound to neoganglioproteins.
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PMID:Intoxication of cultured cells by cholera toxin: evidence for different pathways when bound to ganglioside GM1 or neoganglioproteins. 131 9

Four dopamine D2 receptor mutants were constructed, in each of which an alanine residue was substituted for one of four conserved serine residues, i.e., Ser-193, Ser-194, Ser-197, and Ser-391. Wild-type and mutant receptors were expressed transiently in COS-7 cells and stably in C6 glioma cells for analysis of ligand-receptor interactions. In radioligand binding assays, the affinity of D2 receptors for dopamine was decreased 50-fold by substitution of alanine for Ser-193, implicating this residue in the binding of dopamine. Each mutant had smaller decreases in affinity for one or more of the ligands tested, with no apparent relationship between the class of ligand and the pattern of mutation-induced changes in affinity, except that the potency of agonists was decreased by substitution for Ser-193. The potency of dopamine for inhibition of adenylyl cyclase was reduced substantially by substitution of alanine for Ser-193 or Ser-197. Mutation of Ser-194 led to a complete loss of efficacy for dopamine and p-tyramine, which would be consistent with an interaction between Ser-194 and the p-hydroxyl substituent of dopamine that is necessary for activation of the receptors to occur. Because mutation of the corresponding residues of beta 2-adrenergic receptors has very different consequences, we conclude that although the position of these serine residues is highly conserved among catecholamine receptors, and the residues as a group are important in ligand binding and activation of receptors by agonists, the function of each of the residues considered separately varies among catecholamine receptors.
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PMID:Contributions of conserved serine residues to the interactions of ligands with dopamine D2 receptors. 132 Dec 33

NG108-15 neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cells and S49 lymphoma cells exhibit an enhancement in adenylyl cyclase activity after chronic treatment with receptor agonists that acutely inhibit the enzyme. Using agonists that activate five distinct inhibitory receptors in NG108-15 cells, we have found that there is a correlation between the extent of acute inhibition of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)-stimulated cAMP accumulation and efficacy for induction of enhanced PGE1 stimulation of cAMP accumulation after chronic treatment and withdrawal. Chronic treatment with dideoxyadenosine, which acutely inhibits adenylyl cyclase activity by a mechanism independent or cell surface receptors or pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins, did not induce enhanced PGE1 stimulation of cAMP accumulation in NG108-15 cells or forskolin stimulation of cAMP accumulation in S49 cells. While control basal cAMP concentrations were acutely decreased by carbachol in NG108-15 cells and by somatostatin in S49 cells, when the cAMP concentrations were maintained above the control basal values with a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, chronic treatment with these inhibitory drugs nonetheless resulted in enhanced cAMP responses in both NG108-15 and S49 cells. These results provide evidence that the initial decrement in cAMP concentrations caused by inhibitory drug is not the requisite signal for inducing the subsequent sensitization of adenylyl cyclase in NG108-15 and S49 cells but that activation of a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein is involved in the development of this important adaptation.
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PMID:Adaptive increase in adenylyl cyclase activity in NG108-15 and S49 cells induced by chronic treatment with inhibitory drugs is not due to a decrease in cyclic AMP concentrations. 132 99

Interactions between beta-adrenergic and ADP purinergic receptors in C6 glioma cell membrane preparations were investigated under steady state and then pre-steady state conditions of adenylyl cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) activity, in order to determine how fast the second receptor antagonizes the transduction mechanism of the first. Cell membranes were washed to deplete them as thoroughly as possible of low molecular weight compounds, especially ATP and ADP, and to ensure better control of both substrate and agonist nucleotide concentrations. ATP concentrations were kept constant with the use of an ATP-regenerating system; the C6 cell line exhibited very active ectonucleotidases. The purinergic agonist ADP was replaced by its nonhydrolyzable congener adenosine 5'-O-(2-thio)diphosphate (ADP beta S), which was demonstrated, like ADP, to inhibit isoproterenol-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in intact cells (IC50 for ADP, 0.5 +/- 0.1 microM; IC50 for ADP beta S, 25 +/- 2 microM) and in membrane preparations (IC50 for ADP beta S, 79 +/- 20 microM). In the case of membrane preparations, ADP beta S did not compete with ATP, the substrate of the cyclase-catalyzed reaction, and behaved apparently as a non-competitive inhibitor of the enzyme. The pre-steady state kinetics of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity measured with a pulsed quenched-flow apparatus have previously been shown to include two steps, the first very rapid (taking place within 1-2 sec) and giving rise to a burst of cAMP synthesis and the second much slower and corresponding to the steady state reaction. ADP beta S inhibited the occurrence of both steps with comparable IC50 values (mean value, 55 +/- 20 microM). In the presence of increasing concentrations of the purinergic receptor agonist, the time constant of the exponential burst reaction was not affected, but its amplitude progressively decreased to zero. These results showed that the extinction of the beta receptor cAMP response by the purinergic ADP receptor occurred within the dead-time of the pulsed quenched-flow apparatus, which was 50 msec. Such a rapid inhibition of cAMP production excluded modulation of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity by the ADP receptor by a pathway other than its direct negative coupling to the cyclase via a Gi protein. In this respect, the P2 purinergic ADP receptor of the C6 glioma cell line appears comparable to the P2t receptor of platelets.
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PMID:Pre-steady state study of beta-adrenergic and purinergic receptor interaction in C6 cell membranes: undelayed balance between positive and negative coupling to adenylyl cyclase. 133 11

Incubation of the human glioma cell line HS 683 in the presence of IFN-gamma or retinoic acid strongly stimulates the cell-surface expression of the intercellular adhesion molecule ICAM-1. We have investigated the role of the cAMP-mediated signal transduction pathway in this process and report that pharmacological agents which increased the intracellular levels of cAMP exhibited a biphasic action on ICAM-1 expression in human glioma cell line HS 683. Treatment for 1 hr with 25 microM forskolin or 1 mM isobutylmethylxanthine, or for 12 hr with 100 ng/ml pertussis toxin or 50 micrograms/ml cholera toxin transiently stimulated ICAM-1 expression with a maximal level of expression 8 hr post treatment, after which time ICAM-1 expression returned to the basal level. On the other hand, such pretreatments inhibited the inducing effects of either retinoic acid or IFN-gamma. Indeed, 24 hr after treatment with cAMP-elevating agents, both the retinoic-acid- and the IFN-gamma-induced ICAM-1 expression were inhibited by 60 to 80%, with a maximal 90 to 100% inhibition 72 hr post treatment. This inhibition of the cell-surface expression of ICAM-1 was confirmed at the mRNA level. The intracytoplasmic levels of cAMP were also quantified following treatments with forskolin, retinoic acid or IFN-gamma. In response to forskolin, cAMP levels increased 30-fold within 5 min, whereas a 10-fold increase occurred 60 min following treatment with 10 microM retinoic acid. Interferon gamma, in contrast, did not induce cAMP accumulation. These results were also correlated with an in vitro activation of adenylyl cyclase activity by retinoic acid and inhibition of this activity by IFN-gamma, in a dose-dependent and a GTP-dependent manner. Our results suggest that the suppression of IFN-gamma-induced ICAM-1 expression, obtained upon pre-treatment with cAMP-elevating agents, is due to direct antagonism with IFN-gamma action on adenylyl cyclase. However, the inhibition of retinoic-acid-induced ICAM-1 expression cannot be explained by the same mechanisms. The timing of adenylyl cyclase stimulation and cAMP accumulation, as well as the levels of cAMP accumulation, are probably involved in this inhibition. Our results also emphasize the fact that the induction of ICAM-1 expression is a multi-step process implicating different transductional signals among which cAMP might be involved as a second messenger.
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PMID:Biphasic effect of cAMP-elevating agents on ICAM-1 expression stimulated by retinoic acid and interferon gamma. 137 Apr 36

We have previously demonstrated that monooleylphosphatidate (MOPA) and phosphatidate inhibit adenylyl cyclase in cultured fibroblasts. In this study, the specificity of the phospholipid effect was probed by analysis of the effect of phosphonate analogs of these phospholipids on adenylyl cyclase in C6 glioma cells. The MOPA phosphonate analog inhibited adenylyl cyclase, but the comparable phosphonate analog of phosphatidate was ineffective. The IC50 for inhibition of adenylyl cyclase by the MOPA phosphonate analog was similar to that of MOPA, the maximal inhibitions were comparable (approximately 45% inhibition of hormone-stimulated adenylyl cyclase), and the effects of both appeared to be mediated by Gi, because treatment with islet-activating protein reduced the inhibition to 5-10%.
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PMID:Potent Gi-mediated inhibition of adenylyl cyclase by a phosphonate analog of monooleylphosphatidate. 190 81

Membrane depolarization is a critical component of neural signaling; in recent years there also has been a great deal of evidence that membrane depolarization can regulate neural gene expression. Therefore, excitatory neurotransmission may be an important mechanism of neural plasticity. We have investigated the intracellular pathways and DNA regulatory elements through which membrane depolarization activates expression of the neural gene encoding human proenkephalin. In PC12 and C6-glioma cells, depolarization-induced expression of a transfected proenkephalin fusion gene was proportional to extracellular calcium concentration and was inhibited by verapamil. Activation of the gene by KCl-induced depolarization or the calcium ionophore A23187 was dependent upon and synergistic with cAMP in PC12 and C6-glioma cells, but neither depolarization nor treatment with A23187 affected cAMP levels. Trifluoperazine and W7 inhibited depolarization-induced gene expression but did not affect expression induced by the adenylyl cyclase activator forskolin. At the level of the DNA, depolarization-induced activation is conferred on the proenkephalin gene by a previously characterized cAMP-inducible enhancer. Multiple copies of a single component element of that enhancer, containing the CGTCA sequence motif characteristic of cAMP regulatory elements, can reconstitute the entire repertoire of responses to both cAMP and depolarization. These data suggest a model in which membrane depolarization activates gene expression through a calcium-dependent pathway, potentially involving calmodulin, and in which the transcriptional responses to both cAMP and calcium are transduced by the same DNA element.
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PMID:The effect of depolarization on expression of the human proenkephalin gene is synergistic with cAMP and dependent upon a cAMP-inducible enhancer. 216 56

In neuronal cells, opioid peptides and opiates inhibit neurotransmitter release, which is a calcium-dependent process. They also inhibit adenylyl cyclase, presumably via the membrane signal-transducing component, Gi, a guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein). No causal relationship between these two events has yet been demonstrated. Besides Gi, membranes of neuronal tissues contain large amounts of Go, a G-protein with unknown function. Both G-proteins are heterotrimers consisting of alpha-, beta- and gamma-subunits; the alpha-subunits can be ADP-ribosylated by an exotoxin from Bordetella pertussis (PT), which modification inhibits receptor-mediated activation of the G-protein. It was recently shown that noradrenaline, dopamine and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) inhibit the voltage-dependent calcium channels in dorsal root and sympathetic ganglia; this inhibition is mimicked by intracellular application of guanine nucleotides and blocked by PT, suggesting the involvement of a G-protein. Here we report an inhibitory effect of the opioid D-Ala2, D-Leu5-enkephalin (DADLE) on the calcium current (ICa) in neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid cells (N X G cells). Pretreatment with PT almost completely abolishes the DADLE effect. The effect is restored by intracellular application of Gi and Go. As the alpha-subunit of Go (with or without beta-gamma complex) is 10 times more potent than Gi, we propose that Go is involved in the functional coupling of opiate receptors to neuronal voltage-dependent calcium channels.
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PMID:The GTP-binding protein, Go, regulates neuronal calcium channels. 243 90

It has been widely reported that the chronic administration of antidepressant drugs induces a down regulation of beta receptors in the brains of experimental animals with a time course that parallels the therapeutic improvement seen in depressed patients given these drugs. It has been tacitly assumed that these beta receptors are located on neurons. All classes of antidepressant drugs tested, various monoamine uptake inhibitors, a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, or novel drugs lacking either of these actions, reduced the retention of dihydroalprenolol by intact astrocytes in primary cultures. The drug concentrations altering this retention by astrocytes (Ki) are in the same range as those reported by other investigators using homogenates of glioma cells or whole brain. The isoproterenol-induced stimulation of cyclic AMP formation by astrocytes in primary cultures is reduced acutely by the antidepressants amitriptyline, tranylcypromine and doxepin. Following washout of the antidepressant drug, isoproterenol stimulation of adenylyl cyclase is reduced in astrocytes exposed in culture to amitriptyline or tranylcypromine for 12-14 days or longer but is not altered in astrocytes exposed to the antidepressants for only 5 days. This indicates that the chronic exposure of astrocytes in culture to antidepressant drugs, down regulates astrocyte beta receptors with a time course that parallels the beta down regulation seen in vivo in animal brain homogenates and the therapeutic improvement seen in depressed patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effects of antidepressant drugs on adenylyl cyclase linked beta adrenergic binding sites on mouse astrocytes in primary cultures. 632 Mar 3


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