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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Outward currents were recorded from voltage-clamped NG108-15 mouse neuroblastoma X rat
glioma
hybrid cells, differentiated with
prostaglandin E1
. Depolarising voltage steps from -70 mV, evoked a transient outward current from a threshold of -30 mV. The outward current showed complete inactivation at potentials positive to -10 mV. Inactivation was removed by hyperpolarisation with half-inactivation at -53 mV. The time course of the inactivation could be best fitted by two exponentials with mean time constants of 280 ms and 1.6 s at +80 mV. Tail current measurements showed a shift in the reversal potential with changes in external K+ concentration, consistent with K+ as the current-carrying ion. The outward current amplitude was reversibly reduced by 4-aminopyridine, and the time course of inactivation modified. In the presence of other K+ channel blockers (tetraethylammonium, barium and tetrahydroaminoacridine) the amplitude of the outward current was also reversibly reduced, but with a negligible effect on its time course. The current was unaffected by dendrotoxin, d-tubocurarine, apamin, Cd2+ and Ni2+, and by replacing external Ca2+ with Co2+ or Mg2+. In current clamp, action potential duration was greatly increased by 4-aminopyridine. The findings show that the NG108-15 cell line displays a transient outward current that resembles IK(A) but with a higher than usual threshold and relatively slow inactivation, and that this current is likely to be important for action potential repolarisation.
...
PMID:A transient outward current in NG108-15 neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cells. 235 30
Desensitization of the responsiveness to hormones or drugs is often mediated by down-regulation of receptors. The stimulatory coupling protein (Ns) of adenylate cyclase has been shown to be involved in the down-regulation of stimulatory beta-adrenergic receptors. Whether the inhibitory coupling protein (Ni) is involved in the down-regulation of receptors that inhibit adenylate cyclase is not known. We wished to determine whether down-regulation of inhibitory muscarinic cholinergic and alpha 2-adrenergic receptors occurs in neuroblastoma X
glioma
hybrid cells after the ability of Ni to inhibit adenylate cyclase is inactivated by pertussis toxin. After treatment of cells with pertussis toxin, the ability of carbachol or epinephrine to inhibit
prostaglandin E1
-stimulated cAMP accumulation in intact cells was either completely prevented or markedly attenuated, respectively, indicating functional inactivation of Ni. Furthermore, pertussis toxin treatment of membrane fragments from these cells did not result in labeling of the 41,000-dalton alpha-subunit of Ni with ADP ribose from [32P] NAD, indicating maximal ADP ribosylation of Ni by prior treatment of cells with pertussis toxin. Carbachol treatment of cells resulted in down-regulation of muscarinic cholinergic receptors to 45.7 +/- 12.5% and 52.5 +/- 13.5% of control values for toxin-untreated and toxin-treated cells, respectively. Epinephrine treatment of cells caused homologous desensitization of alpha 2-receptor-mediated inhibition of cAMP accumulation and down-regulation of alpha 2-adrenergic receptors to 42.9 +/- 11.4% and 53.2 +/- 5.3% of control values for toxin-untreated and toxin-treated cells, respectively. Down-regulation of muscarinic cholinergic receptors by carbachol and of alpha 2-adrenergic receptors by epinephrine was not due to the effect of retained agonist and was agonist specific, since it could be prevented by the antagonists atropine and yohimbine, respectively. We conclude that agonist-mediated down-regulation of both the muscarinic cholinergic receptor and the alpha 2-adrenergic receptor does not require functional inhibitory coupling.
...
PMID:Agonist-induced down-regulation of muscarinic cholinergic and alpha 2-adrenergic receptors after inactivation of Ni by pertussis toxin. 242 98
Chronic pertussis toxin treatment (5 days) of NG108-15 neuroblastoma X
glioma
hybrid cells had no significant effect on basal cyclic AMP levels whereas it effectively blocked the inhibitory action of acute (10 min) exposure of carbachol (10(-4)M) on intracellular cyclic AMP accumulation, stimulated by
prostaglandin E1
. This action of pertussis toxin was found to be long lasting: exposure of the cells to pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml) for only 24 h followed by a 5-day withdrawal period still was shown effective on day 7 in abolishing the inhibitory action of carbachol on
prostaglandin E1
-stimulated cyclic AMP production. Chronic exposure (5 days) of NG108-15 cells to carbachol (10(-5)M) causes an increase in basal cyclic AMP levels by 98%, and a desensitization of the muscarinic inhibition of cyclic AMP accumulation, assessed after a 24-h withdrawal period. When carbachol treatment is carried out in the presence of pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml) both of these effects of carbachol are abolished.
...
PMID:Chronic exposure to pertussis toxin alters muscarinic receptor-mediated regulation of cyclic AMP metabolism in neuroblastoma x glioma NG108-15 hybrid cells. 245 96
1. Membrane currents were recorded from voltage-clamped, microelectrode-impaled cells of the NG108-15 mouse neuroblastoma x rat
glioma
clonal cell line, differentiated with
prostaglandin E1
. 2. A slow outward tail current reversing at post-pulse potentials between -80 and -90 mV was evoked by depolarizing pre-pulses to near 0 mV. The tail current was inhibited by Cd2+ ions (0.2-1 mM) and hence attributed to activation of a Ca2+-dependent K+ current by a priming voltage-activated Ca2+ current. 3. Two components to this tail current could be distinguished pharmacologically: an early (less than or equal to 50 ms) component inhibited by 1-5 mM-tetraethylammonium (TEA), and a late component lasting several hundred milliseconds inhibited by apamin (0.1-0.4 microM) or d-tubocurarine (0.1-0.5 mM). 4. Ionophoretic injection of Ca2+ ions evoked a transient outward current with an apparent reversal potential (from ramped current-voltage curves) of -70 mV. This current was succeeded or sometimes replaced by an inward current with an apparent reversal potential between -20 and -10 mV. 5. The outward current induced by Ca2+ injections was unaffected or partly inhibited by TEA (1-5 mM), but was strongly inhibited by apamin or d-tubocurarine. 6. Hyperpolarizing voltage steps from between -30 and -40 mV induced inward current relaxations reversing at between -80 and -90 mV. These were considered to result from deactivation of the voltage-dependent sustained K+ current, IM. 7. Application of methacholine, muscarine or Ba2+ ions produced an inward current, reduced input conductance and reduced IM deactivation relaxations. 8. It is concluded that differentiated NG108-15 cells possess several of the K+ currents present in sympathetic neurones, including a delayed rectifier current, two species of Ca2+-activated K+ current and the M-current.
...
PMID:Voltage- and calcium-activated potassium currents in mouse neuroblastoma x rat glioma hybrid cells. 245 95
Some human tumor cell lines express the c-sis gene, the proto-oncogene of the transforming gene v-sis, and produce platelet-derived growth factor, which may contribute to carcinogenesis by autocrine or paracrine mechanisms. Here we demonstrate that c-sis expression in some human
glioma
and osteosarcoma cell lines can be blocked by agents that increase cellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). Forskolin, 8-bromocyclic AMP, cholera toxin, and
prostaglandin E1
reduced c-sis mRNA in these cells by up to 90%. c-sis transcription rates were reduced by agents that increase cAMP; the stability of c-sis mRNA was unaffected. The possible therapeutic value of blocking the expression of tumor growth factor genes pharmacologically warrants further study.
...
PMID:Cyclic AMP blocks expression of the c-sis gene in tumor cells. 254 92
Opiate receptor-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity was elicited in membranes of C6BUI
glioma
cells and S49 cyc- lymphoma cells after fusion with opiate receptor-containing membranes derived from NG108-15 neuroblastoma x
glioma
hybrid cells. The fusion was induced by polyethylene glycol using procedures developed by Orly and Schramm [(1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 73, 4410-4414]. Prior to fusion, the adenylate cyclase activity of the donor. NG108-15 cell membrane, was inactivated by N-ethylmaleimide treatment.
Prostaglandin E1
receptors and the stimulatory GTP-binding protein Ns were transferred to the recipient cells along with opiate receptors. Thus, inhibitory receptors can be transferred to foreign adenylate cyclase systems just as stimulatory receptors had earlier been found to do. Furthermore, opiate receptors have been shown to function in non-neuronal cells.
...
PMID:Transfer of functional opiate receptors from membranes to recipient cells by polyethylene glycol-induced fusion. 282 Aug 7
Hormonal regulation of Mg2+ influx was examined in the neuroblastoma X
glioma
hybrid cell line NG108-15 and the skeletal muscle cell line G8 using 28Mg2+. Both cell lines express multiple classes of hormone receptors; in addition, G8 cells can be induced to differentiate from a single myoblast-like cell into fused myotube-like cells. In NG108-15 cells, 2-Cl-adenosine, an adenosine receptor agonist, stimulated Mg2+ influx by about 60%. This effect was not mimicked by norepinephrine or
PGE1
, agonists at alpha 2-adrenergic and prostaglandin receptors which NG108-15 cells also express. Carbachol, acting through a muscarinic receptor, gave minimal and variable stimulation of Mg2+ influx. The effect of 2-Cl-adenosine was not blocked by theophylline, an adenosine receptor antagonist, and was not mimicked by adenosine analogs selective for either A1 or A2 adenosine receptors, suggesting that a nonclassical adenosine receptor mediates the effect on Mg2+ influx. Theophylline slightly stimulated Mg2+ influx as did the permeable cyclic AMP analog, 8-Br-cyclic AMP. These results indicate that cyclic AMP may influence Mg2+ influx in NG108-15 cells unlike previous results in murine S49 lymphoma cells [Maguire and Erdos, J. biol. Chem. 255: 1030-1035, 1980] where receptor modulation of Mg2+ influx was independent of cyclic AMP. In G8 cells, the nicotinic cholinergic receptor agonist carbachol stimulated Mg2+ influx at the myoblast cell stage but had no effect on Mg2+ influx after cells had formed myotubes. The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol had the opposite effect, stimulating Mg2+ influx in the myotube stage but not in the myoblast stage. Taken together, these results demonstrate that only a subset of receptors expressed by a cell may be coupled to Mg2+ influx, that the regulation of Mg2+ influx differs from cell type to cell type, and finally, that modulation of Mg2+ influx by hormone receptors may change with differentiation.
...
PMID:Hormonal regulation of magnesium uptake: differential coupling of membrane receptors to magnesium uptake. 282 11
alpha 2-Adrenergic receptors, a population of receptors linked to inhibition of adenylate cyclase, accelerate Na+/H+ exchange in NG108-15 neuroblastoma x
glioma
cells (Isom, L. L., Cragoe, E. J., Jr., and Limbird, L. E. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 6750-6757). We now report that two other receptor populations linked to inhibition of adenylate cyclase, muscarinic cholinergic and delta-opiate receptors, also alkalinize the interior of NG108-15 cells, as measured with the pH-sensitive fluorescent probe, 2,7-biscarboxyethyl-5(6)-carboxy-fluorescein. Manipulations that block Na+/H+ exchange, i.e. removal of extracellular Na+, reduction of extracellular pH to equal that of intracellular pH, and addition of 5-amino-substituted analogs of amiloride, all block alpha 2-adrenergic, delta-opiate, or muscarinic cholinergic receptor-induced alkalinization in a parallel fashion. These data suggest that all three populations of receptors alkalinize NG108-15 cells by acceleration of Na+/H+ exchange and do so via a shared or similar mechanism. Although these three receptor populations are linked to inhibition of adenylate cyclase, decreased production of cAMP does not appear to be the mechanism responsible for receptor-accelerated Na+/H+ exchange. Thus, ADP-ribosylation of intact NG108-15 cells with Bordetella pertussis islet-activating protein prevents attenuation of
prostaglandin E1
-stimulated cAMP accumulation by alpha 2-adrenergic, muscarinic, and delta-opiate agonists but has no measurable effect on the ability of these agonists to accelerate Na+/H+ exchange. Similarly, manipulations that block receptor-accelerated Na+/H+ exchange influence but do not block receptor-mediated attenuation of cAMP accumulation. Thus, the present data suggest that these two receptor-mediated biochemical events, acceleration of Na+/H+ exchange and attenuation of cAMP accumulation, occur through divergent mechanisms in NG108-15 cells.
...
PMID:Multiple receptors linked to inhibition of adenylate cyclase accelerate Na+/H+ exchange in neuroblastoma x glioma cells via a mechanism other than decreased cAMP accumulation. 282 23
The total activities of monoamine oxidase (MAO) and the ratio of type B/type A activities were determined in mouse neuroblastoma N1E-115 cells, and in NX31T and NG108-15 hybrid cells derived from mouse neuroblastoma X rat sympathetic ganglion hybrid or mouse neuroblastoma X rat
glioma
hybrid cells. N1E-115 and NX31T cells possessed type A activities exclusively, although NG108-15 cells showed both type A (65-90%) and type B (10-35%) MAO activities. The activity of type A MAO in NX31T and N1E-115 cells was relatively constant during culturing periods in the presence or absence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP (Bt2cAMP), whereas total MAO activity and the ratio of type B MAO/type A MAO in NG108-15 cells increased as a function of culture periods.
Prostaglandin E1
(
PGE1
) and theophylline, the best known combination to increase intracellular cyclic AMP content of NG108-15 cells, caused similar increases of MAO and of the type B/type A ratio in NG108-15 cells. The results suggest that MAO activity and expression of MAO B activity are regulated in NG108-15 cells in a cyclic AMP-dependent manner.
...
PMID:Expression of A and B types of monoamine oxidase in differentiated neuroblastoma hybrid cells. 298 18
Chronic treatment of neuroblastoma X
glioma
NG108-15 hybrid cells with opiate agonist resulted in loss of the acute opiate inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity with a concomitant increase in the enzymatic activity observable on addition of the antagonist naloxone. The role of membrane lipids in the cellular expression of these chronic opiate effects was investigated by the hydrolysis of phospholipids with various lipases. Treatment with phospholipase C from Clostridium welchii produced an enzyme concentration-dependent decrease of
prostaglandin E1
-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in control or etorphine-treated (1 microM for 4 h) hybrid cells. In addition, incubation of hybrid cells with phospholipase C concentrations of greater than or equal to 0.5 U/ml completely abolished the compensatory increase in adenylate cyclase activity after chronic opiate treatment. This attenuation of the increase in adenylate cyclase activity by phospholipase C could be prevented by inclusion of phosphatidylcholine but not of phosphatidic acid during the enzymatic incubations. The specificity of the phospholipids involved in expression of the chronic opiate effect could be demonstrated further by the absence of effect exhibited by phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus and phospholipase D. Hydrolysis of the acyl side chains of phospholipids with phospholipase A2 did not alter the chronic opiate effect after removal of lysophosphatides with bovine serum albumin. Because the guanylylimidodiphosphate- and NaF-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities were not affected by these phospholipase treatments, the expression of the compensatory increase in adenylate cyclase activity is mediated via an increase in the coupling between hormonal receptor and adenylate cyclase with the participation of the polar head groups of the phospholipids and not the hydrophobic side chains.
...
PMID:Effect of phospholipases on chronic opiate action in neuroblastoma X glioma NG108-15 hybrid cells. 301 58
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