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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
GRK5
, a recently cloned member of the
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
family, has been shown to phosphorylate and participate in the desensitization of angiotensin II (Ang II) type 1A (AT1A) receptors. In this study, the effect of angiotensin II on
GRK5
expression was examined in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells and aortas of Ang II-infused hypertensive rats. In vascular smooth muscle cells, Ang II (100 nM) up-regulated
GRK5
mRNA as early as 1 h, with a peak at 16 h. This up-regulation was dose- and calcium-dependent. The increase in
GRK5
mRNA was reflected in a smaller increase in protein expression, which nonetheless had functional significance since AT1 receptor phosphorylation was increased and phospholipase C activation was decreased following prolonged incubation with Ang II. In aortas of Ang II-infused hypertensive rats, both
GRK5
mRNA and protein levels increased approximately 3-fold compared with sham-operated rats at 5 and 7 days, respectively. This up-regulation was blocked either by losartan or by the nonspecific vasodilator hydralazine. Since a subpressor dose of Ang II did not increase
GRK5
mRNA levels and norepinephrine infusion also increased
GRK5
mRNA expression, we conclude that Ang II-induced
GRK5
up-regulation in rat aortas may be due to
hypertension
per se. Hormone- and hemodynamic stress-induced
GRK5
regulation may provide a novel molecular basis for long-term regulation of agonist sensitivity of vascular cells.
...
PMID:G protein-coupled receptor kinase 5 in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells and rat aorta. Regulation by angiotensin II and hypertension. 940 59
The beta-adrenergic receptor (betaAR) kinase (betaARK1) is a
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
(GRK) that controls cardiac betaAR signaling via receptor phosphorylation, leading to desensitization. We have observed in mice that chronic isoproterenol administration results in increased myocardial levels of betaARK1 activity, suggesting that adrenergic activation can regulate cardiac betaARK1 expression. Thus, we evaluated left ventricular (LV) betaARK1 levels and activity in response to 3 weeks of a low-sodium (0.05%) diet, which is known to chronically activate the sympathetic nervous system. Wistar-Kyoto rats were subjected to either low or regular sodium (2%) intake. To prove the association of betaARK1 expression and low sodium-induced adrenergic activation, a group of rats was subjected to atenolol treatment (1 mg/kg per day) during the low-sodium diet. LV betaARK1 expression was assessed by protein immunoblotting and betaARK1 activity by in vitro GRK phosphorylation assays. We verified the LV protein levels of
GRK5
, which is abundantly expressed in the heart. A low-sodium diet reduced body weight and cardiac size so that the heart-to-body weight ratio did not change. On the contrary, low-sodium diet increased by 50% both LV betaARK1 protein (densitometry units: normal sodium, 26.5+/-0.9; low sodium, 35.7+/-1.6; P<0.05) and activity (fmol/mg per minute: normal sodium, 6.49+/-1.17; low sodium, 9.15+/-0.93; P<0.05). Atenolol treatment prevented the increase in both protein expression (low sodium plus atenolol, 27.6+/-5.33, P=NS versus normal sodium) and activity (6.54+/-1.19, P=NS versus normal sodium).
GRK5
expression was not affected by a low-sodium diet (17.2+/-0.2 versus 18.4+/-0.4, P=NS). Our data indicate that cardiac betaARK1 is regulated by sympathetic action on betaARs as tested by reducing dietary salt and betaAR blockade.
Hypertension
2001 Aug
PMID:Cardiac betaARK1 upregulation induced by chronic salt deprivation in rats. 1150 86
Essential hypertension has a heritability as high as 30-50%, but its genetic cause(s) has not been determined despite intensive investigation. The renal dopaminergic system exerts a pivotal role in maintaining fluid and electrolyte balance and participates in the pathogenesis of genetic hypertension. In genetic hypertension, the ability of dopamine and D(1)-like agonists to increase urinary sodium excretion is impaired. A defective coupling between the D(1) dopamine receptor and the G protein/effector enzyme complex in the proximal tubule of the kidney is the cause of the impaired renal dopaminergic action in genetic rodent and human essential hypertension. We now report that, in human essential hypertension, single nucleotide polymorphisms of a
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
, GRK4gamma, increase
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
(GRK) activity and cause the serine phosphorylation and uncoupling of the D(1) receptor from its G protein/effector enzyme complex in the renal proximal tubule and in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. Moreover, expressing GRK4gammaA142V but not the wild-type gene in transgenic mice produces
hypertension
and impairs the diuretic and natriuretic but not the hypotensive effects of D(1)-like agonist stimulation. These findings provide a mechanism for the D(1) receptor coupling defect in the kidney and may explain the inability of the kidney to properly excrete sodium in genetic hypertension.
...
PMID:G protein-coupled receptor kinase 4 gene variants in human essential hypertension. 1190 38
Gprotein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) are known to be involved in the development of cardiac hypertrophy. Their exact role and subcellular distribution during cardiac hypertrophy and failure remain to be elucidated. We examined expression and subcellular distribution of GRK2 and
GRK5
in the left ventricle of female spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF) rats at 6 months of age using Western blots and fluorescent confocal microscopy. GRK2 was expressed mainly in the Triton X-100 soluble fraction in the left ventricle with similar expression levels between SHHF and age-matched Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats. GRK2 had a striated pattern which colocalized with sarcomeric alpha-actinin and G protein in both SHHF and WKY rat myocytes and specifically accumulated in the intercalated disks of myocytes from SHHF but not WKY rats.
GRK5
was expressed in both the Triton X-100 soluble fraction and Triton X-100 insoluble fraction in the left ventricle with similar expression levels between SHHF and WKY rats.
GRK5
distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm in both SHHF and WKY rat myocytes and specifically accumulated in the nucleus of myocytes from SHHF but not WKY rats.
GRK5
colocalized with coilin, the major component of the nuclear substructure involved in RNA synthesis and processing. The results suggest different roles for GRK2 and
GRK5
in G-protein signaling and RNA biogenesis. Subcellular redistribution of GRK2 and
GRK5
may be involved in cardiac hypertrophy resulting from chronic
hypertension
.
Hypertension
2002 Jun
PMID:Myocyte redistribution of GRK2 and GRK5 in hypertensive, heart-failure-prone rats. 1205 42
AVP receptors represent a logical target for drug development. As a new class of therapeutic agents, orally active AVP analogs could be used to treat several human pathophysiological conditions including neurogenic diabetes insipidus, the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of AVP (SIADH), congestive heart failure, arterial
hypertension
, liver cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, dysmenorrhea, and ocular hypertension. By immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting, we elucidated the phosphorylation pattern of green fluorescent protein-tagged AVP receptors and showed interactions with the specific kinases PKC and
GRK5
that are agonist-, time- and receptor subtype-dependent. The tyrosine residue of the NPWIY motif present in the 7th helix of AVP receptors is rapidly and transiently phosphorylated after agonist stimulation. This phosphorylation is instrumental in the genesis of the mitogenic cascade linked to the activation of this receptor, presumably by establishing key intramolecular contacts and by participating in the creation of a scaffold of proteins that produce the activation of downstream kinases. The random screening of chemical entities and optimization of lead compounds recently resulted in the development of orally active non-peptide AVP receptor agonists and antagonists. Furthermore, the identification of the molecular determinants of receptor-ligand interactions should facilitate the development of more potent and very selective orally active compounds via the approach of structure-based drug design. We developed three-dimensional molecular docking models of peptide and non-peptide ligands to the human V1 vascular, V2 renal and V3 pituitary AVP receptors. Docking of the peptide hormone AVP to the receptor ligand binding pockets reflects its dual polar and non-polar structure, but is receptor subtype-specific. The characteristics of non-peptide AVP analogs docking to the receptors are clearly distinct from those of peptide analogs docking. Molecular modeling of the results of site-directed mutagenesis experiments performed in CHO cells stably transfected with the human AVP receptor subtypes revealed that non-peptide antagonists establish key contacts with a few amino acid residues of the receptor subtypes that are different from those involved in agonist binding. Moreover, these interactions are species-specific. These findings provide further understanding of the signal transduction pathways of AVP receptors and new leads for elucidation of drug-receptor interactions and optimization of drug design. NOTE TO THE READER: The recent cloning and molecular characterization of AVP/OT receptor subtypes call for the revision of their nomenclature. For the sake of clarity and reference to their main site of expression, we call the V1a receptor the V1 vascular receptor, the V2 receptor the V2 renal receptor and the V1b or V3 receptor the V3 pituitary receptor in the present review.
...
PMID:Molecular pharmacology and modeling of vasopressin receptors. 1243 35
Feedback inhibition is a fundamental principle in signal transduction allowing rapid adaptation to different stimuli. In mammalian cells, the major feedback inhibitor for G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) is
G-protein-coupled receptor kinase
2 (GRK-2), which phosphorylates activated receptors, uncouples them from G proteins and initiates their internalization. The functions of GRK-2 are indispensable and need to be tightly controlled. Dysregulation promotes disorders such as
hypertension
or heart failure. In our search for a control mechanism for this vital kinase, here we show that the Raf kinase inhibitor protein (RKIP) is a physiological inhibitor of GRK-2. After stimulation of GPCR, RKIP dissociates from its known target, Raf-1 (refs 6-8), to associate with GRK-2 and block its activity. This switch is triggered by protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent phosphorylation of the RKIP on serine 153. The data delineate a new principle in signal transduction: by activating PKC, the incoming receptor signal is enhanced both by removing an inhibitor from Raf-1 and by blocking receptor internalization. A physiological role for this mechanism is shown in cardiomyocytes in which the downregulation of RKIP restrains beta-adrenergic signalling and contractile activity.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C switches the Raf kinase inhibitor from Raf-1 to GRK-2. 1465 44
While
hypertension
is a complex disease with a well-documented genetic component, genetic studies often fail to replicate findings. One possibility for such inconsistency is that the underlying genetics of
hypertension
is not based on single genes of major effect, but on interactions among genes. To test this hypothesis, we studied both single locus and multilocus effects, using a case-control design of subjects from Ghana. Thirteen polymorphisms in eight candidate genes were studied. Each candidate gene has been shown to play a physiological role in blood pressure regulation and affects one of four pathways that modulate blood pressure: vasoconstriction (angiotensinogen, angiotensin converting enzyme - ACE, angiotensin II receptor), nitric oxide (NO) dependent and NO independent vasodilation pathways and sodium balance (
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
,
GRK4
). We evaluated single site allelic and genotypic associations, multilocus genotype equilibrium and multilocus genotype associations, using multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR). For MDR, we performed systematic reanalysis of the data to address the role of various physiological pathways. We found no significant single site associations, but the hypertensive class deviated significantly from genotype equilibrium in more than 25% of all multilocus comparisons (2,162 of 8,178), whereas the normotensive class rarely did (11 of 8,178). The MDR analysis identified a two-locus model including ACE and
GRK4
that successfully predicted blood pressure phenotype 70.5% of the time. Thus, our data indicate epistatic interactions play a major role in
hypertension
susceptibility. Our data also support a model where multiple pathways need to be affected in order to predispose to
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Multilocus analysis of hypertension: a hierarchical approach. 1513 10
Epithelial Na(+) channels mediate the transport of Na across epithelia in the kidney, gut, and lungs and are required for blood pressure regulation. They are inhibited by ubiquitin protein ligases, such as Nedd4 and Nedd4-2, with loss of this inhibition leading to
hypertension
. Here, we report that these channels are maintained in the active state by the
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
, Grk2, which has been previously implicated in the development of essential hypertension. We also show that Grk2 phosphorylates the C terminus of the channel beta subunit and renders the channels insensitive to inhibition by Nedd4-2. This mechanism has not been previously reported to regulate epithelial Na(+) channels and provides a potential explanation for the observed association of Grk2 overactivity with
hypertension
. Here, we report a
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
regulating a membrane protein other than a receptor and provide a paradigm for understanding how the interaction between membrane proteins and ubiquitin protein ligases is controlled.
...
PMID:The kinase Grk2 regulates Nedd4/Nedd4-2-dependent control of epithelial Na+ channels. 1528 39
Abnormalities in dopamine production and receptor function have been described in human essential hypertension and rodent models of genetic hypertension. All of the five dopamine receptor genes (D1, D2, D3, D4, and D5) expressed in mammals and some of their regulators are in loci linked to
hypertension
in humans and in rodents. Under normal conditions, D1-like receptors (D1 and D5) inhibit sodium transport in the kidney and the intestine. However, in the Dahl salt-sensitive and spontaneously hypertensive rats, and humans with essential hypertension, the D1-like receptor-mediated inhibition of sodium transport is impaired because of an uncoupling of the D1-like receptor from its G protein/effector complex. The uncoupling is genetic, and receptor-, organ-, and nephron segment-specific. In human essential hypertension, the uncoupling of the D1 receptor from its G protein/effector complex is caused by an agonist-independent serine phosphorylation/desensitization by constitutively active variants of the
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
type 4. The D5 receptor is also important in blood pressure regulation. Disruption of the D5 or the D1 receptor gene in mice increases blood pressure. However, unlike the D1 receptor, the
hypertension
in D5 receptor null mice is caused by increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system, apparently due to activation of oxytocin, V1 vasopressin, and non-N-methyl D-aspartate receptors in the central nervous system. The cause of the activation of these receptors remains to be determined.
...
PMID:D5 dopamine receptor knockout mice and hypertension. 1552 60
Abnormalities in dopamine production and receptor function have been described in human essential hypertension and rodent models of genetic hypertension. Under normal conditions, D(1)-like receptors (D(1) and D(5)) inhibit sodium transport in the kidney and intestine. However, in the Dahl salt-sensitive and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) and in humans with essential hypertension, the D(1)-like receptor-mediated inhibition of epithelial sodium transport is impaired because of an uncoupling of the D(1)-like receptor from its G protein/effector complex. The uncoupling is receptor specific, organ selective, nephron-segment specific, precedes the onset of
hypertension
, and cosegregates with the hypertensive phenotype. The defective transduction of the renal dopaminergic signal is caused by activating variants of
G protein-coupled receptor kinase
type 4 (
GRK4
: R65L, A142V, A486V). The
GRK4
locus is linked to and
GRK4
gene variants are associated with human essential hypertension, especially in salt-sensitive hypertensive subjects. Indeed, the presence of three or more
GRK4
variants impairs the natriuretic response to dopaminergic stimulation in humans. In genetically hypertensive rats, renal inhibition of
GRK4
expression ameliorates the
hypertension
. In mice, overexpression of
GRK4
variants causes
hypertension
either with or without salt sensitivity according to the variant.
GRK4
gene variants, by preventing the natriuretic function of the dopaminergic system and by allowing the antinatriuretic factors (e.g., angiotensin II type 1 receptor) to predominate, may be responsible for salt sensitivity. Subclasses of
hypertension
may occur because of additional perturbations caused by variants of other genes, the quantitative interaction of which may vary depending upon the genetic background.
...
PMID:Functional genomics of the dopaminergic system in hypertension. 1554 30
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