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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
neuroblastoma
line SK-N-SH consists of distinct and interconverting cell types, which include a neuroblast phenotype (SH-SY5Y), an epithelial phenotype (SH-EP), and an intermediate cell type (SH-IN). In SH-SY5Y cells, only muscarinic receptor activation produced stimulation of phosphoinositide turnover, whereas in SH-EP cells, where muscarinic receptors are not present, the peptides bradykinin, endothelin, and angiotensin II stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis with EC50 values of 16, 6, and 0.7 nM, respectively, and a rank order of maximal effects of bradykinin greater than endothelin greater than angiotensin II. Fetal calf serum at concentrations between 1 and 10% was also a potent stimulator of phosphoinositide hydrolysis in SH-EP cells but not in SH-SY5Y cells. In the intermediate cell clone, SH-IN, phosphoinositide hydrolysis was stimulated not only by muscarinic receptors, but also by endothelin, bradykinin, and serum, an indication that this cell type harbors all the kinds of receptors that are differentially expressed in the other two cell types. The effects of the three peptides--bradykinin, endothelin, and angiotensin II--on phosphoinositide hydrolysis in SH-EP cells were additive, a result suggesting that the three kinds of receptors may activate distinct transducer proteins and/or
phospholipase C
subtypes. Pretreatment of intact SH-EP cells with pertussis toxin under conditions sufficient to ADP-ribosylate 90-95% of the endogenous guanine nucleotide regulatory protein substrates did not impair the ability of any of the receptors to stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis in any of the cell types. In contrast, short-term exposure to the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (1 microM) abolished the stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis mediated by peptide receptors in SH-EP cells and partially inhibited that by muscarinic receptors in SH-SY5Y cells. Prolonged incubation of SH-EP cells with phorbol ester resulted in a recovery of receptor responsiveness, the extent and rate of which were different for each receptor type. In contrast, there was no recovery of responsiveness for muscarinic receptors in SH-SY5Y cells. The pattern of phorbol ester-mediated effects depended on the cell rather than on the receptor type. In fact, muscarinic receptor responsiveness in SH-IN, the intermediate cell type, was desensitized by and recovered from treatment with phorbol esters in a manner more similar to peptide receptors in SH-EP than to muscarinic receptors in SH-SY5Y. These data suggest that the transduction mechanisms by which distinct receptor types are coupled to phosphoinositide hydrolysis in the three cell phenotypes differ in sensitivity to feedback regulation by protein kinase C.
...
PMID:The epithelial phenotype of human neuroblastoma cells express bradykinin, endothelin, and angiotensin II receptors that stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis. 130 39
Stimulation of m1 and of m3 muscarinic receptors has previously been shown to increase intracellular cAMP levels in a variety of cells. Although the mechanism underlying this response is not fully understood, it has been hypothesized to be secondary to the IP3-mediated rise in intracellular calcium. In order to determine whether other means of elevating intracellular calcium also raise cAMP levels, we stimulated SK-N-SH human
neuroblastoma
cells with bradykinin or with maitotoxin. Both of these agents stimulated
phospholipase C
, stimulated inositol phosphate release and elevated cAMP levels, thus demonstrating that this cAMP response is not unique to muscarinic receptor stimulation.
...
PMID:Agents that stimulate phosphoinositide turnover also elevate cAMP in SK-N-SH human neuroblastoma cells. 131 35
Low level, chronic exposure (0.1 nM, 24 hrs) to the organophosphate paraoxon significantly inhibits N-[3H]methylscopolamine ([3H]NMS) binding to muscarinic receptors in a noncompetitive manner in the SK-N-SH
neuroblastoma
cell line. The effect of paraoxon on muscarinic receptor-mediated phosphoinositide hydrolysis was also investigated. At 0.1 nM, paraoxon caused a time-dependent increase in the accumulation of inositol phosphates, while the classical muscarinic receptor agonist carbachol was virtually ineffective at low concentrations. In contrast, carbachol-induced increases in phosphoinositide hydrolysis at higher concentrations (1 mM) were markedly larger (five-fold) than the increases induced by PX. Approximately 50% of the maximal increase in the accumulation of inositol phosphates due to paraoxon treatment was antagonized by saturating concentrations of muscarinic receptor antagonists, while the response to carbachol was completely antagonized. In addition, chronic treatment (24 hrs) of SK-N-SH cells with pertussis toxin blocked 75% of the stimulatory effects of carbachol, but inhibited only 38% of the paraoxon-induced response. Neomycin, a
phospholipase C
inhibitor, completely blocked both the paraoxon and carbachol-induced stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis. The results suggest that paraoxon can modulate signal transduction by indirect activation of muscarinic receptors as well as by acting at a distal site along the pathway.
...
PMID:Organophosphate-induced alterations in muscarinic receptor binding and phosphoinositide hydrolysis in the human SK-N-SH cell line. 133 18
The effects of aluminium on inositol phosphate formation were examined in murine
neuroblastoma
cells labelled with [3H]-myo-inositol. In aluminium-pretreated cells, the bradykinin-triggered inositol triphosphate, IP3, release and the change in intracellular [Ca2+] were appreciably less compared with the control group. Stimulating digitonin-permeabilized cells with non-hydrolyzable guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]-triphosphate, GTP[S], inositol phosphate formation decreased in the presence of aluminium. A primary target of aluminium toxicity may reside on the guanine nucleotide-binding protein(Gp)/
phospholipase C
system, at a site different from that of the GTP[S] binding site.
...
PMID:Aluminium interferes with signal transduction in neuroblastoma cells. 133 97
We have previously shown that 3F8, a murine IgG3, monoclonal antibody (MoAb) specific for the ganglioside GD2, mediates tumor cell kill in vitro and in vivo. We now describe receptor requirements of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in 3F8-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) of human GD2 (+) melanoma and
neuroblastoma
cell lines. PMN from a child with leukocyte adhesion deficiency (LAD) were devoid of CD11/CD18 adhesion molecules and mounted no detectable ADCC. MoAb to CD11b, CD11c, and CD18 each efficiently blocked ADCC by normal PMN. In contrast, a panel of different MoAbs to CD11a had no significant inhibitory effect on ADCC, a finding consistent with the low-to-absent expression of the CD11a ligand, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, on the target cells. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) significantly increased the expression of CD11b, CD11c, and CD18 on normal PMN, decreased the expression of Fc receptors (FcR), and enhanced ADCC by normal but not by LAD PMN. MoAbs to FcRII and FcRIII each efficiently blocked ADCC; anti-FcRI MoAb had no effect. Flow cytometry using anti-FcRII MoAb versus anti-FcRIII MoAb did not show cross competition, suggesting that inhibition of ADCC was not a steric effect resulting from FcRII proximity to FcRIII. PMN deficient in FcRIII (obtained from patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria) and PMN depleted of FcRIII by treatment with elastase or phosphatidylinositol (PI)-specific
phospholipase C
produced low ADCC, supporting a role for the PI-liked FcRIII. Thus, optimal ADCC using human PMN, human solid tumor cells, and a clinically active MoAb (conditions that contrast with the heterologous antibodies and nonhuman or nonneoplastic targets used in most models of PMN ADCC) required CD11b, CD11c, FcRII, and the PI-linked FcRIII. Furthermore, in this clinically relevant system, GM-CSF enhancement of antitumor PMN ADCC correlated with increased expression of CD11/CD18 molecules.
...
PMID:Absolute requirement of CD11/CD18 adhesion molecules, FcRII and the phosphatidylinositol-linked FcRIII for monoclonal antibody-mediated neutrophil antihuman tumor cytotoxicity. 134 7
The peptide angiotensin II (AngII) has been reported to stimulate phosphoinositide-specific
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) activity in the murine
neuroblastoma
cell line N1E-115. In the present study, polyclonal antibodies raised against a
PLC
isoenzyme,
PLC
-alpha, reacted with a 60-kDa protein present in both membrane and cytosolic fractions of differentiated N1E-115 cells. In order to examine the possible association of
PLC
-alpha with cell surface AngII receptors (AngII-Rs), membranes from differentiated N1E-115 cells were solubilized, using the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS). CHAPS (1%) solubilized AngII-Rs, from N1E-115 cells, that maintained their high affinity for agonists. Gel filtration analysis of the solubilized membranes revealed that the majority of the specific binding of 125I-AngII eluted as a large protein complex with a molecular mass of 380 kDa and that agonist binding was partially reduced by guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S), within this complex. CHAPS also effectively solubilized immunoreactive
PLC
-alpha, from N1E-115 cell membranes, that was similarly present within the 380-kDa AngII-binding complex. Anti-
PLC
-alpha antisera immunoprecipitated approximately 16% of the total phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-specific
PLC
activity in the 1% CHAPS extract and 40% of cytosolic
PLC
activity. Moreover, a 60-kDa 35S-Trans S-labeled protein, comigrating with immunoreactive
PLC
-alpha, was immunoprecipitated from the 1% CHAPS extract by the antisera. In addition, anti-
PLC
-alpha antisera immunoprecipitated approximately 20% of solubilized AngII-Rs prebound with 125I-AngII but failed to precipitate receptors prebound with the antagonist 125I-Sarc1,Ile8-AngII. The anti-
PLC
-alpha antisera also immunoprecipitated AngII-Rs when intact membranes were labeled with 125I-AngII before solubilization in 1% CHAPS, suggesting that the AngII-R interaction with
PLC
-alpha was not the result of detergent-promoted protein-protein interaction. On the other hand, monoclonal antibodies against another
PLC
isozyme,
PLC
-gamma, did not precipitate AngII-Rs in solubilized N1E-115 membranes. Finally, the formation of the immunoprecipitated AngII-R-
PLC
-alpha complex was disrupted by the nonhydrolyzable guanine nucleotide analog GTP gamma S, suggesting that the interaction between AngII-Rs and
PLC
-alpha is likely to involve a heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding protein in neuron-like cells.
...
PMID:Association of solubilized angiotensin II receptors with phospholipase C-alpha in murine neuroblastoma NIE-115 cells. 151 21
The relationship between muscarinic receptor activation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis and the sequestration of cell surface muscarinic receptors has been examined for both intact and digitonin-permeabilized human SK-N-SH
neuroblastoma
cells. Addition of the aminosteroid 1-[6-[[17 beta-3-methoxyestra-1,3,5(10)-trien-17-yl]amino] hexyl]-1H-pyrrole-2,5-dione (U-73122) to intact cells resulted in the inhibition of oxotremorine-M-stimulated inositol phosphate release and of Ca2+ signaling by greater than 75%. In contrast, when
phospholipase C
was directly activated by the addition of the calcium ionophore ionomycin, inclusion of U-73122 had little inhibitory effect. Addition of U-73122 to intact cells also inhibited the agonist-induced sequestration of cell surface muscarinic receptors and their subsequent down-regulation with an IC50 value (4.1 microM) similar to that observed for inhibition of inositol phosphate release (3.7 microM). In contrast, when oxotremorine-M-stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis was inhibited by depletion of extracellular Ca2+, no reduction in the extent of receptor sequestration was observed. When introduced into digitonin-permeabilized cells, U-73122 more markedly inhibited inositol phosphate release elicited by either oxotremorine-M or guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) than that induced by added Ca2+. Addition of oxotremorine-M to permeabilized cells resulted in muscarinic receptor sequestration and down-regulation. Both the loss of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors and activation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis in permeabilized cells were inhibited by the inclusion of guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate). The results indicate that the agonist-induced sequestration of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor in SK-N-SH cells requires the involvement of a GTP-binding protein but not the production of phosphoinositide-derived second messenger molecules.
...
PMID:The aminosteroid U-73122 inhibits muscarinic receptor sequestration and phosphoinositide hydrolysis in SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells. A role for Gp in receptor compartmentation. 166 Aug 86
The involvement of endogenous diacylglycerol production in the stimulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis by exogenous
phospholipase C
was examined using a
neuroblastoma
(LA-N-2) cell line. Phospholipase C treatment (0.1 unit/ml) of intact cells stimulated CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity significantly more effectively than did maximally effective concentrations of the synthetic diacylglycerol sn-1,2-dioctanoylglycerol (1 mM). When added to cells together with
phospholipase C
, oleic acid, but not dioctanoylglycerol, further increased cytidylyltransferase activity with respect to
phospholipase C
treatment alone, indicating that the enzyme was not maximally activated by the lipase. This suggests that the lack of additivity of diacylglycerol and
phospholipase C
reflects a common mechanism of action. The time course of activation of cytidylyltransferase by
phospholipase C
paralleled that of [3H]diacylglycerol production in cells prelabeled for 24 h with [3H]oleic acid. Diacylglycerol mass was similarly increased. Significant elevations of [3H]oleic acid and total fatty acids occurred later than did the increases in cytidylyltransferase activity and diacylglycerol levels. No significant reduction in total or [3H]phosphatidylcholine was elicited by this concentration of
phospholipase C
, but higher concentrations (0.5 unit/ml) significantly reduced phosphatidylcholine content. The stimulation of cytidylyltransferase activity by
phospholipase C
or dioctanoylglycerol was also associated with enhanced incorporation of [methyl-14C]choline into phosphatidylcholine. Dioctanoylglycerol was more effective than
phospholipase C
at stimulating the formation of [14C]phosphatidylcholine, and the effects of the two treatments were additive. However, further analysis revealed that dioctanoylglycerol served as a precursor for [14C]dioctanoylphosphatidylcholine as well as an activator of cytidylyltransferase; and when corrections were made for this effect, the apparent additivity disappeared. The results indicate that the generation of diacylglycerol by exogenous
phospholipase C
(and possibly the subsequent production of fatty acids via diacylglycerol metabolism) activates cytidylyltransferase activity in neuronal cells under conditions in which membrane phosphatidylcholine content is not measurably reduced.
...
PMID:Production of diacylglycerol by exogenous phospholipase C stimulates CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity and phosphatidylcholine synthesis in human neuroblastoma cells. 166 12
A common feature of scrapie and related transmissible spongiform encephalopathies is the accumulation of an abnormal protease-resistant form of PrP which may be the major component of the infectious agent. While it is known that both the normal (protease-sensitive) PrP and protease-resistant PrP are encoded by the same endogenous gene, the nature of the disease-associated modification of PrP is not understood. To study the cellular events leading to the formation of protease-resistant PrP, we have compared its biosynthesis to that of its normal isoform in scrapie-infected mouse
neuroblastoma
cells. In pulse-chase labeling experiments, the protease-resistant PrP was synthesized and degraded much more slowly than the normal PrP, suggesting that protease-resistant PrP is made from a protease-sensitive precursor. More significantly, we found that the precursor of protease-resistant PrP was eliminated from intact cells by treatments with phosphatidylinositol-specific
phospholipase C
and trypsin. This demonstrated that, unlike the protease-resistant PrP itself, the precursor is phospholipase- and protease-sensitive and at least transiently found on the cell surface. By these criteria, the precursor of protease-resistant PrP is indistinguishable from the normal PrP isoform. These results indicate that the conversion of PrP to the protease- and phospholipase-resistant state is a post-translational event that occurs after the precursor reaches the cell surface.
...
PMID:The scrapie-associated form of PrP is made from a cell surface precursor that is both protease- and phospholipase-sensitive. 168 Aug 59
The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is a sialoglycoprotein anchored to the external surface of cells by a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol moiety. During scrapie, an abnormal PrP isoform designated PrPSc accumulates, and much evidence argues that it is a major and necessary component of the infectious prion. Based on the resistance of native PrPSc to proteolysis and to digestion with phosphatidylinositol-specific
phospholipase C
as well as the enhancement of PrPSc immunoreactivity after denaturation, we devised in situ immunoassays for the detection of PrPSc in cultured cells. Using these immunoassays, we identified the sites of PrPSc accumulation in scrapie-infected cultured cells. We also used these immunoassays to isolate PrPSc-producing clones from a new hamster brain cell line (HaB) and found an excellent correlation between their PrPSc content and prion infectivity titers. In scrapie-infected HaB cells as well as in scrapie-infected mouse
neuroblastoma
cells, most PrPSc was found to be intracellular and most localized with ligands of the Golgi marker wheat germ agglutinin. In one scrapie-infected HaB clone, PrPSc also localized extensively with MG-160, a protein resident of the medial-Golgi stack whereas this colocalization was not observed in another subclone of these cells. Whether the sites of intracellular accumulation of PrPSc are limited to a few subcellular organelles or they are highly variable remains to be determined. If the intracellular accumulation of PrPSc is found in the cells of the central nervous system, then it might be responsible for the neuronal dysfunction and degeneration which are cardinal features of prion diseases.
...
PMID:Scrapie prion proteins accumulate in the cytoplasm of persistently infected cultured cells. 169 23
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