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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Toxicity tests based on mouse-weight-gain (whether control of
pertussis
, DPT,
cholera
or typhoid vaccine) are not satisfactory, particularly since the vaccines may be adsorbed and non-adsorbed preparations. Comparison between results of tests in animals some of which were treated with vaccine and others with saline does not allow to make conclusions as valid as those supplied by a standard control vaccine (adsorbed and not adsorbed) instead of saline.
...
PMID:Pertussis vaccine: mouse-weight-gain (toxicity) test. 83 46
The absolute configuration of 3-hydroxy fatty acids has been studied, which are present in the lipopolysaccharides of the following bacteria: Phodopseudomonas gelatinosa, Rh. viridis, Rhodospirillum tenue, Chromobacterium violaceum, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bordetella
pertussis
, Vibrio metchnikovii,
Vibrio cholerae
, Salmonella spp., Escherichia coli, Shigella flexneri, Proteus mirabilis, Yersinia enterocolitica and Fusobacterium nucleatum. The 3-hydroxy acids were liberated by strong alkaline hydrolysis, converted to 3-methoxy acid L-phenylethylamides and analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography. With the aid of authentic D-3-hydroxy fatty acids it was shown for all lipopolysaccharides that the 3-hydroxy acids, regardless of chain lengths, branching, 3-O-substitution or type of linkage, possess the D-configuration. 2-Hydroxydodecanoic acid, which is present in some lipopolysaccharides, was analyzed in an analogous way and shown to possess the L-configuration.
...
PMID:Absolute configuration of 3-hydroxy fatty acids present in lipopolysaccharides from various bacterial groups. 127 68
The ability of cations to modulate the binding of the sigma 1 receptor-selective ligand (+)-[3H]pentazocine to guinea pig cerebellum was investigated. Di- and trivalent cations biphasically inhibited (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding, revealing multiple affinity states. The rank order of potency of these cations (based on the high affinity component of inhibition) was Zn2+ > Co2+ >> La3+ = Ni2+ = Cd2+ = Mn2+ = Gd2+ > Ba2+ = Sr2+ >> Mg2+ > Ca2+. The inhibition of 1,3-[3H]di(2-tolyl)guanidine binding to the sigma 2 receptor by these cations differed qualitatively and quantitatively from their effects on (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding. Although monovalent cations decreased the Kd for (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding, divalent cations split (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding into low and high affinity components. The Bmax of the high affinity component decreased with increasing divalent cation concentrations. Both mono- and divalent cations significantly reduced the rate of association of (+)-[3H]pentazocine with the sigma 1 receptor without altering the dissociation rate. (+)-[3H]Pentazocine binding was not altered by guanine nucleotides or by treatment with
cholera
or
pertussis
toxins. However, nonselective cation channel blockers (cinnarizine, hydroxyzine, prenylamine, amiodarone, and proadifen) potently inhibited (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding. These results indicate that physiologically relevant concentrations of divalent cations allosterically modulate (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding to the sigma 1 receptor, to reveal multiple affinity states. These sites do not represent sigma 1 to sigma 2 subtype interconversion or ternary complex formation with guanine nucleotide-binding proteins. However, the rank order of cation potency and the inhibition of binding by cation channel blockers is consistent with a potential role for sigma receptors as constituents of cation channels.
...
PMID:Modulation of (+)-[3H]pentazocine binding to guinea pig cerebellum by divalent cations. 127 78
Somatostatin, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide were incubated in an adenylate cyclase assay with a particulate fraction of caudate-putamen tissue of the rat in order to examine the effect of the neuropeptides on G-protein coupled adenylate cyclase in vitro. Somatostatin induced an enhancement of cyclic AMP formation in presence of guanine nucleotides and
cholera
toxin but inhibited
pertussis
toxin and forskolin enzyme stimulation.
Pertussis
toxin and
cholera
toxin also depressed forskolin-induced stimulation as described previously. Somatostatin was able to antagonize these inhibitory effects of both toxins. On the contrary, substance P reduced GTP and
cholera
toxin stimulated striatal adenylate cyclase, without affecting forskolin activation. In our preparation, VIP did not influence basal adenylate cyclase activity or the stimulation by guanine nucleotides,
cholera
toxin, and
pertussis
toxin. VIP potently inhibited the enhancement of cyclic AMP formation by forskolin and completely antagonized the inhibitory effect of
cholera
toxin on forskolin activation. These results suggest that neuromodulatory effects of somatostatin, substance P, and VIP are mediated by the inhibitory as well as stimulatory guanine nucleotide proteins G-i and G-s coupled to an adenylate cyclase system.
...
PMID:Peptidergic modulation of G-protein coupled cyclic-AMP accumulation in the rat caudate nucleus. 127 50
The regulation of Cl- channels in human myoballs by G proteins was studied using whole-cell and inside-out patch recordings. After perfusion of the cell with 0.1 mM GTP[gamma S], the specific Cl- conductance, GCl, at standard resting potential (-85 mV) was increased from 5.9 microS/cm2 to 103 microS/cm2, and the kinetics upon stepping the potential to positive values was changed from an activating current with very slow inactivation to a fast inactivating current with no potential-dependent activation. These effects were not affected by the simultaneous blockade of several signal cascades involving G proteins. Addition of the protein kinase blockers PKI (25 microM), H8 (10 microM), or of the phospholipase-A2-blocking agent quinacrine (10 microM), had not much influence on these GTP[gamma S] effects. Buffering of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration (0.1 microM) or addition of the Ca2+/calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine (50 microM) was also without effect. Pre-incubation of the cells with
pertussis
toxin or with
cholera
toxin did not change GCl. In excised inside-out patches voltage-clamped at -85 mV, application of GTP[gamma S] influenced the "intermediate" Cl- channel, the Cl- channel type having the highest density in these cells, by increasing the number of transitions in a half-conductance state. The probability of the channel being in one of the two conducting states rose from 0.015 to 0.67, and the kinetics of the single-channel currents was changed so that, on average, it was similar to the whole-cell current kinetics seen after application of GTP[gamma S]. It is concluded that a G protein is directly interacting with these channels.
...
PMID:Chloride channels in cultured human skeletal muscle are regulated by G proteins. 127 15
We have identified by immunoblotting and ADP-ribosylation by
cholera
toxin and
pertussis
toxin the presence of Mr 43 and 46 KDa Gs alpha, and 39 and 41 KDa Gi alpha subunits in rat parotid gland plasma membranes but not in granule membranes. A Mr 28 KDa polypeptide that served as substrate for ADP-ribosylation by both
cholera
toxin and
pertussis
toxin was present exclusively in granule membranes. Photoaffinity crosslinking of [alpha-32P]GTP showed the presence of high molecular weight GTP-binding proteins (Mr 160, 100 KDa) in granule membranes. Six low molecular weight GTP-binding proteins (Mr 21-28 KDa) were differentially distributed in both plasma membranes and granule membranes. The present study identifies various GTP-binding proteins in rat parotid gland plasma membranes and granule membranes, and demonstrates the presence of distinct molecular weight GTP-binding proteins in granule membranes. These granule-associated GTP-binding proteins may be involved in secretory processes.
...
PMID:Identification of G-proteins in rat parotid gland plasma membranes and granule membranes: presence of distinct components in granule membranes. 128 Mar 20
The mechanism of adenylyl cyclase desensitization by carbachol, an agent that stimulates polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis, was studied in thyroid cells. Incubation of cultured dog thyroid cells with 10 microM carbachol for 2-4 hr reduced the subsequent thyrotropic hormone (TSH) stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity of membrane preparations by approximately 40%. This inhibition was reversed by atropine, occurred even in a Ca(2+)-free medium containing ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethylether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, and was not reproduced by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. The carbachol effect was not prevented by simultaneous incubation of cells with either isobutylmethylxanthine, an inhibitor of phosphodiesterase, or H-7, an inhibitor of protein kinase. Pretreatment of cells with
pertussis
toxin to inactivate the Gi inhibitory protein also failed to affect the carbachol inhibition. Although carbachol did not reduce the basal or the TSH-stimulated cyclase activities when added to membranes directly during the assay, exposure of cells to carbachol for 2-4 hr resulted in long lasting inhibition of TSH-stimulated cyclase activity (for at least 24 hr); recovery was seen by 48 hr after its removal. Carbachol pretreatment had no effect on 125I-TSH binding to membranes but reduced the cyclase stimulation by not only TSH but also
cholera
toxin, guanosine 5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate, and forskolin; it also significantly reduced the
cholera
toxin-mediated AD[32P]-ribosylation of Gs in membranes. These data indicate that carbachol-induced inhibition of adenylyl cyclase occurs beyond the level of TSH receptor binding and that Gs is a possible site of its action. Thus, in dog thyroid cells, carbachol, via muscarinic receptors, can reduce the adenylyl cyclase activity by a process that does not involve Ca2+ or activation of phosphodiesterase.
...
PMID:Carbachol-induced decrease in thyroid cell adenylyl cyclase activity is independent of calcium and phosphodiesterase activation. 131 Jan 40
In Zajdela hepatoma cells (ZHC) the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump displayed no sensitivity to glucagon (19-29) (mini-glucagon), whereas in hepatocyte this metabolite of glucagon evoked a biphasic regulation of the Ca2+ pump system via a
cholera
toxin-sensitive G protein. Analysis of G protein subunits in ZHC membranes indicated the presence of
cholera
toxin-sensitive Gs alpha and G beta gamma proteins, whose functionality was manifested by GTP and NaF stimulation of adenylylcyclase activity, and
pertussis
toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of Gi alpha, respectively. However, immunoblotting experiments suggested a lower content in beta gamma subunits in ZHC as compared with hepatocyte plasma membranes. Complementation of ZHC or hepatocyte plasma membranes with purified beta gamma subunits from transducin (T beta gamma) caused inhibition of the basal activity of the Ca2+ pump at 10 and 300 ng/ml, respectively, and revealed (in ZHC) or increased (in hepatocytes) sensitivity of the system to mini-glucagon. After
cholera
toxin treatment of ZHC, T beta gamma no longer reconstituted the response of the Ca2+ pump to mini-glucagon, suggesting that the mechanism of beta gamma action is dependent on an association with the alpha subunit of a
cholera
toxin-sensitive G protein. It is concluded that G beta gamma subunits control both the basal activity of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump and its inhibition by mini-glucagon.
...
PMID:Role of G protein beta gamma subunits in the regulation of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump. 131 Mar 15
Endothelin-3 (ET-3) stimulated phosphoinositide metabolism and synthesis of prostaglandins in cultured rat Kupffer cells. ET-3-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides was characterized by the production of various inositol phosphates and of glycerophosphoinositol. The mechanism of ET-3-stimulated metabolism of phosphoinositides and synthesis of prostaglandins appeared to be distinct from the effect of platelet-activating factor (PAF) on these processes described previously [Gandhi, Hanahan & Olson (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 18234-18241]. On a molar basis ET-3 was significantly more potent than PAF in stimulating phosphoinositide metabolism, e.g. ET-3-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides occurred at 1 pM, whereas PAF was ineffective at concentrations less than 1 nM. Upon challenging Kupffer cells with both ET-3 and PAF, an additive stimulation of phosphoinositide metabolism was observed, suggesting that the actions of these factors may be exerted on separate phosphoinositide pools. Treatment of Kupffer cells with
pertussis
toxin resulted in an inhibition of ET-3-induced phospholipase C activation; in contrast,
cholera
toxin treatment caused potentiation of ET-3-stimulated phospholipase C activity. Both toxins, however, inhibited PAF-stimulated phospholipase C activity. The present results suggest that the stimulatory effects of ET-3 and PAF on the phosphodiesteric metabolism of phosphoinositides in Kupffer cells require different guanine-nucleotide-binding proteins. Furthermore, the effects of bacterial toxins on ET-3- and PAF-induced phosphoinositide metabolism were not mediated by cyclic AMP. ET-3-induced metabolism of phosphoinositides was inhibited completely in Kupffer cells pretreated with ET-3, suggesting homologous ligand-induced desensitization of the ET-3 receptors. In contrast, similar experiments using PAF showed only a partial desensitization of subsequent PAF-induced phosphoinositide metabolism. In contrast to the increased production of prostaglandins E2 and D2 observed upon stimulation of Kupffer cells with PAF, ET-3 stimulated the biosynthesis of prostaglandin E2 only. Consistent with their additive effects on phosphoinositide metabolism, PAF and ET-3 exhibited an additive stimulation of the synthesis of prostaglandin E2.
...
PMID:A comparative study of endothelin- and platelet-activating-factor-mediated signal transduction and prostaglandin synthesis in rat Kupffer cells. 131 Jun 1
Corticostatic peptides are a family of arginine-rich cysteine-rich peptides that inhibit ACTH-stimulated corticosterone (B) production in rat adrenal cell suspensions. In this communication we describe a new method for the facile isolation and purification of these basic peptides from rabbit adult lung. We then describe the isolation and sequences of the four rabbit peptides, CSI, CSII, CSIII, and CSIV, and compare their biological activities in the ACTH (150 pg/ml) inhibition assay. CSI is by far the most potent of the four peptides. Using CSI as a model, we then studied its effects on the proximal and distal parts of the pathway leading to the generation of cAMP. CSI had no effect on (Bu)2cAMP action on forskolin or
cholera
toxin in their ability to mimic ACTH and increase B production in rat adrenal cells, nor did CSI have any effect on the stimulation of B production by
pertussis
toxin. Endogenous cAMP stimulated by ACTH decreased after the addition of CSI, which pointed to the inhibition of ACTH binding to explain the mode of action of this corticostatin. Displacement of the specific binding of labeled ACTH by CSI and the ACTH antagonist ACTH-(6-24) was determined, and indeed, CSI did displace ACTH from its binding site. The question of what portion of the ACTH molecule was involved in the action of CSI was answered by studying ACTH-(1-13) acetyl amide (alpha MSH) and ACTH-(1-18) amide. CSI had no effect on alpha MSH stimulation of B production, but did lower the production of B stimulated by ACTH-(1-18) amide. Therefore, CSI must act on ACTH-(14-18), which is part of the so-called address region of ACTH, which is -Gly14-Lys15-Lys16-Arg17-Arg18-, the very basic part of the molecule. These results indicate that CSI acts by competing with ACTH for its binding receptor on the adrenal cell and that this competition is confined to amino acids 14-18 of the molecule when it is bound to the receptor.
...
PMID:Isolation and mode of action of rabbit corticostatic (antiadrenocorticotropin) peptides. 131 Dec 40
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