Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The human erythroleukemia cell line (HEL) has been used as a model system for studying signal transduction processes as they might relate to platelet/megakaryocyte function. We were interested in examining the role of thrombin in the regulation of adenylyl cyclase in this cell line. As opposed to its predominantly inhibitory effects on cyclic AMP production in platelets or in membranes from HEL cells, our initial experiments in intact HEL cells revealed that thrombin markedly potentiated the cyclic AMP response to prostaglandin E1 (2.9 +/- 0.2-fold), prostacyclin (1.9 +/- 0.2-fold) and carbacyclin (2.5 +/- 0.5-fold), measured either by radioimmunoassay or by the [3H]adenine preloading procedure. Thrombin, although ineffective alone, also potentiated cyclic AMP production stimulated by vasoactive intestinal peptide (1.6 +/- 0.2-fold), cholera toxin (3.0 +/- 0.6-fold) and AIF4- (2.3 +/- 0.6-fold), but not by forskolin (0.9 +/- 0.1-fold). The thrombin effect 1) produced an increase in the efficacy of the prostaglandins with no change in potency; 2) was long-lived; 3) required the proteolytic activity of thrombin; 4) was insensitive to pertussis toxin; and 5) was at least partially mimicked by trypsin, extracellular ATP and UTP, platelet activating factor and activators of protein kinase C. Down-regulation of protein kinase C or pre-exposure to the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine blocked the potentiating effect. Together, these results suggest that in HEL cells, the mechanism of thrombin potentiation of cyclic AMP production may involve alterations in the interaction between stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein and the catalytic subunit of adenylyl cyclase, possibly involving protein kinase C-mediated phosphorylation.
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PMID:Potentiation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate production by thrombin in the human erythroleukemia cell line, HEL. 133 12

Cultured endothelium derived from three microvascular fractions of human brain was used to characterize adrenergic receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase activity. Catecholamines (norepinephrine, epinephrine) and their analogs (isoproterenol, phenylephrine, 6-fluoronorepinephrine) dose-dependently stimulated endothelial production of cAMP. Antagonists for beta 1 and beta 2 receptors (propranolol, atenolol, and butoxamine) and for alpha 1-receptors (prazosin) dose-dependently blocked cAMP formation induced by the tested adrenergic agonists. Clonidine, an alpha 2 > alpha 1-agonist, also inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated production of cAMP while yohimbine (alpha 2 > alpha 1 antagonist) augmented the norepinephrine or epinephrine-induced accumulation of cAMP. Cholera toxin-induced ADP ribosylation of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gs) abolished the stimulatory effect of norepinephrine, epinephrine, phenylephrine or 6-fluoronorepinephrine on cAMP formation. ADP ribosylation of the inhibitory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gi) by pertussis toxin had no effect on either phenylephrine- or 6-fluoronorepinephrine-induced production of cAMP while it increased the norepinephrine and epinephrine-induced accumulation of cAMP. These findings represent the first documentation of beta 1-, beta 2-, alpha 1 and alpha 2-adrenergic receptors linked to adenylate cyclase in endothelium derived from human brain microvasculature. These data also indicate that activation of endothelial alpha 1 -adrenergic receptors is mediated by a signal transduction mechanism associated with Gs protein. The results strongly support the presence of various receptor-controlled adrenergic regulatory mechanisms on human cerebromicrovascular endothelium.
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PMID:Adrenergic receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase in human cerebromicrovascular endothelium. 133 35

Endothelin, a potent vasoactive peptide originally isolated from the vascular endothelial cells, exerts glycogenolytic and vasoconstrictive actions in the perfused rat liver. In this paper we demonstrate high-affinity binding sites for endothelin-1 (ET-1) on rat hepatocytes. Upon incubation at 37 degrees C, association of ET-1 with hepatocytes occurred in a time-dependent manner, was maximal between 3 and 6 h, and subsequently declined; at this temperature ET-1 was rapidly internalized with the internalized ligand exceeding the surface-bound ligand at all time points. The rate of association of 125I-ET-1 with hepatocytes was much slower when the binding assay was performed at 4 degrees C; sequestration of ET-1 in hepatocytes was also substantially reduced at this temperature. ET-1 was extremely potent in stimulating phosphoinositide metabolism in hepatocytes, with significant activation of this signal transduction process occurring at ET-1 concentrations as low as 0.1 pM, with an EC50 of 1 pM. The effect of ET-1 was coupled via a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein. Cholera toxin did not affect ET-1-mediated phosphoinositide metabolism and neither toxin influenced the association of 125I-ET-1 with hepatocytes. PAGE of hepatocyte membranes following exposure of the cells to 125I-ET-1 and cross-linking revealed labelling of three major proteins with apparent molecular masses of 32, 49 and 72 kDa. 125I-ET-1 labelling of each of these proteins was inhibited by unlabelled ET-1, whereas unlabelled ET-3 inhibited the labelling of only the 32 and 49 kDa proteins. 125I-ET-3 labelled the 49 kDa protein and this labelling was inhibited by both unlabelled ET-1 and ET-3. Each of these receptors appears to be functional, since both ET-1 and ET-3 stimulated phosphoinositide metabolism in hepatocytes. Down-regulation of ET-1 association and desensitization of ET-1-induced phosphoinositide metabolism occurred upon incubation of hepatocytes with the homologous ligand. Following down-regulation, the ET-1 receptor was restored to the surface of the hepatocyte by prolonged incubation, although the ET-1-stimulated phosphoinositide response remained inhibited even after complete recovery of the ET-1 association capability. These results demonstrate the presence of multiple high-affinity receptors for ET-1 on hepatocytes and the direct action of this peptide on hepatic parenchymal cells via the phosphoinositide signal transduction pathway.
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PMID:Hepatic effects of endothelin. Receptor characterization and endothelin-induced signal transduction in hepatocytes. 133 87

Transducin (T alpha beta gamma), the heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein that interacts with photoexcited rhodopsin (Rh*) and the cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) in retinal rod cells, is sensitive to cholera (CTx) and pertussis toxins (PTx), which catalyze the binding of an ADP-ribose to the alpha subunit at Arg174 and Cys347, respectively. These two types of ADP-ribosylations are investigated with transducin in vitro or with reconstituted retinal rod outer-segment membranes. Several functional perturbations inflicted on T alpha by the resulting covalent modifications are studied such as: the binding of T alpha to T beta gamma to the membrane and to Rh*; the spontaneous or Rh*-catalysed exchange of GDP for GTP or guanosine 5-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[gamma S]), the conformational switch and activation undergone by transducin upon this exchange, the activation of T alpha GDP by fluoride complexes and the activation of the PDE by T alpha GTP. ADP-ribosylation of transducin by CTx requires the GTP-dependent activation of ADP-ribosylation factors (ARF), takes place only on the high-affinity, nucleotide-free complex, Rh*-T alpha empty-T beta gamma and does not activate T alpha. Subsequent to CTx-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation the following occurs: (a) addition of GDP induces the release from Rh* of inactive CTxT alpha GDP (CTxT alpha, ADP-ribosylated alpha subunit of transducin) which remains associated to T beta gamma; (b) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma exhibits the usual slow kinetics of spontaneous exchange of GDP for GTP[gamma S] in the absence of Rh*, but the association and dissociation of fluoride complexes, which act as gamma-phosphate analogs, are kinetically modified, suggesting that the ADP-ribose on Arg174 specifically perturbs binding of the gamma-phosphate in the nucleotide site; (c) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma can still couple to Rh* and undergo fast nucleotide exchange; (d) CTxT alpha GTP[gamma S] and CTxT alpha GDP-AlFx (AlFx, Aluminofluoride complex) activate retinal cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) with the same efficiency as their unmodified counterparts, but the kinetics and affinities of fluoride activation are changed; (e) CTxT alpha GTP hydrolyses GTP more slowly than unmodified T alpha GTP, which entirely accounts for the prolonged action of CTxT alpha GTP on the PDE; (f) after GTP hydrolysis, CTxT alpha GDP reassociates to T beta gamma and becomes inactive. Thus, CTx catalyzed ADP-ribosylation only perturbs in T alpha the GTP-binding domain, but not the conformational switch nor the domains of contact with the T beta gamma subunit, with Rh* and with the PDE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional modifications of transducin induced by cholera or pertussis-toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation. 133 64

The regulation of pituitary hormone secretion by TRH and GnRH proceeds through similar mechanisms which employ phosphoinositide hydrolysis to generate intracellular signals. Proximal events involve receptor activation of heterotrimeric (alpha beta gamma) GTP-binding (G) proteins which regulate phospholipase (PLC) activity. Since TRH and GnRH actions are not affected by cholera or pertussis toxin, a novel G protein (Gp) was suggested to mediate receptor regulation. The required Gp protein has not been identified and this was the focus of the present study. Recent molecular cloning and biochemical studies have characterized two novel, pertussis toxin-insensitive alpha-subunit proteins of the Gq subfamily (alpha q and alpha 11) which regulate the activity of the beta 1 isoenzyme of PLC. Gq and G11 represent the best candidates for the PLC-activating G proteins which mediate the actions of TRH and GnRH. To test this directly, an antibody to the common Gq/11 alpha-subunit carboxyterminal sequence was generated and shown to react with unique 42-kilodalton Gq alpha and 43-kilodalton G11 alpha proteins in membranes from TRH-responsive GH3 cells and GnRH-responsive alpha T3-1 pituitary cells. The Gq/11 alpha peptide antibody was shown to immunodeplete the Gp activity of GH3 cell membrane extracts measured by reconstitution of the guanine nucleotide regulation of PLC-beta 1. In addition, the immunoglobulin G fraction of Gq/11 alpha peptide immune serum specifically inhibited TRH- and GnRH-stimulated PLC activity measured in the membranes of GH3 and alpha T3-1 cells, respectively. The results indicate that TRH and GnRH activation of PLC requires receptor coupling to a Gp protein(s) which corresponds to Gq, G11 or both.
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PMID:Thyrotropin-releasing hormone and gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptors activate phospholipase C by coupling to the guanosine triphosphate-binding proteins Gq and G11. 133 52

The histamine H3 receptor agonist (R)alpha-methylhistamine (MeHA) inhibited, in a nanomolar range, basal and carbachol-stimulated inositol phosphate formation in the human gastric tumoral cell line HGT1-clone 6. The inhibition was reversed by micromolar concentrations of the histamine H3 receptor antagonist thioperamide and was sensitive to cholera or pertussis toxin treatment. Using [3H]N alpha-MeHA as specific tracer, high affinity binding sites were demonstrated with a Bmax of 54 +/- 3 fmol/mg of protein and a KD of either 0.61 +/- 0.04 or 2.2 +/- 0.4 nM, in the absence or presence of 50 microM GTP[gamma]S, respectively. The binding sites were solubilized by Triton X-100 and prepurified by gel chromatography. They were separated from the histamine H2 receptor sites by filtration through Sepharose-famotidine and finally retained on Sepharose-thioperamide. The purified sites concentrated in one single silver-stained protein band of 70 kDa in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. They specifically bound [3H]N alpha-MeHA with a KD of 1.6 +/- 0.1 nM and a Bmax of 12,000 +/- 750 pmol/mg of protein. This corresponds to a 90,225-fold purification over cell lysate and a purity degree of 84%. Binding was competitively displaced by N alpha-MeHA (IC50 = 5.8 +/- 0.7 nM), (R) alpha-MeHA (IC50 = 9 +/- 1 nM), and thioperamide (IC50 = 85 +/- 10 nM), but not by famotidine (H2 antagonist) or by mepyramine (H1 antagonist). These findings provide the first evidence for solubilization, purification, and molecular mass characterization of the histamine H3 receptor protein and for the negative coupling of this receptor phosphatidylinositol turnover through a so far unidentified G protein.
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PMID:Purification of a histamine H3 receptor negatively coupled to phosphoinositide turnover in the human gastric cell line HGT1. 133 91

1. The adenosine receptors from pig kidney proximal tubules have been studied in membrane vesicle preparations derived from either luminal (brush-border membranes-BBM-) or basolateral (BL) sides. There was a substantial amount of A2-like NECA binding in both preparations, but the A1 subtype of adenosine receptors was not found in either BBM or BL membranes. The use of [3H]-CGS21680 which is a more specific ligand for A2a receptors revealed true adenosine receptors in the BBM. 2. The kinetic parameters for [3H]-CGS21680 binding to pig renal BBM were: Bmax = 1.48 pmol mg-1 protein and Kd = 150 nM. In the presence of Gpp(NH)p the affinity decreased (Kd = 220 nM), whereas the addition of Mg2+ induced a marked increase in affinity (Kd = 83 nM). These equilibrium constants are higher than those found for the A2a adenosine receptors present in pig brain striatal membranes (Kd = 12 nM), and are close to those found in rat renal BBM (Kd = 90 nM). 3. The order of potency of agonist and antagonists was not consistent with the presence of either A1 or A2 receptors, but it was very similar to the agonist order of potency for the A3 receptor subtype. Furthermore, the blockade of the [3H]-CGS21680 binding by both cholera and pertussis toxin further supports the view that the subtypes present in BBM are neither A1 nor A2. 4. Overall the results suggest the presence in BBM of an A3 receptor, or of a new subtype of adenosine receptor, which is linked to G proteins sensitive to both cholera and pertussis toxins.
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PMID:Characterization of adenosine receptors in brush-border membranes from pig kidney. 133 33

Both pertussis and cholera toxins inhibit oxytocin-stimulated phosphoinositide turnover in rat myometrium. The actions of pertussis and cholera toxins as well as those of CPTcAMP are reversed by H-8, an inhibitor of protein kinase A. H-8 does not have a major effect on cAMP elevation by the toxins in the presence of oxytocin. The results suggest that the stimulation by oxytocin of phosphoinositide turnover does not involve direct obligatory coupling to a pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein. Rather, indirect effects on protein kinase A activation may contribute to the inhibitory effects of both cholera and pertussis toxins. This study suggests that caution must be exercised in interpreting inhibition of phosphoinositide turnover by pertussis toxin in whole cell experiments as indicative of direct involvement of a toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein.
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PMID:Inhibition of oxytocin-stimulated phosphoinositide turnover in rat myometrium by pertussis and cholera toxins may involve protein kinase A activation. 133 68

Responses to opioids can be bimodal depending on the concentration of opioid used. For example, low concentrations (nM) enhance whereas higher concentrations (10-100 nM) inhibit the electrically evoked release of enkephalin from the myenteric plexus. The nature of the responsiveness of the enkephalin release process to opioids is also dependent on the intracellular and/or extracellular milieu of enkephalin-containing neurons or other neurons of this plexus. Intracellular levels of cAMP, availability of pertussis toxin- and cholera toxin-sensitive guanine nucleotide binding proteins and intracellular calcium concentration have all been shown to be important determinants of opioid excitatory versus inhibitory actions. The present data indicate that the inhibition of enkephalin release produced by U50,488H or sufentanil is no longer observed when the applied voltage is increased 3- or 2-fold, respectively. Under this condition, a previously inhibitory concentration of opioid produces an enhancement of stimulated enkephalin release. Increasing the frequency of the applied stimulation from 5 to 60 Hz (at a constant voltage) also reverses the sufentanil-induced inhibition to a facilitation of enkephalin release. These data indicate that the intensity (voltage) or frequency of the stimulation that is used to release enkephalin is a critical determinant of the nature of its modulation by opioids. The possible relevance of these findings to known differences in opioid sensitivity between different types of pain is discussed.
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PMID:Stimulus frequency and intensity: critical determinants of opioid enhancement or inhibition of evoked methionine-enkephalin release. 133 1

Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were obtained from light-responsive on-bipolar cells in retinal slices of the dogfish. Inclusion of the A-subunit of pertussis toxin in the patch-pipette solution resulted in an increase in inward current and membrane conductance, and a block of light-evoked currents of on-bipolar cells. The opposite effect was obtained with the A-subunit of cholera toxin, which blocked light responses, and induced an outward current and a decrease in membrane conductance. These actions were NAD+ dependent. The results show that the G-protein(s) linking glutamate receptors to a cGMP cascade in on-bipolar cells possess sites which are ADP-ribosylated by pertussis and cholera toxins, with no homology to the adenylate cyclase system but possibly with a homology to transducin. Furthermore, inclusion of H-7, a kinase inhibitor in the patch-pipette solution, or of a non-hydrolysable ATP analogue (AMP-PNP) had no effect on light responses, membrane conductance or dark current of on-bipolar cells, suggesting that the components of this cGMP cascade are unlikely to be regulated by protein kinases.
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PMID:The glutamate-receptor linked cGMP cascade of retinal on-bipolar cells is pertussis and cholera toxin-sensitive. 134 16


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