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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acquired renal cysts derive from terminally differentiated tubular epithelium in adults as a consequence of increased epithelial cell proliferation, fluid accumulation and extracellular matrix remodelling. To understand better how human epithelial cysts may be initiated and progressively expand, cells from primary cultures of normal human adult renal cortex were dispersed in polymerized type I collagen. The transparent matrix permitted repeated observation by light microscopy of cyst formation from individual renal cells. The cyst cells reacted strongly with distal nephron histochemical markers (cytokeratin antibodies
AE1
/AE3, epithelial membrane antigen, and Arachis hypogaea lectin) but inconsistently or not at all to markers of proximal tubules (Tetragonolobus purpureas lectin and Phaseolus vulgaris erthroagglutinin lectin). The number of spherical, fluid-filled epithelial cysts that developed in a standardized microscope field quantified cyst initiation. Cyst progression was determined from the increase in the diameter (surface area) of cysts and represents a hyperplastic event. EGF or TGF alpha, were required in serum-free defined medium to cause cysts to develop from individual epithelial cells dispersed in the matrix; insulin was required as a co-factor. The EC50 for EGF was approximately 0.1 ng/ml, and for insulin 1 microgram/ml. Early cultures of normal cortex formed cysts more efficiently when dispersed in collagen matrix than cells passaged several times before suspension in the gel. Agonists of adenylate cyclase (PGE1, AVP, VIP, PTH, forskolin, cholera toxin), methylisobutylxanthine, and 8-Br-cAMP, though incapable of causing cyst formation alone in defined medium, enhanced cyst initiation and progression in the presence of EGF and insulin. Angiotensin II, TNF alpha, beta-estradiol, and
pertussis
toxin had no effect in the absence or presence of EGF and insulin.
Pertussis
toxin inhibited cyst initiation and expansion caused by EGF and forskolin but potentiated cyst initiation and expansion caused by EGF and PGE1. Cyst formation and expansion were inhibited by TGF beta 1 and 2-chloroadenosine. Polarized monolayers of human renal cortical cells grown on permeable membranes were used to independently quantify the effects of agonists on the net secretion of solute and water from the basolateral to the apical surface of the cells. PGE1, forskolin, and 8-Br-cAMP stimulated net fluid secretion that was sustained for several days; EGF enhanced forskolin-stimulated fluid secretion. We conclude that the formation and expansion of in vitro cysts derived from solitary human cortex cells depends on the coordinated interplay between cellular proliferation and fluid secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:In vitro formation and expansion of cysts derived from human renal cortex epithelial cells. 131 21
Prostaglandins are important mediators of pain and inflammation. We have examined the effects of prostanoids on voltage-activated calcium currents (I(Ca)) in acutely isolated mouse trigeminal sensory neurons, using standard whole cell voltage clamp techniques. Trigeminal neurons were divided into two populations based on the presence (Type 2) or absence (Type 1) of low voltage-activated T-type I(Ca). The absence of T-type I(Ca) is highly correlated with sensitivity to mu-opioid agonists and the VR1 agonist capsaicin. In both populations of cells, high voltage-activated I(Ca) was inhibited by PGE(2) with an EC(50) of about 35 nM, to a maximum of 30 %. T-type I(Ca) was not inhibited by PGE(2).
Pertussis
toxin pre-treatment abolished the effects of PGE(2) in Type 2 cells, but not in Type 1 cells, whereas treatment with cholera toxin prevented the effects of PGE(2) in Type 1 cells, but not in Type 2 cells. Inhibition of I(Ca) by PGE(2) was associated with slowing of current activation and could be relieved with a large positive pre-pulse, consistent with inhibition of I(Ca) by G protein betagamma subunits. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction of mRNA from trigeminal ganglia indicated that all four EP prostanoid receptors were present. However, in both Type 1 and Type 2 cells the effects of PGE(2) were only mimicked by the selective EP(3) receptor agonist ONO-AE-248, and not by selective agonists for EP(1) (ONO-DI-004), EP(2) (ONO-
AE1
-259) and EP(4) (ONO-
AE1
-329) receptors. These data indicate that two populations of neurons in trigeminal ganglia differing in their calcium channel expression, sensitivity to mu-opioids and capsaicin also have divergent mechanisms of PGE(2)-mediated inhibition of calcium channels, with Gi/Go type G proteins involved in one population, and Gs type G proteins in the other.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin E(2) inhibits calcium current in two sub-populations of acutely isolated mouse trigeminal sensory neurons. 1188 76
The postganglionic sympathetic nerves of the isolated rat stomach were electrically stimulated twice at 1 Hz for 1 min. Prostaglandin E(2) and ONO-AE-248 (16S-9-deoxy-9beta-chloro-15-deoxy-16-hyfroxy-17,17-trimethylene-19,20-didehydro prostaglandin F(2)) (an EP(3) receptor agonist) reduced the evoked noradrenaline release, while ONO-DI-004 (17S-2,5-ethano-6-oxo-17,20-dimethyl prostaglandin E(1)) (an EP(1) receptor agonist), ONO-
AE1
-259-01 (11,15-O-dimethyl prostaglandin E(2)) (an EP(2) receptor agonist) and ONO-
AE1
-329 [16-(3-methoxymethyl)phenyl-omega-tetranor-3,7-dithia prostaglandin E(1)] (an EP(4) receptor agonist) had no effect. U-46619 (9,11-dideoxy-9alpha,11alpha-methanoepoxy prostaglandin F(2alpha)) and I-BOP (7-[3-[3-hydroxy-4-(4-iodophenoxy)-1-butenyl]-7-oxabicyclo[2,2,1] hept-2-yl]-,[1S[1alpha,2alpha(Z),3beta(1E,3S)4alpha]]-5-heptenoic acid) (TP receptor agonists) also reduced the noradrenaline release and these inhibitory effects were abolished by SQ-29548 (7-[3-[[2-[(phenylamino) carbonyl] hydrazino]methyl]-7-oxabicyclo[2,2,1]hept-2-yl][1S(1alpha,2alpha(Z), 3alpha,4alpha]-5-heptenoic acid) (a TP receptor antagonist). The inhibitory effect of U-46619, but not ONO-AE-248, was abolished by
pertussis
toxin. These results suggest that the prostanoid EP(3) and TP receptors mediate the inhibition of gastric noradrenaline release; TP, but not EP(3), receptor-mediated inhibition is mediated by a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive mechanism in rats.
...
PMID:Prostanoid EP3 and TP receptors-mediated inhibition of noradrenaline release from the isolated rat stomach. 1252 45
In this study, we investigated the role of PGE(2) in mouse mastocytoma P-815 cell adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins (ECMs) in vitro. We report that PGE(2) accelerated ProNectin F(TM) (a proteolytic fragment of fibronectin)-mediated adhesion, which was abolished by addition of the GRGDS peptide, an inhibitor of the RDG binding site of ProNectin F(TM). We show that the cAMP level and cAMP-regulated protein kinase (PKA) activity are critical mediators of this PGE(2) effect, because the cell-permeable cAMP analogue 8-Br-cAMP accelerated P-815 cell adhesion to ProNectin F(TM) and the pharmacological inhibitor of PKA, H-89, blocked PGE(2)-mediated adhesion. Consistent with mRNA expression of the G(s)-coupled EP4- and G(i)-coupled EP3-PGE receptor subtypes, P-815 cell adhesion was accelerated by treatment with a selective EP4 agonist, ONO-
AE1
-329, but not a selective EP1/EP3 agonist, sulprostone. However, simultaneous treatment with ONO-
AE1
-329 and sulprostone resulted in augmentation of both the cAMP level and cell adhesion. The augmentation of EP3-mediated cAMP synthesis was dose-dependent, without affecting the half-maximal concentration for EP4-mediated G(s)-activity, which was inhibited by a G(i) inhibitor,
pertussis
toxin. In conclusion, these findings suggest that PGE(2) accelerates RGD-dependent adhesion via cooperative activation between EP3 and EP4 and contributes to the recruitment of mast cells to the ECM during inflammation.
...
PMID:Induction of adherent activity in mastocytoma P-815 cells by the cooperation of two prostaglandin E2 receptor subtypes, EP3 and EP4. 1263 75
Mice deficient in the G-protein alpha subunit G(i)alpha(2) spontaneously develop colitis and colon cancer. IL-11 is a pleiotropic cytokine known to protect the intestinal epithelium from injury in animal models of colitis and is produced by subepithelial myofibroblasts in response to inflammatory mediators including TGF-beta, IL-1beta, and PGE(2). Arachidonic acid release and subsequent PGE(2) production is significantly decreased in the colonic mucosa of G(i)alpha(2)-/- mice, and we hypothesized that this would affect mucosal IL-11 production. Mucosal levels of IL-11 were found to be significantly decreased in G(i)alpha(2)-/- mice despite the presence of mild colitis. Primary cultures of G(i)alpha(2)-/- intestinal and colonic myofibroblasts (IMF and CMF, respectively) produced less basal and TGF-beta or IL-1beta-stimulated IL-11 mRNA and protein than wild-type cells. Inhibitors of ERK or p38 MAPK activation dose dependently inhibited IMF and CMF IL-11 production in response to TGF-beta stimulation, whereas 16,16 dimethyl-PGE(2) and prostanoid receptor subtype-selective agonists induced IL-11 production. Treatment of animals with the EP4-specific agonist ONO-
AE1
-329 resulted in enhanced mucosal levels of IL-11, and increased IL-11 production by ex vivo cultured CMF. Modulation of cAMP levels produced diverging results, with enhancement of TGF-beta-induced IL-11 release in IMF pretreated with 8-Br-cAMP and inhibition in cells treated either with
pertussis
toxin or the PKA inhibitor H-89. These data suggest a physiological role for prostaglandins, MAPK signaling, and cAMP signaling for the production of myofibroblast-derived IL-11 in the mouse intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:Decreased MAPK- and PGE2-dependent IL-11 production in Gialpha2-/- colonic myofibroblasts. 1733 78