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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thrombin induced an increase in [Ca2+]i in mouse mastocytoma P-815 cells. This increase was markedly reduced by prior exposure to
pertussis
toxin (PT) but not by removal of extracellular Ca2+, suggesting that thrombin stimulates phospholipase C via a PT-sensitive GTP-binding protein. ATP also induced an increase in [Ca2+]i. This increase was insensitive to PT but completely suppressed on removal of extracellular Ca2+, suggesting that ATP stimulates Ca2+ influx in a PT-insensitive manner.
Iloprost
, a stable prostacyclin analogue, increased the cellular cAMP level and dose-dependently inhibited the thrombin-induced increase in [Ca2+]i, whereas the ATP-induced increase in [Ca2+]i was markedly enhanced by iloprost. Cyclic AMP analogues, dibutyryl cAMP and 8-bromo cAMP, also inhibited the increase in [Ca2+]i induced by thrombin and promoted that by ATP, indicating that the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of iloprost are mediated by cAMP. These results suggest that the prostacyclin receptor differentially regulates two distinct Ca2+ mobilizing systems via cAMP in mastocytoma cells.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of thrombin- or ATP-induced mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ by prostacyclin receptor in mouse mastocytoma cells. 170 39
Glucocorticoids secreted by the fetal adrenal, or administered for therapeutic reasons, stimulate fetal lung maturation in the human and other species. Prostacyclin, produced within the lung may be another agent with maturational effects. In this investigation we have demonstrated that glucocorticoids interact with lung cells and increase their response to a prostacyclin analogue (
Iloprost
, PGIp). This agent stimulates adenylate cyclase activity in fetal lung fibroblasts, fetal lung epithelial cells and in neonatal vascular smooth muscle cells. The cAMP response to PGIp in fibroblasts and epithelial cells occurred in the range 3nM-1 microM. When fibroblasts were pretreated with cortisol before PGIp, cAMP was increased 2-3 fold (p less than 0.01). There was a similar increase in cAMP after cortisol pretreatment in response to PGIp by fetal lung epithelial cells, but not with smooth muscle cells. The action of cortisol was blocked by an inhibitor of RNA synthesis (Actinomycin D) but not by an inhibitor of DNA synthesis (5-fluorodeoxy-uridine). Additional experiments with cholera and
pertussis
toxins, and with forskolin suggest that cortisol principally increases the quantity or activity of the adenylate cyclase sub-unit in fetal lung fibroblasts and, in doing so, increases the cAMP response to PGIp.
...
PMID:Interaction between prostacyclin and cortisol in fetal lung cells: effects on cAMP production. 171 20
We studied PGE2 specific binding sites in human myometrial microsomes prepared from uterine specimens obtained by hysterectomy (women between 38 and 55 years of age). Competition experiments showed that the potency order for various prostaglandins (PGs) was: PGE2 > or = PGE1 >> PGF2 alpha >
Iloprost
> or = Carbacyclin >> ZK 110841 (PDG2 analogue). These relative affinities indicated that the receptor was of the EP type. In kinetic experiments GTP, GppNHp and GTP gamma S increased the rate of PGE2 binding (steady state was reached more rapidly in the presence of nucleotides) but maximal specific binding was not significantly different. Complete dissociation could not be obtained, even in the presence of GTP. Only 50% of maximal binding was readily dissociable. The dissociation rate was 4.56.10(-4) sec-1 (half time of about 660 sec) and in the presence of GTP analogues it was slightly increased (k-1 = 7.16 10(-4) sec-1, half time 420 sec.). Scatchard analysis of saturation curves showed an increase in ligand receptor affinity in the presence of GTP or nucleotide analogues: the Kd shifted from 9.66 +/- 2.8.10(-9) M to 4.96 +/- 1.25.10(-9) M, but the number of binding sites did not change significantly (310 +/- 37 to 350 +/- 17 fmol/mgP). The effect of GTP was observed at a concentration of 5.10(-4)M. GppNHp and GTP gamma S were effective at 1.10(-5) M. Pretreatment of myometrial membranes with
pertussis
or cholera toxins had no effect on PGE2 binding to membrane sites. Our conclusion is that GTP induced conversion of a population of low affinity sites into a population of higher affinity sites. This effect of guanine nucleotides was described in adipocytes and kidney medulla. Competition studies with PGE2 analogues (sulprostone, 17-phenyl-omega-trinor PGE2, M&B 28,767, misoprostol, butaprost) showed that this receptor mediates a contractile response and is probably an EP3 subtype.
...
PMID:Modulation of human myometrial PGE2 receptor by GTP characterization of receptor subtype. 823 33
The purpose of this study was to characterize the prostanoid receptors coupled to intracellular calcium in human erythroleukemia (HEL) cells, a cell line with platelet/megakaryocytic characteristics. Both prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and iloprost increased cyclic AMP (cAMP) in HEL cells, but modulated [Ca2+]i by different mechanisms.
Iloprost
(10(-9) to 10(-6) M) had no effect on basal [Ca2+]i, but greatly potentiated the increase in [Ca2+]i produced by thrombin. This effect was mimicked by cholera toxin and other Gs-coupled receptors, and involved calcium influx since iloprost had no effect on [Ca2+]i in cells incubated in Ca2+-free buffer. Furthermore, iloprost did not increase the generation of baseline or thrombin-induced inositol phosphates at these concentrations. In contrast, PGE1 (10(-7) to 10(-5) M), but not iloprost, increased basal [Ca2+]i through a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive mechanism that involved stimulation of inositol phosphate generation and mobilization of intracellular calcium. The order of potencies of other prostaglandins that increased [Ca2+]i was not consistent with known IP, EP, DP, FP, or TP receptors. 11-Deoxy-16,16-dimethyl PGE2 was the most potent of the analogs tested (EC50 = 28 nM). In summary, at least two prostaglandin receptors are functionally coupled to intracellular calcium in HEL cells: a putative IP receptor coupled to Gs proteins that increases cAMP and enhances calcium influx, and a novel prostanoid receptor that evokes calcium mobilization through stimulation of phospholipase C by a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive pathway.
...
PMID:Prostanoid receptor with a novel pharmacological profile in human erythroleukemia cells. 935 92
A FLAG-tagged form of the human IP prostanoid receptor was expressed stably in HEK 293 cells. This bound [3H]iloprost with high affinity and stimulated cAMP production when exposed to agonist.
Iloprost
produced weak stimulation of GTPase activity and [35S]guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate binding in membranes of these cells. Pretreatment of cells with
pertussis
toxin did not modify iloprost-mediated stimulation, but this was blocked by cholera toxin. The effects of iloprost were not increased by coexpression of either Gsalpha or Gi1alpha. In contrast, coexpression of a chimeric G protein alpha subunit in which the carboxyl-terminal six amino acids of Gi1alpha were altered to those of Gsalpha resulted in robust stimulation by iloprost. Because the chimeric G protein alpha subunit (Gi1/Gs6alpha) is not a substrate for either
pertussis
or cholera toxin, pretreatment of cells coexpressing the IP prostanoid receptor and Gi1/Gs6alpha with a mixture of these toxins resulted in resolution of the signal derived from activation of the chimeric G protein. Agonist-stimulated [35S]guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate binding and GTPase activity assays are the most commonly used strategies to examine interactions between G protein-coupled receptors and G proteins. These usually are not appropriate for receptors such as the IP prostanoid receptor that interact with G proteins with low rates of guanine nucleotide exchange and hydrolysis. Chimeric G proteins such as Gi1/Gs6alpha that allow appropriate receptor contacts to be converted to the higher nucleotide turnover rates typical of the Gi family G proteins can overcome this and offer a novel means to examine agonist function at such receptors.
...
PMID:Selective activation of a chimeric Gi1/Gs G protein alpha subunit by the human IP prostanoid receptor: analysis using agonist stimulation of high affinity GTPase activity and [35S]guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate binding. 968 65
Direct measures of G-protein activation based on guanine nucleotide exchange and hydrolysis are frequently impossible to monitor for receptors which interact predominantly with G(s)alpha. An isolated FLAG (Asp-Tyr-Lys-Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys)-epitope-tagged human IP prostanoid receptor and fusion proteins generated between this form of the receptor and the alpha subunits of its cognate G-protein G(s), G(i1), a G-protein which it fails to activate in co-expression studies, and a chimaeric G(i1)-G(s)6 (a form of G(i1) in which the C-terminal six amino acids were replaced with the equivalent sequence of G(s)) were stably expressed in HEK293 cells. These were detected by [(3)H]ligand-binding studies and by immunoblotting with both an anti-FLAG antibody and with appropriate antisera to the G-proteins. Each construct displayed similar affinity to bind the agonist iloprost.
Iloprost
stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in clones expressing both IP prostanoid receptor and the IP prostanoid receptor-G(s)alpha fusion protein, and both constructs were shown to interact with and activate endogenously expressed G(s)alpha. Addition of iloprost to membranes of cells expressing the isolated receptor resulted in a small stimulation of high-affinity GTPase activity.
Iloprost
produced no stimulation of GTPase activity which could be attributed to the IP prostanoid receptor-G(i1)alpha fusion. However, the fusion proteins containing either G(s)alpha or G(i1)-G(s)6alpha produced substantially greater stimulation of GTPase activity than the isolated IP prostanoid receptor. Treatment of cells expressing the IP prostanoid receptor-G(i1)-G(s)6alpha fusion protein with a combination of cholera and
pertussis
toxins allowed direct measurement of agonist activation of the receptor-linked G-protein. Normalization of such results for levels of expression of the IP prostanoid receptor constructs demonstrated a 5-fold higher stimulation of GTPase activity when using the G(s)alpha-containing fusion protein and a 9-fold improvement when using the fusion protein containing G(i1)-G(s)6alpha to detect G-protein activation compared with expression of the isolated receptor.
...
PMID:Analysis of agonist function at fusion proteins between the IP prostanoid receptor and cognate, unnatural and chimaeric G-proteins. 1045 34