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)

Activation of guinea pig hepatocyte alpha 1-adrenoceptors increases phosphatidylinositol (PI) labeling, [3H]inositol phosphate production and phosphorylase activity. These adrenergic actions were not altered by pretreatment with chlorethylclonidine but were blocked by 5-methyl urapidil and prazosin (the former being 3- to 10-fold more potent than the latter), indicating that alpha 1A-adrenoceptors were involved. When the cells were incubated in buffer without calcium and containing EGTA, the alpha 1A-adrenergic stimulation of PI labeling was diminished but not abolished and that of phosphorylase was not affected. The alpha 1A-adrenergic effects were insensitive to pertussis toxin treatment. Phorbol myristate acetate inhibited the alpha 1A-adrenergic actions, although at relatively large concentrations, and also those of other agents such as angiotensin II and NaF. Our data clearly indicate that guinea pig hepatocytes express alpha 1A-adrenoceptors whose activation stimulates phosphoinositide turnover, via a pertussis toxin-insensitive process; the alpha 1A-adrenergic effects were at least partially independent of extracellular calcium.
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PMID:Guinea pig hepatocyte alpha 1A-adrenoceptors: characterization, signal transduction and regulation. 136 11

In guinea pig hepatocytes, histamine increased phosphorylase activity and inositol phosphate production. Similar effects were obtained with 2-(2-aminoethyl)-thiazole, a histamine H1 receptor agonist, but not with dimaprit or impromidine, H2 receptor agonists. These effects of histamine were dose-dependently inhibited by the H1 antihistamines, (+)-chlorpheniramine and mepyramine (pyrilamine) but not by cimetidine or ranitidine, H2 antagonists. (+)-Chlorpheniramine and mepyramine had similar potencies (apparent Ki values approximately 3 nM) when incubated with the cells for 1 min (phosphorylase a assays) but the former was 15-20-fold more potent than the latter at longer incubation times (apparent Ki values approximately 3-4 nM and 45-90 nM, respectively) indicating that mepyramine is actively metabolized by guinea pig hepatocytes. Histamine increased cytosol calcium approximately 2-fold, an effect also mediated through H1 receptors. The actions of histamine were not affected by in vivo ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin. Our data clearly indicate that histamine modulates the metabolism of guinea pig hepatocytes via activation of H1 receptors. These receptors are coupled to the phosphoinositide turnover-calcium mobilization signalling pathway through a pertussis toxin-insensitive process.
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PMID:Histamine activates phosphorylase and inositol phosphate production in guinea pig hepatocytes. 147 55

The basis for the hypersensitive response of glycogen phosphorylase to epinephrine stimulation was investigated in adult rat cardiomyocytes isolated from normal and alloxan-diabetic animals. To assess potential G-protein involvement in the response, normal and diabetic derived myocytes were incubated with either cholera or pertussis toxin prior to hormonal stimulation. Pretreatment of cardiomyocytes with cholera toxin resulted in a potentiated response to epinephrine stimulation whereas pertussis toxin did not affect the activation of this signaling pathway. To determine if the enhanced response of phosphorylase activation resulted from an alteration in adenylate cyclase activation, the cells were challenged with forskolin. After 3 hr in primary culture, diabetic cardiomyocytes exhibited a hypersensitive response to forskolin stimulation relative to normal cells. However, after 24 hr in culture, both normal and diabetic myocytes responded identically to forskolin challenge. The present data suggest that a cholera toxin sensitive G-protein mediates the hypersensitive response of glycogen phosphorylase to catecholamine stimulation in diabetic cardiomyocytes and this response which is present in alloxan-diabetic cells and is induced in vitro in normal cardiomyocytes is primarily due to a defect at a post-receptor site.
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PMID:Post-receptor defect accounts for phosphorylase hypersensitivity in cultured diabetic cardiomyocytes. 148 Jan 65

Stimulation of P2-purinergic receptors by ATP resulted in activation of phosphorylase, which was associated with marked production of inositol trisphosphate (Ins-P3), in rat hepatocytes. ATP also inhibited forskolin-induced accumulation of cAMP in the presence of a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. On the contrary, adenosine or AMP never inhibited the cAMP accumulation, but increased hepatocyte cAMP; the stimulation was antagonized by a methylxanthine. Thus, P1-purinergic receptors are linked to adenylate cyclase in a stimulatory fashion in hepatocytes. Various kinds of purine nucleotides stimulating P2-receptors can be divided into two groups on the basis of their relative abilities to stimulate Ins-P3 production and to inhibit cAMP accumulation; the first group including adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (ATP gamma S), ADP, 5-adenylyl imidodiphosphate, GTP, and guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) has an efficacy similar to that of ATP, and the second group of nucleotides including alpha, beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate, beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate (App(CH)2)p), and GDP exerts considerable inhibitory effects on cAMP accumulation, but only slight effects on inositol lipid metabolism. Treatment of hepatocytes with islet-activating protein, pertussis toxin, blocked the nucleotide-induced inhibition of cAMP accumulation, but exerted only a small effect on Ins-P3 production. In membranes prepared from hepatocytes, forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase was inhibited by GTP. This GTP-induced inhibition of the enzyme was susceptible to islet-activating protein and dependent on the concentration of ATP (or its derivatives, ATP gamma S or App(CH2)p). It is concluded that there are two types of P2-purinergic receptors: one is linked to adenylate cyclase via an inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Gi) and the other is linked to phospholipase C.
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PMID:P2-purinergic receptors are coupled to two signal transduction systems leading to inhibition of cAMP generation and to production of inositol trisphosphate in rat hepatocytes. 244 92

Islet-activating protein (IAP, a Bordetella pertussis toxin) was employed to test the hypothesis that the inhibitory GTP-binding regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase (Ni) mediates GTP effects on the binding of Ca2+-mobilizing hormones to liver plasma membranes and is involved in calcium mobilization stimulated by these agonists. IAP added to normal liver plasma membranes catalyzed the incorporation of radioactivity from [32P]NAD into a 41,000-Da peptide (presumably the alpha-subunit of Ni). However, no such incorporation was observed in liver membranes prepared from rats 24 hr after intraperitoneal injection of IAP. Angiotensin II attenuated glucagon-stimulated increases in cAMP in hepatocytes prepared from control but not IAP-treated rats. In contrast, following IAP treatment, no changes were observed in the ability of glucagon, vasopressin, angiotensin II, or epinephrine to activate phosphorylase; nor did this treatment alter [3H]vasopressin binding or epinephrine displacement of [3H]prazosin binding. However, IAP treatment decreased [3H]angiotensin II binding affinity when studies were performed in the absence but not the presence of 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (GppNHp). This shift was small and represented only 5-8% of the shift in apparent Kd elicited by GppNHp in untreated membranes. In vitro studies with IAP confirmed the results of the radioligand binding studies using in vivo IAP treatment. The effects of NaCl on [3H]angiotensin II binding were also tested but were not typical of other receptors which couple to Ni. The data suggest that, although a small population of hepatic angiotensin II receptors couple to Ni and attenuate glucagon-stimulated increases in cAMP, vasopressin, alpha 1-adrenergic, and the majority of angiotensin II receptors do not interact significantly with Ni. Thus, although there is evidence that agonist-induced Ca2+ mobilization requires a GTP-binding regulatory protein, this protein does not appear to be Ni in rat liver.
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PMID:Effect of islet-activating pertussis toxin on the binding characteristics of Ca2+-mobilizing hormones and on agonist activation of phosphorylase in hepatocytes. 300 28

The ability of angiotensin II to down-regulate its receptor was tested on rat hepatocytes in primary culture for 4 h. Angiotensin II treatment decreased [3H]angiotensin II specific binding in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. The effect was maximum with 1 microM angiotensin II and after 2 h. There was a decrease in the maximum number of binding sites (56% of control) with no significant effect on the apparent dissociation constant. The down-regulation was blocked by the angiotensin II antagonist [Val4,Ile7]angiotensin III and was not induced by other hormones (e.g. vasopressin, norepinephrine, or glucagon) or by 4 beta-phorbol 12 beta-myristate 13 alpha-acetate or A23187 ionophore. The decrease in angiotensin II receptors resulted in correlated decreases in the potency of angiotensin II to activate phosphorylase or lower glucagon-induced cAMP accumulation. However, high concentrations of the agonist were still able to elicit maximal responses in both parameters. Down-regulation of the receptor was not dependent upon active Gi, since it was still observed after ADP-ribosylation and inactivation of Gi by pertussis toxin. The above results indicate that the down-regulation of the hepatic angiotensin II receptor induced by its agonist is homologous and does not involve Gi, Ca2+, or protein kinase C. The correlation of receptor loss with decreases in the potency of angiotensin to activate phosphorylase and inhibit glucagon-induced cAMP accumulation is consistent with the idea that a single receptor population regulates two different messengers, i.e. calcium and cAMP.
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PMID:Agonist-induced down-regulation of the angiotensin II receptor in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. 313 62

Treatment of isolated hepatocytes with F- produced a concentration-dependent activation of phosphorylase, efflux of Ca2+, rise in [Ca2+]i, increase in Ins 1,4,5-P3 levels, decrease in PI-4,5-P2 levels, and increase in DAG levels. The levels of intracellular cAMP were decreased by NaF. The effects of NaF were potentiated by AlCl3. This potentiation was abolished by the Al3+ chelator deferoxamine. These results illustrate that AlF4- can mimic the effects of Ca2+-mobilizing hormones in hepatocytes and suggest that the coupling of the receptors for these hormones to the hydrolysis of PI-4,5-P2 is through a guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein. This is because AlF4- is known to modulate the activity of other guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (Gi, Gs, and transducin). Calcium-sensitive inositide release in a purified rat liver plasma membrane preparation was increased by calcium-mobilizing hormones in the presence of guanine nucleotides. Vasopressin-stimulated inositide release was evident in the presence of GTP or GTP gamma S. The guanine nucleotide and hormonal stimulation was evident on both inositide production and PI 4,5-P2 degradation. Treatment of plasma membranes with cholera toxin or islet activating protein or prior injection of animals with islet activating protein did not affect stimulation of inositide release by GTP gamma S or GTP gamma S plus vasopressin. The results suggest that calcium-mobilizing hormones stimulate polyphosphoinositide breakdown in rat liver plasma membranes through a novel guanine nucleotide binding protein. The GTPase activity of rat liver plasma membranes was stimulated 20% by 10(-8) M vasopressin. The vasopressin-stimulated GTPase activity was not inhibited in plasma membranes that had been ADP-ribosylated with either cholera toxin or pertussis toxin. When membranes that had been solubilized after preincubation with [3H]vasopressin were subjected to sucrose gradient centrifugation, most of the protein-bound [3H]vasopressin migrated as a single band, also, there was a GTPase activity that migrated with the bound [3H]vasopressin. This peak of bound [3H]vasopressin was decreased 90% when the sucrose gradient centrifugation was run in the presence of 10 M GTP gamma S. Direct evidence that a GTP-binding protein was present in the [3H]vasopressin peak was obtained by the immuno-detection of a 35 kDa beta subunit of a GTP-binding protein and a 40 kDa alpha subunit. These results support the conclusion that liver plasma membranes contain a GTP-binding protein that can complex with the vasopressin receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins and inositol phosphates in the hormone induced mobilization of hepatocyte calcium. 314 79

1. In hepatocytes, epidermal growth factor (EFG) (a) increased the rate of 45Ca2+ exchange in cells incubated at 1.3 mM extracellular Ca2+, (b) increased the activity of glycogen phosphorylase a and the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration (measured with quin2) in a process dependent on the concentration of extracellular Ca2+, and (c) enhanced the increase in glycogen phosphorylase activity which follows the addition of Ca2+ to cells previously incubated in the absence of Ca2+. It is concluded that EGF stimulates plasma-membrane Ca2+ inflow. 2. The effects of the combination of EGF and vasopressin on the rate of 45Ca2+ exchange and on the rate of increase in glycogen phosphorylase activity were the same as those of vasopressin alone. 3. The amount of 45Ca2+ released by EGF from internal stores was about 30% of that released by vasopressin. No detectable increase in [3H]inositol mono-, bis- or tris-phosphate was observed after the addition of EGF to cells labelled with myo-[3H]inositol. 4. In hepatocytes isolated from rats treated with pertussis toxin, the effects of EGF and vasopressin on phosphorylase activity (measured at 1.3 mM-Ca2+) and on the rate of Ca2+ inflow (measured with quin2) were markedly decreased compared with those in normal cells. 5. Treatment with pertussis toxin did not impair the ability of vasopressin to release Ca2+ from internal stores, but decreased vasopressin-stimulated [3H]inositol polyphosphate formation by 50%. 6. It is concluded that the mechanism(s) by which vasopressin and EGF stimulate plasma-membrane Ca2+-inflow transporters in hepatocytes involves a GTP-binding regulatory protein sensitive to pertussis toxin, and does not require an increase in the concentration of inositol trisphosphate comparable with that which induces the release of Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum.
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PMID:Evidence that a pertussis-toxin-sensitive substrate is involved in the stimulation by epidermal growth factor and vasopressin of plasma-membrane Ca2+ inflow in hepatocytes. 350 16

Adrenergic mechanism for phosphorylase activation was gradually converted from an alpha 1- to a beta 2-type during primary culture of rat hepatocytes. beta 2-Receptor-mediated cAMP generation was also much greater in 8-h cultured cells than in fresh cells. Incubation of hepatocyte membranes with [alpha-32P]NAD and the preactivated A-protomer (an active component) of islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, resulted in the ADP-ribosylation of a specific IAP substrate protein (Mr = 41,000). This ADP-ribosylation diminished progressively when the membrane-donor hepatocytes had been cultured. The early diminution was interfered with by the addition of nicotinamide or isonicotinamide, a potent inhibitor of ADP-ribosyltransferase, to the culture medium. The decrease of the IAP substrate was well correlated with the potentiation of beta-adrenergic functions under various conditions of culture. beta-Receptor-mediated activation of GTP-dependent membrane adenylate cyclase was, but glucagon-induced activation was not enhanced by either prior culture of hepatocytes or prior exposure of membranes to the A-protomer of IAP. There was no further enhancement, however, when membranes from cultured cells were exposed to the active toxin. Thus, the IAP-susceptible inhibitory guanine nucleotide-regulatory protein is coupled to beta-adrenergic receptors in such a manner as to reduce the degree of activation of cyclase, and the decrease in this IAP substrate may be responsible, at least partly, for development of beta-receptor functions during culture of hepatocytes. Its possible relation to accompanying inhibition of alpha 1-receptor functions is discussed.
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PMID:Conversion of adrenergic mechanism from an alpha- to a beta-type during primary culture of rat hepatocytes. Accompanying decreases in the function of the inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory component of adenylate cyclase identified as the substrate of islet-activating protein. 609 73

Insect adipokinetic hormones (AKHs) have been shown to mobilize fat body carbohydrate by glycogen phosphorylase activation. In this study, the signal transduction pathways of AKH-I, -II and -III from the migratory locust are further elucidated. We show that the AKHs enhance fat body cAMP levels in vitro. For all hormones, maximal levels are reached after 1 min and correspond to a 200% increase compared to resting levels. Although cAMP levels induced by massive doses of AKH-I, -II and -III are equal, AKH-III is the most potent when applied in a physiological dose. This difference in potency also applies to glycogen phosphorylase activation. Cholera toxin (CTX) likewise ennhaces cAMP levels and phosphorylase activity, however pertussis toxin (PTX) has no effect. Increases induced by CTX and AKH are not additive, suggesting that they share the same pathway. Phosphorylase activation by the AKHs is strongly attenuated by guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S). These results demonstrate a role for cAMP in AKH signal transduction and indicate that the AKH receptor(s) are coupled to cAMP formation and glycogen phosphorylase activation via the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding protein (Gs).
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PMID:Stimulation of glycogenolysis by three locust adipokinetic hormones involves Gs and cAMP. 776 28


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