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)

PC-3 human prostatic tumor sublines have been previously isolated which exhibit striking differences in their invasive and metastatic phenotypes. This work has been extended here to measure and compare the levels of kinesin, a microtubule-dependent translocator molecule, in the PC-3 sublines. Western blots, slot blots, radiolabeling, and immunoprecipitation analysis showed that kinesin was expressed in the highly invasive and metastatic sublines at levels which were elevated above the base-line levels observed in the parent PC-3 cells. In comparison, kinesin was not expressed in detectable amounts in the noninvasive cell lines. The conditioned medium of the metastatic PC-3 sublines contained a heat- and trypsin-sensitive protein which exhibited a dosage-dependent capacity to stimulate increased kinesin expression, type IV collagenase secretion, and invasion of Matrigel by the metastatic sublines. The noninvasive sublines failed to secrete a similar stimulatory factor(s) or respond to the conditioned medium of metastatic sublines. Various growth factors and cytokines tested (platelet-derived growth factor, epidermal growth factor, insulin-like growth factor, formylmethionineleucinephenylalanine) had no significant effect on either kinesin expression or protease secretion and invasion. Pertussis toxin blocked the stimulatory effects of the conditioned medium, but other agents known to interfere with adenylate cyclase pathways (i.e., cholera toxin, forskolin, 8-bromoadenosine) failed to block stimulation. The data show for the first time that kinesin, protease secretion, and the resulting invasion process may be regulated in a coordinated manner by an autocrine factor(s) which activates G-protein-dependent processes.
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PMID:Regulation of kinesin expression and type IV collagenase secretion in invasive human prostate PC-3 tumor sublines. 165 72

Treatment of rat hepatocytes with epidermal growth factor (EGF) produced an enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGF receptor and phospholipase C-gamma (PLC-gamma) in conjunction with the mobilization of Ca2+. Approximately 30% of the total PLC-gamma was tyrosine-phosphorylated with a maximum being reached after 30 s of incubation with EGF. Pretreatment of the rats with pertussis toxin prior to isolation of the hepatocytes blocked EGF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-gamma and Ca2+ mobilization but had no effect on autophosphorylation of the EGF receptor or Ca2+ responses elicited by angiotensin II or phenylephrine. Under these conditions Gi protein alpha subunits were fully ADP-ribosylated. A 41-kDa Gi protein alpha subunit was found to be present in the anti-PLC-gamma immune complex after EGF stimulation as shown by in vitro ADP-ribosylation using [32P]NAD+ and activated pertussis toxin. The kinetics of association between PLC-gamma with Gi alpha protein reached a maximum after 1 min of incubation with EGF. Antibodies specific for the EGF receptor also coimmunoprecipitated a Gi protein alpha subunit. Treatment of hepatocytes with EGF caused first an increase and then a decrease in the amount of Gi protein alpha subunit associated with the EGF receptor. In contrast, studies with cultured rat liver (WB) cells, a cell line in which EGF stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis is not inhibited by pertussis toxin, showed that a stable complex of Gi alpha was not formed with either PLC-gamma or EGF receptor immunoprecipitates. These results indicate that a pertussis toxin-sensitive Gi protein is uniquely involved in the signal transduction pathway mediating EGF-induced activation of PLC-gamma and Ca2+ mobilization in hepatocytes.
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PMID:Pertussis toxin-sensitive Gi protein involvement in epidermal growth factor-induced activation of phospholipase C-gamma in rat hepatocytes. 165 96

Injection of rats with a single dose of epidermal growth factor (EGF) or isoproterenol increased parotid gland acinar cell levels of cyclic AMP (cAMP) significantly above control basal concentrations (34, 177 and 11.5 pmol/g tissue/100 g body weight, respectively). Following a chronic regimen of isoproterenol (3 days), EGF, bovine galactosyltransferase (Gal Tase, EC 2.4.1.22) and isoproterenol increased cAMP levels, albeit to a lower level than observed for the single dose (21, 17 and 51 pmol, respectively). Using isolated parotid gland membranes, EGF and bovine galactosyltransferase also stimulated adenylate cyclase (EC 2.7.4.3) activity in a concentration-dependent manner. Introduction of the beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol blocked isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and cAMP accumulation, but not that observed with EGF or the transferase treatment. Growth factor-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity required the presence of the guanosine triphosphate (GTP) analogue, guanyl-5'-imidodiphosphate (p[NH]ppG), while cAMP accumulation could additionally be blocked by introducing the GDP analog, guanosine 5'[beta-thio]diphosphate (GDP[S]). The ability of EGF to activate adenylate cyclase was not affected by pretreatment of acinar cell membranes with pertussis toxin, whereas pretreatment with cholera toxin eliminated EGF-stimulated cyclase activity. The experimental results presented here expand to the parotid gland our knowledge of the ability of EGF to stimulate the cAMP second messenger signalling pathway via a G-binding regulatory protein, by a mechanism independent of beta-adrenergic receptor activation.
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PMID:Epidermal growth factor activation of rat parotid gland adenylate cyclase and mediation by a GTP-binding regulatory protein. 166 11

Endothelin is a novel peptide secreted by endothelial cells, the vasoconstrictor effects of which appear dependent on the activation of phospholipase C. We examined in tissue culture its potential as a growth factor for vascular smooth muscle. In quiescent cultures of rat aortic smooth muscle cells, endothelin rapidly elevated levels of c-fos and c-myc mRNA. Peak effects on c-fos mRNA occurred between 15 and 30 min and were completely gone after 2 h. The elevation in c-fos mRNA was, in part, dependent on protein kinase C, since phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) also elevated c-fos mRNA and further increased c-fos mRNA expression by endothelin, but the effects were not additive. Furthermore, the endothelin-induced elevation in c-fos mRNA was attenuated but not abolished in protein kinase C-depleted cells. Maximum levels of c-myc mRNA occurred between 15 and 30 min after exposing the cells to endothelin and persisted for at least 6 h. The effects of simultaneous addition of endothelin and PMA on c-myc mRNA levels were essentially similar to those observed with c-fos mRNA. [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA occurred 8 h after exposing the cells to endothelin. The mitogenic effect of endothelin was smaller than that observed with either fetal calf serum or epidermal growth factor and was dependent on both pertussis toxin-insensitive and -sensitive pathways. Sensitivity to the latter pathway did not appear dependent on attenuation of phospholipase C activity, since neither peak intracellular calcium concentrations nor c-fos mRNA levels were reduced in pertussis toxin-treated cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Growth factor activity of endothelin on vascular smooth muscle. 169 May 14

Several cAMP-elevating agents such as cholera toxin (CT), forskolin and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) exhibited weak mitogenic activity on bovine undifferentiated mammary epithelial cells in three-dimensional collagen culture. CT and IBMX strongly synergized with epidermal growth factor (EGF), insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) or both, but not with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS). Permeable cAMP analogs also synergized with IGF-I. Other hormones such as ovine prolactin, bovine growth hormone, estrogen or progesterone were not mitogenic and not synergistic with EGF, IGF-I, CT and FCS. Pertussis toxin (PT) reduced the DNA synthesis in cells cultured in the basal medium and attenuated 40-90% of the mitogenic activity stimulated by 10% FCS. PT inhibition of DNA synthesis was accompanied by ADP-ribosylation of 40 kDa and 41 kDa membrane proteins. The 41 kDa protein cross-reacted with antibodies that recognize the Gi-protein of the adenylate cyclase system, indicating the involvement of the latter in the mitogenic process. The nature of the second protein remains unknown. The present results suggest that the mitogenesis of normal mammary epithelial cells which is stimulated by IGF-I, EGF and other factors found in FCS is mediated through both cAMP-dependent and independent pathways. These pathways include PT-sensitive GTP-binding proteins.
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PMID:Proliferation of bovine undifferentiated mammary epithelial cells in vitro is modulated by G-proteins. 169 21

We have shown previously that exposure of a non-transformed continuous line of rat liver epithelial (WB) cells to epidermal growth factor (EGF), adrenaline, angiotensin II or [Arg8]vasopressin results in an accumulation of the inositol phosphates InsP1, InsP2 and InsP3 [Hepler, Earp & Harden (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7610-7619]. Studies were carried out with WB cells to determine whether the EGF receptor and other, non-tyrosine kinase, hormone receptors stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis by common, overlapping or separate pathways. The time courses for accumulation of inositol phosphates in response to angiotensin II and EGF were markedly different. Whereas angiotensin II stimulated a very rapid accumulation of inositol phosphates (maximal by 30 s), increases in the levels of inositol phosphates in response to EGF were measurable only following a 30 s lag period; maximal levels were attained by 7-8 min. Chelation of extracellular Ca2+ with EGTA did not modify this relative difference between angiotensin II and EGF in the time required to attain maximal phospholipase C activation. Under experimental conditions in which agonist-induced desensitization no longer occurred in these cells, the inositol phosphate responses to EGF and angiotensin II were additive, whereas those to angiotensin II and [Arg8]vasopressin were not additive. In crude WB lysates, angiotensin II, [Arg8]vasopressin and adrenaline each stimulated inositol phosphate formation in a guanine-nucleotide-dependent manner. In contrast, EGF failed to stimulate inositol phosphate formation in WB lysates in the presence or absence of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]), even though EGF retained the capacity to bind to and stimulate tyrosine phosphorylation of its own receptor. Pertussis toxin, at concentrations that fully ADP-ribosylate and functionally inactivate the inhibitory guanine-nucleotide regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase (Gi), had no effect on the capacity of EGF or hormones to stimulate inositol phosphate accumulation. In intact WB cells, the capacity of EGF, but not angiotensin II, to stimulate inositol phosphate accumulation was correlated with its capacity to stimulate tyrosine phosphorylation of the 148 kDa isoenzyme of phospholipase C. Taken together, these findings suggest that, whereas angiotensin II, [Arg8]vasopressin and alpha 1-adrenergic receptors are linked to activation of one or more phospholipase(s) C by an unidentified G-protein(s), the EGF receptor stimulates phosphoinositide hydrolysis by a different pathway, perhaps as a result of its capacity to stimulate tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase C-gamma.
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PMID:Evidence that the epidermal growth factor receptor and non-tyrosine kinase hormone receptors stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis by independent pathways. 169 55

In the present study we demonstrate that a murine proximal tubular cell line (MCT cells), expressing angiotensin II (ANG II) receptors [dissociation constant (Kd) = 0.89 nM; receptor density (R0) = 46,900 receptors/cell] in culture, can be induced to hypertrophy after the daily addition of exogenous ANG II (10(-8) M). This hypertrophic response was characterized by an increase in total cellular protein content, by an enhancement of [3H]leucine incorporation into precipitable proteins, and by an augmentation in cell size by cytofluorography. This ANG II effect producing MCT cell enlargement was demonstrable in the absence of cellular proliferation. Proliferation of MCT cells, however, could be induced by epidermal growth factor (EGF) or platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), and pretreatment of rested MCT cells with ANG II further enhanced EGF-induced cell division. ANG II-induced hypertrophy in MCT cells was factor specific, in that it could be blocked with saralasin, and not induced by angiotensin I (ANG I). This hypertrophic response was also independent of prostaglandin E2 synthesis but was transducible by pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins and involved, to some extent, the activation of Na(+)-H+ exchange. ANG II, as well as EGF and/or PDGF, moreover, could induce the cellular oncogenes c-fos, c-myc, c-N-ras, but not c-cis, which suggests that early gene activation is probably not a specific prerequisite for hypertrophy. Our findings demonstrate that ANG II, in culture, can be a single-factor event capable of inducing hypertrophy in proximal tubular cells.
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PMID:Angiotensin II induces cellular hypertrophy in cultured murine proximal tubular cells. 170 Jun 29

Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase is a 42-kDa serine/threonine-specific protein kinase that requires phosphorylation on both tyrosine and threonine residues for activity. This enzyme is rapidly and transiently activated in quiescent cells after addition of various agonists, including insulin, epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, and phorbol esters. We show here that addition of the growth factors thrombin or basic fibroblast growth factor to CCL39 fibroblasts rapidly induces tyrosine phosphorylation of the p42 MAP kinase protein and concomitantly stimulates MAP kinase enzymatic activity. To elucidate the signaling pathways utilized in this activation, we took advantage of the sensitivity of CCL39 cells to the toxin of bordetella pertussis, which ADP-ribosylates two Gi proteins in this cell system. We show that pretreatment of cells with the toxin inhibited thrombin stimulation of MAP kinase by greater than 75% but had no detectable effect on the stimulation induced by basic fibroblast growth factor. We also demonstrate that these two growth factors that synergize for mitogenicity are able to cooperate in activation of MAP kinase and that this synergism is partially sensitive to pertussis toxin. Finally, we describe a 44-kDa protein, the tyrosine phosphorylation of which appears to be coregulated with p42 MAP kinase. We conclude that p42 MAP kinase (and the pp44 protein) are at or are downstream from a point of convergence of two different receptor-induced signaling pathways and might well play a key role in integrating those signals.
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PMID:p42/mitogen-activated protein kinase as a converging target for different growth factor signaling pathways: use of pertussis toxin as a discrimination factor. 177 7

The phospholipase C-mediated hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine has been shown recently to be activated by a number of agonists. Muscarinic receptors, which trigger various signal transduction mechanisms including inhibition of adenylate cyclase through Gi, have been shown to be potent stimulants of this novel phospholipid degradative pathway. We demonstrate here, by exogenous addition of Bacillus cereus phosphatidylcholine-hydrolyzing phospholipase C, that phosphatidylcholine breakdown mimics the ability of carbachol to inhibit adenylate cyclase. This effect is sensitive to pertussis toxin and is entirely dependent on the presence of protein kinase C. This kinase is also required for the inhibition by carbachol of adenylate cyclase. These results suggest that the activation of phosphatidylcholine breakdown by phospholipase C may play an important role linking or favoring the coupling muscarinic receptors to Gi. Results presented here also show that phospholipase C-mediated hydrolysis of phosphoinositides by exogenous addition of Bacillus thuringiensis phosphoinositide-hydrolyzing phospholipase C does not affect adenylate cyclase, despite the fact that protein kinase C is translocated to an extent similar to that produced by the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine. According to the results shown here, both phospholipases also differ in their ability to down-regulate protein kinase C as well as to phosphorylate p80 and to transmodulate the binding of epidermal growth factor, two well established effects of protein kinase C in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. This emphasizes the complexity, from a functional point of view, of protein kinase C activation "in vivo."
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PMID:Mechanism of inhibition of adenylate cyclase by phospholipase C-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine. Involvement of a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein and protein kinase C. 184 88

Mast cells appear to promote fibroblast proliferation, presumably through secretion of growth factors, although the molecular mechanisms underlying this mitogenic potential have not been explained fully by known mast cell-derived mediators. We report here that tryptase, a trypsin-like serine proteinase of mast cell secretory granules, is a potent mitogen for fibroblasts in vitro. Nanomolar concentrations of dog tryptase strongly stimulate thymidine incorporation in Chinese hamster lung and Rat-1 fibroblasts and increase cell density in both subconfluent and confluent cultures of these cell lines. Tryptase-induced cell proliferation appears proteinase-specific, as this response is not mimicked by pancreatic trypsin or mast cell chymase. In addition, low levels of tryptase markedly potentiate DNA synthesis stimulated by epidermal growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor, or insulin. Inhibitors of catalytic activity decrease the mitogenic capacity of tryptase, suggesting, though not proving, the participation of the catalytic site in cell activation by tryptase. Differences in Ca++ mobilization and sensitivity to pertussis toxin suggest that tryptase and thrombin activate distinct signal transduction pathways in fibroblasts. These data implicate mast cell tryptase as a potent, previously unrecognized fibroblast growth factor, and may provide a molecular link between mast cell activation and fibrosis.
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PMID:Mast cell tryptase is a mitogen for cultured fibroblasts. 186 60


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