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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
The mitogenic effect of extracellular ATP on porcine aortic smooth muscle cells (SMC) was examined. Stimulation of [3H]thymidine incorporation by ATP was dose-dependent; the maximal effect was obtained at 100 microM. ATP acted synergistically with insulin, IGF-1,
EGF
, PDGF, and various other mitogens. Incorporation of [3H]thymidine was correlated with the fraction of [3H]thymidine-labeled nuclei and changes in cell counts. The stimulation of proliferation was also determined by measurement of cellular DNA using bisbenzamide and by following the increase of mitochondrial dehydrogenase protein. The effect of ATP was not due to hydrolysis to adenosine, which shows synergism with ATP. ATP acted as a competence factor. The mitogenic effect of ATP, but not adenosine, was further increased by lysophosphatidate, phosphatidic acid, or norepinephrine. The inhibitor of adenosine deaminase, EHNA, stimulated the effect of adenosine but not ATP. The adenosine receptor antagonist theophylline depressed adenosine-induced mitogenesis. ADP and the non-hydrolyzable analogue adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate (AMP-PNP) were equally mitogenic. Thus extracellular ATP stimulated mitogenesis of SMC via P2Y purinoceptors. The mechanism of ATP acting as a mitogen in SMC was further explored. Extracellular ATP stimulated the release of [3H]arachidonic acid (AA) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) into the medium, and enhanced cAMP accumulation in a dose-dependent fashion similar to ATP-induced [3H]thymidine incorporation. Inhibitors of the arachidonic acid metabolism pathway, quinacrine and indomethacin, partially inhibited the mitogenic effect of ATP but not of adenosine.
Pertussis
toxin inhibited ATP-stimulated DNA synthesis, AA release, PGE2 formation, and cAMP accumulation. Down-regulation of protein kinase C (PKC) by long-term exposure to phorbol dibutyrate (PDBu) partially prevented stimulation of DNA synthesis and activation of the AA pathway by ATP. The PKC inhibitor, staurosporine, antagonized mitogenesis stimulated by ATP. No synergistic effect was found when PDBu and ATP were added together. Therefore, a dual mechanism, including both arachidonic acid metabolism and PKC, is involved in ATP-mediated mitogenesis in SMC. In addition, ATP acted synergistically with angiotensin II, phospholipase C, serotonin, or carbachol to stimulate DNA synthesis. Finally, the possible physiological significance of ATP as a mitogen in SMC was further studied. The effect of endothelin and heparin, which are released from endothelial cells, on ATP-dependent mitogenesis was investigated. Extracellular ATP acted synergistically with endothelin to stimulate a greater extent of [3H]thymidine incorporation than was seen with PDGF plus endothelin. Heparin, believed to have a regulatory role, partially inhibited the stimulation of DNA synthesis caused both by ATP and PDGF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Extracellular ATP and ADP stimulate proliferation of porcine aortic smooth muscle cells. 135 98
Human renal glomerular epithelial cells possess membrane urokinase receptors. Addition of purified active urokinase to these cells in serum free minimum medium induced a dose-dependent increase in 3H-thymidine incorporation and a doubling of cell number after 48 hours of incubation. Both receptor occupancy and enzymatic activity of u-PA were required to stimulate cell proliferation. This effect was inhibited by down regulation of protein kinase C (PKC) or by H7, an inhibitor of PKC. It involved a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive pathway. This effect of urokinase was additive with
EGF
but not with thrombin growth factor activity and was not inhibited by aprotinin, an inhibitor of plasmin.
...
PMID:Growth factor-like effect of urokinase type plasminogen activator in human renal cells. 164 44
The muscle regulatory protein myogenin accumulates in differentiating muscle cells when the culture medium is depleted for serum. To investigate the regulation of myogenin gene expression, we have isolated and characterized the Myf4 gene which encodes the human homologue of murine myogenin. Serum components, basic FGF (b-FGF), transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), and
EGF
, agents which suppress differentiation of muscle cells in vitro, down-regulate the activity of the Myf4 gene, suggesting that it constitutes a nuclear target for the negative control exerted by these factors. The 5' upstream region containing the Myf4 promoter confers activity to a CAT reporter plasmid in C2C12 myotubes but not in fibroblasts and undifferentiated myoblasts. Unidirectional 5' deletions of the promoter sequence reveal that integral of 200 nucleotides upstream of the transcriptional start site are sufficient for cell type-specific expression. The forced expression of the muscle determining factors, MyoD1, Myf5, and Myf6 and to a lesser degree Myf4, results in the transactivation of the Myf4 promoter in C3H mouse 10T1/2 fibroblasts. Pathways potentially involved in conveying signals from the cell-surface receptors to the Myf4 gene were probed with
pertussis
- and cholera toxin, forskolin, and cAMP. Dibutyryl-cAMP and compounds that stimulate adenylate cyclase inhibit the endogenous Myf4 gene and the Myf4 promoter in CAT and LacZ reporter constructs. Conversely,
pertussis
toxin which modifies Gi protein stimulates Myf4 gene expression. In summary, our data provide evidence that the muscle-specific expression of the Myf4 gene is subject to negative control by serum components, growth factors and a cAMP-dependent intracellular mechanism. Positive control is exerted by a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive pathway that presumably involves G proteins.
...
PMID:Transcription of the muscle regulatory gene Myf4 is regulated by serum components, peptide growth factors and signaling pathways involving G proteins. 165 74
Induction of mitosis by certain growth factors is inhibited by
pertussis
toxin, indicating that the GTP-binding protein, Gi, is involved in receptor signal transduction to initiate cell division. However, the substrates of receptor-activated Gi that are involved in mitosis have not been determined. The present study has examined whether Gi may directly modulate cell division by receptor-induced subcellular translocation of the alpha subunit of Gi (Gi alpha). Insulin and
EGF
, particularly when added together or in combination with phorbol dibutyrate (PdBu), induced a rapid (1-4 h) redistribution of Gi alpha from the plasma membrane to perinuclear sites in the cell. After 2 days of stimulation, Gi alpha had translocated into the nucleus of dividing cells and bound specifically to the separating chromatin of dividing nuclei. Unstimulated cells did not display translocation of Gi alpha. This demonstrates a direct involvement of Gi alpha in cell division, which provides an apparently uninterrupted link from growth factor receptor to nucleus.
...
PMID:Growth factor-induced cell division is paralleled by translocation of Gi alpha to the nucleus. 190 Jul 94
Bovine mammary undifferentiated epithelial cells from young female calves, cultured in three-dimensional collagen gels in serum-free medium exhibited ultrastructural organization that resembled the in vivo situation. Extracts of bovine pituitary, kidney, uterus and mammary gland, stimulated cell proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. This mitogenic activity strongly synergised with the existant growth factors (GFs) in FCS and with IGF-I, while the addition of
EGF
had only minor effect. No synergistic manifestation was found with cholera toxin but
pertussis
toxin inhibited the growth-promoting activity of all four extracts. Other experiments indicated that this mitogenic activity does not result from prolactin, growth hormone or fibroblast growth factor. The present and former results, in which synergism between IGF-I and cholera toxin was demonstrated, suggest therefore, that the mitogenesis of normal mammary epithelial cells regulated by several tissue derived growth factors, consists of at least two pathways which are distinct from those activated by
EGF
and IGF-I. One of these pathways indicates involvement of
pertussis
toxin-sensitive GTP-binding proteins, and the other, activation of cholera toxin-sensitive adenylate cyclase.
...
PMID:Bovine pituitary, kidney, uterine and mammary gland extracts contain bovine mammary epithelium growth factors that synergise with IGF-I and fetal calf serum: indication for involvement of GTP-binding proteins. 190 89
The contribution of the GTP-binding protein, Gi, to
EGF
, phorbol dibutyrate (PdBu)-, and insulin-stimulated DNA synthesis was examined in BALB/c3T3 cells.
Pertussis
toxin inhibited DNA synthesis by each agonist, particularly at suboptimal agonist concentrations, but the inhibition could be partially overcome with higher agonist concentrations and combinations of these agonists. This suggested that (1) some, but not all, of the mitogenic signals for all three agonists were transduced by Gi (2) Gi may be activated by post-receptor mechanisms involving protein kinase C. Gi alpha-specific antibodies and ADP-ribosylation by
pertussis
toxin using 32P-NAD each labelled a single protein band, representing one or more species of Gi alpha.
Pertussis
toxin treatment increased the synthesis of Gi alpha. These results are discussed in relation to possible direct effects of Gi alpha on nuclear control during division.
...
PMID:Pertussis toxin inhibits EGF-, phorbol ester- and insulin-stimulated DNA synthesis in BALB/c3T3 cells: evidence for post-receptor activation of Gi alpha. 210 75
The human CSF-1 receptor (c-fms protooncogene product) was introduced into CSF-1-unresponsive Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (CCL39 cell line) in order to study its coupling to biochemical signal-transducing systems and to compare the growth-regulating properties of CSF-1 to those of other growth factors. Independent clones expressing different levels of CSF-1 receptors were isolated and characterized. CSF-1 increased [3H]thymidine incorporation in serum-starved cells and potentiated the mitogenic effects of FGF and thrombin. As already observed for other growth factors activating receptor tyrosine kinases (
EGF
, FGF, IGF-I), CSF-1 alone did not trigger inositol phosphate formation, but slightly enhanced the activity of phospholipase C agonists (thrombin, A1F4- complex). Activation of the CSF-1 receptor by its ligand was evidenced by the rapid activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger resulting in amiloride-sensitive cytoplasmic alkalinization (0.1-0.2 pH units) within minutes after stimulation. Whereas
pertussis
toxin does not affect the action of
EGF
, FGF, or IGF-I in CCL39 cells, it partially inhibited both DNA synthesis reinitiation and activation of Na+/H+ exchange by CSF-1, indicating that the CSF-1 receptor can communicate with a signal-transducing GTP binding protein. A point-mutated form of the c-fms gene product, in which Tyr 969, a residue negatively modulating signal transduction, had been replaced with Phe [fms (F969)], did not generate responses significantly different from those obtained with the wild-type c-fms gene product. In the absence of CSF-1, cells expressing either wild-type or fms (F969) showed a considerably higher basal level of thymidine incorporation and decreased anchorage dependence compared with parental CCL39 cells. Monoclonal antibodies that interfere with signal transduction by the human CSF-1 receptor inhibited both basal [3H]thymidine incorporation and soft agar colony formation, indicating that relaxation of growth control was dependent on CSF-1 receptor expression.
...
PMID:Functional expression of the human receptor for colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) in hamster fibroblasts: CSF-1 stimulates Na+/H+ exchange and DNA-synthesis in the absence of phosphoinositide breakdown. 215 62
Acute spontaneous c-myc gene expression and sustained increase of a GTP-binding protein(s) (G-protein) which is sensitive to islet-activating protein (IAP),
pertussis
toxin, occurred early during primary culture of adult rat hepatocytes. Following these earlier events, DNA synthesis was demonstrated in response to
EGF
and insulin. Addition of IAP immediately after plating of primary cultures inhibited c-myc expression and the hormone-induced DNA synthesis. Addition at 24 h or later following cell inoculation, however, produced only weak effects on DNA synthesis, even though the IAP-sensitive G-proteins were completely inactivated. We conclude that the IAP-sensitive G-protein(s) plays a role in the earlier process(es) of the G0-G1 transition, which is essential for the initiation of growth factor-dependent DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:A pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein plays a role in the G0-G1 transition of rat hepatocytes following establishment in primary culture. 249 69
In isolated perfused rat hearts, epidermal growth factor (
EGF
; 15 nM) increased cellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) content by 9.5-fold. In rat cardiac membranes,
EGF
also stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in a dose-dependent manner, with maximal stimulation (35% above control) being observed at 10 nM-
EGF
. Half-maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase was observed at 40 pM-
EGF
. Although the beta-adrenergic-receptor antagonist propranolol markedly attenuated the isoprenaline-mediated increase in cAMP content of perfused hearts and stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity, it did not alter the ability of
EGF
to elevate tissue cAMP content and stimulate adenylate cyclase. The involvement of a guanine-nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein) in the activation of adenylate cyclase by
EGF
was indicated by the following evidence. First, the
EGF
-mediated stimulation of adenylate cyclase required the presence of the non-hydrolysable GTP analogue, guanyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate (p[NH]ppG). Maximal stimulation was observed in the presence of 10 microM-p[NH]ppG. Secondly, in the presence of 10 microM-p[NH]ppG, the stable GDP analogue guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate at a concentration of 10 microM blocked the stimulation of the adenylate cyclase by 1 nM- and 10 nM-
EGF
. Third, NaF + AlCl3-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was not altered by
EGF
. The ability of
EGF
to stimulate adenylate cyclase was not affected by
pertussis
-toxin treatment of cardiac membranes. However, in cholera-toxin-treated cardiac membranes, when the adenylate cyclase activity was stimulated by 2-fold,
EGF
was ineffective. Finally, PMA by itself did not alter the activity of cardiac adenylate cyclase, but abolished the
EGF
-mediated stimulation of this enzyme activity. The experimental evidence in the present paper demonstrates, for the first time, that
EGF
stimulates adenylate cyclase in rat cardiac membranes through a stimulatory GTP-binding regulatory protein, and this effect is manifested in elevated cellular cAMP levels in perfused hearts exposed to
EGF
.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor stimulates rat cardiac adenylate cyclase through a GTP-binding regulatory protein. 251 10
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