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)

Two G proteins that regulate phosphoinositide phospholipase C in liver plasma membranes have been purified to homogeneity in both the heterotrimeric and dissociated forms. The heterotrimers contain a 42 kDa or 43 kDa alpha subunit and a 35 kDa beta subunit. The alpha subunits are not ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin and are closely related immunologically to members of the recently identified Gq class of G proteins. The specific phosphoinositide phospholipase C isozyme that responds to the G proteins has been determined to the beta 1 isozyme. GTP analogues stimulate phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis in rat liver plasma membranes. The nucleotide specificity and Mg2+ dependency of the response indicate that it is mediated by a G protein. Phosphatidic acid, diacylglycerol, choline and phosphorylcholine are the products, indicating that both phospholipase D and C activities are involved. Activation of phospholipase D is also indicated by the enhanced production of phosphatidyl-ethanol in the presence of ethanol.
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PMID:Regulation of phosphoinositide and phosphatidylcholine phospholipases by G proteins. 132 81

All of the components of the neuropeptide vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) signal transduction system were underexpressed in rat prostatic membranes 6 weeks after streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Binding studies with [125I]VIP showed decreases of 86% and 62% in the binding capacity of the high and low affinity classes of VIP receptors in diabetes. Affinity labeling experiments indicated that the main form of VIP receptor was 51 kilodaltons in control rats and 45 kilodaltons in diabetic animals. The efficacy of VIP and forskolin in stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity as well as the potentiating effect of GTP on VIP action were also reduced in diabetes, as was the expression of the alpha-subunit of the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins Gs and Gi (studied by ADP ribosylation with cholera and pertussis toxins). Gi function was lost in diabetes, as assessed with experiments on guanyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate potentiation of forskolin activity. These disturbances together with previous findings argue for VIP playing a role in the diabetic neuropathy of the genitourinary tract.
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PMID:The effect of streptozotocin diabetes on the vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor/effector system in membranes from rat ventral prostate. 132 26

Coronary stenosis was induced in rats to determine whether chronic coronary artery constriction resulted in impairment of cardiac pump performance, alterations in alpha 1-adrenoreceptor signal transduction, and inadequate myocardial hypertrophy, and these parameters were examined 6 mo later. A 50% reduction in coronary diameter was associated with an elevation in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, whereas left ventricular peak systolic pressure, rate of pressure rise and decay were reduced. The hypertrophic response was modest, since statistically significant increases of 11% and 23% in left and right ventricular weights were measured. Radioligand binding documented an 18% and a 38% statistically significant reduction in alpha 1-adrenoreceptor density of the left and right myocardium, respectively. ADP ribosylation of the 41-kDa substrate by pertussis toxin showed a 16% significant decrease of this parameter in the left myocardium. Moreover, a 29% decrease in norepinephrine stimulated phosphoinositol turnover was seen in myocytes, and this change was statistically significant. The depressed generation of intracellular second messengers linked to the alpha 1-adrenoreceptors was found in conjunction with a 19% significant reduction in myocardial norepinephrine content. In conclusion, the long-term effects of coronary stenosis involve impaired transduction of adrenergic signals, which, in combination with constraints on myocardial growth, may participate in the onset of ventricular dysfunction in this model.
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PMID:Chronic coronary arterial stenosis impairs alpha 1-adrenoreceptor signaling and cardiac performance in rats. 132 38

1. Endothelin-1 (ET-1)-induced contraction of porcine coronary artery strips may be mediated via at least two intracellular signalling mechanisms, the activation of dihydropyridine-sensitive voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and the stimulation of phosphoinositide breakdown. Here we have investigated the possible involvement of pertussis toxin (PT)-sensitive guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP)-binding proteins (G-proteins) in ET-1-induced activation of these two signalling pathways in porcine coronary artery smooth muscle. 2. Increase in extracellular K+ concentration (10, 15 mM) shifted the dose-response relationship for the ET-1-induced contraction to the left. 3. The dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel blocker, nifedipine (10(-8) M), induced a rightward shift in the dose-response curve for ET-1. Pretreatment of the arterial strips with PT (0.1 microgram ml-1) induced a similar rightward shift of the ET-1 dose-response curve but not of the KCl response. Nifedipine (10(-8) M) did not further attenuate the ET-1-induced contraction in the PT-pretreated strips. 4. The pretreatment with PT significantly reduced 45Ca2+ uptake of the arterial strips stimulated by ET-1, but had no effect on ET-1-induced production of inositol phosphates. 5. The contractile response of the arterial strips to phorbol dibutyrate, an active phorbol ester, was not significantly affected by 10(-8) M nifedipine. 6. We confirmed that the pretreatment of the tissue with PT induced ADP-ribosylation of a 41 kDa membrane protein. 7. These findings indicate that activation of dihydropyridine-sensitive voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels by ET-1 in this tissue is mediated via a PT-sensitive G-protein in a manner apparently independent of the ET-1-induced activation of protein kinase C. It is concluded that the action of ET-1 in porcine coronary artery is mediated via two distinct signal transduction pathways, which are coupled to PT-sensitive and PT-insensitive GTP-binding proteins, respectively.
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PMID:A pertussis toxin-sensitive mechanism of endothelin action in porcine coronary artery smooth muscle. 133 Jan 78

In rabbit peritoneal neutrophils prelabeled with [3H] lyso platelet-activating factor, a protein kinase C inhibitor, staurosporine (> 1 microM), increased [3H]phosphatidylethanol ([3H]PEt) level in the presence of ethanol in a concentration- and time-dependent manner, providing evidence for staurosporine activation of phospholipase D (PLD). The staurosporine activation of the enzyme absolutely required both extracellular calcium and cytochalasin B, and was almost completely inhibited by pretreatment of the cells with pertussis toxin (IAP). In a reconstituted system where the purified Gi1 had been incorporated into phospholipid vesicles, staurosporine activated GTPase activity of Gi1 in a concentration-dependent fashion, with a maximal 4-5-fold effect. ADP-ribosylation by IAP of Gi1 in vesicles significantly suppressed the staurosporine activation. As with the GTPase activity of Gi1, GTPase activities of other purified IAP-sensitive G proteins, such as Gi2 and G(o), were significantly stimulated by staurosporine, but the cholera toxin substrate Gs was appreciably less sensitive to the staurosporine stimulation. The staurosporine activation of GTPase was also observed in rabbit neutrophil membranes from control cells, but not in membranes from IAP-treated neutrophils. From these results, we conclude that the staurosporine activation of PLD in rabbit neutrophils is attributed to the direct activation of an IAP-sensitive G protein in a similar manner to receptors occupied by agonists. By contrast, staurosporine failed to activate phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) under the conditions in which it activated PLD, indicating that there exists a PLD activation pathway independent of PI-PLC. Furthermore, it was found that N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase release from the granules of intact neutrophils was evoked by staurosporine to almost the same extent as by fMLP (100 nM), but O2- generation was not affected. These results suggest a possibility that PLD pathway plays an important role in enzyme release, but is not sufficient for O2- generation, in rabbit peritoneal neutrophils.
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PMID:A protein kinase C inhibitor, staurosporine, activates phospholipase D via a pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein in rabbit peritoneal neutrophils. 133 Oct 88

We have previously reported that platelet-activating factor (PAF) elevates cytosolic free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in fura-2-loaded glomerular mesangial cells. To confirm that this increase in [Ca2+]i is a result of receptor-mediated activation of phospholipase C, we investigated hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns-4,5-P2) in PAF-treated mesangial cells. PAF (10(-7) M) stimulated a rapid and transient formation of inositol trisphosphate. In concomitant experiments, PAF stimulated a biphasic accumulation of 3H-arachidonate-labeled 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG). The secondary elevation in DAG was coincident with a rise in 3H-phosphorylcholine (PC) and 3H-phosphorylethanolamine (PE) suggesting that PAF stimulates delayed phospholipase activities which hydrolyze alternate phospholipids besides the polyphosphoinositides. This PAF-stimulated elevation in 3H-water soluble phosphorylbases was seen at 5 min but not at 15 sec suggesting that the initial rise in DAG as well as the initial elevation in [Ca2+]i are due primarily to PtdIns-4,5-P2 hydrolysis. PAF also stimulated PGE2 as well as 3H-arachidonic acid and 3H-lyso phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) formation. We suggest that arachidonate released specifically from PtdCho via phospholipase A2 is a source of this PAF-elevated PGE2. It has been postulated that anti-inflammatory prostaglandins may antagonize the contractile and proinflammatory effects of PAF via activation of adenylate cyclase. Surprisingly, exogenous PAF reduced basal and receptor-mediated cAMP concentration indicating that PAF-stimulated transmembrane signaling pathways may oppose receptor-mediated activation of adenylyl cyclase. We have taken advantage of the different sensitivities of phospholipases A2 and C(s) to PMA, EGTA, and pertussis toxin to dissociate phospholipase A2 and C activities. Acute PMA-treatment enhanced PAF-stimulated PGE2 formation, reduced PAF-induced elevations in [Ca2+]i and had no effect upon PAF-stimulated 3H-PE. We have also demonstrated that phospholipase A2, but not PtdIns-specific phospholipase C, was sensitive to external calcium concentration. The role of a GTP-binding protein to couple PAF-receptors to the PtdIns-specific phospholipase C was confirmed as GTP gamma S synergistically elevated PAF-stimulated inositol phosphate formation. We also demonstrated that pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylates a single protein of an apparent 42 kD mass and that PAF pretreatment reduced subsequent ADP-ribosylation in a time-dependent manner. However, pertussis toxin had no effect upon phospholipase C-generated water soluble phosphorylbases or inositol phosphates. In contrast, PAF-stimulated phospholipase A2 and PAF-inhibited adenylyl cyclase activities were sensitive to pertussis toxin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Platelet-activating factor stimulates multiple signaling pathways in cultured rat mesangial cells. 133 Nov 21

Metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) is highly expressed in cerebellar Purkinje cells. The purpose of this study was pharmacological and immunocytochemical characterization of the mGluR in single cerebellar neurons, especially Purkinje cells. Ca2+ imaging with fura-2 in cultured cerebellar neurons, identified immunocytochemically, was used to record the direct effects of drugs in stable conditions. In addition, the expression of mGluR was examined, and expression of the intracellular receptor for inositol trisphosphate (IP3) produced by mGluR activation was studied immunocytochemically with specific antibodies. Purkinje neurons and some other neurons showed Ca(2+)-mobilizing responses to mGluR agonists. These responses were mediated by mGluR because they were not blocked by ionotropic GluR antagonists, were independent of the caffeine-sensitive Ca2+ pool, and were blocked by inhibitors of IP3-induced Ca2+ release. This is the first pharmacological characterization of mGluR at single Purkinje cells. The results differed as follows from those in earlier studies in which phosphoinositide turnover of the entire population of cerebellar cells was monitored: (1) the mGluR responses were not blocked by pertussis toxin or D,L-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid; (2) glutamate was a potent agonist, whereas L-aspartate was ineffective; and (3) the dose-response relationship showed an all-or-none tendency. The metaboltropic response of Purkinje cells changed markedly during development, with a sharp peak after day 4 of culture, whereas mGluR and IP3 receptor proteins increased steadily during maturation. This apparent desensitization of mGluR was not blocked by inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC) or ADP-ribosyltransferase. The metabotropic responses were mainly localized to the center of the somata of Purkinje cells even on day 4, whereas both receptor proteins were expressed throughout the cell. These results suggest that the function of mGluR is spatially and developmentally controlled by a posttranslational mechanism involving a mechanism other than phosphorylation by PKC or ADP-ribosylation.
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PMID:Pharmacological and immunocytochemical characterization of metabotropic glutamate receptors in cultured Purkinje cells. 133 61

Cultured endothelium derived from three microvascular fractions of human brain was used to characterize adrenergic receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase activity. Catecholamines (norepinephrine, epinephrine) and their analogs (isoproterenol, phenylephrine, 6-fluoronorepinephrine) dose-dependently stimulated endothelial production of cAMP. Antagonists for beta 1 and beta 2 receptors (propranolol, atenolol, and butoxamine) and for alpha 1-receptors (prazosin) dose-dependently blocked cAMP formation induced by the tested adrenergic agonists. Clonidine, an alpha 2 > alpha 1-agonist, also inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated production of cAMP while yohimbine (alpha 2 > alpha 1 antagonist) augmented the norepinephrine or epinephrine-induced accumulation of cAMP. Cholera toxin-induced ADP ribosylation of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gs) abolished the stimulatory effect of norepinephrine, epinephrine, phenylephrine or 6-fluoronorepinephrine on cAMP formation. ADP ribosylation of the inhibitory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gi) by pertussis toxin had no effect on either phenylephrine- or 6-fluoronorepinephrine-induced production of cAMP while it increased the norepinephrine and epinephrine-induced accumulation of cAMP. These findings represent the first documentation of beta 1-, beta 2-, alpha 1 and alpha 2-adrenergic receptors linked to adenylate cyclase in endothelium derived from human brain microvasculature. These data also indicate that activation of endothelial alpha 1 -adrenergic receptors is mediated by a signal transduction mechanism associated with Gs protein. The results strongly support the presence of various receptor-controlled adrenergic regulatory mechanisms on human cerebromicrovascular endothelium.
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PMID:Adrenergic receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase in human cerebromicrovascular endothelium. 133 35

In the sarcolemma fraction of foot muscles of a fresh-water bivalve mollusc, Anodonta cygnea, a direct inhibitory, rather than stimulatory, effect of the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol, at micromolar concentration, on cAMP level and adenylate cyclase activity, was revealed. It was blocked by beta- but not alpha-adrenergic antagonists. A single class of [3H]dihydroalprenolol-binding sites with binding properties of beta-adrenergic receptor was detected in mollusc sarcolemma. Potentiation of the inhibitory effect of isoproterenol on mollusc adenylate cyclase activity by GTP or guanosine 5'-[beta,gamma-imido]triphosphate at micromolar concentrations, and its elimination in the presence of guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate, were shown. The pertussis-toxin-induced ADP-ribosylation of sarcolemma 40-kDa protein [immunochemically related in the C-terminal part to pertussis-toxin-sensitive guanine-nucleotide-binding regulatory protein (G-protein) alpha subunits of vertebrates], as well as the treatment of mollusc sarcolemma with antisera responsive to the C-terminus of vertebrate inhibitory G-protein (G(i)) alpha subunit led to elimination of the inhibitory effect of isoproterenol on adenylate cyclase activity. The results obtained suggest that beta-agonist-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase in A. cygnea foot muscle may be realized via the beta-adrenoreceptor/G(i) signalling pathway.
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PMID:Beta-agonist-induced inhibitory-guanine-nucleotide-binding regulatory protein coupling to adenylate cyclase in mollusc Anodonta cygnea foot muscle sarcolemma. 133 63

Transducin (T alpha beta gamma), the heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein that interacts with photoexcited rhodopsin (Rh*) and the cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) in retinal rod cells, is sensitive to cholera (CTx) and pertussis toxins (PTx), which catalyze the binding of an ADP-ribose to the alpha subunit at Arg174 and Cys347, respectively. These two types of ADP-ribosylations are investigated with transducin in vitro or with reconstituted retinal rod outer-segment membranes. Several functional perturbations inflicted on T alpha by the resulting covalent modifications are studied such as: the binding of T alpha to T beta gamma to the membrane and to Rh*; the spontaneous or Rh*-catalysed exchange of GDP for GTP or guanosine 5-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[gamma S]), the conformational switch and activation undergone by transducin upon this exchange, the activation of T alpha GDP by fluoride complexes and the activation of the PDE by T alpha GTP. ADP-ribosylation of transducin by CTx requires the GTP-dependent activation of ADP-ribosylation factors (ARF), takes place only on the high-affinity, nucleotide-free complex, Rh*-T alpha empty-T beta gamma and does not activate T alpha. Subsequent to CTx-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation the following occurs: (a) addition of GDP induces the release from Rh* of inactive CTxT alpha GDP (CTxT alpha, ADP-ribosylated alpha subunit of transducin) which remains associated to T beta gamma; (b) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma exhibits the usual slow kinetics of spontaneous exchange of GDP for GTP[gamma S] in the absence of Rh*, but the association and dissociation of fluoride complexes, which act as gamma-phosphate analogs, are kinetically modified, suggesting that the ADP-ribose on Arg174 specifically perturbs binding of the gamma-phosphate in the nucleotide site; (c) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma can still couple to Rh* and undergo fast nucleotide exchange; (d) CTxT alpha GTP[gamma S] and CTxT alpha GDP-AlFx (AlFx, Aluminofluoride complex) activate retinal cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) with the same efficiency as their unmodified counterparts, but the kinetics and affinities of fluoride activation are changed; (e) CTxT alpha GTP hydrolyses GTP more slowly than unmodified T alpha GTP, which entirely accounts for the prolonged action of CTxT alpha GTP on the PDE; (f) after GTP hydrolysis, CTxT alpha GDP reassociates to T beta gamma and becomes inactive. Thus, CTx catalyzed ADP-ribosylation only perturbs in T alpha the GTP-binding domain, but not the conformational switch nor the domains of contact with the T beta gamma subunit, with Rh* and with the PDE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional modifications of transducin induced by cholera or pertussis-toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation. 133 64


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