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)

We studied the effect of adenosine on prolactin secretion by the anterior pituitary, and the transduction mechanisms whereby the purine exerts its action. Adenosine inhibited prolactin release in basal and in vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)- or TRH-stimulated conditions. Pertussis toxin pretreatment reduced the inhibition of VIP-stimulated prolactin secretion which was induced by adenosine, while it completely abolished the effect of the purine on TRH-evoked prolactin release. In membrane preparations of anterior pituitary cells, adenosine reduced the adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by VIP. Such an inhibition was not blocked by pertussis toxin pretreatment. Furthermore, the purine reduced TRH-stimulated inositol phosphate production in cultured anterior pituitary cells, an effect that was reversed by pretreatment with pertussis toxin. In addition, the nucleoside did not significantly affect the TRH-induced rise in intracellular calcium. In conclusion, our data show that adenosine inhibits prolactin secretion, acting on purinergic receptors coupled to the adenylate cyclase enzyme and phospholipase C. The effect of the nucleoside on adenylate cyclase seems to be achieved either by the involvement of an adenosine receptor coupled to the catalytic subunit of the enzyme via a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein, or by the activation of a site directly coupled to the catalytic subunit of the adenylate cyclase (the P site). Its effect on phospholipase C seems to be mediated by a purinergic receptor coupled to the intracellular effector via a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein.
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PMID:Direct effect of adenosine on prolactin secretion at the level of the single rat lactotroph: involvement of pertussis toxin-sensitive and -insensitive transducing mechanisms. 814 40

The purpose of the experiments was to examine the behavior of cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in individual pituitary melanotrophs and how that is affected by physiological ligands that inhibit or stimulate melanotroph secretion. Melanotrophs were dispersed from neurointermediate lobes of Xenopus laevis adapted to a black background, and [Ca2+]i was measured with fura-2. In basal (unstimulated) conditions, repetitive transient elevations in [Ca2+]i, not hitherto observed in any melanotrophs, were detected in 73% of the cells. These cytosolic Ca pulses occurred at fairly regular intervals (1-10 min) and lasted from a half to several minutes, during which [Ca2+]i rose several-fold. Pulsing was promptly and reversibly arrested by the secreto-inhibitory transmitters, dopamine, neuropeptide-Y (NPY), and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and also by quinpirole, muscimol, and baclofen. Pertussis toxin eliminated the responses to dopamine, NPY, and GABAB receptor activation, but spared responses to GABAA receptor activation. The responses to the physiological inhibitors and to the Ca channel blocker Ni were close to all or nothing; a mere doubling of an ineffective concentration commonly sufficed to arrest pulsing. Submaximal responses, seen over a narrow concentration range, involved a slowing of the pulsing. Cells not pulsing spontaneously were responsive to dopamine, GABA, and NPY and pulsed in response to the secretagogues CRF and TRH. They are suggested to be melanotrophs not actively secreting. The behavior of [Ca2+]i parallels secretory activity and strengthens the view that spontaneous secretion is driven by spontaneous influx of Ca ions and that secreto-inhibitory transmitters act by suppressing this influx and lowering [Ca2+]i. Cytosolic Ca pulsing may provide an efficient means of sustaining a high rate of spontaneous secretion.
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PMID:Spontaneous cytosolic calcium pulsing detected in Xenopus melanotrophs: modulation by secreto-inhibitory and stimulant ligands. 838 13

The presence of the pertussis toxin (PTX) insensitive GTP-binding proteins (C-proteins) G(q) alpha and/or G(11) alpha has been demonstrated in three different prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) producing pituitary adenoma cell lines. Immunoblocking of their coupling to hormone receptors indicates that G(q) and/or G(11) confer throliberin (TRH) responsive phospholipase C (PL-C) activity in these cells. The contention was substantiated by immunoprecipitation analyses showing that anti G(q)/11 alpha-sera coprecipitated PL-C activity. In essence, only G(q)/11 (but neither G(12) G(13) nor G(o)) seems to mediate the TRH-sensitive PL-C activity, while G(o) may be coupled to a basal or constitutive PL-C activity. Immunoblocking studies imply that the B gamma-complex also, to some extent, may stimulate GH(3) pituitary cell line PL-C activity. Finally, the steady state levels of G(q)/(11) alpha mRNA and protein were down regulated upon long term exposure of the GH(3) cells to TRH (but not to vasoactive intestinal peptide = VIP).
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PMID:Phospholipase C activation in rat pituitary adenoma (GH) cells. 886 41

TRH and somatostatin (SRIH) are well known to stimulate and to inhibit TSH secretion respectively. However, the mechanisms underlying the effect of SRIH on thyrotrophs are still not understood. We have previously shown in vitro that the TSH response to TRH is potentiated in a Ca(2+)-dependent fashion through the activation of dihydropyridine (DHP)-sensitive Ca2+ channels by the prepro-TRH (160-169) cryptic peptide (PS4) and tri-iodo-L-thyronine (T3), when the hormone was added shortly before a TRH pulse in order to avoid its genomic effect. Using perifused rat pituitary fragments, the present study has shown that SRIH inhibits, in a dose-dependent manner, the TSH response to physiological concentration of TRH (10 nM) and reverses the Ca(2+)-dependent potentiation of that response induced either by PS4 or by T3. We have also demonstrated that the inhibition by SRIH of the T3 potentiation of TRH-induced TSH secretion is pertussis toxin-sensitive. Our data suggest that SRIH inhibits the PS4 and T3 potentiation of TRH-induced TSH secretion through the inactivation of DHP-sensitive Ca2+ channels. Using primary cultures of rat anterior pituitary cells and videomicroscopy, we have already demonstrated that TRH, as well as PS4 and T3, are able to increase intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) rapidly, in 15 s. Our study has shown that SRIH is able to abolish the acute rise in [Ca2+]i induced either by PS4 or by T3. Since [Ca2+]i responses to PS4 and T3 are also abolished by the DHP nifedipine, our results suggest that [Ca2+]i changes in PS4- or T3-sensitive pituitary cells depend directly or indirectly on the activation of DHP-sensitive Ca2+ channels and that the inhibitory effect of SRIH may be mediated by inactivation of this type of channel.
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PMID:Somatostatin blocks the potentiation of TRH-induced TSH secretion from perifused pituitary fragments and the change in intracellular calcium concentrations from dispersed pituitary cells elicited by prepro-TRH (PS4) or by tri-iodothyronine. 927 64

In CHO cells transfected with the rat dopamine D2 receptor (long isoform), administration of dopamine per se elicited a concentration-dependent increase in arachidonic acid (AA) release. The maximal effect was 197% of controls (EC50=25 nM). The partial D2 receptor agonist, (-)-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-N-n-propylpiperidine [(-)-3-PPP], also induced AA release, but with somewhat lower efficacy (maximal effect: 165%; EC50=91 nM). The AA-releasing effect of dopamine was counteracted by pertussis toxin, by the inhibitor of intracellular Ca2+ release, 8-(N N-diethylamino)octyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate (TMB-8), by excluding calcium from the medium, by the phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitor, quinacrine, and by long-term pretreatment with the phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). In addition, it was antagonized by the D2 antagonists, raclopride and (-)-sulpiride--but not by (+)-sulpiride--and absent in sham-transfected CHO cells devoid of D2 receptors. The results obtained contrast to the previous notion that dopamine and other D2 receptor agonists require the concomitant administration of calcium-mobilizing agents such as ATP, ionophore A-23187 (calcimycin), thrombin, and TRH, to influence AA release from various cell lines.
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PMID:Direct dopamine D2-receptor-mediated modulation of arachidonic acid release in transfected CHO cells without the concomitant administration of a Ca2+-mobilizing agent. 975 80

We have previously found that the D5 dopamine receptor couples to a G-protein other than Gsalpha, and could be involved in signaling pathways other than regulation of adenylyl cyclase. To describe interactions of the D5 receptor with cellular effectors, we used GH4C1 cells transfected with cDNA for the human D5 receptor. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH, 100 nM) stimulated accumulation of inositol phosphates (IPs) fivefold in D5GH4C1 cells. Dopamine (DA, 10 microM) inhibited TRH-stimulated IP values by 29%; at higher concentrations (100 microM), maximal inhibition of 61% was observed. The D5 agonist SKF R-38393 (10 microM) mimicked this effect (28% inhibition). SCH 23390, a D5 antagonist, blocked the inhibition caused by both DA and SKF R-38393. Spiperone, a D2 receptor antagonist, did not block the inhibition. The D2 agonist (+/-)-2-(N-phenylethyl-N-propyl)amino-5-hydroxytetralin (PPHT) did not inhibit TRH-stimulated IP production, nor did it augment the effect of D5 agonists. The DA-mediated suppression of IP levels was not sensitive to pertussis toxin; cholera toxin blocked both TRH stimulation and DA suppression of IP accumulation in response to 100 nM TRH. Neither dibutyryl cAMP nor forskolin lowered IP formation in response to TRH. Phorbol ester decreased TRH-stimulated IP accumulation in D5GH4C1 cells; however, an inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC) did not block the effect of DA.
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PMID:Inhibition of hormonally induced inositol trisphosphate production in Transfected GH4</ sup>C1 cells: A novel role for the D5 subtype of the dopamine receptor. 1008 53

The hypothalamus exerts a predominantly inhibitory influence on prolactin secretion through dopamine. In addition, the expression of anterior pituitary hormone-gene products are regulated by intrapituitary growth factors. In particular, TGF-beta1 produced in the pituitary regulates lactotroph cell proliferation and prolactin gene-expression. This study characterized the regulation of in-vitro prolactin synthesis and secretion by TGF-beta1 using rat anterior pituitary cells in monolayer culture. Furthermore, we studied the interaction of TGF-beta1 with other signals involved in the neuroregulation of prolactin secretion, such as dopamine and TRH, as well as the importance of different signal transduction pathways in this response. TGF-beta1 inhibited prolactin secretion in a time- and concentration-dependent manner, with half-maximal inhibition occurring at the range of 15-30 pM. The inhibitory effect was observed after 4 h, being maximal after 4 days of exposure of the cells to the peptide. This inhibitory effect was mimicked by TGF-beta2 but not by inhibin, and was not influenced by oestrogens, being similar in male, normal female or oestradiol-treated rats. Prolonged pretreatment of the cells with TGF-beta1(4 days) did not modify GH or TSH secretion nor dopamine-induced inhibition of prolactin secretion, and blunted prolactin responses to TRH, Forskolin, But2-cAMP and to the calcium ionophore A23187. The effect observed after long-term treatment (24 h to 4 days) is essentially caused by a decrease in prolactin synthesis, since TGF-beta1 inhibited prolactin mRNA levels and de novo prolactin protein synthesis. However, in the short term (up to 12 h) TGF-beta1 inhibition of prolactin secretion was associated with an increase in intracellular prolactin content, dissecting a dual mechanism of action of TGF-beta1. The short-term TGF-beta1 effect did not modify Erk-2 phosphorylation, basal or TRH-induced increase in intracellular calcium concentration, but blunted basal and forskolin stimulated cAMP levels. But2-cAMP replacement did not revert the inhibition of prolactin secretion. However, pertussis toxin was able to recover a large percentage of TGF-beta1-induced inhibition of prolactin secretion. This study indicates that TGF-beta1 plays a crucial role as a modulator of lactotroph function, inhibiting prolactin biosynthesis after long-term treatment, as well as, after short-term exposure prolactin secretion at the level of the secretory process, through a mechanism pertussis toxin sensitive but independent of Erk-2 phosphorylation, calcium concentrations or intracellular cAMP.
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PMID:Effects of TGF-beta1 on prolactin synthesis and secretion: an in-vitro study. 1032 May 62

In lactating rats, suckling renders mammotropes more responsive to prolactin (PRL)-releasing stimuli and less responsive to PRL-inhibiting secretagogues. We have previously shown that a decrease in the activity of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) may be responsible for the decrease in responsiveness to the inhibitory secretagogue dopamine (DA). In our present experiments, we have studied the involvement of the adenylate cyclase (AC), stimulatory and inhibitory GTP-binding proteins and also the role of PP2A in the sensitization phenomenon. Pituitary cells obtained from mother rats separated from their pups for 4 h prior to dispersion (non-suckled), suckled for 10 or 30 min after the separation period (suckled) and without separation (continual suckling) were incubated in the presence of different doses of forskolin to activate AC and DA. In a further study, pituitary cells of non-suckled rats were pretreated with cholera toxin (CTX) or pertussis toxin (PTX) and tested for the stimulatory action of forskolin or TRH on PRL release. Ocadaic acid (OA) pretreatment has been used to investigate the involvement of PP2A. Hormone secretion was measured by the reverse hemolytic plaque assay (RHPA). Our results have shown that cells from non-suckled rats were unresponsive to forskolin. A 10-min suckling stimulus sensitizes pituitary mammotropes to respond with a PRL release to a dose-dependent activation of AC by forskolin. This sensitization of AC becomes a permanent feature of the cells when suckling continues for an additional 20 min. We have also found that pituitary mammotropes from non-suckled dams respond to forskolin or TRH with PRL release when they were preincubated with either PTX or the PP2A inhibitor OA. It clearly indicates that the non-responsive pituitary can be shifted to the responsive stage by uncoupling of inhibitory G-protein from its receptor as well as by inhibition of PP2A. This latter finding, consonant with our previous results, suggests that suckling may cause selective changes in the function of G(i) of mammotropes due to a rapid phosphorylation which can remove tonic, GTP-dependent inhibitory function.
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PMID:Inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) mimics suckling-induced sensitization of mammotropes: involvement of a pertussis toxin (PTX) sensitive G-protein and the adenylate cyclase (AC). 1037 12

The GH4C1 cell line was used to study the cellular mechanisms of cannabinoid-mediated inhibition of PRL release. Cannabinoid CB1 receptor activation inhibited vasoactive intestinal polypeptide- and TRH-stimulated PRL release, but not its basal secretion. The cannabinoid-mediated inhibition of TRH-stimulated PRL release was reversed by the CB1 receptor-specific antagonist, SR141,716A, and was abolished by pertussis toxin pretreatment, indicating that G alpha subunits belonging to the G(i)alpha and G(o)alpha family were involved in the signaling. Photoaffinity labeling using [alpha-32P] azidoaniline GTP showed that cannabinoid receptor stimulation in cell membranes produced activation of four G alpha subunits (G(i)alpha2, G(i)alpha3, G(o)alpha1, and G(o)alpha2), which was also reversed by SR141,716A. The CB1 receptor agonists, WIN55,212-2 and CP55,940, inhibited cAMP formation and calcium currents in GH4C1 cells. The subtypes of calcium currents inhibited by WIN55,212-2 were characterized using holding potential sensitivity and calcium channel blockers. WIN55,212-2 inhibited the omega-conotoxin GVIA (Conus geographus)- and omega-agatoxin IVA (Aigelenopsis aperta)-sensitive calcium currents, but not the nisoldipine-sensitive calcium currents, suggesting the inhibition of N- and P-type, but not L-type, calcium currents. Taken together, the present findings indicate that CB1 receptors can couple through pertussis toxin-sensitive G alpha subunits to inhibit adenylyl cyclase and calcium currents and suppress PRL release from GH4C1 cells.
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PMID:Cannabinoid CB1 receptor-mediated inhibition of prolactin release and signaling mechanisms in GH4C1 cells. 1080 76

Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) decreases transcription of the Kv1.5 K(+) channel gene in GH(3) pituitary cells. Here, we examine whether TRH utilizes Gq activated phospholipase C, Gs or Gi to produce this response. We report that expression of constitutively active Galphaq mimicked and occluded the TRH effect. In contrast, expression of activated Galpha(S) or Galpha(i2) had no effect on Kv1. 5 mRNA expression. Furthermore, pertussis and cholera toxins failed to block the TRH-induced decrease in channel mRNA. Surprisingly, despite the role of Gq, the phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 did not alter down-regulation of channel mRNA by TRH, although it abolished the TRH-induced increase in intracellular [Ca(2+)] and up-regulation of c-fos mRNA. Furthermore, depletion of an intracellular Ca(2+) pool or inhibition of protein kinase C did not block the TRH-induced decrease in Kv1.5 mRNA. These results indicate that TRH-induced down-regulation of Kv1.5 gene expression is mediated by Galphaq proteins, but does not require PLC activation.
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PMID:TRH regulates Kv1.5 gene expression through a Galphaq-mediated PLC-independent pathway. 1094 Apr 81


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