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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Incubation of either C3a, C3ades Arg, or synthetic analogues of the C-terminal sequence of C3a with purified rat peritoneal mast cells resulted in a rapid and dose-dependent histamine release. The natural factors C3a and C3ades Arg were the most active of the factors tested exhibiting EC50 values of 3.3 and 2.2 microM, respectively. The corresponding 21- and 22-residue C-terminal analogues of C3a (Y21R and Y21) were less potent than intact factor exhibiting EC50 values of 10.9 and 25.1 microM, respectively. Histamine was released in a nonlytic manner and the mast cell stimulation by both natural and synthetic factors was sensitive to
pertussis
toxin,
neuraminidase
, benzalkonium chloride, and to an excess of calcium. C3a stimulated the generation of inositol polyphosphates that was inhibited by either
pertussis
toxin or benzalkonium chloride. The C3a anaphylatoxin also directly stimulates purified G proteins (i.e., GTPase activity) in a dose-dependent manner. The evident correlation between efficiency of C3a and C3a analogues to stimulate purified G proteins and their capacity to induce cellular histamine release led us to conclude that C3a fails to activate mast cells via a mechanism involving specific receptors on the cell. Instead, we propose that C3a either causes direct activation of G proteins of the Gi subtype, with a subsequent activation of phospholipase C, or interacts with a binding site of the cell surface specific for cationic molecules that is coupled to the G protein cascade.
...
PMID:A mechanism of action for anaphylatoxin C3a stimulation of mast cells. 137 70
Previously, we have extensively studied FSH-receptor interactions using bovine calf testis membranes, and demonstrated that the high-affinity FSH binding to receptors and coupling of FSH receptors with guanine nucleotide-binding protein (Gs protein) in a GTP-sensitive state are important initial events in FSH action. In this study, using the same plasma membrane system, we examined the glycoprotein nature of the FSH receptor and determined the contribution of carbohydrate moieties to these functions of the FSH receptor. Our approach involved enzymic deglycosylation of FSH receptors present in calf testis plasma membranes and then removal of incompletely deglycosylated FSH receptors by lectin affinity chromatography. Following treatment of testis membranes with peptide N-glycosidase, the receptor, as identified by ligand-blot analysis, had a higher electrophoretic mobility indicating a decrease in M(r) from 240-200K. Treatment of testis membranes with
neuraminidase
caused a reduction (to approximately 225K) in the size of the receptor consistent with desialylation. However, digestion with O-glycosidase (endo-alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase) did not affect the mobility of the FSH receptor. These results suggest that bovine testis FSH receptor contains predominantly N-linked oligosaccharide chains, a finding which is consistent with recent predictions that N-linked glycosylation, but not O-linked glycosylation sites are present in cloned FSH receptor from rat testis. Moreover, calf testis membranes after treatment with peptide N-glycosidase F, were solubilized with Triton X-100 under optimum conditions that preserve the physical and functional coupling of FSH receptors with guanine nucleotide-binding protein, and then subjected to lectin affinity chromatography. Scatchard analysis indicated that intact and deglycosylated FSH receptors bound 125I-human FSH with similar affinities. In the presence of GTP, the binding of 125I-human FSH to intact and deglycosylated receptors decreased similarly and in a noncompetitive manner. Treatment of testis membranes with NAD plus cholera toxin, but not NAD plus
pertussis
toxin, eliminated the GTP effect on FSH binding to enzymic deglycosylated as well as intact receptors, suggesting that the guanine nucleotide binding protein mediating GTP regulation of FSH binding in these membranes is probably Gs protein. Our results suggest that the bovine testis FSH receptor contains predominantly N-linked oligosaccharide chains consistent with recently predicted N-linked glycosylation sites of cloned FSH receptor of rat testis. The bovine testis FSH receptor does not require N-linked carbohydrate for high-affinity hormone binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Carbohydrate moiety of follitropin receptor is not required for high affinity hormone-binding or for functional coupling between receptor and guanine nucleotide-binding protein in bovine calf testis membranes. 142 41
Fetuin derivatives with enzymatically altered oligosaccharide units were tested for their ability to inhibit
pertussis
toxin-mediated agglutination of goose erythrocytes and the binding of 125I-labeled fetuin to
pertussis
toxin-coated polystyrene tubes. Fetuin oligosaccharides were sequentially degraded by treatment with:
neuraminidase
(asialofetuin) followed by beta-galactosidase (asialoagalactofetuin) and, lastly, with beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase (asialoagalacto-a[N-acetylglucosamino]fetuin). Asialofetuin retained only 19 and 53% of the inhibitory activity of native fetuin in the hemagglutination and 125I-fetuin binding assays, respectively. Asialoagalactofetuin showed no further reduction of inhibition in the hemagglutination system and, instead, resulted in partial recovery of inhibition in the 125I-fetuin-
pertussis
toxin binding assay. Asialoagalacto-a[N-acetylhexosamino]fetuin showed a further decrease in ability to inhibit
pertussis
toxin binding in both assays. The inhibitory activity of asialoagalactofetuin could be restored to that of native fetuin by adding back D-galactose with UDP-Gal:D-glucosyl-1,4-beta-galactosyltransferase, followed by the addition of terminal sialic acid residues with CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid:beta-D-galactosyl-1,4-N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosamine-alpha-2,6-N- acetylneuraminyltransferase. The data suggested that a requirement for
pertussis
toxin binding to fetuin may be the presence of acetamido-containing sugar groups in the nonreducing terminal position of fetuin's oligosaccharides.
...
PMID:Use of glycosyltransferases to restore pertussis toxin receptor activity to asialoagalactofetuin. 245 26
Incubation of rat peritoneal mast cells with substance P resulted in the transient stimulation of phosphoinositol breakdown and histamine secretion through an exocytotic process. These effects were inhibited markedly by a prior 2-hr exposure of the cells to
pertussis
toxin.
Pertussis
toxin also inhibited exocytosis induced by substance P, mastoparan and compound 48/80, but did not modify the secretory effect of the ionophore A23187. The transfer of rat peritoneal mast cells from balanced salt solution to calcium-free buffer led to a similar time-dependent decrease in their response to substance P and mastoparan. The concomitant absence of potassium from the calcium-free buffer enabled the mast cells to retain their secretory response. These data demonstrate identical dependency for calcium and monovalent ions of the secretory process elicited by substance P, mastoparan and compound 48/80. Pretreatment of mast cells with
neuraminidase
decreased the secretagogic effect of substance P, mastoparan and compound 48/80 without modifying the efficiency of the ionophore A23187. Thus, sialic acid residues might be involved in the initial binding of peptides and compound 48/80 to mast cells, which activate a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive G-protein and allows the increase in phospholipase C activity to induce exocytosis. This sequence of events might characterize the physiological pathway of mast cell activation by peptides, without necessarily requiring selective membrane receptors.
...
PMID:Activation of rat peritoneal mast cells by substance P and mastoparan. 247 89
The ligand binding subunit of the D2 dopamine receptor (Mr approximately equal to 94,000) can be visualized by autoradiography following photoaffinity labeling with [125I]N-azidophenethylspiperone and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Following removal of sialic acids with the exoglycosidase,
neuraminidase
, [125I]N-azidophenethylspiperone photoincorporated into a protein of Mr = 54,000 with the appropriate pharmacological profile for D2 receptors. The desialylated D2 receptor bound dopaminergic agonists with high affinity and was capable of coupling to a functional G-protein as indexed by: 1)
pertussis
-toxin mediated [32P]ADP ribosylation of proteins of Mr = 42,000 and 39,000, and 2) the conversion of the agonist high affinity form of D2 receptors to one displaying low affinity for agonists in the presence of guanine nucleotides. These data suggest that sialic acid residues do not contribute significantly to the ligand binding characteristics of D2 receptors despite the large change produced in the estimated molecular mass of the binding subunit.
...
PMID:Dopamine D2 receptors retain agonist high-affinity form and guanine nucleotide sensitivity after removal of sialic acid. 290 37
The N-acetyl glucosamine (GlcNAc)-specific lectin Datura stramonium agglutinin (DSA) rapidly and sugar-specifically released histamine from rat peritoneal mast cells, and
pertussis
toxin (IAP) inhibited it, suggesting that DSA activated mast cells via an IAP-sensitive G protein pathway. The additive effects of DSA and basic secretagogues such as compound 48/80 that activate IAP-sensitive G protein directly suggest that they shared the same mechanism of action including involvement of the IAP-sensitive G protein. Using lectin-blotting, blots of the corresponding glycoproteins detected by DSA diminished by haptenic sugar or pretreatment of the cells with N-glycosidase F, suggesting that the binding of DSA was responsible for the mast cell activation. The other GlcNAc-specific lectins such as Phytolacca americana mitogen, Solanum tuberosum agglutinin and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) inhibited the histamine release induced by DSA, suggesting that these lectins were antagonists, but DSA was an agonist. Sialic acid-specific Macckia amurensis mitogen (MAM) inhibited the histamine release, and
neuraminidase
-treatment decreased mast cell activation induced by DSA. At least four mast cell glycoproteins that have affinity to DSA, WGA and MAM and are sensitive to
neuraminidase
-treatment were detected by lectin-blotting. Some of them may be binding sites coupled to histamine release including the IAP-sensitive G protein pathway. DSA is a useful tool for studying signal transduction of mast cells including the involvement of the IAP-sensitive G protein.
...
PMID:Datura stramonium agglutinin released histamine from rat peritoneal mast cells that was inhibited by pertussis toxin, haptenic sugar and N-acetylglucosamine-specific lectins: involvement of glycoproteins with N-acetylglucosamine residues. 753 33
Adriamycin (ADR) induces nonimmunological and noncytotoxic histamine release from peritoneal and pleural rat mast cells. This secretion is unaffected by the pretreatment with
pertussis
toxin, cholera toxin and benzalkonium chloride. Histamine release induced by compound 48/80, was markedly inhibited by
pertussis
toxin, cholera toxin, benzalkonium chloride and
neuraminidase
. The ADR dose-response curve is significantly shifted to the right when cells were preincubated with the unspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX. The activation of protein kinase C (PKC) with the phorbol esther TPA increases the response to ADR, while PKC inhibition with trifluoperazine decreases histamine release. The pretreatment of mast cells with okadaic acid did not modify the response to ADR. These results suggest that ADR elicits histamine release with a mechanism notably different from compound 48/80.
...
PMID:Study of the activation mechanism of adriamycin on rat mast cells. 753 76
Recent evidence suggests that peptides induce the release of mediators from rat peritoneal mast cell by means of a receptor-independent mechanism, possibly involving an interaction with sialic acid residues at the cell surface followed by the activation of a guanine nucleotide binding protein (G protein). We have now examined the potential involvement of sialic acid residues and of G protein stimulation in the activation of both human and rat cutaneous mast cells by neuropeptide Y, its C-terminal fragments and the wasp venom peptide, mastoparan. Neuropeptide Y-(18-36) was the most effective histamine releaser of the fragments tested, the order of potency being neuropeptide Y-(18-36) > neuropeptide Y-(22-36) > neuropeptide Y-(1-36). This order of potency suggests that the effects of the peptides are not mediated through classical NPY receptors. The hydrolysis of sialic acid residues by
neuraminidase
and the inhibition of G proteins by benzalkonium chloride or
pertussis
toxin significantly inhibited the secretory response of cutaneous mast cells to neuropeptide Y-(18-36) and mastoparan. These results demonstrate that the peptidergic pathway described for the activation of peritoneal rat mast cells is also involved in the response of cutaneous human and rat mast cells to peptides.
...
PMID:Human and rat cutaneous mast cells: involvement of a G protein in the response to peptidergic stimuli. 753 61
The binding of
pertussis
toxin and its B oligomer to lipid vesicles containing glycosphingolipids was studied. Both
pertussis
toxin and the B oligomer bound to lipid vesicles containing ganglioside GD1a. Binding of
pertussis
toxin to these vesicles decreased upon treatment of the vesicles with
neuraminidase
, suggesting that sialic acid residues are important for efficient binding of the toxin to GD1a.
...
PMID:Binding of pertussis toxin to lipid vesicles containing glycolipids. 841 57
[p-Glu5,D-Trp(7,9,10)]substance P-(5-11) inhibited mastoparan-stimulated GTPase activity in homogenized rat peritoneal mast cells and decreased histamine secretion induced by mastoparan from streptolysin O-permeabilized mast cells (IC50 of about 30 microM), but not from intact cells. In contrast, [D-Pro4,D-Trp(7,9,10)]substance P-(4-11) inhibited the secretion from intact cells (IC50 of about 10 microM) but had no effect on histamine secretion from permeabilized cells, suggesting that this peptide exerts its inhibitory effect on the plasma membrane, whereas [p-Glu5,D-Trp(7,9,10)]substance P-(5-11) interacts with G proteins. Pretreatment of mast cells with
neuraminidase
led to an inhibition of the secretory response to mastoparan and related triggers. This response was restored following cell permeabilization, demonstrating the role of the cell surface on the entry of mastoparan and related triggers and on their ability to reach G proteins sensitive to
pertussis
toxin and [p-Glu5,D-Trp(7,9,10)]substance P-(5-11).
...
PMID:Substance P-related inhibitors of mast cell exocytosis act on G-proteins or on the cell surface. 954 56
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