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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Earlier, we (Vijayagopal, P. et al. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 960, 210) showed that mouse peritoneal macrophages metabolize low density lipoprotein (LDL)-proteoglycan complex by a receptor pathway distinct from the acetyl-LDL receptor. Further studies were conducted to probe further into the mechanism of LDL-proteoglycan complex uptake by macrophages. Both 125I-methyl-LDL-proteoglycan complex and 125I-LDL-proteoglycan complex were taken up and degraded by the cells to the same extent. Similarly, the ability of these ligands to stimulate cholesteryl ester synthesis was also indistinguishable. These results rule out the possibility of apoB,E receptor involvement in the uptake of LDL-proteoglycan complex in macrophages.
Sodium fluoride
, cytochalasin D and aggregated LDL inhibited degradation of the complex by 24%, 26% and 28%, respectively, indicating that phagocytosis is only a minor pathway for the uptake. Both binding and degradation of the complex were not inhibited by excess hyaluronic acid suggesting that ligand recognition was not through hyaluronic acid binding sites. As compared to acetyl-LDL, the cellular degradation of LDL-proteoglycan complex was retarded. Macrophages exhibited a rapid stimulation of [3H]inositol trisphosphate (IP3) release and diacylglycerol production when incubated with LDL-proteoglycan complex. Furthermore,
pertussis
toxin produced a 62% inhibition of LDL-proteoglycan complex mediated IP3 release, suggesting that LDL-proteoglycan complex metabolism in macrophages is dependent upon the G-protein coupled signal transduction mechanism. These results show that receptor mediated endocytosis plays a major role in the metabolism of LDL-proteoglycan complex in macrophages.
...
PMID:Studies on the mechanism of uptake of low density lipoprotein-proteoglycan complex in macrophages. 204 99
The regulation of prostacyclin (PGI2) synthesis by cultured human umbilical vein endothelium (HUVEC) was investigated. HUVEC monolayer generation of PGI2 was monitored by RIA of 6-keto PGF1 alpha and dose-dependent increases observed with human alpha- and gamma-thrombins, histamine, or arachidonate. Alpha thrombin (10 nM) produced levels of 6-keto PGF1 alpha approximating responses with 1 microM gamma-thrombin, 5 microM arachidonate, or 10 microM histamine. Diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate-inactivated alpha-thrombin did not stimulate PGI2 release, demonstrating that catalytic activity was required for thrombin-stimulated PGI2 release.
Sodium fluoride (NaF)
, at concentrations known to activate guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (G proteins), directly stimulated HUVEC PGI2 synthesis in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner (20 mM NaF, 4.4 +/- 0.5-fold increase at 10 min, 11.9 +/- 1.5-fold increase at 30 min). Neither alpha-thrombin nor NaF-stimulated PGI2 release was dependent upon the availability of extracellular Ca++). The hypothesis that G proteins are involved in agonist-stimulated PGI2 synthesis was further supported by studies using digitonin-permeabilized HUVEC monolayers challenged with another G protein activator, guanosine 5'-0-3-thiotrisphosphate (GTP gamma S), which effected significant dose-dependent increases in PGI2 synthesis compared with control levels of 6-keto PGF1 alpha. In contrast, the G-protein inhibitor GDP beta S, (guanosine 5'-0-2-thiodiphosphate), attenuated alpha-thrombin-mediated prostaglandin generation. Treatment of HUVEC monolayers with
pertussis
toxin (1 microgram/ml) did not inhibit the PGI2 synthesis stimulated by either alpha-thrombin, NaF, or histamine but catalyzed the ADP ribosylation of a 40 kDa membrane protein which cross-reacted with antisera against a synthetic peptide corresponding to an amino acid sequence common to the alpha-subunit of other G-proteins. Preincubation of HUVEC microsomal membranes with alpha-thrombin diminished
pertussis
toxin-catalyzed ADP ribosylation in a time-dependent manner. These data suggest that thrombin stimulation of PGI2 synthesis by HUVEC monolayers requires the catalytically functional enzyme and further suggests that the thrombin-occupied receptor is coupled to phospholipase activities by a
pertussis
toxin-insensitive guanine nucleotide regulatory protein in human endothelial cell membranes.
...
PMID:Thrombin-induced prostacyclin biosynthesis in human endothelium: role of guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins in stimulus/coupling responses. 210 25
GnRH stimulates secretion of pituitary LH by increasing intracellular calcium. Increased calcium may result from activation of phospholipase-C, since there is an increase in inositol phosphates and diacylglycerol, and a redistribution of protein kinase-C (PKC) from cytosolic to a particulate cell fraction in GnRH-stimulated pituitary cultures. A GTP-binding protein (G-protein) may mediate GnRH actions, since GTP stimulates LH release in permeabilized gonadotropes and decreases receptor affinity for a GnRH analog. In the present study we have used sodium fluoride, an exogenous activator of G-proteins, to investigate the possibility of a G-protein link between GnRH receptor activation, phospholipase-C activity, and LH release. Treatment of primary pituitary cell cultures from immature female rats with sodium fluoride stimulated the release of 20% total cellular LH and increased inositol phosphate accumulation.
Sodium fluoride
-stimulated LH release was insensitive to cholera toxin and
pertussis
toxin.
Sodium fluoride
-stimulated LH release was additive with a maximally effective concentration of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate and was not inhibited by depletion of cellular PKC, suggesting that PKC does not mediate sodium fluoride effects. Treatment of cultures with 3 mM EGTA and 10 nM GnRH for 5 and 16 h reduced pituitary responsiveness to subsequent treatment with GnRH, but had no effect on sodium fluoride-stimulated LH release. Although the precise mechanism of sodium fluoride-stimulated LH release remains to be described, our results support a role for a G-protein in regulation of LH release by the releasing hormone.
...
PMID:Stimulation of luteinizing hormone release by sodium fluoride is independent of protein kinase-C activity and unaffected by desensitization to gonadotropin-releasing hormone. 215 31
Guinea pig tracheal epithelial cells in primary air/liquid interface culture (GPTE) and virally transformed human bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) were exposed to histamine at concentrations of 1 to 100 microM. At concentrations greater than 1 microM, histamine elicited a concentration-dependent increase in accumulation of inositol phosphates in both cell types, as assessed by anion exchange chromatography. The effects of histamine were most pronounced at 15 to 30 min and were attenuated by the H1-receptor antagonist, pyrilamine. The H2-receptor antagonist, ranitidine, was without effect.
Sodium fluoride
(25 mM), a non-receptor-associated activator of GTP binding (G) proteins, increased accumulation of inositol phosphates within GPTE and BEAS cells. In cells permeabilized with digitonin, the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S; 10 microM) increased inositol phosphate accumulation. This GTP gamma S-induced increase was attenuated by exposure to 500 microM guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S). Additionally, histamine-induced increases in inositol phosphate accumulation were potentiated by GTP gamma S and attenuated by GDP beta S. These data indicate involvement of a G protein in the response to histamine. Preincubation with
pertussis
toxin (100 ng/ml for 4 h) did not significantly affect the response, suggesting that the associated G protein was not
pertussis
toxin-sensitive. The presence of the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC)-associated G protein, G alpha q/11, and the presence of mRNA for the Gq family, were ascertained by immunoblotting and Northern hybridization, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Histamine provokes turnover of inositol phospholipids in guinea pig and human airway epithelial cells via an H1-receptor/G protein-dependent mechanism. 769 21
The present study investigated transcellular signalling mechanism involved in thrombin-induced production of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) in cultured vascular baboon aortic smooth muscle cells (BASMC). Treatments with thrombin dose-dependently increased the steady state levels of PAI-1 mRNA and the generation of PAI-1 antigen from BASMC. Thrombin receptor-activating peptide mimicked the effect of thrombin on the generation of PAI-1.
Sodium fluoride
(1 mM) stimulated PAI-1 generation from BASMC.
Pertussis
toxin dose-dependently suppressed thrombin-induced increase of PAI-1 generation. Treatment with 5 mM neomycin, 10 microM U73122 or 1 microM calphostin C blocked thrombin-induced PAI-1 generation. Phorbol myristate acetate at 10 nM for 3 h strongly stimulated the generation of PAI-1 from BASMC. Forskolin (100 microM) or 8-bromo-cAMP (100 microM) suppressed thrombin-induced PAI-1 generation. The responses of quiescent BASMC to thrombin or the inhibitors on PAI-1 generation were comparable to that of growing cells. The results of the present study suggest that
pertussis
toxin-sensitive G proteins and a phospholipase C are involved in thrombin-induced generation of PAI-1 in BASMC, which may transmit signals from occupied thrombin receptor to protein kinase C and thereby increase the generation of PAI-1. Elevated levels of intracellular cAMP may negatively regulate the generation of PAI-1 from vascular SMC.
...
PMID:G proteins and phospholipase C mediate thrombin-induced generation of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 from vascular smooth muscle cells. 916 40
1.
Sodium fluoride
causes apoptosis of pancreatic beta-cells and this response is enhanced by pre-treatment with
pertussis
toxin. In the present study, tyrosine kinase inhibitors were used to investigate the mechanisms of action of NaF and
pertussis
toxin in the beta-cell line, RINm5F. 2. Exposure of RINm5F cells to low concentrations of genistein or tyrphostin A25 resulted in significant inhibition of cell death induced by 5 mM NaF. Higher concentrations (>25 microM) were cytotoxic in the absence of NaF but, paradoxically, the combination of genistein and NaF induced less cell death than when each agent was used alone. 3. The increase in cell death induced by 100 microM genistein was markedly inhibited by ciprofloxacin, a drug which binds to topoisomerase II. Etoposide (which inhibits topoisomerase II but has no effect on tyrosine kinase activity) also caused an increase in RINm5F cell death. Neither etoposide nor ciprofloxacin altered the response to 5 mM NaF. 4.
Pertussis
toxin markedly enhanced the extent of RINm5F cell death induced by NaF and this effect was completely prevented by 25 microM genistein. The inhibition caused by genistein was not affected by ciprofloxacin but was reproduced by a structurally dissimilar tyrosine kinase inhibitor, herbimycin A. 5. The results demonstrate that RINm5F beta-cells express a
pertussis
toxin sensitive pathway that is anti-apoptotic. The activity of this pathway is most evident in cells exposed to pro-apoptotic stimuli where the effects of
pertussis
toxin can be blocked by inhibitors of tyrosine kinase enzymes. A genistein-sensitive tyrosine kinase does not appear to be involved in RINm5F cell survival under basal conditions.
...
PMID:Effects of tyrosine kinase inhibitors on cell death induced by sodium fluoride and pertussis toxin in the pancreatic beta-cell line, RINm5F. 1115 68
Sodium fluoride (NaF)
has previously been reported to induce a strong IL-8 response in human epithelial lung cells (A549) via mechanisms that seem to involve the activation of G proteins. In the present study the signal pathways downstream of the G proteins have been examined. NaF induced a weak, but sustained increase in PKC activity. In contrast, the PKC activator TPA induced a relatively strong, but transient effect and augmented the NaF-induced PKC activity. TPA induced a marked IL-8 response compared to NaF. PDB, another PKC activator, was less effective, but augmented the IL-8 response to NaF. Pretreatment with TPA for 20 h, or the PKC inhibitor GF109203X for 1 h, abolished the basal and NaF-induced PKC activities and partially prevented the NaF-induced IL-8 response. Inhibition of the MAP kinase p38 by SB202190 partially reduced the IL-8 response to NaF, whereas a reduction in ERK activity by PD98059 led to an increased response. The NaF-induced IL-8 response was weakly augmented by the PKA stimulator forskolin and the G(i) inhibitor
pertussis
toxin. The PKA inhibitor H89 seemed to reduce the NaF-induced IL-8 response, but the measured effect was not statistically significant. BAPTA-AM, KN93 and W7, that inhibit Ca(2+)-linked effects, did not affect the IL-8 response. Furthermore, the tyrosine kinase inhibitor genestein, the PI-3 kinase inhibitor wortmannin and phosphatase inhibition were without effects. In conclusion, the data suggest that NaF-induced increase of IL-8 in A549 cells involved PKC- and p38-linked pathways, whereas an ERK-dependent pathway counteracted the response. Tyrosine kinases, Ca(2+)-linked pathways, PI-3 kinase, PKA and phosphatase inhibition seem to play no or minor roles in the fluoride-induced IL-8 response.
...
PMID:Mechanisms in fluoride-induced interleukin-8 synthesis in human lung epithelial cells. 1156 78