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)

Incubation of C6-2B rat glioma cells with UDP or UTP resulted in a time- and concentration-dependent increase in the accumulation of inositol phosphates. In contrast, ATP, ADP, and analogs of these nucleotides known to be effective agonists at P2U-, P2X-, P2Y-, P2T-, and P2Z-purinergic receptors all had no effect on inositol phosphate levels in C6-2B cells. Pyrimidine nucleotides stimulated inositol phosphate accumulation with an order of potency of UDP > 5-BrUTP > UTP > dTDP > UDP glucose. K0.5 values for UDP, 5-BrUTP, and UTP were 2.3 +/- 0.5, 9 +/- 3, and 57 +/- 10 microM, respectively. A similar uridine nucleotide selectivity was observed for arachidonic acid release presumably occurring as a consequence of activation of phospholipase A2. Cross-desensitization and additivity experiments indicated that UDP and UTP interact with the same population of receptors. The effect of uridine nucleotides on inositol phosphate accumulation was inhibited markedly by pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin. UDP also caused a guanine nucleotide-dependent increase in inositol lipid hydrolysis in streptolysin-O-permeabilized cells. Taken together these results describe the existence of a novel uridine nucleotide receptor that is not activated by adenine nucleotides. This receptor is pharmacologically distinct from the previously described P2U- and other P2-purinergic receptors, and likely is a member of a new class of receptors for extracellular nucleotides.
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PMID:Identification of a uridine nucleotide-selective G-protein-linked receptor that activates phospholipase C. 816 81

The P2Y4 receptor is a new member of the P2Y family which functionally behaves as a pyrimidinergic receptor. The pharmacological properties of the human P2Y4 receptor have been characterized following its stable expression in 1321N1 astrocytoma cells. UTP induced a biphasic accumulation of inositol trisphosphates, with an early peak at 30 s followed by a smaller but more sustained accumulation. ATP was a pure antagonist at early times and later behaved as a partial agonist. At 20 min, the rank order of potency of various nucleotides was the following: UTP > UDP = deoxy UTP > 5-bromo-UTP > ITP > ATP. Diadenosine polyphosphates also stimulated the production of inositol trisphosphates (after 20 min), more potently than ATP, but their maximal effect represented only 20-25% of that of UTP. Pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulphonic acid inhibited strongly the UTP response, whereas suramin was inactive and reactive blue 2 had an intermediate effect. Pertussis toxin inhibited the response to UTP at early times (62 +/- 5% inhibition at 30 s), but its effect was no longer observed at 5 or 20 min. It is speculated that the P2Y4 receptor can exist in two distinct activation states differing in terms of time-course, specificity for uridine nucleotides and G-protein coupling.
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PMID:Pharmacological characterization of the human P2Y4 receptor. 899 25

The P2Y6 receptor is a recently cloned P2 receptor which displays a high sensitivity for diphosphonucleotides. In 1321N1 astrocytoma cells stably expressing this receptor, UDP induced a slow and sustained accumulation of inositol trisphosphate via a pertussis toxin-insensitive G-protein: the maximal level was only reached after 15 min and a significant response was maintained for at least 3 h. A full second response to UDP was obtained after the first 45-min stimulation, but was lost after 165 min. This slow and sustained time-course and the lack of desensitization was reproduced with ADP. UTP was unable to restimulate the P2Y4 receptor, another recently cloned P2 receptor with a preference for UTP, after the first 5-min stimulation. The P2Y4 receptor is thus rapidly desensitized whereas desensitization of the P2Y6 receptor is delayed. The rank order of potency of various diphosphonucleotides at the P2Y6 receptor was: UDP > TDP > IDP > GDP > ADP >> CDP. The activity of three non-specific antagonists of P2 receptors was characterized by the following rank order of potency: reactive blue 2 > pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulphonic acid (PPADS) > suramin. In conclusion, the most impressive features of the human P2Y6 receptor revealed by this study are the slow and sustained time-course of its activation and its high resistance to desensitization.
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PMID:Slow desensitization of the human P2Y6 receptor. 922 17

1. Northern blotting experiments have been performed with RNA extracted from several cell lines derived from the human lung in order to detect P2Y1, P2Y2, P2Y4 and P2Y6 mRNA. We have investigated the 1HAEo- and 16HBE14o- epithelial cell lines derived from the airway epithelium, the A549 cell line displaying properties of type II alveolar epithelial cells, the CALU-3 serous cells, the 6CFSMEo- submucosal cells and the HASMSC1 airway smooth muscle cells. We have also evaluated one pancreatic epithelial cell line called CFPAC-1. These experiments revealed that P2Y2 and P2Y6 mRNA are co-expressed in the IHAEo-, 16HBE14o- and A549 epithelial cell lines. The CFPAC-1 pancreatic cell line was strongly positive for the P2Y2 receptor. No signal was obtained for the P2Y1 and P2Y4 receptors. 2. We have then performed RT-PCR experiments with specific oligonucleotides of these last two P2Y receptors with the RNA used for the Northern blotting experiments. P2Y4 mRNA was detected in five cell lines: 1HAEo-, 16HBE14o-, 6CFSMEo-, HASMSC1 and CFPAC-1. P2Y1 mRNA was only detected in the CALU-3 cell line. 3. Inositol trisphosphates assays have identified a response typical of the P2Y2 receptor in the 1HAEo- and the 16HBE14o- airway epithelial cell lines which co-express P2Y2 and P2Y6 mRNA. By contrast, the 6CFSMEo- submucosal cells expressed a UTP-specific response which displayed pharmacological characteristics compatible with the human P2Y4 receptor: in particular, there was no response to UDP or ATP and the UTP effect was totally inhibited by pertussis toxin.
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PMID:Expression of P2Y receptors in cell lines derived from the human lung. 1038 59

1. The mobilization of Ca2+ by purinoceptor activation and the relative contributions of intra- and extracellular sources of Ca2+ were investigated using microfluorimetric measurements of fura-2 loaded in cultured neurones from rat intracardiac ganglia. 2. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed expression of mRNA for the G protein-coupled P2Y2 and P2Y4 receptors. 3. Brief application of either 300 microM ATP or 300 microM UTP caused transient increases in [Ca2+]i of 277 +/- 22 nM and 267 +/- 39 nM, respectively. Removal of external Ca2+ did not significantly reduce these [Ca2+]i responses. 4. The order of purinoceptor agonist potency for [Ca2+]i increases was ATP = UTP > 2-MeSATP > ADP >> adenosine, consistent with the profile for P2Y2 purinoceptors. ATP- and UTP-induced rises in [Ca2+]i were completely and reversibly blocked by 10 microM PPADS (a P2 purinoceptor antagonist) and partially inhibited by 100 microM suramin (a relatively non-specific purinoceptor antagonist). 5. In the presence of the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase inhibitor cyclopiazonic acid (10 microM) in Ca2+-free media, the [Ca2+]i responses evoked by ATP were progressively decreased and abolished. 6. ATP- and UTP-induced [Ca2+]i rises were insensitive to pertussis toxin, caffeine (5 mM) and ryanodine (10 microM) but were significantly reduced by U-73122, a phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor. 7. In fura-2-loaded cells, perforated patch whole-cell recordings show that ATP and UTP evoked slow outward currents at -60 mV, concomitant with the rise in [Ca2+]i, in approximately 30 % of rat intracardiac neurones. 8. In conclusion, these results suggest that in r intracardiac neurones, ATP binds to P2Y2 purinoceptors to transiently raise [Ca2+]i and activate an outward current. The signalling pathway appears to involve a PTX-insensitive G protein coupled to PLC generation of IP3 which triggers the release of Ca2+ from a ryanodine-insensitive Ca2+ store(s).
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PMID:P2Y purinoceptor activation mobilizes intracellular Ca2+ and induces a membrane current in rat intracardiac neurones. 1089 18

We previously found that oscillatory fluid flow activated MC3T3-E1 osteoblastic cell Ca(2+)(i) mobilization via the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate pathway in the presence of 2% fetal bovine serum (FBS). However, the molecular mechanism of fluid flow-induced Ca(2+)(i) mobilization is unknown. In this study, we first demonstrated that oscillatory fluid flow in the absence of FBS failed to increase [Ca(2+)](i) in MC3T3-E1 cells. Apyrase (10 units/ml), which rapidly hydrolyzes 5' nucleotide triphosphates to monosphophates, prevented the fluid flow induced increases in [Ca(2+)](i) in the presence of FBS. Adding ATP or UTP to flow medium without FBS restored the ability of fluid flow to increase [Ca(2+)](i), suggesting that ATP or UTP may mediate the effect of fluid flow on [Ca(2+)](i). Furthermore, adenosine, ADP, UDP, or adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) did not induce Ca(2+)(i) mobilization under oscillatory fluid flow without FBS. Pyridoxal phosphate 6-azophenyl-2,4'-disulfonic acid, an antagonist of P2X purinoceptors, did not alter the effect of fluid flow on the Ca(2+)(i) response, whereas pertussis toxin, a G(i/o)-protein inhibitor, inhibited fluid flow-induced increases in [Ca(2+)](i) in the presence of 2% FBS. Thus, by the process of elimination, our data suggest that P2Y purinoceptors (P2Y2 or P2Y4) are involved in the Ca(2+)(i) response to fluid flow. Finally, a decreased percentage of MC3T3-E1 osteoblastic cells treated with P2Y2 antisense oligodeoxynucleotides responded to fluid flow with an increase in [Ca(2+)](i), and an increased percentage of ROS 17/2.8 cells, which do not normally express P2Y2 purinoceptors, transfected with P2Y2 purinoceptors responded to fluid flow in the presence of 2% FBS, confirming that P2Y2 purinoceptors are responsible for oscillatory fluid flow-induced Ca(2+)(i) mobilization. Our findings shed new light of the molecular mechanisms responsible for oscillatory fluid flow-induced Ca(2+)(i) mobilization in osteoblastic cells.
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PMID:P2Y purinoceptors are responsible for oscillatory fluid flow-induced intracellular calcium mobilization in osteoblastic cells. 1237 32

Extracellular nucleotides exert a variety of biological actions through several kinds of P2 receptors in many tissues and cell types. We found that treatment with nucleotides increases intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in SK-N-BE(2)C human neuroblastoma cells with a following order of potency: UDP > UTP > ADP >> ATP. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis showed that specific mRNAs coding for human P2Y1, P2Y4, and P2Y6 receptors were expressed in the cells, but Northern blot analysis revealed that P2Y6 receptors were the predominant type. Activation of protein kinase C-alpha by treatment with 1 micro m phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate dramatically inhibited both the UDP-induced [Ca2+]i rise and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) generation, whereas incubation with pertussis toxin had little effect on the responses. The UDP-induced [Ca2+]i rise and IP3 production were maintained up to 30 min after stimulation, while bradykinin-induced responses rapidly decreased to the basal level within 5 min of stimulation. Pretreatment of cells with the maximal effective concentration of UDP reduced the subsequent carbachol- or bradykinin-induced [Ca2+]i rise without inhibition of IP3 generation. Neuronal differentiation of the cells by treatment with retinoic acid for 7 days did not change the expression level of P2Y6 receptors. Taken together, the data indicate that P2Y6 receptors highly responsive to diphosphonucleotide UDP are endogenously expressed in the human neuroblastoma SK-N-BE(2)C cells and that they are involved in the modulation of other phospholipase C-coupled receptor-mediated Ca2+ mobilization by depleting the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ stores.
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PMID:Attenuation of signal flow from P2Y6 receptor by protein kinase C-alpha in SK-N-BE(2)C human neuroblastoma cells. 1271 36

Previous reports on heterologously-expressed human P2Y11 receptors have indicated that ATP, but not UTP, is an agonist stimulating both phosphoinositidase C and adenylyl cyclase. Consistent with these findings, we report that in 1321N1 cells expressing human P2Y11 receptors, UTP stimulation did not lead to accumulation of inositol(poly)phosphates under conditions in which ATP gave a robust, concentration-dependent effect. Unexpectedly, however, both UTP and ATP stimulated increases in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c), with both nucleotides achieving similar EC50 and maximal responses. The responses to maximally effective concentrations of ATP and UTP were not additive. The [Ca2+]c increase in response to UTP was less dependent on extracellular Ca2+ than was the response to ATP. AR-C67085 (2-propylthio-beta,gamma-difluoromethylene-d-ATP, a P2Y11-selective agonist), adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate), and benzoyl ATP were all full agonists with potencies similar to those of ATP and UTP. In desensitization experiments, exposure to ATP resulted in loss of the UTP response; this response was more sensitive to desensitization than that of ATP. Pertussis toxin pretreatment attenuated the response to UTP but left the ATP response unaffected. The presence of 2-aminoethyl diphenylborate differentially affected the responses of ATP and UTP. No mRNA transcripts for P2Y2 or P2Y4 were detectable in the P2Y11-expressing cells. We conclude that UTP is a Ca2+-mobilizing agonist at P2Y11 receptors and that ATP and UTP acting at the same receptor recruit distinct signaling pathways. This example of agonist-specific signaling is discussed in terms of agonist trafficking and differential signal strength.
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PMID:Characterization of a Ca2+ response to both UTP and ATP at human P2Y11 receptors: evidence for agonist-specific signaling. 1276 46

This study was designed to test the hypothesis of whether activation of presynaptic P2X receptor-gated ion channels elicits noradrenaline release from central catecholaminergic terminals. ATP, alpha,beta-methylene-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (alpha,beta-methyleneATP), and ADP elicited concentration-dependent [3H]noradrenaline outflow from superfused rat hippocampal slices with the following rank order of agonist potency: alpha,beta-methyleneATP > ATP > ADP. Among P2 receptor antagonists, pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulphonic acid (30 microM), 4,4',4",4"'-[carbonylbis(imino-5,1,3-benzenetriyl-bis(carbonylimino))]tetrakis-1,3-benzenedisulfonic acid (100 nM), and 8,8'-[carbonybis(imino-3,1-phenylenecarbonylimino)]bis1,3,5-naphthalenetrisulphonic acid (10 microM) significantly inhibited the outflow of [3H]noradrenaline, evoked by ATP, whereas Brilliant Blue G (100 nM), 2'-deoxy-N6-methyladenosine 3',5'-bisphosphate tetraammonium (10 microM), the A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (250 nM), and the A2A receptor antagonist 3,7-dimethyl-1-propargylxanthine (250 nM) were ineffective. Pretreatment with the Gi protein inhibitor pertussis toxin (2.5 microg/ml) did not change the effect of ATP on [3H]noradrenaline outflow. In contrast, a decrease in extracellular pH from 7.4 to 6.6 significantly attenuated the response by ATP. When extracellular Na+ was replaced by choline chloride and in the presence of the noradrenaline uptake inhibitor desipramine (10 microM), the ATP-evoked [3H]noradrenaline outflow was almost completely abolished, indicating that its underlying mechanism is the sodium-dependent reversal of the noradrenaline transporter. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed that mRNA encoding P2X1, P2X2, P2X3, P2X4, P2X6, P2X7 and P2Y1 receptor subunits were expressed in the brainstem containing catecholaminergic nuclei projecting to the hippocampus, whereas mRNA encoding P2X5, P2Y2, P2Y4, and P2Y6 receptors were absent. Taken together, these results indicate that noradrenergic terminals of the rat hippocampus are equipped with presynaptic facilitatory P2X receptors, displaying a pharmacological profile similar to homomeric P2X1 and P2X3 receptors.
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PMID:P2X receptor activation elicits transporter-mediated noradrenaline release from rat hippocampal slices. 1508 50

Nucleotides are important extracellular signaling molecules. It has been established that nucleotides are released from damaged cells, activated platelets and endothelial cells. Thus, at the site of vascular injury, the concentrations of extracellular nucleotides can become elevated. Nucleotides have been shown to cause mobilization of intracellular calcium, upregulation of Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18), degranulation, and chemotaxis in human neutrophils. The goal of this work is to investigate the functional characteristics of nucleotide-receptors in human neutrophils. Nucleotides (ATP and UTP), caused intracellular calcium mobilization in a dose dependent manner. Pharmacological characterization using selective agonists (ATP, UTP), pertussis toxin in human neutrophils and human astrocytoma cells 1321N1 stably expressing P2Y2 or P2Y4 receptors, revealed that human neutrophils express only functional P2Y2 receptors. Treatment of neutrophils with pertussis toxin causes a partial inhibition of nucleotide-induced calcium mobilization. Similarly, by using 1321N astrocytoma cells expressing the P2Y2 receptor we confirmed that calcium mobilization is only partially inhibited by pertussis toxin. The partial resistance of P2Y2-mediated intracellular calcium mobilization suggests that this receptor subtype is coupled not only to a Gi protein, but also to a protein belonging to the Gq-family (most likely G16). In conclusion, we have shown that human neutrophils express functional P2Y2 receptors and all the nucleotide responses are mediated by P2Y2 receptor subtype and that P2Y2 receptors are the functional able to trigger intracellular signaling event in human neutrophils through dual activation of different G proteins.
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PMID:[Functional characteristics of nucleotide-receptors in human neutrophils]. 1660 54


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