Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The dual (stimulatory and inhibitory) regulation of adenylyl cyclase was studied in syncytiotrophoblast basal membranes prepared from term human placenta. Stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity with GTP, non-hydrolyzable GTP analogs, isoproterenol and PGE1 was observed, confirming the presence of an intact stimulatory pathway in these membranes. Investigations of the inhibitory pathway revealed tight coupling of the G-protein, Gi alpha, to catalytic adenylyl cyclase, with high doses of GTP producing 80 per cent inhibition of GTP/forskolin-stimulated activity. Confirming Gi alpha involvement, pertussis toxin (PTX) treatment of basal membranes augmented the responses of adenylyl cyclase to both GTP and forskolin. In addition, immunoblotting of basal membrane proteins revealed the presence of the G-protein subunits, Gs alpha, Gi alpha, and G beta/gamma. The response of adenylyl cyclase was measured to a series of agonists known to inhibit adenylyl cyclase in other tissues, however a reproducible inhibitory effect was produced only by somatostatin (approximately 80 per cent). Treatment of basal membranes with PTX caused a degree of reversal of the somatostatin-mediated adenylyl cyclase inhibition. However, the intoxication was insufficient to restore GTP/forskolin-stimulated activity.
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PMID:Dual regulation of human syncytial adenylyl cyclase. 135 75

Previous studies have shown that at least two subtypes of somatostatin (SRIF) receptors (SRIF1 and SRIF2) are expressed in mammalian cells. SRIF1 receptors have high affinity for MK 678, whereas SRIF2 receptors have no affinity for MK 678 but selectively bind peptides with structures similar to that of CGP 23996. Recently, two SRIF receptor genes have been cloned from human and mouse genomic libraries. In the present study, the pharmacological properties of these two cloned SRIF receptors, expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, were investigated, to determine whether they have any similarity to the previously described SRIF1 and SRIF2 receptor subtypes. Both cloned receptors could be labeled with 125I-Tyr11-SRIF and exhibited high affinity for SRIF. The SSTR1 receptor could also bind CGP 23996-like compounds but not MK 678. In contrast, the SSTR2 receptor was insensitive to CGP 23996-like compounds but bound MK 678 with high affinity. These findings indicate that the peptide specificities of the cloned SSTR1 and SSTR2 receptors differ from each other. Pretreatment of CHO cells expressing the two cloned SRIF receptors with SRIF abolished high affinity agonist binding to the cloned SSTR2 receptor but not the cloned SSTR1 receptor. Agonist binding to SSTR1 receptors was not significantly affected by guanosine-5'-)-(3-thiotriphosphate) or pertussis toxin pretreatment, whereas agonist binding to SSTR2 receptors was inhibited by both treatments. These findings suggest that SSTR2 receptors can be regulated and they associate with pertussis toxin-sensitive guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, whereas SSTR1 receptors do not. SRIF is a potent inhibitor of adenylyl cyclase activity in mammalian cells. However, neither the cloned SSTR2 nor SSTR1 receptor mediated SRIF inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity in stably transformed CHO cells or COS-1 cells transiently expressing the cloned receptors, suggesting that neither cloned receptor couples to adenylyl cyclase. The results of these studies indicate that the two cloned SRIF receptors have different pharmacological properties. The characteristics of the cloned SSTR2 receptor are similar to those of the previously described SRIF1 receptor, and the characteristics of the cloned SSTR1 receptor are similar to those of the previously described SRIF2 receptor.
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PMID:Pharmacological properties of two cloned somatostatin receptors. 135 50

A somatostatin (SRIF) receptor and its associated Gi regulatory proteins was purified from GH4C1 rat pituitary cells by: 1) saturation of the membrane-bound receptor with biotinyl-NH-[Leu8,D-Trp22,Tyr25] SRIF28 (bio-S28); 2) solubilization of receptor-ligand (R.L) complex with deoxycholate-lysophosphatidylcholine (D.L); 3) adsorption of solubilized receptor-ligand complex to immobilized streptavidin; and 4) elution of receptor and G-protein by GTP. The receptor, a glycoprotein with an average M(r) of 85,000, was then purified to substantial homogeneity on immobilized wheat germ agglutinin. The 85-kDa glycoprotein was identified as a SRIF receptor by several criteria. (a) It had the same size as the chemically cross-linked R.[125I]L complex. (b) Yield of the purified protein increased and plateaued in the same range of bio-S28 concentrations where specific high affinity binding reached saturation. (c) It was copurified with appropriate G-protein subunits. The 85-kDa receptor and two other proteins with M(r) values of 35,000 and 40,000, the sizes of G beta and G alpha, did not appear in eluates from control streptavidin columns done with SRIF receptors loaded with nonbiotinylated S14. The 40-kDa protein was identified as a Gi alpha by ADP-ribosylation from [32P]NAD catalyzed by pertussis toxin. (d) Both the chemically cross-linked R.[125I]L complex and SRIF receptor purified from [35S]methionine-labeled GH4C1 cells were reduced in size to about 38 kDa by endoglycosidase F. (e) Amino acid sequence from the purified receptor was nearly identical with that of a recently cloned SRIF receptor subtype.
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PMID:Purification of a pituitary receptor for somatostatin. The utility of biotinylated somatostatin analogs. 135 97

Intracellular calcium [Ca2+]i acts as an important intracellular messenger system for secretion and synthesis, cell growth and differentiation. In order to demonstrate definitively that a change in [Ca2+]i is responsible for a physiological event, one has to measure [Ca2+]i directly within intact cells and correlate the time course of any [Ca2+]i changes with the biological response. Measurement of [Ca2+]i was done in a single cell preloaded with fluorescent Ca indicator fura2 using a fluorescent unit (lonoquant) consisting of an inverted microscope (Zeiss IM 35) equipped with a mercury lamp and a rotating filter wheel containing filters at wavelengths of 340 and 380 nm. Cells were alternately excited and emission signals of fura 2-loaded cells were collected by a photomultiplier and recorded on-line on a computer screen. As a model system, the rat C-cell carcinoma cell line rMTC 6-23 secreting calcitonin was used. An acute elevation of extracellular calcium resulted in an increase in [Ca2+]i within 5 sec and rapid release of preformed calcitonin. This tight linkage between extracellular calcium and [Ca2+]i is mediated via Ca influx through voltage-dependent Ca channels. These channels are modulated by intracellular cAMP, yielding a rhythmic oscillation of [Ca2+]i, as well as by extracellular somatostatin blocking the Ca channel and the increase of [Ca2+]i via a pertussis toxin sensitive Gi protein. The change in [Ca2+]i is associated with changes in calcitonin secretion, confirming the stimulus secretion coupling via voltage-dependent Ca channels in C-cells.
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PMID:Measurement of free cytosolic calcium in single cells: method and application. 135 76

In enzymatically dispersed enriched rat parietal cells we studied the effect of pertussis toxin on prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)- or somatostatin-induced inhibition of H(+)-production. Parietal cells were incubated in parallel in the absence (control cells) and presence of pertussis toxin (250 ng/ml; 4 h). [14C]Aminopyrine accumulation by both pertussis toxin-treated and control cells was used as an indirect measure of H(+)-production after stimulation with either histamine, forskolin or dibutyryl adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (dbcAMP) alone and in the presence of PGE2 (10(-9)-10(-7) M) or somatostatin (10(-9)-10(-6) M). PGE2 inhibited histamine- and forskolin-stimulated [14C]aminopyrine accumulation but failed to alter the response to dbcAMP. Somatostatin was less effective and less potent than PGE2 in inhibiting stimulation by histamine or forskolin and reduced the response to dbcAMP. Pertussis toxin completely reversed inhibition by both PGE2 and somatostatin on histamine- and forskolin-stimulated H(+)-production but failed to affect inhibition by somatostatin of the response to dbcAMP. After incubation of crude control cell membranes with [32P]NAD+, pertussis toxin catalysed the incorporation of [32P]adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-ribose into a membrane protein of molecular weight of 41,000, the known molecular weight of the inhibitory subunit of adenylate cyclase (Gi alpha). Pertussis toxin treatment of parietal cells prior to the preparation of crude membranes almost completely prevented subsequent pertussis toxin-catalysed [32P]ADP ribosylation of the 41,000 molecular weight protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pertussis toxin reverses prostaglandin E2- and somatostatin-induced inhibition of rat parietal cell H(+)-production. 135 83

The effect of somatostatin on cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion in C-cells of the rat medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line rMTC 6-23 was investigated. Intracellular cAMP accumulation as well as calcitonin secretion could be dose-dependently stimulated by rat growth hormone releasing factor (rGRF). The long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide inhibited rGRF-stimulated cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion dose dependently but failed to block 8-bromo-cAMP-stimulated calcitonin secretion. The inhibitory effect of octreotide on rGRF-induced calcitonin secretion was partially abolished by pretreating the cells with pertussis toxin. The octreotide effect was not due to changes in the degradation of cAMP, as it was similarly seen in the presence of isobutylmethylxanthine. Thus we conclude that pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins are involved in the cAMP-mediated regulation of calcitonin secretion in C-cells.
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PMID:Inhibitory effect of somatostatin on cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion in C-cells: involvement of pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins. 135 52

Antral gastrin secretion and gene expression is inhibited by the paracrine release of somatostatin from antral D cells. Transforming growth factor-alpha and epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulate gastrin reporter gene constructs when transfected into pituitary GH4 cells. Somatostatin inhibits EGF stimulation of gastrin gene expression, which is in part mediated at the level of transcriptional regulation as somatostatin inhibits EGF stimulation of gastrin reporter gene constructs. Somatostatin inhibition was abolished by pertussis toxin, indicating somatostatin inhibits transcription through the inhibitory G protein Gi. Somatostatin inhibition was unaffected by vanadate and okadaic acid, implying this inhibitory pathway is mediated neither through phosphotyrosine phosphatases nor serine/threonine phosphatases, respectively. Gastrin reporter genes containing 82 base pairs of the 5'-flanking DNA were sufficient to confer both EGF responsiveness and inhibition by somatostatin in GH4 cells. However, transcription of a gastrin reporter gene construct containing only the EGF response element (GGGGCGGGGTGGGGGG), located at -68 to -53, was stimulated by EGF but was not inhibited by somatostatin. Thus, somatostatin inhibits EGF-stimulated gastrin gene transcription by a mechanism other than by interfering with cell signals elicited by the EGF receptor. Since the 82 GASCAT is inhibited by somatostatin, this result also implies that sequences adjacent to the EGF response element contain a cis-regulatory element mediating transcriptional inhibition by somatostatin. This cis-element was located using gastrin reporter genes comprising sequential segments of the human gastrin promoter sequence from the transcriptional start site to -82 in the 5'-flanking DNA. Gastrin oligonucleotide constructs lacking the D oligonucleotide (gatcCATATGGCAGGGTA), located at -82 to -69 in the 5'-flanking DNA, were not inhibited by somatostatin, indicating that a somatostatin inhibitory cis-element is located between -82 and -69 in the 5'-flanking DNA of the human gastrin promoter.
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PMID:Identification of a cis-regulatory element mediating somatostatin inhibition of epidermal growth factor-stimulated gastrin gene transcription. 135 47

Somatostatin and somatostatin receptors are transiently expressed in the immature rat cerebellar cortex but virtually undetectable in the cerebellum of adults. Although somatostatin binding sites have been visualized during the postnatal period in the external granule cell layer, the type of cell that expresses somatostatin receptors has never been identified; thus, the potential function of somatostatin in the developing cerebellum remains unknown. In the present study, we have taken advantage of the possibility of obtaining a culture preparation that is greatly enriched in immature cerebellar granule cells to investigate the presence of somatostatin receptors and the effect of somatostatin on intracellular messengers on cerebellar neuroblasts in primary culture. Autoradiographic labeling revealed the occurrence of a high density of binding sites for radioiodinated Tyr-[D-Trp8]somatostatin-(1-14) on 1-day-old cultured immature granule cells. Saturation and competition studies showed the existence of a single class of high-affinity binding sites (Kd = 0.133 +/- 0.013 nM, Bmax = 3038 +/- 217 sites per cell). Somatostatin induced a dose-dependent inhibition of forskolin-evoked cAMP formation (ED50 = 10 nM), and this effect was prevented by preincubation of cultured immature granule cells with pertussis toxin. Somatostatin also caused a marked reduction of intracellular calcium concentration. These results show the presence of functionally active somatostatin receptors on immature granule cells. Our data suggest the possible involvement of somatostatin in the regulation of proliferation and/or migration of neuroblasts during the development of the cerebellar cortex.
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PMID:Somatostatin receptors are expressed by immature cerebellar granule cells: evidence for a direct inhibitory effect of somatostatin on neuroblast activity. 135 66

Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and other substances increase adenylate cyclase (AC) activity and growth of normal and neoplastic thyroid tissue. Factors that inhibit cAMP may provide targeted therapy to tumors dependent on cAMP for growth. Somatostatin has been reported to inhibit the growth of gastrinomas and carcinoid tumors. We therefore studied the effects of somatostatin on basal, TSH, pertussis toxin, and forskolin stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in normal and neoplastic thyroid tissue from 19 patients. Adenylate cyclase (AC) activity was determined by the conversion of alpha 32P-ATP to 32P-cAMP in pmoles/mg protein/30 minutes in an 8000 x g particulate fraction rich in thyroid plasma membranes. TSH (300 mU/ml) and forskolin (100 mM) (a diterpine that directly stimulates the catalytic unit of AC) increased AC activity in normal and neoplastic thyroid tissue. The AC stimulation was greater in the neoplasms (p less than 0.01). Somatostatin (5 x 10(-6)M) decreased basal and TSH stimulated AC activity below basal levels in both normal and neoplastic thyroid tissue (including papillary, follicular, and medullary carcinomas). The inhibition of AC by somatostatin was greater in neoplastic tissue (p less than 0.025). Pertussis toxin (which blocks the inhibitory guanyl nucleotide regulatory protein) was able to partially reverse the effect of somatostatin. Somatostatin partially inhibited forskolin stimulated AC activity. Somatostatin inhibits basal and TSH stimulated AC activity in both normal and neoplastic human thyroid tissue, with a greater effect on neoplasms. These studies establish that somatostatin blocks a major regulator of thyroid growth and provides the rationale for the use of somatostatin analogs in the treatment of thyroid cancers.
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PMID:Effect of somatostatin on adenylate cyclase activity in normal and neoplastic thyroid tissue. 135 26

Octreotide (SMS), a somatostatin analogue, is an established antigrowth peptide, but it does not effectively inhibit the growth of insulinoma cells. In order to study the mechanisms that underlie this apparent lack of an antiproliferative effect on insulinoma tumor cells we established the rat insulinoma cell line, RINm5F, in culture. Cells in culture were tested by incubation in media with and without SMS. To study tritiated [3H]-thymidine incorporation into extracted DNA (TTID), 2 muCi/well of 3H was added for 24 hr, and cells were harvested and assayed for TTID (cpm/microgram DNA). Insulin (IRI) and intracellular cAMP (cAMPi) were measured by RIA. To study the effects of SMS on insulin secretion, conditioned media were sampled after 24 hr. To study the effects of cAMPi, conditioned medium was used to extract cAMPi following incubation with SMS for 15 min. Increasing concentrations of SMS had no significant effect on TTID in the presence of 1% FBS. Trypan blue exclusion tests showed > 90% viable cells throughout all stages of these experiments. There were no significant differences in cell numbers and protein content in the presence of SMS. There was a significant decrease in the secretion of insulin and intracellular cAMP levels in response to 50 nM SMS. However, SMS significantly inhibited TTID in RINm5F cells following a 4-hr pretreatment with pertussis toxin (PT) (23553 +/- 1747 vs 20635 [cpm/microgram DNA] +/- 1983 [SEM], P < 0.01). We conclude that the inhibition of insulin secretion by SMS is associated with an attenuation of cAMP formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanisms of somatostatin action in RINm5F cells in culture: preliminary evidence for possible altered G protein function. 135 94


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