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Query: UMLS:C0406810 (
NAME
)
13,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of
trypsin
and arginine analogues, alone or in combination, on half-maximal non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) relaxation elicited by different pulse trains of electrical field stimulation were studied in the rat gastric fundus in order to investigate further the relative contribution of peptides and NO. Trypsin (1 microM) partially inhibited electrically-induced NANC relaxation especially when longer pulse trains were used. L-NOARG, L-
NAME
and L-NMMA, but not D-NOARG or D-
NAME
(3-300 microM) produced concentration-dependent inhibition of the electrically induced NANC relaxation. L-Arginine (L-Arg), but not D-Arginine (D-Arg) (3.8 microM-3.8 mM) produced a concentration-dependent reversal of the inhibitory effect of L-NOARG IC50 (38 microM). Neither L-NOARG (38 microM) nor L-Arg (380 microM) influence submaximal relaxation induced by VIP (3 nM), isopropylnoradrenaline (10 nM), ATP (10 microM) or sodium nitroprusside (300 nM). Moreover L-NOARG (100 microM) did not influence neurally-induced VIP release. L-NOARG inhibition of NANC relaxation was significant only when short pulse trains were used, while
trypsin
showed significant inhibition only of relaxation induced by longer pulse trains. These results suggest that the relaxation induced by the activation of the NANC inhibitory neurotransmission of the rat gastric fundus consists of at least two components, one
trypsin
-sensitive and the other
trypsin
-resistant, to which VIP and NO contribute, respectively.
...
PMID:Evidence for dual components in the non-adrenergic non-cholinergic relaxation in the rat gastric fundus: role of endogenous nitric oxide and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. 158 95
Interferon production was demonstrated by the goldfish-derived
CAR
cell line in response to infection by goldfish virus-2. Supernatants of infected cultures provided antiviral protection to
CAR
cells and another cell line derived from goldfish, ABIII. The protective factor retained activity after ultracentrifugation, dialysis, freezing and thawing, acid treatment (pH 2), or heating to 56 degrees C but was sensitive to
trypsin
. Supernatants of infected cultures did not affect adsorption of virus. Previous studies have shown that replication of goldfish virus type 2 is enhanced by pretreatment of cultures with subcytotoxic concentrations of carbaryl. In the present study, pesticide-treated cultures were found to synthesize reduced levels of interferon.
...
PMID:Suppression of interferon synthesis by the pesticide carbaryl as a mechanism for enhancement of goldfish virus-2 replication. 620 Nov 37
1. rK10, a weak T-kininogenase isolated from the rat submandibular gland, is a protein belonging to the rat kallikrein family. In the present work, we have studied the biological effects of rK10 with respect to its ability to alter vascular resistance, either directly like rK9, i.e. another kallikrein-like protein,
trypsin
and thrombin, or through the release of kinins like tissue kallikrein (rK1). The direct effect was studied by its vasomotor activity on rat isolated aortic rings since this preparation was insensitive to the action of kinins. Its ability to induce altered vascular resistance through kinin-generation was investigated by blood pressure studies in whole animals. The studies were performed in comparison to rK1. 2. Unlike rK1, which induces hypotension when administered intravenously to rats (delta BP = -56 +/- 5 mmHg, 5 micrograms kg-1), rK10 did not have any effect on systemic blood pressure (delta BP = -3 +/- 1, 5 micrograms kg-1, i.v.). 3. rK10 was without effect on uncontracted aortic rings, but showed a concentration-dependent (10(-8)-10(-6) M) relaxant effect on tissue precontracted with phenylephrine (10(-6) M). After removal of endothelial cells, no relaxation was observed. The relaxant response to rK10 was transient. rK1 (with and without endothelium), bradykinin and T-kinin (with endothelium) had no effect on contracted or uncontracted aortic rings. 4. The relaxant effect of rK10 was dependent on its enzymatic activity since preincubation with aprotinin (1.02 mM) significantly reduced vasorelaxation from 74 +/- 4% to 24 +/- 3%. 5. The relaxant effect was not inhibited by the kinin antagonist Hoe 140 (10-7 M; 34 +/- 4% without,versus 30 +/- 2% with Hoe 140), but was totally inhibited by the NO-synthase inhibitor N omega.nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
) (2.5 x 10-4 M; 27 +/- 3% without and 2 +/- 1% with L-
NAME
).6. These results show that rKlO has the ability to induce vascular relaxation by a specific, direct effect on endothelial cell NO-synthesis, dependent on rK1O proteolytic activity, but independent of its ability to generate kinin. This effect, or its T-kininogenase activity in blood, was not sufficient for rK1O to have an effect on peripheral vascular resistance since intravenous injections of rK1O, unlike rKl, did not induce hypotension. Thus, rKlO does not seem to play a role in blood pressure homeostasis but may have a local effect on vascular resistance.
...
PMID:Kallikrein rK10-induced kinin-independent, direct activation of NO-formation and relaxation of rat isolated aortic rings. 754 21
This study set out to identify the neurotransmitters involved in autonomic vasodilatation of the guinea pig uterine artery. Non-noradrenergic, paracervical neurons supplying this artery contain at least four neuropeptides: vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), neuropeptide Y (NPY), dynorphin A (1-17) and somatostatin, probably in addition to acetylcholine. Transmural nerve stimulation of arterial segments precontracted with phenylephrine (3 x 10(-7) mol l-1 and treated with guanethidine (10(-6) mol l-1), produced relaxations which varied in form with the frequency of stimulation and the length of the pulse train. The relaxations were monophasic at low frequencies (< 2 Hz), and were biphasic at higher frequencies (> 5 Hz) and with longer pulse trains (> 50 pulses). Neither phase of the relaxations was reduced by hyoscine (10(-6) mol l-1), or by removal of the endothelium. The faster phase of the relaxations was selectively reduced (by 61%) during treatment with L-nitro-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
; up to 3 x 10(-5) mol l-1). This reduction was reversed by an excess of L-arginine, indicating that the fast relaxation was mediated by nitric oxide, possibly acting as a neurotransmitter. The slower phase of the neurogenic relaxation was preferentially reduced (by 43%) by the endopeptidase,
trypsin
(1-3 micrograms.ml-1). As VIP is the only currently identified peptide present in the paracervical neurons which causes vasodilatation, it is likely that VIP, or a closely-related peptide, is the transmitter responsible for the slow relaxation. Acetylcholine and an opioid peptide also seem to be released from the vasodilator neurons, but their effects were small, and may have been restricted to pre-synaptic sites. The slower neurogenic relaxations were inhibited by exogenous neuropeptide Y (68% reduction in amplitude), and were slightly potentiated by somatostatin (21% increase in amplitude). Therefore, endogenous stores of these peptides may also contribute to the sum effect of stimulating the paracervical vasodilator neurons. In conclusion, many different substances may act as autonomic co-transmitters from these pelvic vasodilator neurons.
...
PMID:Co-transmission from autonomic vasodilator neurons supplying the guinea pig uterine artery. 809 24
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is a neurotransmitter of nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC) nerves in the cat gastric fundus. A possible additional role for nitric oxide (NO) was investigated in circular and longitudinal muscle strips from this tissue. Incubation with the inhibitor of NO-synthesis, NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
, 3 x 10(-4) M), inhibited the relaxant response to both short- and long-lasting electrical field stimulation. The substrate for NO synthesis, L-arginine (2 x 10(-3) M), prevented this inhibition. In experiments with long-lasting electrical field stimulation,
trypsin
(3 x 10(-6) M) and L-
NAME
inhibited the beginning of the NANC relaxation to the same extent, but the inhibition by
trypsin
was more pronounced at the end of the stimulation period. The inhibitory effect of L-
NAME
and
trypsin
was additive. L-
NAME
did not influence the relaxations induced by VIP (10(-7) M), NO (10(-5) M) and isoprenaline (3 x 10(-6) M). NG-nitro-L-arginine (3 x 10(-4) M) also did not change the response to VIP. The relaxation induced by 10(-5) M NO was not transient but was sustained. The plateau phase of this relaxation was reduced by
trypsin
but not by 3 x 10(-6) M tetrodotoxin. It is concluded that NO is involved in NANC relaxation of the cat gastric fundus. During sustained NANC relaxation in the cat gastric fundus, cotransmission of NO and VIP is possible.
...
PMID:Involvement of the L-arginine: nitric oxide pathway in nonadrenergic noncholinergic relaxation of the cat gastric fundus. 833 56
1. The biological activities of the proteinase-activated receptor number 2 (PAR-2)-derived peptides, SLIGRL (PP6) SLIGRL-NH2 (PP6-NH2) and SLIGR-NH2 (PP5-NH2) were measured in mouse and rat gastric longitudinal muscle (LM) tissue and in a rat aortic ring preparation and the actions of the PAR-2-derived peptides were compared with
trypsin
and with the actions of the thrombin receptor activating peptide, SFLLR-NH2 (TP5-NH2). 2. From a neonatal rat intestinal cDNA library, and from intestinal and kidney-derived cDNA, the coding region of the rat PAR-2 receptor was cloned and sequenced, thereby establishing its close sequence identity with the previously described mouse PAR-2 receptor; and this information, along with a reverse-transcriptase (RT) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of cDNA derived from gastric and aortic tissue was used to establish the concurrent presence of PAR-2 and thrombin receptor mRNA in both tissues. 3. In the mouse and rat gastric preparations, the PAR-2-derived polypeptides, PP6, PP6-HN2 and PP5-NH2 caused contractile responses that mimicked the contractile actions of low concentrations of
trypsin
(5 u/ml-1; 10 nM) and that were equivalent to contractions caused by TP5-NH2. 4. The cumulative exposure of the rat LM tissue to PP6-NH2 led to a desensitization of the contractile response to this polypeptide, but not to TP5-NH2 and vice versa, so as to indicate a lack of cross-desensitization between the receptors responsive to the PAR-2 and thrombin receptor-derived peptides. 5. In the rat gastric preparation, the potencies of the PAR-2-activating peptides were lower than the potency of TP5-NH2 (potency order: TP5-NH2 > > PP6-NH2 > or = PP6 > PP5-NH2); PP6 was a partial agonist in this preparation. 6. The contractile actions of PP6 and PP6-NH2 in the rat gastric preparation required the presence of extracellular calcium, were inhibited by nifedipine and were blocked by the cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin and by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, genistein, but not by the kinase C inhibitor, GF109203X. The contractile responses were not blocked by atropine, chlorpheniramine, phenoxybenzamine, propranolol, ritanserin or tetrodotoxin. 7. In a precontracted rat aortic ring preparation, with an intact endothelium, all of the PAR-2-derived peptides caused a prompt relaxation response that was blocked by the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, N omega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-
NAME
) but not by D-
NAME
; in an endothelium-free preparation, which possessed mRNA for both the PAR-2 and thrombin receptors, the PAR-2-activating peptides caused neither a relaxation nor a contraction, in contrast with the contractile action of TP5-NH2. The relaxation response to PP6-NH2 was not blocked by atropine, chlorpheniramine, genistein, indomethacin, propranolol or ritanserin. 8. In the rat aortic preparation, the potencies of PP6, PP6-NH2 and PP5-NH2 were greater than those of the thrombin receptor activating peptide, TP5-NH2 (potency order: PP6-NH2 > or = PP6 > PP5-NH2 > TP5-NH2). 9. In the rat aortic preparation, the relaxant actions of the PAR-2-derived peptides were mimicked by
trypsin
, at concentrations (0.5-1 u ml-1; 1-2 nM) lower than those that can activate the thrombin receptor. 10. The bioassay data obtained with the PAR-2 peptides and with
trypsin
, along with the molecular cloning/RT-PCR analysis, point to the presence of functional PAR-2 receptors that can activate distinct responses in the gastric and vascular smooth muscle preparations. These responses were comparable to those resulting from thrombin receptor activation in the same tissues, so as to suggest that the receptor for the PAR-2-activating peptides may play a physiological role as far reaching as the one proposed for the thrombin receptor.
...
PMID:Rat proteinase-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2): cDNA sequence and activity of receptor-derived peptides in gastric and vascular tissue. 876 73
The contractile actions of the proteinase-activated receptor-2-activating peptides (PAR2APs), SLIGRL-NH2 (SL-NH2), SLIGKV-NH2 (KV-NH2), trans-cinnamoyl-LIGRLO-NH2 (tc-NH2), and the PAR1-AP. TFLLR-NH2 (TF-NH2) as well as
trypsin
and thrombin were studied in endothelium-denuded and intact human umbilical vein (HUV) ring preparations. In HUV rings with, but not without an intact endothelium, PAR2APs caused a concentration-dependent contractile response, whereas LSIGRL-NH2
trypsin
and PAR1APs were inactive. The contractile response was not affected by the endothelin ETA receptor antagonist, BQ123, the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin, the leukotriene synthesis inhibitor, MK886, or the epoxygenase/P450 inhibitor, SKF-525A. Other pharmacological antagonists (prazosin, Losartan") were similarly inactive. The order of potencies of the PAR2APs to cause a contraction in the endothelium-intact preparation was: SL-NH2 > > KV-NH2 > or = tc-NH2. Using an endothelium-free rat aorta ring as a reporter tissue, surrounded with endothelium-intact HUV as a donor tissue in a 'sandwich assay,' we also monitored the ability of SL-NH2, TF-NH2,
trypsin
and thrombin to release either contractile (EDCF) or relaxant (EDRF) factors. In the 'sandwich assay' done in the presence of L-
NAME
(0.1 mM), the endothelium-intact HUV tissue (but not endothelium-denuded HUV) released a contractile factor (EDCF) in response to SL-NH2 (50 microM) but not to
trypsin
or LSIGRL-NH2. The SL-NH2-mediated release/action of the EDCF was not affected by BQ123, indomethacin, MK886 or SKF-525A. In the 'sandwich assay',
trypsin
(4-10 nM), SL-NH2, KV-NH2 and tc-NH2 caused the release of a relaxant activity (EDRF) from the endothelium-intact (but not the denuded) HUV preparation. The release of EDRF was blocked by 0.1 mM (omega)nitro-L-arginine-methylester (L-
NAME
). Neither thrombin (10 u ml(-1), 100 nM) nor TF-NH2 (50 microM) were active in this EDRF-release assay. The relative potencies of the PAR2 agonists for causing the release of EDRF in the HUV sandwich assay were: trypsin> >SL-NH2> >tc-NH2>KV-NH2. This order of potencies differed from the one observed for the same agonists in the HUV contraction assay (above) and in an intracellular calcium signalling assay, conducted with cloned human PAR2 that was expressed in cultured rat kidney KNRK cells:
trypsin
> > SL-NH2 = tc-NH2 > KV-NH2. We conclude that PAR2APs (but not PAR1APs) via a receptor distinct from PAR2, can cause a contractile response in endothelium-intact HUV tissue via the release of a diffusable EDCF, that is different from previously recognized smooth muscle agonists (e.g. prostanoid metabolites, endothelin, noradrenaline, angiotensin-II, acetylcholine).
...
PMID:Endothelium-dependent contractile actions of proteinase-activated receptor-2-activating peptides in human umbilical vein: release of a contracting factor via a novel receptor. 988 72
We have investigated the ability of protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1), PAR-2, PAR-3 and PAR-4 agonists to induce contractile responses in isolated guinea-pig gallbladder. Thrombin,
trypsin
, mouse PAR-1 activating (SFLLRN-NH(2)) peptide, and mouse PAR-2 activating (SLIGRL-NH(2)) and human PAR-2 activating (SLIGKV-NH(2)) peptides produced a concentration-dependent contractile response. Mouse PAR-4 activating (GYPGKF-NH(2)) peptide, the mouse PAR-1 reverse (NRLLFS-NH(2)) peptide, the mouse PAR-2 reverse (LRGILS-NH(2)) and human PAR-2 reverse (VKGILS-NH(2)) peptides caused negligible contractile responses at the highest concentrations tested. An additive effect was observed following the contractile response induced by either
trypsin
or thrombin, with the addition of a different PAR agonist (SFLLRN-NH(2) and SLIGRL-NH(2), respectively). Desensitization to PAR-2 activating peptide attenuated the response to
trypsin
but failed to attenuate the response to PAR-1 agonists, and conversely desensitization to PAR-1 attenuated the response to thrombin but failed to alter contractile responses to PAR-2 agonists. The contractile responses produced by thrombin,
trypsin
, SFLLRN-NH(2) and SLIGRL-NH(2) were markedly reduced in the presence of the cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin, whilst the small contractile response produced by NRLLFS-NH(2) and LRGILS-NH(2) were insensitive to indomethacin. The contractile responses to thrombin,
trypsin
, SFLLRN-NH(2) and SLIGRL-NH(2) were unaffected by the presence of: the non-selective muscarinic antagonist, atropine; the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, L-
NAME
; the sodium channel blocker, tetrodotoxin; the combination of selective tachykinin NK(1) and NK(2) receptor antagonists, (S)-1-[2-[3-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-1 (3-isopropoxyphenylacetyl) piperidin-3-yl] ethyl]-4-phenyl-1 azaniabicyclo [2.2.2] octane chloride (SR140333) and (S)-N-methyl-N-[4-acetylamino-4-phenylpiperidino-2-(3, 4-dichlorophenyl)-butyl] benzamide (SR48968), respectively. The results indicate that PAR-1 and PAR-2 activation causes contractile responses in the guinea-pig gallbladder, an effect that is mediated principally by prostanoid release, and is independent of neural mechanisms.
...
PMID:Evidence that PAR-1 and PAR-2 mediate prostanoid-dependent contraction in isolated guinea-pig gallbladder. 1103 Jul 17
Serine proteinases elicit profound cellular effects in various tissues mediated by activation of proteinase-activated receptors (PAR). In the present study, we investigated the vascular effects of cathepsin G, a serine proteinase that is present in the azurophil granules of leukocytes and is known to activate several cells that express PARs. In prostaglandin F2alpha (3 microM)-precontracted rings from porcine pulmonary arteries with intact endothelium, cathepsin G caused concentration-dependent relaxant responses (pEC(50)=9.64+/-0.12). The endothelium-dependent relaxant effect of cathepsin G could also be demonstrated in porcine coronary arteries (pEC(50)=9.23+/-0.07). In pulmonary arteries the cathepsin G-induced relaxation was inhibited after blockade of nitric oxide synthesis by L-
NAME
(200 microM) and was absent in endothelium-denuded vessels. Bradykinin- and cathepsin G-induced relaxant effects were associated with a 5.7 fold and 2.4 fold increase in the concentration of cyclic GMP, respectively. Compared with thrombin and
trypsin
, which also produced an endothelium-dependent relaxation in pulmonary arteries, cathepsin G was 2.5 and four times more potent, respectively. Cathepsin G caused only small homologous desensitization. In cathepsin G-challenged vessels, thrombin was still able to elicit a relaxant effect. The effects of cathepsin G were blocked by soybean trypsin inhibitor (IC(50)=0.043 microg ml(-1)), suggesting that proteolytic activity is essential for induction of relaxation. Recombinant acetyl-eglin C proved to be a potent inhibitor (IC(50)=0.14 microg ml(-1)) of the cathepsin G effect, whereas neither indomethacin (3 microM) nor the thrombin inhibitor hirudin (5 ATU ml(-1)) elicited any inhibitory activity. Due to their polyanionic structure defibrotide (IC(50)=0.11 microg ml(-1)), heparin (IC(50)=0.48 microg ml(-1)) and suramin (IC(50)=1.85 microg ml(-1)) diminished significantly the relaxation in response to the basic protein cathepsin G. In conclusion, like thrombin and
trypsin
, cathepsin G is able to induce endothelium-dependent vascular relaxation. It can be released from activated leukocytes at sites of vascular injury and inflammation and, therefore, sufficiently high concentrations might be reached locally in the vascular space to induce vasodilatation.
...
PMID:Endothelium-dependent relaxation induced by cathepsin G in porcine pulmonary arteries. 1137 59
1. Activation of PAR2 in second-order mesenteric arteriole (MA) rings from C57BL/6J, NOS3 (-/-) and PAR2 (-/-) mice was assessed for the contributions of NO, cyclo-oxygenases, guanylyl cyclase, adenylyl cyclase, and of K(+) channel activation to vascular smooth muscle relaxation. 2. PAR2 agonist, SLIGRL-NH(2) (0.1 to 30 microM), induced relaxation of cirazoline-precontracted MA from C57BL/6J and NOS3 (-/-), but not PAR2 (-/-) mice. Maximal relaxation (E(max)) was partially reduced by a combination of L-(G)N-nitroarginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
), 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) and indomethacin. An ODQ/L-
NAME
/indomethacin resistant relaxation was also caused by
trypsin
(30 nM) in PAR2 (+/+), but not in PAR2 (-/-) mice. Relaxation was endothelium-dependent and inhibited by either 30 mM KCl-precontraction, or pretreatment with apamin, charybdotoxin, and their combination; iberiotoxin did not substitute for charybdotoxin nor did scyllatoxin substitute fully for apamin. 3. Tetraethylammonium (TEA), glibenclamide, tetrodotoxin, 17-octadecynoic acid, carboxy-2-phenyl-4,4,5,5,-tetramethyl-imidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, SQ22536, carbenoxolone, arachidonyl trifluoromethyl ketone, 7-nitroindazole, N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl)acetamidine (1400W), N-(2-cyclohexyloxy-4-nitrophenyl)-methanesulfonamide (NS-398) and propanolol did not inhibit relaxation. 4-aminopyridine significantly increased the potency of SLIGRL-NH(2). A combination of 30 microM BaCl(2) and 10 microM ouabain significantly reduced the potency for relaxation, and in the presence of L-
NAME
, ODQ and indomethacin, E(max) was reduced. 4. We conclude PAR2-mediated relaxation of mouse MA utilizes multiple mechanisms that are both NO-cGMP-dependent, and -independent. The data are also consistent with a role for endothelium-dependent hyperpolarization of vascular smooth muscle that involves the activation of an apamin/charybdotoxin-sensitive K(+) channel(s) and, in part, may be mediated by K(+).
...
PMID:Multiple mechanisms of vascular smooth muscle relaxation by the activation of proteinase-activated receptor 2 in mouse mesenteric arterioles. 1178 91
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