Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The addition of norepinephrine, epinephrine, or forskolin to collagenase-dispersed rat liver hepatocytes increase cAMP and result in a 15% loss in total cell Mg2+ within 5 min. Conversely, carbachol and vasopressin induce a 10-15% increase of total cell Mg2+. Permeabilized hepatocytes also mobilize a large pool of Mg2+ when stimulated by ADP or cAMP. This stimulation is completely inhibited by atractyloside and bongkrekic acid, two different specific inhibitors of the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocase. cAMP directly mobilizes Mg2+ efflux from isolated rat liver mitochondria. 50 nM cAMP or 250 microM ADP induces in 5 min a mitochondrial loss of about 6 nmol of Mg2+/mg of protein and a stimulation of ATP efflux. The effect of cAMP is specific, is not reproduced by other cyclic or noncyclic nucleotides, and is inhibited by inhibitors of the adenine nucleotide translocase. These data indicate that cAMP is a messenger for a major mobilization of Mg2+ in hepatocytes. A major target for the effect of cAMP are mitochondria, which lose up to 20-25% of their total Mg2+ in 5 min, both within the cell and after isolation. Evidence is presented suggesting that the adenine nucleotide translocase is the target of the cAMP-dependent Mg2+ efflux and that cAMP may change the operation of the translocase. This, in turn, could change within the matrix the substrate of choice of the translocase from ATP to ATP.Mg.
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PMID:Cyclic AMP-induced Mg2+ release from rat liver hepatocytes, permeabilized hepatocytes, and isolated mitochondria. 166 10

The present work was undertaken to elucidate the role of the vascular endothelium in the changes of isometric tension elicited by different compounds in isolated cylinders of human and cat cerebral arteries and cat pulmonary arteries. Endothelium removal by rubbing significantly reduced the relaxing response to acetylcholine (ACh) of isolated segments of all the arteries. The same treatment did not modify the contraction elicited by 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in the human and cat cerebral segments but increased the contractile effect of the amine in cat pulmonary arteries. The mechanical responses to vasopressin, ATP and adenosine in isolated segments of cat cerebral arteries were unaffected after removing the endothelial layer. L-Arginine, but not D-arginine (10(-5) M), enhanced significantly the relaxation induced by increasing doses of ACh in unrubbed cat cerebral arteries whereas it did not modify the response to ACh in rubbed ones. However, L-arginine had no effect on the dose-response curve to 5-HT in both kinds of preparation and did not change the tone in precontracted unrubbed cat cerebral segments. These results suggest that the endothelium of the cerebrovascular bed plays a minor role in regulating the mechanical response induced by several vasoactive agents, although it retains its ability to produce an endothelium-derived relaxing factor.
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PMID:Different influence of endothelium in the mechanical responses of human and cat isolated cerebral arteries to several agents. 167 38

The water permeability of the kidney collecting duct epithelium is regulated by vasopressin (VP)-induced recycling of water channels between an intracellular vesicular compartment and the plasma membrane of principal cells. To test whether the water channels pass through an acidic endosomal compartment during the endocytic portion of this pathway, we measured ATP-dependent acidification of FITC-dextran-labeled endosomes in isolated microsomal fractions from different regions of Brattleboro rat kidneys. Both VP-deficient controls and rat treated with exogenous VP were examined. ATP-dependent acidification was not detectable in endosomes containing water channels from distal papilla (osmotic water permeability Pf = 0.038 +/- 0.004 cm/s). In contrast, the addition of ATP resulted in a strong acidification of renal cortical endosomes (pHmin = 5.8, initial rate = 0.18-0.25 pH U/s). Acidification of cortical endosomes was reversed with nigericin and strongly inhibited by N-ethyl-maleimide. Passive proton permeability was similar and low in both cortical and papillary endosomes from rats treated or not treated with VP. The fraction of labeled endosomes present in microsomal preparations was determined by fluorescence imaging microscopy of microsomes nonspecifically bound to poly-l-lysine-coated coverslips and was 25% in cortical preparations compared to 14% (+VP) and 9% (-VP) in papillary preparations. The fraction of cortical endosomes was enriched 1.5-fold by immunoabsorption to coverslips coated with mAbs against the bovine vacuolar proton pump. In contrast, the fraction of papillary endosomes was depleted more than twofold by immunoabsorption to identical coverslips. Finally, sections of distal papilla stained with antibodies against the lysosomal glycoprotein LGP120 showed that most of the entrapped FITC-dextran did not colocalize with this lysosomal protein. These results demonstrate that vesicles which internalize water channels in kidney collecting duct principal cells lack functional proton pumps, and do not deliver the bulk of their FITC-dextran content to lysosomes. The data suggest that the principal cell contains a specialized nonacidic apical endocytic compartment which functions primarily to recycle membrane components, including water channels, to the plasma membrane.
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PMID:Endocytic vesicles from renal papilla which retrieve the vasopressin-sensitive water channel do not contain a functional H+ ATPase. 169 62

Administration (ip) into fed mice of glucagon, epinephrine, vasopressin, oxytocin, angiotensin II, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) resulted in a rapid (within 2.5 to 15 min) elevation of PRPP content (two- to threefold) and in acceleration of the rate of de novo purine synthesis (twofold). Inhibition of the epinephrine-stimulated glycogenolysis by 2,5-anhydromannitol diminished markedly the acceleration effect of the hormone on the rate of purine synthesis. Administration of the hormones caused a rapid rise in the liver content of glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) by 15-70% but did not increase the ribose 5-phosphate (R5P) content. Liver ATP content was not affected. The hormones did not cause direct activation of PRPP synthetase, as gauged by the specific activity of the enzyme, its Km for substrates R5P and ATP, and its sensitivity to inhibition by ADP and GDP. The hormones did not increase the liver content of the enzyme activators Pi and Mg2+. The results suggest that the glycogenolytic hormones accelerate purine synthesis by a metabolic mechanism associated with the enhancement of glycogenolysis. PRPP synthesis is probably enhanced by the glycogenolysis-induced alterations in the cellular content of some metabolites other than R5P.
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PMID:Acceleration of purine synthesis in mouse liver by glycogenolytic hormones. 172 6

OKA2 and CL-A significantly inhibit the ability of angiotensin II, ATP and vasopressin to raise [Ca2+]i in rat hepatocytes, with a partial inhibition of the initial spike, and a complete inhibition of the following plateau. In contrast, the [Ca2+]i response to thapsigargin, which releases intracellular calcium stores through a mechanism independent of inositol phosphates, is much less affected. The ability of angiotensin II to stimulate Ins(1,4,5)P3 production is also reduced by OKA, with kinetics consistent with the inhibited [Ca2+]i response. Since OKA and CL-A are potent and selective inhibitors of phosphoprotein phosphatases, these results provide further evidence that agonist-stimulated Ins(1,4,5)P3 signalling can be inhibited by protein phosphorylation.
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PMID:Okadaic acid inhibits angiotensin II stimulation of Ins(1,4,5)P3 and calcium signalling in rat hepatocytes. 173 83

Addition of ethanol (17 to 340 mM) to cultured rat hepatocytes stimulated the breakdown of phosphatidylcholine phospholipases D and C as measured by an increase in the rate of release of choline and phosphocholine into the medium. The effects of ethanol were mimicked by propanol, dimethylsulfoxide and to a lesser extent methanol. The magnitude of the stimulation seen with ethanol was equivalent to and additive to that produced by glucagon vasopressin, norepinephrine, A23187 or PMA. In contrast, ethanol (340 mM) stimulated PI-specific phospholipase C activity by less than 20%. An equivalent stimulation of PC-specific phospholipase D and C was seen with as little as 20 mM ethanol and a 100% increase was seen with 340 mM ethanol. Ethanol did not significantly affect the ability of vasopressin, norepinephrine, ATP or A23187 to stimulate PI-specific phospholipase C. It is concluded that while ethanol is only a weak stimulator of PI-specific phospholipase C, it is a potent stimulator of phosphatidylcholine breakdown in rat hepatocytes.
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PMID:Ethanol is a potent stimulator of phosphatidylcholine breakdown in cultured rat hepatocytes. 173 64

The autoperfused intestinal circulation of pentobarbitone anaesthetized cats was used to study the effects of alpha,beta-methylene ATP (1-100 micrograms i.a.) on pre-capillary resistance vessels and post-capillary capacitance (venous) blood vessels in comparison with other vasoconstrictor agents (also given i.a.) and the effects of sympathetic nerve stimulation (0.25-16 Hz). All cats were treated with atropine and propranolol. alpha,beta-Methylene ATP, noradrenaline and sympathetic nerve stimulation all caused dose- or frequency-dependent constriction of both resistance and capacitance vessels. alpha,beta-Methylene ATP was particularly active on capacitance vessels causing a greater constriction than either noradrenaline or sympathetic nerve stimulation. In comparison, angiotensin II and vasopressin caused a selective constriction of resistance vessels and prostaglandin F2 alpha a selective constriction of capacitance vessels. The results demonstrate that functional P2x purinoceptors are present on both arterial and venous blood vessels of the cat intestinal circulation.
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PMID:Effects of alpha,beta-methylene ATP on resistance and capacitance blood vessels of the cat intestinal circulation; a comparison with other vasoconstrictor agents and sympathetic nerve stimulation. 181 94

Functional water channels are retrieved by endocytosis from the apical membrane of toad bladder granular cells in response to vasopressin [Shi, L.-B., & Verkman, A.S. (1989) J. Gen. Physiol. 94, 1101-1115]. To examine whether endocytic vesicles which contain the vasopressin-sensitive water channel fuse with acidic vesicles for entry into a lysosomal pathway, ATP-dependent acidification and osmotic water permeability were measured in endosomes from control bladders and bladders treated with vasopressin (VP) and/or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). Endosomes were labeled with the fluid-phase markers 6-carboxyfluorescein or fluorescein-dextran. Osmotic water permeability (Pf) was measured by stopped-flow fluorescence quenching and proton ATPase activity by ATP-dependent, N-ethylmaleimide-inhibitable acidification. In a microsomal pellet, Pf was low (less than 0.002 cm/s, 20 degrees C) in labeled endocytic vesicles from control bladders but high (0.05-0.1 cm/s) in a subpopulation (50-70%) of vesicles from VP- and PMA-treated bladders. Following ATP addition, the average drop in pH was 0.1 (control), 0.3 (VP), and 0.2 (PMA) unit. Measurement of pH in individual endocytic vesicles by quantitative image analysis showed that less than 20% of vesicles from VP-treated bladders acidified by greater than 0.5 pH unit. To examine whether water channels and proton pumps were present in the same endocytic vesicles, the pH of endosomes with high and low water permeability was measured from the effect of ATP on the amplitude of the fluorescence quenching signal in response to an osmotic gradient.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional water channels and proton pumps are in separate populations of endocytic vesicles in toad bladder granular cells. 190 Oct 21

The model of "chemical hypoxia" with KCN plus iodoacetic acid mimics the ATP depletion and reductive stress of hypoxia. Here, we examined the effects of chemical hypoxia on cytosolic free Na+ and Ca2+ in single cultured rat hepatocytes by multiparameter digitized video microscopy and ratio imaging of sodium-binding furan indicator (SBFI) and Fura-2. Intracellular Na+ increased from about 10 mM to more than 100 mM after 20 min of chemical hypoxia, whereas cytosolic free Ca2+ remained virtually unchanged. In normoxic hepatocytes, phenylephrine (50 microM) and Arg-vasopressin (20-40 nM) induced Ca2+ oscillations in 70 and 40% of cells, respectively. These Ca2+ oscillations were suppressed after one spike following the onset of chemical hypoxia. Phenylephrine and vasopressin also increased inositol phosphate formation by 22 and 147%, respectively. This effect was suppressed by KCN plus iodoacetate. Intracellular acidosis is characteristic of chemical hypoxia. Intracellular acidosis induced by 40 mM Na-acetate suppressed Ca2+ oscillations but did not inhibit hormone-induced inositol phosphate formation. Cytosolic alkalinization also suppressed Ca2+ oscillations. However, prevention of intracellular acidosis with monensin (10 microM) did not prevent suppression of Ca2+ oscillations during chemical hypoxia. Mitochondrial depolarization with uncoupler did not change free Ca2+ levels during chemical hypoxia, indicating that mitochondria do not regulate free Ca2+ during chemical hypoxia. From these results, we conclude: 1) chemical hypoxia does not block Na+ influx across the plasma membrane; 2) Chemical hypoxia inhibits hormone-stimulated Ca2+ flux pathways across cellular membranes by two different mechanisms: (a) by ATP depletion, which disrupts hormone-myo-inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate coupling, and (b) by intracellular acidosis, which inhibits myo-inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate-stimulated Ca2+ release from intracellular stores; 3) during ATP depletion by chemical hypoxia, mitochondria do not take up Ca2+ to maintain cytosolic free Ca2+ at low concentrations.
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PMID:Suppression of Ca2+ oscillations in cultured rat hepatocytes by chemical hypoxia. 193 69

The modulation of Ca2+ currents by neurotransmitters was studied in freshly dissociated rat spinal cord neurons, using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. GABA, baclofen, adenosine, ATP, serotonin, norepinephrine, somatostatin, and dynorphin A inhibited the current through Ca2+ channels in a substantial fraction of cells, while substance P, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, [D-ala2,d-leu5]-enkephalin, cholecystokinin-8 (sulfated), calcitonin gene-related peptide, angiotensin II, neurotensin, vasopressin, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone had no effect. In the case of baclofen, the inhibition is mediated, at least in part, by a GTP-binding protein. Suppression of Ca2+ current by neurotransmitters may represent a mechanism of presynaptic inhibition in the spinal cord.
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PMID:Neurotransmitter modulation of calcium current in rat spinal cord neurons. 196 36


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