Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Systematic analysis of the hydrolysis of benzyloxycarbonyl (Cbz)-dipeptides by cathepsin A [EC 3.4.12.1] purified from rat liver lysosomes showed that multiple forms of cathepsin A preferentially cleave peptide bonds with leucine, methionine, and phenylalanine. Cbz-Met-Met, -Met-Phe, -Phe-Met, and -Phe-Ala were hydrolyzed 6 to 8 times faster than the standard substrates, Cbz-Glu-Phe and Cbz-Glu-Tyr. The pH optima of the hydrolyses were 4.6 to 5.8. Hydrolysis of peptide bonds with glycine, isoleucine, and proline was very slow, but the rate depended on the nature of the adjacent amino acids. Proteins such as albumin, cytochrome c, gamma-globulin, hemoglobin, histone, myoglobin, and myosin were scarecely degraded. Peptide hormones, such as glucagon and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) were hydrolyzed markedly with optimum pH's of 4.5 and 4.6, respectively. Angiotensin I, II, bradykinin, Lys- and Met-Lysbradykinin (kallidin and Met-kallidin), and substance P were also hydrolyzed at appreciable rates. pH optima for these peptide hormones were 5.2 to 5.6. On the other hand, insulin and its A chain, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH), oxytocin and vasopressin were cleaved slowly. In the hydrolyses of glucagon and other peptides, multiple forms of rat liver lysosomal cathepsin A again showed a carboxypeptidase nature, cleaving peptide bonds sequentially from the carboxyl terminal. Almost all of the amino acids were cleaved on prolonged incubation. Vaso-activites of angiotensin II and bradykinin were rapidly lost on hydrolysis by cathepsin A. Lysosomal cathepsin C [dipeptidylaminopeptidase I, EC 3.4.14.1] also activated angiotensin II, but did not inactive bradykinin. Cathepsin A, therefore, can be regarded as one of the lysosomal angiotensinases and kinases. No distinct differences were observed between the multiple forms of cathepsin A in these hydrolyses and inactivations of peptides.
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PMID:Studies on cathepsins of rat liver lysosomes. III. Hydrolysis of peptides, and inactivation of angiotensin and bradykinin by cathepsin A. 1 61

Mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats oxidize succinate, but not ascorbate plus tetramethylphenylenediamine, faster in the uncoupled state than do control mitochondria. The rate of O(2) uptake in the presence of both substrates is equal to the sum of the rates of the O(2) uptake in the presence of either substrate alone. It is concluded that the mitochondrial respiratory chain is limited at some point between cytochromes b and c and that this step is regulated by glucagon. Measurement of the cytochrome spectra under uncoupled conditions in the presence of succinate and rotenone demonstrates a crossover between cytochromes c and c(1) when control mitochondria are compared with those from glucagon-treated rats, cytochrome c being more oxidized and cytochrome c(1) more reduced in control mitochondria. Under conditions where pyruvate metabolism is studied the control mitochondria are generally more oxidized than those from glucagon-treated rats, the redox state of cytochrome b-566 correlating with the rate of pyruvate metabolism in sucrose medium. However, when the redox state of the mitochondria is taken into account, a crossover between cytochromes c and c(1) is again apparent. The spectra of the b cytochromes are complex, but cytochrome b-562 appears to become more reduced relative to cytochrome b-566 in mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats than in control mitochondria. This can be explained by the existence of a more alkaline matrix in glucagon-treated rats, the redox potential for cytochrome b being pH-sensitive. It is concluded that glucagon stimulates electron flow between cytochromes c(1) and c. The physiological significance of these findings is discussed.
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PMID:Stimulation of the respiratory chain of rat liver mitochondria between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c by glucagon treatment of rats. 21 Jul 59

A peptide, eluted with cytochrome c, called 'big' somatostatin, is the only somatostatin-like immunoreactivity present in the peripheral plasma of the duck. The metabolic action of partially purified fractions of 'big' somatostatin was investigated on glucagon-stimulated lipolysis in chicken adipocytes. Significant inhibition of glycerol release (an index of lipolysis) induced by physiological concentrations of glucagon was observed with physiological concentrations of 'big' somatostatin; the percentage of inhibition was dose-dependent.
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PMID:The biological activity of duck 'big' somatostatin on chicken adipose tissue. 285 95

The effects of hormones on the cytochrome spectra of isolated hepatocytes were recorded under conditions of active gluconeogenesis from L-lactate. Glucagon, phenylephrine, vasopressin and valinomycin, at concentrations that caused stimulation of gluconeogenesis, increased the reduction of the components of the cytochrome bc1 complex, just as has been observed in liver mitochondria isolated from glucagon-treated rats [Halestrap (1982) Biochem. J. 204, 37-47]. The effects of glucagon and phenylephrine were additive. The time courses of the increased reduction of cytochrome c/c1 and NAD(P)H/NAD(P)+ caused by hormones, valinomycin, A23187 and ethanol were measured by dual-beam spectrophotometry and fluorescence respectively. Ethanol (14 mM) produced a substantial rise in NAD(P)H fluorescence, beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate and lactate/pyruvate ratios, no change in cytochrome c/c1 reduction, a 10% decrease in O2 consumption and a 60% decrease in gluconeogenesis. Glucagon, phenylephrine and vasopressin caused a substantial and transient rise in NAD(P)H fluorescence, but a sustained increase in cytochrome c/c1 reduction and the rates of O2 consumption and gluconeogenesis. The transience of the fluorescence response was greater in the absence of Ca2+, when the cytochrome c/c1 response also became transient. The fluorescence response was smaller and less transient, but the cytochrome c/c1 response was greater, in the presence of fatty acids. Both responses were greatly decreased by the presence of 1 mM-pent-4-enoate. Valinomycin (2.5 nM) caused a decrease in NAD(P)H fluorescence coincident with an increase in cytochrome c/c1 reduction and the rate of gluconeogenesis and O2 consumption. A23187 (7.5 mM) caused increases in both NAD(P)H fluorescence and cytochrome c/c1 reduction. The effects of hormones and valinomycin on the time courses of NAD(P)H fluorescence, cytochrome c/c1 reduction and light-scattering by hepatocytes were compared with those of 0.5 microM-Ca2+ or 1 nM-valinomycin on the same parameters of isolated liver mitochondria. It is concluded that hormones increase respiration by hepatocytes in a biphasic manner. An initial Ca2+-dependent activation of mitochondrial dehydrogenases rapidly increases the mitochondrial [NADH], which is followed by a volume-mediated stimulation of fatty acid oxidation and electron flow between NADH and cytochrome c. 10. Amytal (0.5 mM) was able to reverse the effects of hormones on the reduction of cytochromes c/c1 and the rates of gluconeogenesis and O2 consumption without significantly lowering tissue [ATP].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The mechanism of the hormonal activation of respiration in isolated hepatocytes and its importance in the regulation of gluconeogenesis. 302 26

The rate of reduction of ferricyanide in the presence and absence of antimycin and ubiquinone-1 was measured using liver mitochondria from control and glucagon treated rats. Glucagon treatment was shown to increase electron flow from both NADH and succinate to ubiquinone, and from ubiquinone to cytochrome c. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) was shown to inhibit the oxidation of glutamate + malate to a much greater extent than that of succinate or duroquinol. Spectral and kinetic studies confirmed that electron flow between NADH and ubiquinone was the primary site of action but that the interaction of the ubiquinone pool with complex 3 was also affected. The effects of various respiratory chain inhibitors on the rate of uncoupled oxidation of succinate and glutamate + malate by control and glucagon treated mitochondria were studied. The stimulation of respiration seen in the mitochondria from glucagon treated rats was maintained or increased as respiration was progressively inhibited with DCMU, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-n-oxide (HQNO) and colletotrichin, but greatly reduced when inhibition was produced with malonate or antimycin. These data were also shown to support the conclusion that glucagon treatment may cause some stimulation of electron flow through NADH dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase and through the bc1 complex, probably at the point of interaction of the complexes with the ubiquinone pool. The effects of glucagon treatment on duroquinol oxidation and the inhibitor titrations could not be mimicked by increasing the matrix volume, nor totally reversed by aging of mitochondria. These are both processes that have been suggested as the means by which glucagon exerts its effects on the respiratory chain (Armston, A.E., Halestrap, A.P. and Scott, R.D., 1982, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 681, 429-439). It is concluded that an additional mechanism for regulating electron flow must exist and a change in lipid peroxidation of the inner mitochondrial membrane is suggested.
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PMID:Glucagon treatment of rats activates the respiratory chain of liver mitochondria at more than one site. 302 93

1. Increasing concentrations of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), a mild respiratory-chain inhibitor [Halestrap (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 927, 280-290], caused progressive inhibition of glucose production from lactate + pyruvate by hepatocytes from starved rats incubated in the presence or absence of oleate and gluconeogenic hormones. 2. No significant changes in tissue ATP content were observed, but there were concomitant decreases in ketone-body output and cytochrome c reduction and increases in NADH fluorescence and the ratios of [lactate]/[pyruvate] and [beta-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate]. 3. The inhibition by DCMU of palmitoylcarnitine oxidation by isolated liver mitochondria was used to calculate a flux control coefficient of the respiratory chain towards gluconeogenesis. In the presence of 1 mM-oleate, the calculated values were 0.61, 0.39 and 0.25 in the absence of hormone and in the presence of glucagon or phenylephrine respectively, consistent with activation of the respiratory chain in situ as previously suggested [Quinlan & Halestrap (1986) Biochem. J. 236, 789-800]. 4. Cytoplasmic oxaloacetate concentrations were shown to decrease under these conditions, implying inhibition of pyruvate carboxylase. 5. Inhibition of gluconeogenesis from fructose and dihydroxyacetone was also observed with DCMU and was accompanied by an increased output of lactate + pyruvate, suggesting that activation of pyruvate kinase was occurring. With the latter substrate, measurements of tissue ADP and ATP contents showed that DCMU caused a small fall in [ATP]/[ADP] ratio. 6. Two inhibitors of fatty acid oxidation, pent-4-enoate and 2-tetradecylglycidate, were shown to abolish and to decrease respectively the effects of hormones, but not valinomycin, on gluconeogenesis from lactate + pyruvate, without changing tissue ATP content. 7. It is concluded that the hormonal increase in mitochondrial matrix volume stimulates fatty acid oxidation and respiratory-chain activity, allowing stimulation of pyruvate carboxylation and thus gluconeogenesis to occur without major changes in [ATP]/[ADP] or [NADH]/[NAD+] ratios. 8. The high flux control coefficient of the respiratory chain towards gluconeogenesis may account for the hypoglycaemic effect of mild respiratory-chain inhibitors.
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PMID:Evidence that the flux control coefficient of the respiratory chain is high during gluconeogenesis from lactate in hepatocytes from starved rats. Implications for the hormonal control of gluconeogenesis and action of hypoglycaemic agents. 342 47

The conformation of some polypeptides and proteins in sodium dodecyl sulfate (NaDodSO4) solutions was studied by circular dichroism. The type and extent of induced structure depend on their helix- and beta-forming potential. Anionic side groups in segments of helix or beta form tend to destabilize the ordered structure unless they are protonated. beta-Endorphin has one Glu inside a predicted helical segment; its helicity in a NaDodSO4 solution is enhanced at pH below 4. alpha-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone having a Glu in a beta segment undergoes a pH-induced coil to beta transition in 1.25 mM NaDodSO4 (excess surfactant will disrupt the beta form). Reduced somatostatin assumes a beta form in 2 mM NaDodSO4 and a partial helix in 25 mM NaDodSO4, both of which are unchanged in acidic pH because it lacks -COOH groups. The unordered gastrin with five consecutive Glu's becomes helical in a NaDodSO4 solution at pH 4. Neurotensin with one Glu has no structure-forming potential and is unordered in both neutral and acidic NaDodSO4 solutions. This charge effect also manifests in segments of ordered structure for polypeptides and proteins such as glucagon, cytochrome c, parvalbumin, ribonuclease A, and lysozyme. The effect is especially predominant in tropomyosin that is rich in clusters of anionic side groups. Its more than 90% helicity is reduced to about one-half in a neutral NaDodSO4 solution, but most of it can be restored by lowering the pH to 2.4.
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PMID:Ordered conformation of polypeptides and proteins in acidic dodecyl sulfate solution. 611 37

1. Studies on the cytochrome spectra of liver mitochondria from control and glucagon-treated rats in State 4, State 3 and in the presence of uncoupler are reported. 2. The stimulation of electron flow between cytochromes c1 and c observed previously [Halestrap (1978) Biochem. J. 172, 399-405] was shown to be an artefact of Ca2+-induced swelling of mitochondria. 3. When precautions were taken to prevent such swelling, glucagon treatment was shown to enhance the reduction of cytochromes c, c1 and b558 in both State 3 and uncoupled conditions with either succinate or glutamate + malate as substrate. An increase in the reduction of cytochromes b562 and b566 was also seen in some, but not all, experiments. 4. In State 4 with succinate but not glutamate + malate as substrate, cytochromes c, c1, b558, b562 and b566 showed increased reduction. 5. Glucagon stimulated oxidation of duroquinol and palmitoylcarnitine by intact mitochondria and of NADH by disrupted mitochondria. 6. No effect of glucagon on succinate dehydrogenase activity or the temperature-dependence of succinate oxidation could be detected. 7. Glucagon enhanced the inhibition of the respiratory chain by colletotrichin, but not antimycin or 8-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. 8. These results are interpreted in terms of a primary stimulation by glucagon of the 'Q cycle' [Mitchell (1976) J. Theor. Biol. 62, 827-367] within Complex III (ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) and a secondary site of action involving stimulation of electron flow into Complex III from the ubiquinone pool. 9. Ageing of mitochondria, hyperosmotic treatment or addition of 20 mM-benzyl alcohol opposed the effects of glucagon treatment on cytochrome spectra and colletotrichin inhibition of respiration. 10. These results support the hypothesis that glucagon exerts its effects on the mitochondria by perturbing the membrane structure.
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PMID:The nature of the stimulation of the respiratory chain of rat liver mitochondria by glucagon pretreatment of animals. 711 29

Glucagon and the glucagon-like peptides regulate metabolic functions via signaling through a glucagon receptor subfamily of G protein-coupled receptors. Activation of glucagon-like peptide-2 receptor (GLP-2R) signaling maintains the integrity of the intestinal epithelial mucosa via regulation of crypt cell proliferation. Because GLP-2 decreases mortality and reduces intestinal apoptosis in rodents after experimental injury, we examined whether GLP-2R signaling directly modifies the cellular response to external injury. We show here that activation of GLP-2R signaling inhibits cycloheximide-induced apoptosis in baby hamster kidney fibroblasts expressing a transfected GLP-2 receptor. GLP-2 reduced DNA fragmentation and improved cell survival, in association with reduced activation of caspase-3 and decreased poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and reduced caspase-8 and caspase-9-like activities. Both GLP-2 and forskolin reduced mitochondrial cytochrome c release and decreased the cycloheximide-induced cleavage of caspase-3 in the presence or absence of the PKA inhibitor H-89. Similarly, GLP-2 increased cell survival following cycloheximide in the presence of the kinase inhibitors PD98054 and LY294002. These findings provide evidence that signaling through G protein-coupled receptors of the glucagon superfamily is directly linked to regulation of apoptosis and suggest the existence of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase-, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-, and mitogen-activated protein kinase-independent pathway coupling GLP-2R signaling to caspase inhibition and cell survival.
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PMID:The glucagon-like peptide-2 receptor mediates direct inhibition of cellular apoptosis via a cAMP-dependent protein kinase-independent pathway. 1094 Mar 5

A multi-variable computer model is presented for the prediction of the electrophoretic mobilities of peptides at pH 2.5 from known physico-chemical constants of their amino acid residues. The model is empirical and does not claim any theoretical dependencies; however, the results suggest that, at least at this pH, peptides may be theoretically represented as classical polymers of freely joined amino acid residues of unequal sizes. The model assumes that the electrophoretic mobility can be represented by a product of three functions that return the contributions of peptide charge, length and width, respectively to the mobility. The model relies on accurate experimental determination of the electrophoretic mobilities of a diverse set of peptides, by capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE), at 22 degrees C, with a 50 mM phosphate buffer, at pH 2.5. The electrophoretic mobilities of a basis set of 102 peptides that varied in charge from 0.65 to 16 and in size from two to 42 amino acid residues were accurately measured at these fixed experimental conditions using a stable 10% linear polyacrylamide-coated column. Data from this basis set was used to derive the peptide charge, length, and width functions respectively. The main purpose of this endeavor is to use the model for the prediction of peptide mobilities at pH 2.5, and for simulation of CZE peptide maps of protein digests. Excellent agreement was obtained between predicted and experimental electrophoretic mobilities for all categories of peptides, including the highly charged and the hydrophobic. To illustrate the utility of this model in protein studies it was used to simulate theoretical peptide maps of the digests of glucagon and horse cytochrome c. The resulting maps were compared and contrasted with their experimental counterparts. The potential of this approach and its limitations are discussed.
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PMID:Peptide mapping by capillary zone electrophoresis: how close is theoretical simulation to experimental determination. 1152 76


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