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)

Developmental increase of tryptophan oxygenase (L-tryptophan: oxygen 2, 3-oxidoreductase (decyclizing), EC 1.13.11.11) was studied using hepatocytes of neonatal rats in primary culture. Hepatocytes from rats of 2-30-days-old were isolated and cultured for 2 days. In cultured hepatocytes of 2-day-old rats, tryptophan (2.5 mM), dexamethasone (1 x 10(-5) M) and glucagon (1 x 10(-7) M) did not cause the appearance of tryptophan oxygenase. But the enzyme activity became detectable, when hepatocytes from 5-day-old rats were incubated with tryptophan, the oxygenase could be induced precociously by dexamethasone, but by glucagon. The effect of glucagon was first seen 2 weeks after birth. However, in hepatocytes of 9-day-old rats glucagon stimulated formation of cyclic AMP and protein kinase activity (EC 2.7.1.37) and also induced tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5). When hepatocytes of 9-day-old rats were cultured for 4 days, their tryptophan oxygenase became inducible by glucagon. Insulin almost completely inhibited precocious appearance of the enzyme activity evoked by tryptophan plus dexamethasone in hepatocytes of 9-day-old rats. These studies suggest that the appearance of tryptophan oxygenase in rat liver during development is due to first the onset of gene coding for tryptophan oxygenase and then stimulation by the sequential actions of glucocorticoid and glucagon.
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PMID:Hormonal control of the development of tryptophan oxygenase in primary cultures of young rat hepatocytes. 730 79

The synthesis of the heterobifunctional cross-linking reagent 2-nitro-4-azidophenylsulfenyl chloride (NAPSCl) is described. This reagent can be used to specifically attach a photoactivatable nitrophenyl azide to tryptophan-containing polypeptides and proteins lacking sulfhydryl groups. The sulfenyl chloride group of NAPSCl reacts with the indole ring of tryptophan following second-order reaction kinetics in 50-100% acetic acid. The labeled product can be effectively photolyzed at wavelengths above 300 nm. The reaction of glucagon, a peptide hormone containing a single tryptophan residue at position 25 and no cysteine, with NAPSCl gave one major product, the photosensitive derivative glucagon-NAPS. The structure and properties of the purified derivative were established by amino acid analysis, absorption spectroscopy, and photolysis. Only the tryptophan residue of this derivative was modified. The photosensitive glucagon was shown to activate the adenylate cyclase of hepatocyte plasma membranes to the same extent as the native hormone at equimolar concentrations. Glucagon-NAPS could be radiolabeled by the lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination of the peptide. A glucagon-specific antibody bound both radiolabeled glucagon and glucagon-NAPS peptides. The covalent labeling of protein molecules with radiolabeled glucagon-NAPS peptide upon photolysis was demonstrated. Glucagon-NAPS can be used as an effective photoaffinity probe for labeling the glucagon receptor site in plasma membranes of target cells.
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PMID:Synthesis and characterization of a heterobifunctional photoaffinity reagent for modification of tryptophan residues and its application to the preparation of a photoreactive glucagon derivative. 742 13

Previous experiments suggest that experimental cancer-induced anorexia is associated with hyperammonemia and that daily injections of insulin may attenuate the anorexia for several days. In the present study, we determined whether similar daily insulin treatments would correct anorexia induced by the infusion of ammonium salts and compared this feeding response with that of insulin-treated tumor-bearing (TB) rats. Daily treatment of control and anorectic TB rats with systemically administered insulin for six days increased feeding in all control rats and 40% of the TB rats. All insulin-treated groups exhibited equal degrees of hypoglycemia irrespective of anorexia. Basal concentrations of lactate and glucagon were elevated in saline-treated TB rats. Plasma lactate levels were normalized by insulin treatment, whereas glucagon was normalized only in the TB rats that fed to insulin and increased further in TB rats that did not feed to insulin. Elevated hypothalamic tyrosine was reduced in insulin-treated TB rats that ate, and 5-hydroxy-indoleacetic acid was increased further when the rats did not eat. Insulin also blocked anorexia resulting from the intravenous infusion of ammonium salts. Hypothalamic concentrations of tyrosine and tryptophan were increased by the ammonia infusion and reduced significantly in insulin-treated infused rats. These results indicate that insulin treatment can reverse experimental cancer-induced anorexia and hyperammonemia-induced anorexia. Neurochemical changes associated with these treatments are also similar, but not identical.
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PMID:Insulin reverses ammonia-induced anorexia and experimental cancer anorexia. 752 Oct 32

The mouse tumor cell line alpha TC1-6 was used as a model system to examine the post-translational processing of proglucagon. Determination of the mouse preproglucagon cDNA sequence and comparison with the published sequences of rat and human preproglucagons revealed nucleic acid homologies of 89.1 and 84%, respectively, and amino acid homologies of 94 and 89.4%, respectively. Immunohistochemical analyses with antibodies directed against PC2 and glucagon colocalized both the enzyme and substrate within the same secretory granules. PC1 was also immunolocalized in secretory granules. Cells were metabolically labeled with [3H]tryptophan, and extracts were analyzed by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Radioactive peptides with retention times identical to those of synthetic peptide standards were recovered and subjected to peptide mapping to verify their identities. To determine the potential role of PC1 and PC2 in proglucagon processing, 3H-labeled proglucagon was incubated in vitro with recombinant PC1 and/or immunopurified PC2. Both enzymes cleaved proglucagon to yield the major proglucagon fragment, glicentin, and oxyntomodulin, whereas only PC1 released glucagon-like peptide-I from the major proglucagon fragment. Neither PC1 nor PC2 processed glucagon from proglucagon in vitro. These results suggest a potential role for PC1 and/or PC2 in cleaving several of the normal products, excluding glucagon, from the mouse proglucagon precursor.
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PMID:Processing of mouse proglucagon by recombinant prohormone convertase 1 and immunopurified prohormone convertase 2 in vitro. 773 Mar 17

Nineteen bulimic women and 22 age-matched controls were randomly assigned to receive 25 g of glucose or a placebo injection under double-blind conditions. Blood samples of glucose, insulin, and glucagon, and psychometric assessments of mood and food cravings were obtained 10 min before, and 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 45, and 60 min after injection. Blood levels of the large neutral amino acids (LNAAs) tryptophan, tyrosine, leucine, valine, phenylalanine, and leucine were determined at 10 min before and 60 min after the injection. Bulimic subjects were found to report more symptoms of distressed mood throughout the entire monitoring period than controls. Five minutes following glucose ingestion the self-reports of depression, fatigue, anxiety, and bewilderment rose to a level among the bulimic subjects that was above that at baseline, and was higher than that of bulimia nervosa (BN) subjects receiving placebo. No comparable change in mood was observed among controls. Blood glucose levels were correlated with mood in the bulimic group, but not in controls. In addition, the glucose injection induced a heightened urge to binge in the bulimic group (compared to placebo at 10 and 60 min), whereas reducing food cravings (for sweets) in the controls (at 5 min). When collapsed across time and injection condition, the blood glucose level of bulimics was lower than that of controls. There were no differences in insulin response between the groups. The bulimic group was found to have lower baseline levels of blood tryptophan, whereas no differences in the tryptophan/LNAA ratio were observed either at baseline or following glucose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A double-blind placebo-controlled glucose challenge in bulimia nervosa: psychological effects. 844 64

The studies were performed on cultured TT cells originating from human thyroid medullary carcinoma (i.e., from parafollicular cells of the thyroid). The amount of released calcitonin was dependent upon calcium level in the medium. Moreover, calcitonin secretion might be regulated by medium supplementation with polypeptide hormones. Somatostatin inhibited while glucagon and pentagastrin stimulated calcitonin secretion to t he medium. Calcitonin secretion was also influenced by biogenic amines and their precursors. Dihydroxy-1-phenylalanine and serotonin augmented while 5-hydroxy-1-tryptophan and dopamine inhibited calcium secretion. This, calcitonin secretion may be controlled by different substances present in the healthy organism. This points to a complex control of calcium ion level in the blood.
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PMID:Regulation of calcitonin secretion by thyroid parafollicular cells in vitro. 861 73

To further examine the physiological roles of the neuroendocrine prohormone convertases (PCs) in proglucagon processing, alpha TC1-6 cells were transiently transfected with PC1/3 and PC2 expression vectors containing either antisense or sense encoding cDNAs. PC1/3- and PC2-directed RIAs were used to determine that the PC1/3 antisense transfections lowered endogenous levels of PC1/3 by 40 +/- 7.9% but did not alter the levels of PC2. The PC2 antisense transfections decreased the endogenous levels of PC2 by 91 +/- 11.7% without affecting the levels of PC1/3. To quantitate the levels of proglucagon and proglucagon-derived products, transfected cells were metabolically labeled with [3H]tryptophan, and extracts were chromatographed by reversed-phase HPLC. Recovered peptides were then subjected to peptide mapping analyses, allowing precise quantification of 3H-radioactivity incorporated into proglucagon and its cleavage products. Product-precursor ratios were determined, and percent change in the proportion of products generated in antisense-transfected vs. sense-transfected cells was calculated. The decrease in PC1/3 after antisense treatment significantly reduced the amounts of glicentin produced and partially reduced the levels of all other proglucagon cleavage products. PC2 antisense treatment significantly reduced the levels of glicentin and 9K glucagon generated but had no significant effect on the remainder of the proglucagon-derived peptides. These results suggest the existence of redundant mechanisms that ensure the production of each of the intermediate and product peptides derived from proglucagon. PC1/3 is potentially an important enzyme in the processing of most proglucagon-derived peptides, whereas PC2-processing activity appears to predominate at only two of the four potential cleavage sites.
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PMID:Evidence for redundancy in propeptide/prohormone convertase activities in processing proglucagon: an antisense study. 872 79

Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was utilized to investigate the requirement of tryptophan residues located in the N-terminal domain of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor for the ability to bind its ligand and to induce cAMP generation. W39, W72, W87, W91, W110, and W120 were mutated into alanine. Two of the six tryptophan residues, W72 and W110, are highly conserved within the receptor subfamily. After transfection of mutated cDNAs in COS-7 or CHL cells, it appeared that mutant W87 A bound [125I] GLP-1 with the same affinity as wild-type receptor and induced signal transduction to a comparable extent. In contrast, mutant receptors W39A, W72A, W91A, W110A, and W120A lost the ability to bind [125I] GLP-1. Because all mutated receptor cDNAs were transcribed on RNA level (Northern blot) and the receptor proteins were expressed at the plasma membrane level (Western blot), it is concluded that with the exception of W87 all trytophan residues are essential for receptor ligand interaction. This indicates the significance of hydrophobic interactions within the N-terminal domain of the GLP-1 receptor.
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PMID:Five out of six tryptophan residues in the N-terminal extracellular domain of the rat GLP-1 receptor are essential for its ability to bind GLP-1. 914 4

We investigated the relationships between phenylalanine hydroxylation (Phe Hy) and plasma concentrations of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and glucagon in healthy male volunteers (N = 13; age, 29 +/- 3 years). Phe Hy, as well as the Phe and Tyr rate of appearance (Ra), were measured during L-[2H5]-Phe and L-[2H2]-Tyr continuous intravenous (i.v.) infusions both under basal postabsorptive conditions (N = 13) and following divergent changes of plasma aromatic amino acids (AAA) concentrations. Namely, AAA were increased by administration of a balanced synthetic mixed meal (n = 6) or selectively decreased by i.v. infusion of insulin along with a Phe-deficient, Tyr and tryptophan-deprived amino acid mixture ([IAA] n = 7). Following the meal, plasma Phe (54 +/- 3 to 81 +/- 12 micromol/L), plasma Tyr (54 +/- 4 to 91 +/- 7), Phe Hy (0.09 +/- 0.01 to 0.15 +/- 0.02 micromol/kg x min), Phe Ra (0.65 +/- 0.04 to 0.96 +/- 0.07), and Tyr Ra (0.51 +/- 0.03 to 0.93 +/- 0.11) all significantly increased (P < or = .05 v basal). IAA infusion significantly decreased plasma Phe (to 47 +/- 3 micromol/L), plasma Tyr (to 25 +/- 4), Phe Hy (to 0.07 +/- 0.004 micromol/kg x min), and Tyr Ra (to 0.29 +/- 0.02; all P < or = .05 v sal), while Phe Ra did not change (0.64 +/- 0.04, NS). Plasma glucagon did not change in the three experimental periods (basal, 85 +/- 7; meal, 72 +/- 10; IAA, 92 +/- 14 pg/mL; NS). Using linear regression analysis, plasma Phe was positively related to both Phe Hy (R2 = .76, P < .001) and plasma Tyr (R2 = .80, P < .001); Phe Hy and plasma Tyr were also significantly correlated (R2 = .60, P < .001). No correlation was found between Phe Hy and basal plasma glucagon (R2 = .04, NS). Using multiple regression analysis with plasma Tyr as the dependent variable, plasma Phe was still correlation with plasma Tyr (t = 4.29, P = .0002), while the relationship between Phe Hy and plasma Tyr was no longer significant (t = 0.69, P = .49). These data indicate that plasma Phe is closely associated with its own hydroxylative disposal in humans, and confirm that Phe conversion to Tyr may play a physiological role in maintaining balanced plasma phenylalanine and tyrosine concentrations.
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PMID:Relationships between phenylalanine hydroxylation and plasma aromatic amino acid concentrations in humans. 962 64

The effect of a "normal" (n = 8) and "high" (n = 6) protein intake (1 and 2.5 g x kg(-1) x day(-1), respectively) and of exercise on plasma amino acid (AA) concentrations, insulin, and glucagon concentrations was followed throughout a continuous 24-h period in adult male subjects at energy balance after six days on a standardized diet and exercise program. Subjects were fasting from 2100 on day 6 to 1200 on day 7 and then fed 10 identical meals hourly until 2100. Physical exercise was performed (46% maximal oxygen uptake) between 0830 and 1000 (fasting) and in a fed state (1600-1730) on each day. The normal-protein group showed fasting plasma AA concentrations that were higher (P < 0.05) than those for the high-protein group, except for leucine, methionine, and tyrosine. Glutamine, glycine, alanine, taurine, and threonine concentrations were distinctly higher ( approximately 30% or greater) throughout the 24-h period in subjects consuming the normal- vs. the high-protein diets. Exercise appeared to increase, although not profoundly, the plasma concentrations of amino acids except for glutamate, histidine, ornithine, and tryptophan. The profound diet-related differences in plasma AA concentrations are only partially explained by differences in the renal clearance of the amino acids. We speculate on the possible metabolic basis for these findings.
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PMID:Inverse relationship between protein intake and plasma free amino acids in healthy men at physical exercise. 1078 Sep 42


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