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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relationship between changes in the myocardial concentration of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) and cardiac contractility was studied in guinea pig and rat myocardium. When isolated perfused guinea pig heart were perfused with 10-5-M papaverine, a potent inhibitor of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity, myocardial cyclic AMP concentration increased significantly from 1.7 plus and minus 0.2 (SE) pmoles/mg protein (N equal 12) to 3.3 plus and minus 0.2 pmoles/mg protein (N equal 12), and the percent of phosphorylase aual 6) (P less than 0.01). However, perfusion with papaverine had no effect on contractility in the absence or the presence of exogenous epinephrine. In perfused rat hearts, 10-5 M glucagon increased myocardial cyclic AMP concentration from 1.5 plus and minus 0.1 pmoles/mg protein (N equal 12) to 2.6 plus and minus 0.1 pmoles/mg protein (N equal 12) (P less than 0.001). In contrast, cyclic AMP levels did not increase detectably in guinea pig heart perfused with glucagon. Glucagon increased adenylate cyclase activity more than twofold in rat myocardial broken cell preparations but failed to stimulate the enzyme in preparations from guinea pigs. Despite these differences, the positive inotropic effects of glucagon on rat and guinea pig hearts were very similar over a wide dose range. Thus, with both papaverine and glucagon, changes in cardiac contractility were dissociated from stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity, increases in myocardial cyclic AMP levels, and conversion of phosphorylase b to phosphorylase a in perfused hearts.
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PMID:Dissociations between changes in myocardial cyclic adenosine monophosphate and contractility. 16 51

Evidence is presented that modulation of the maximum velocity of a particulate low K-m cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) phosphodiesterase by thyroid hormones is one mechanism for the regulation of the responsiveness of rat epididymal adipocytes to lipolytic agents such as epinephrine and glucagon. Fat cells of propylthiouracil-induced hypothyroid rats are unresponsive to lipolytic agents and the V-max of particulate low K-m cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of these cells is elevated above normal. In vivo treatment of hypothyroid rats with triiodothyronine restores to control values both the lipolytic response of the fat cells to epinephrine and the V-max of the particulate bound low K-m cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. No similar correlation is found with the soluble high K-m cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. The phosphodiesterases of fat cells from normal and hypothyroid rats respond identically in vitro to propylthiouracil, triiodothyronine, methylisobutylxanthine, or theophylline, although the particulate low K-m cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase is inhibited to a greater extent than soluble cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate phosphodiesterase activity. Protein kinase of fat cells from hypothyroid rats can be stimulated by cyclic AMP to the same total activity as observed in fat cells of normal rats. However, less of the protein kinase in fat cells from hypothyroid rats was in the cyclic AMP-independent form. This shift in the equilibrium of protein kinase forms is consistent with an increased activity of low K-m cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and probably results from a lowering of the lipolytically significant pool of cyclic AMP.
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PMID:Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases and thyroid hormones. 16 41

Addition of the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitors theophylline (10- minus 2 M) or papaverine (10- minus 4 M) leads to a complete inhibition of lactose synthesis in incubated guinea pig mammary gland slices. Addition of 10- minus 5 M cyclic AMP or dibutyryl cyclic AMP results in 1 30-40% inhibition of the synthesis, which effect is not increased by applying higher concentrations of these compounds. A 30-40% inhibition can also be obtained with epinephrine (5 - 10- minus 5 M), or isoproterenol (10- minus 4 M), but the polypeptide hormones glucagon (10- minus 7 M), insulin (1 munit/ml) and relaxin (10 mug/ml) do not significantly affect lactose synthesis. Cytochalasin B (5 mug/ml) inhibits lactose production by 58and colchicine (10- minus 5 M) by 25%. These experiments suggest that an increase in the intracellular level of cyclic AMP either through its addition, through hormonal stimulation of its synthesis, or through inhibition of its intracellular breakdown, leads to an inhibition of lactose production in lactating mammary gland. This effect of cyclic AMP is similar to that of progesterone, which is known to inhibit lactation in vivo and the withdrawal of which at parturition has been postulated to initiate lactogenesis.
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PMID:Inhibition by cyclic AMP of lactose production in lactating guinea pig mammary gland slices. 16 55

1. Epinephrine-induced increase in rat liver cyclic AMP in vivo was potentiated when the circulating insulin was suppressed by injection of anti-insulin serum or by induction of diabetes. Consequently, phosphorylase was activated, glycogen synthetase was inactivated and glycogen accumulation induced by glucose load was prevented by epinephrine in the insulin-deficient rats to a much larger extent than in normal rats. 2. Insulin lack was effective in potentiating epinephrine-induced increase in liver and muscule cyclic AMP even after the treatment of rats with theophylline; the potentiation could not be solely accounted for by the inhibition of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. Thus, it is likely that insulin lack enhaces epinephrine activation of adenylate cyclase. 3. Unlike epinephrine, glucagon increased liver cyclic AMP to essentially the same extent whether the rat was treated with anti-insulin serum or not. 4. Based on the difference in dose-response curves between normal and insulin-deficient rats, a possibility is discussed that there are two adenylate cylase in the liver with higher and lower affinities for epinephrine and that circulating insulin blocks the high affinity enzyme selectively.
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PMID:Attenuation of epinephrine-induced increase in liver cyclic AMP by endogeneous insulin in vivo. 18 27

The effect of high level section of the spinal cord upon the hepatic cyclic AMP system was investigated in the rat. We report that transection of the spinal cord dramatically decreases the basal level of cyclic AMP from 0.88 nmol/g liver to 0.36 nmol/g at 1 h and to 0.20 nmol/g at 4 h. This was not due to increased activity of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase or to decreased activity of basal adenylate cyclase. The sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to its usual effectors in vitro was not impaired. It is proposed that the lowering of liver cyclic AMP below its basal level after high level section of the spinal cord is due to decreased levels of hepatic catecholamines and/or plasma glucagon.
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PMID:Effect of high level section of the spinal cord on the cyclic AMP system in rat liver. 18 5

1. The effects of changes in the cytoplasmic [NADH]/[NAD+] ratio on the efficacy of glucagon to alter rates of metabolism in isolated rat hepatocytes were examined. 2. Under reduced conditions (with 10mM-lactate), 10nM-glucagon stimulated both gluconeogenesis and urea synthesis in isolated hepatocytes from 48h-starved rats; under oxidized conditions (with 10mM-pyruvate), 10nM-glucagon had no effect on either of these rates. 3. The ability of glucagon to alter the concentration of 3':5'-cyclic AMP and the rates of glucose output, glycogen breakdown and glycolysis in cells from fed rats were each affected by a change in the extracellular [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio; minimal effects of glucagon occurred at low [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratios. 4. Dose-response curves for glucagon-mediated changes in cyclic AMP concentration and glucose output indicated that under oxidized conditions the ability of glucagon to alter each parameter was decreased without affecting the concentration of hormone at which half-maximal effects occurred. 5. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (0.05 mM) significantly reversed the inhibitory effects of pyruvate on glucagon-stimulated glucose output. 6. For exogenously added cyclic [3H]AMP(0.1 mM), oxidized conditions decreased the stimulatory effect on glucose output as well as the intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP attained, but did not alter the amount of cyclic [3H]AMP taken up. 7. The effects of lactate, pyruvate, NAD+ and NADH on cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities of rat hepatocytes were examined. 8. NADH (0.01--1 MM) inhibited the low-Km enzyme, particularly that which was associated with the plasma membrane. 9. The inhibition of membrane-bound cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by NADH was specific, reversible and resulted in a decrease in the maximal velocity of the enzyme. 10. It is proposed that regulation of the membrane-bound low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by nicotinamide nucleotides provides the molecular basis for the effect of redox state on the hormonal control of hepatocyte metabolism by glucagon.
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PMID:Responsiveness to glucagon by isolated rat hepatocytes controlled by the redox state of the cytosolic nicotinamide--adenine dinucleotide couple acting on adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase. 21 54

The antitumour agent 5-(3,3-dimethyl-1-triazeno)imidazole-4-carboxamide (DTIC) was found to inhibit competitively the low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in an ammonium-sulphate-precipitable fraction of the 2,000g supernatant of rat liver. With substrate concentration at 0.25 microM, I50 was 790 microM for DTIC and 350 microM for theophylline. DTIC at 2 mM more than doubled the cAMP response to glucagon in hepatocytes and to adrenaline in MH1C1 hepatoma cells, indicating that it also exerts its inhibitory effect on the phosphodiesterase in intact cells. The possible contribution of the phosphodiesterase inhibition to the growth-inhibitory and cytotoxic effects of DTIC is discussed.
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PMID:The antitumour agent 5-(3,3-dimethyl-1-triazeno) imidazole-4-carboxamide (DTIC) inhibits rat liver cAMP phosphodiesterase and amplifies hormone effects in hepatocytes and hepatoma cells. 22 92

1. Arrhenius plots of the glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase, 5'-nucleotidase, (Na+ + K+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase and Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase activities of control hamster liver plasma membranes exhibited two break points at around 25 and 13 degrees C, whereas Arrhenius plots of their activities in hibernating hamster liver plasma membranes exhibited two break points at around 25 and 4 degrees C. 2. A single break occurring between 25 and 26 degrees C was observed in Arrhenius plots of the activities of fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase, basal adenylate cyclase and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of liver plasma membranes from both control and hibernating animals. 3. Arrhenius plots of phosphodiesterase I activity showed a single break at 13 degrees C for membranes from control animals, and a single break at around 4 degrees C for liver plasma membranes from hibernating animals. 4. The temperature at which break points occurred in Arrhenius plots of glucagon- and fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity were decreased by about 7--8 degrees C by addition of 40 mm-benzyl alcohol to the assays. 5. Discontinuities in the Arrhenius plots of 4-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonic acid fluorescence occurred at around 24 and 13 degrees C for liver plasma membranes from control animals, and at around 25 and 4 degrees C for membranes from hibernating animals. 6. We suggest that in hamster liver plasma membranes from control animals a lipid phase separation occurs at around 25 degrees C in the inner half of the bilayer and at around 13 degrees C in the outer half of the bilayer. On hibernation a change in bilayer asymmetry occurs, which is expressed by a decrease in the temperature at which the lipid phase separation occurs in the outer half of the bilayer to around 4 degrees C. The assumption made is that enzymes expressing both lipid phase separations penetrate both halves of the bilayer, whereas those experiencing a single break penetrate one half of the bilayer only.
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PMID:Changes in the form of Arrhenius plots of the activity of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase and other hamster liver plasma-membrane enzymes occurring on hibernation. 72 95

Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase was measured in liver homogenates and microdissected periportal and perivenous liver tissue from rats in different dietary states under different conditions of substrate saturation and effector stimulation. A radiochemical microtest, more sensitive by 2-3 orders of magnitude than the usual assay, was established for the determination of the activity in liver samples corresponding to 200-800 ng dry weight. At saturating cyclic AMP concentrations (46 microM) phosphodiesterase was homogeneously distributed within the liver acinus of fed rats. Starvation for 48 h led to a decrease in the overall activity and to a heterogenous distribution with slightly higher activities in the perivenous zone. At physiological cyclic AMP concentrations (1.8 microM) phosphodiesterase showed a flat zonal gradient in livers of fed rats with higher levels in the periportal zone; after 48 h starvation it was homogeneously distributed. In the presence of cyclic GMP (2 microM) the basal activity at physiological substrate concentrations was stimulated to a greater extent in the perivenous zone. This led to a homogeneous activity distribution in the fed state and to a heterogenous pattern with a slight perivenous maximum in the fasted state. Thus there was no or only a small zonal heterogeneity of signal transmitting enzymes such as cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase (Zierz and Jungermann 1984). This similar signal transducing capacity in the periportal and the perivenous area will contribute to maintain the zonation of signal input due to the hormone concentration gradients across the liver acinus.
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PMID:Distribution of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in microdissected periportal and perivenous rat liver tissue with different dietary states. 171 30

Using experimentally derived data for the activities and kinetic constants of hepatocyte cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase isoenzymes together with the derived changes in adenylate cyclase activity, due to stimulation and subsequent desensitization by glucagon, a computer model was established to simulate hepatocyte cyclic AMP metabolism. The established ability of glucagon to activate the 'dense-vesicle' cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by eliciting its cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation was shown on the model to be capable of eliciting a profound reduction in the glucagon-stimulated increase in intracellular cyclic AMP. This was consistent with experimentally derived observations using the compound ICI 118233 which was used to inactivate the 'dense-vesicle' enzyme selectively. The non-hydrolysable adenosine agonist N6 (phenylisopropyl)-adenosine (PIA), which prevents glucagon pre-treatment of hepatocytes blocking the ability of insulin to stimulate the peripheral plasma membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, is shown here to accentuate the ability of insulin to decrease glucagon-elevated intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. This effect was obliterated using the compound ICI 63197, a selective inhibitor of the peripheral plasma membrane phosphodiesterase. Computer modelling studies, taking into account experimentally derived actions in insulin in activating the peripheral plasma membrane phosphodiesterase, confirmed the potential of this enzyme to decrease intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. Modelling of the putative effect of an insulin 'mediator' in activating the two cyclic GMP-stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase isoenzymes was shown to elicit a decrease in intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations which was comparable to that caused by insulin's action on intact hepatocytes. The relative contribution of each phosphodiesterase form to the metabolism of hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP, together with an assessment of the potential effect of inhibition and activation of specific species, was evaluated using the computer model. These experimental and stimulation studies indicate that alterations in the phosphodiesterase activity of the 'dense-vesicle' enzyme, the peripheral plasma membrane enzyme, the cyclic GMP-stimulated cyclic AMP isoforms and the IBMX-insensitive PDE-MQ-II can elicit profound effects upon hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations.
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PMID:The use of selective inhibitors and computer modelling to evaluate the role of specific high affinity cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases in the hormonal regulation of hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. 217 3


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