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

Our previous observations that serum cyclic 3',5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity varied in thyroid disorders and was positively correlated with thyroid function stimulated us to investigate the phosphodiesterase levels in sera of patients with pituitary and adrenal disorders, and the response to glucagon in normal subjects. Both serum cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (cyclic AMP-PDE) and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (cyclic GMP-PDE) activities were measured at a low substrate concentration. Serum cyclic AMP-PDE activity was elevated in five patients with phaeochromocytoma and was not elevated in patients with Cushing's syndrome or acromegaly, compared to the level in normal subjects. Increased enzyme activities returned to normal after resection of the tumours. Intramuscular injection of glucagon to five healthy subjects elevated cyclic AMP levels and cyclic AMP-PDE activity in plasma. These results imply that the increased cyclic AMP level by the activation of cyclase may have induced cyclic AMP-PDE in the target organ and the soluble cyclic AMP-PDE may leak into blood vessels from target organs.
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PMID:High activity of cyclic 3',5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase in sera of patient with phaeochromocytoma. 301 9

Glucagon (10nM) prevented insulin (10nM) from activating the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. This effect of glucagon was abolished by either PIA [N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine] (100nM) or adenosine (10 microM). Neither PIA nor adenosine exerted any effect on the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity either alone or in combination with glucagon. Furthermore, PIA and adenosine did not potentiate the action of insulin in activating this enzyme. 2-Deoxy-adenosine (10 microM) was ineffective in mimicking the action of adenosine. The effect of PIA in preventing the blockade by glucagon of insulin's action was inhibited by low concentrations of theophylline. Half-maximal effects of PIA were elicited at around 6nM-PIA. It is suggested that adenosine is exerting its effects on this system through an R-type receptor. This receptor does not appear to be directly coupled to adenylate cyclase, however, as PIA did not affect either the activity of adenylate cyclase or intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. Insulin's activation of the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, in the presence of both glucagon and PIA, was augmented by increasing intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations with either dibutyryl cyclic AMP or the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor Ro-20-1724. PIA also inhibited the ability of glucagon to uncouple (desensitize) adenylate cyclase activity in intact hepatocytes. This occurred at a half-maximal concentration of around 3 microM-PIA. However, if insulin (10 nM) was also present in the incubation medium, PIA exerted its action at a much lower concentration, with a half-maximal effect occurring at around 4 nM.
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PMID:N6-(Phenylisopropyl)adenosine prevents glucagon both blocking insulin's activation of the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and uncoupling hormonal stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in hepatocytes. 608 55

Treatment of hepatocytes with either NH4Cl (10mM) or fructose (10mM) blocks insulin's activation of the 'dense-vesicle' cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. The ability of insulin (10 nM) to decrease intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations raised by glucagon (10 nM) was unaffected by pre-treatment with either NH4Cl (10 mM) or fructose (10 mM). It is concluded that the 'dense-vesicle' enzyme does not play a significant role in this action of insulin and that as yet unidentified cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase(s) must be activated by insulin. Treatment of hepatocytes with either NH4Cl or fructose appeared to increase, reversibly, cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity. When N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine was used to prevent glucagon from blocking insulin's activation of the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity, insulin's ability to decrease intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations in glucagon-treated hepatocytes was increased markedly. Insulin's activation of the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity can exert a potent effect in decreasing intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations elevated by glucagon.
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PMID:An assessment of the ability of insulin-stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase to decrease hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. 608 56

Regulation of blood glucose levels by the liver is primarily achieved by the action of two peptide hormones, insulin and glucagon, which bind to specific receptors associated with the hepatocyte plasma membrane. Whilst the molecular action of glucagon at the level of the cell plasma membrane in activating adenylate cyclase is relatively well understood, we know little, if anything, of the molecular consequences of insulin occupying its receptor. We demonstrate here that insulin, at physiologically relevant concentrations, can trigger the cyclic AMP-dependent activation and phosphorylation of a low Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase attached to the liver plasma membrane. Such an effect may in part explain the ability of insulin to inhibit the increase in cellular cyclic AMP content that glucagon alone produces by activation of adenylate cyclase. Our observation that basal, intracellular cyclic AMP levels are insufficient to allow insulin to activate the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, yet those cyclic AMP levels achieved after exposure of the cells to glucagon are sufficient, gives a molecular rationale to Butcher and Sutherland's proposal that it is necessary to first elevate cellular cyclic AMP levels before they can be depressed by insulin.
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PMID:Insulin trigger, cyclic AMP-dependent activation and phosphorylation of a plasma membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. 625 75

Glucagon (10 nM) caused a transient elevation of intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations, which reached a peak in around 5 min, and slowly returned to basal values in around 30 min. When 1 mM-3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) was present, this process yielded a Ka of 1 nM for glucagon. The addition of insulin (10 nM) after 5 min exposure to glucagon (10 nM) caused intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations to fall dramatically, attaining basal values within 10 min. The regulation of this process was dose-dependent, exhibiting a Ka of 0.4 nM for insulin. If insulin and glucagon were added together to hepatocytes, then insulin decreased the magnitude of the cyclic AMP response to glucagon. IBMX (1 mM) prevented insulin antagonizing the action of glucagon in both of these instances. A gentle homogenization procedure followed by a rapid subcellular fractionation of hepatocytes on a Percoll gradient was developed. This was used to resolve subcellular membrane fractions and to identify cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in both membrane and cytosol fractions. Glucagon and insulin only affected the activity of two distinct membrane-bound species, a plasma-membrane enzyme and a 'dense vesicle' enzyme. Glucagon (10 nM), insulin (10 nM), IBMX (1 mM), dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10 microM) and cholera toxin (1 microgram/ml) all elicited the activation of the 'dense vesicle' enzyme. The plasma-membrane enzyme was not activated by glucagon, IBMX or dibutyryl cyclic AMP, although insulin and cholera toxin both led to its activation. The degree of activation of the plasma-membrane enzyme produced by insulin was increased in the presence of IBMX or dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Glucagon pretreatment (5 min) of hepatocytes blocked the ability of insulin to activate the plasma-membrane enzyme. The activity state of these phosphodiesterases is discussed in relation to the observed changes in intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. It is suggested that insulin exerts its action on the plasma-membrane phosphodiesterase through a mechanism involving a guanine nucleotide-regulatory protein.
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PMID:Insulin and glucagon regulate the activation of two distinct membrane-bound cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases in hepatocytes. 631 Nov 78

Primary monolayer cultures of rat hepatocytes were used for studies of long-term and acute effects of hormones on the cyclic AMP system. When hepatocyte lysates were assayed at various times after plating of the cells three major changes in the metabolism of cyclic AMP and its regulation were observed: Glucagon-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity gradually declined in culture. In contrast, catecholamine-sensitive activity, being very low in normal adult male rat liver and freshly isolated hepatocytes, showed a strong and rapid increase after seeding of the cells. Concomitantly, there was an early elevation (peak approximately equal to 6 h) and a subsequent decrease in activity of both high-Km and low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. These enzymic changes probably explained the finding that in intact cultured cells the cyclic AMP response to glucagon was diminished for 2-24 h after seeding, followed by an increase in the responsiveness to glucagon as well as to adrenergic agents up to 48 h of culture. Supplementation of the culture media with dexamethasone and/or insulin influenced the formation and breakdown of cyclic AMP in the hepatocytes. Insulin added at the time of plating moderately increased the adenylate cyclase activity assayed at 48 h, while dexamethasone had no significant effect. In the presence of dexamethasone, insulin exerted a stronger, and dose-dependent (1 pM - 1 microM), elevation of the adenylate cyclase activity in the lysates, particularly of the glucagon responsiveness. Thus, insulin plus dexamethasone counteracted the loss of glucagon-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity occurring in vitro. Kinetic plots of the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity showed three affinity regions for the substrate. Of these, the two with high and intermediate substrate affinity (Km approximately equal to 1 and approximately equal to 10 microM) were decreased in the dexamethasone-treated cells. Insulin partly prevented this effect of dexamethasone. Accumulation of cyclic AMP in intact cells in response to glucagon or beta-adrenergic agents was strongly increased in cultures pretreated with dexamethasone. The results suggest that insulin and glucocorticoids modulate the effects of glucagon and epinephrine on hepatocytes by exerting long-term influences on the cyclic AMP system.
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PMID:Changes in hormone responsiveness and cyclic AMP metabolism in rat hepatocytes during primary culture and effects of supplementing the medium with insulin and dexamethasone. 632 Nov 68

The ability of glucagon (10 nM) to increase hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations was reduced markedly by the tumour-promoting phorbol ester TPA (12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate). The half-maximal inhibitory effect occurred at 0.14 ng/ml TPA. This action occurred in the presence of the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine (1 mM) indicating that TPA inhibited glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. TPA did not affect either the binding of glucagon to its receptor or ATP concentrations within the cell. TPA did inhibit the increase in intracellular cyclic AMP initiated by the action of cholera toxin (1 microgram/ml) under conditions where phosphodiesterase activity was blocked. TPA did not inhibit glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in a broken plasma membrane preparation unless Ca2+, phosphatidylserine and ATP were also present. It is suggested that TPA exerts its inhibitory effect on adenylate cyclase through the action of protein kinase C. This action is presumed to be exerted at the point of regulation of adenylate cyclase by guanine nucleotides.
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PMID:The phorbol ester, TPA inhibits glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. 632 75

Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) is enhanced separately by epinephrine and by glucagon in primary rat hepatocyte culture. This study determined whether cyclic AMP, a common mediator for some of the actions of the above hormones, increases ADH. Administration of theophylline, a cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor which increases endogenous cyclic AMP, in a dose of 100 mg/kg to rats for 5 days, increased ADH activity. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10 microM) added to primary hepatocytes in culture increased ADH mRNA and ADH activity at 12 and 24 h, respectively, after its addition. The increase in ADH mRNA was preceded by an increase in the expression of C/EBP beta mRNA and in C/EBP beta protein. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP, in transient transfection experiments of primary rat hepatocyte culture, activated an ADH promoter gene construct containing the C/EBP binding site, but failed to activate a construct containing a 4-bp mutation at this site. These results show that cyclic AMP induces ADH and suggests that this effect is mediated by C/EBP beta binding to the C/EBP site. The previously demonstrated induction of ADH by epinephrine and glucagon may be mediated by a common pathway via an increase in cyclic AMP.
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PMID:Regulation of rat alcohol dehydrogenase by cyclic AMP in primary hepatocyte culture. 764 58

Absence of physiological concentrations of extracellular Ca2+ in the Krebs-Henseleit incubation buffer did not affect the ability of 10 nM glucagon (< 5%) to increase hepatocyte intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations, but severely ablated (by approximately 70%) the ability of 10 nM insulin to decrease these elevated concentrations. Cyclic AMP metabolism is determined by production by adenylate cyclase and degradation by cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). In the absence of added extracellular Ca2+ (2.5 mM), insulin's ability to activate PDE activity was selectively compromised, showing a failure of insulin to activate two of the three insulin-stimulated activities, namely the 'dense-vesicle' and peripheral plasma-membrane (PPM) PDEs. In the absence of added Ca2+, insulin's ability to inhibit adenylate cyclase activity in intact hepatocytes was decreased dramatically. Vasopressin and adrenaline (+ propranolol) failed to elicit the activation of either the 'dense-vesicle' or the PPM-PDEs. The presence of physiological concentrations of extracellular Ca2+ in the incubation medium is shown to be important for the appropriate generation of insulin's actions on cyclic AMP metabolism.
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PMID:Extracellular calcium modulates insulin's action on enzymes controlling cyclic AMP metabolism in intact hepatocytes. 839 36

The effect of adenosine analogues on glucagon-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in rat hepatocytes was explored. N6-Cyclopentyladenosine (CPA), 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine and N6-(R-phenylisopropyl)adenosine inhibited in a dose-dependent manner the cyclic AMP accumulation induced by glucagon. This effect seems to be mediated through A1 adenosine receptors. Pertussis toxin completely abolished the effect of CPA on glucagon-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in whole cells which suggested that a pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-protein was involved. On the other hand, this action of adenosine analogues on glucagon-induced cyclic AMP accumulation was reverted by the selective low-Km cyclic AMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitor Ro 20-1724. Analysis of cyclic AMP-phosphodiesterase activity in purified hepatocyte plasma membranes showed that glucagon in the presence of GTP inhibited basal PDE activity by 45% and that CPA reverted this inhibition in dose-dependent manner. In membranes derived from pertussis-toxin-treated rats, we observed no inhibition of cyclic AMP-phosphodiesterase activity by glucagon in the absence or presence of CPA. Our results indicate that in hepatocyte plasma membranes, stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity and inhibition of a low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity are co-ordinately regulated by glucagon, and that A1 adenosine receptors can inhibit glucagon-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation by blocking glucagon's effect on phosphodiesterase activity.
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PMID:Cross-talk between glucagon- and adenosine-mediated signalling systems in rat hepatocytes: effects on cyclic AMP-phosphodiesterase activity. 855 17


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