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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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Previous studies have shown that at least two subtypes of somatostatin (SRIF) receptors (SRIF1 and SRIF2) are expressed in mammalian cells. SRIF1 receptors have high affinity for MK 678, whereas SRIF2 receptors have no affinity for MK 678 but selectively bind peptides with structures similar to that of CGP 23996. Recently, two SRIF receptor genes have been cloned from human and mouse genomic libraries. In the present study, the pharmacological properties of these two cloned SRIF receptors, expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, were investigated, to determine whether they have any similarity to the previously described SRIF1 and SRIF2 receptor subtypes. Both cloned receptors could be labeled with 125I-Tyr11-SRIF and exhibited high affinity for SRIF. The SSTR1 receptor could also bind CGP 23996-like compounds but not MK 678. In contrast, the SSTR2 receptor was insensitive to CGP 23996-like compounds but bound MK 678 with high affinity. These findings indicate that the peptide specificities of the cloned SSTR1 and SSTR2 receptors differ from each other. Pretreatment of CHO cells expressing the two cloned SRIF receptors with SRIF abolished high affinity agonist binding to the cloned SSTR2 receptor but not the cloned SSTR1 receptor. Agonist binding to SSTR1 receptors was not significantly affected by guanosine-5'-)-(3-thiotriphosphate) or pertussis toxin pretreatment, whereas agonist binding to SSTR2 receptors was inhibited by both treatments. These findings suggest that SSTR2 receptors can be regulated and they associate with pertussis toxin-sensitive guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, whereas SSTR1 receptors do not. SRIF is a potent inhibitor of adenylyl cyclase activity in mammalian cells. However, neither the cloned SSTR2 nor SSTR1 receptor mediated SRIF inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity in stably transformed CHO cells or COS-1 cells transiently expressing the cloned receptors, suggesting that neither cloned receptor couples to adenylyl cyclase. The results of these studies indicate that the two cloned SRIF receptors have different pharmacological properties. The characteristics of the cloned SSTR2 receptor are similar to those of the previously described SRIF1 receptor, and the characteristics of the cloned SSTR1 receptor are similar to those of the previously described SRIF2 receptor.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Jul
PMID:Pharmacological properties of two cloned somatostatin receptors. 135 50

The effect of somatostatin on cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion in C-cells of the rat medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line rMTC 6-23 was investigated. Intracellular cAMP accumulation as well as calcitonin secretion could be dose-dependently stimulated by rat growth hormone releasing factor (rGRF). The long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide inhibited rGRF-stimulated cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion dose dependently but failed to block 8-bromo-cAMP-stimulated calcitonin secretion. The inhibitory effect of octreotide on rGRF-induced calcitonin secretion was partially abolished by pretreating the cells with pertussis toxin. The octreotide effect was not due to changes in the degradation of cAMP, as it was similarly seen in the presence of isobutylmethylxanthine. Thus we conclude that pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins are involved in the cAMP-mediated regulation of calcitonin secretion in C-cells.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1992 Aug
PMID:Inhibitory effect of somatostatin on cAMP accumulation and calcitonin secretion in C-cells: involvement of pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins. 135 52

Antral gastrin secretion and gene expression is inhibited by the paracrine release of somatostatin from antral D cells. Transforming growth factor-alpha and epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulate gastrin reporter gene constructs when transfected into pituitary GH4 cells. Somatostatin inhibits EGF stimulation of gastrin gene expression, which is in part mediated at the level of transcriptional regulation as somatostatin inhibits EGF stimulation of gastrin reporter gene constructs. Somatostatin inhibition was abolished by pertussis toxin, indicating somatostatin inhibits transcription through the inhibitory G protein Gi. Somatostatin inhibition was unaffected by vanadate and okadaic acid, implying this inhibitory pathway is mediated neither through phosphotyrosine phosphatases nor serine/threonine phosphatases, respectively. Gastrin reporter genes containing 82 base pairs of the 5'-flanking DNA were sufficient to confer both EGF responsiveness and inhibition by somatostatin in GH4 cells. However, transcription of a gastrin reporter gene construct containing only the EGF response element (GGGGCGGGGTGGGGGG), located at -68 to -53, was stimulated by EGF but was not inhibited by somatostatin. Thus, somatostatin inhibits EGF-stimulated gastrin gene transcription by a mechanism other than by interfering with cell signals elicited by the EGF receptor. Since the 82 GASCAT is inhibited by somatostatin, this result also implies that sequences adjacent to the EGF response element contain a cis-regulatory element mediating transcriptional inhibition by somatostatin. This cis-element was located using gastrin reporter genes comprising sequential segments of the human gastrin promoter sequence from the transcriptional start site to -82 in the 5'-flanking DNA. Gastrin oligonucleotide constructs lacking the D oligonucleotide (gatcCATATGGCAGGGTA), located at -82 to -69 in the 5'-flanking DNA, were not inhibited by somatostatin, indicating that a somatostatin inhibitory cis-element is located between -82 and -69 in the 5'-flanking DNA of the human gastrin promoter.
Mol Endocrinol 1992 Aug
PMID:Identification of a cis-regulatory element mediating somatostatin inhibition of epidermal growth factor-stimulated gastrin gene transcription. 135 47

The biosynthesis of fimbriae is a complex process requiring multiple genes which are generally found clustered on the chromosome. In Bordetella pertussis, only major fimbrial subunit genes have been identified, and no evidence has yet been found that they are located in a fimbrial gene cluster. To locate additional genes involved in the biosynthesis of B. pertussis fimbriae, we used TnphoA mutagenesis. A PhoA+ mutant (designated B176) was isolated which was affected in the production of both serotype 2 and 3 fimbriae. Cloning and sequencing of the DNA region harbouring the transposon insertion revealed the presence of at least three additional fimbrial genes, designated fimB, fimC and fimD. The transposon was found to be located in fimD. Analysis of PhoA activity indicated that the fimbrial gene cluster was positively regulated by the bvg locus. A potential binding site for BvgA was observed upstream of fimB. FimB showed homology with the so-called chaperone-like fimbrial proteins, while FimC was homologous with a class of fimbrial proteins located in the outer membrane and presumed to be involved in transport and anchorage of fimbrial subunits. An insertion mutation in fimB abolished the expression of fimbrial subunits, implicating this gene in the biosynthesis of both serotype 2 and 3 fimbriae. Upstream of fimB a pseudogene (fimA) was observed which showed homology with the three major fimbrial subunit genes, fim2, fim3 and fimX. The construction of a phylogenetic tree suggested that fimA may be the primordial major fimbrial subunit gene from which the other three were derived by gene duplication. Interestingly, the fimbrial gene cluster was found to be located directly downstream from the gene coding for the filamentous haemagglutinin, an important B. pertussis adhesin, possibly suggesting co-operation between the two loci in the pathogenesis of pertussis.
Mol Microbiol 1992 Sep
PMID:Characterization of a Bordetella pertussis fimbrial gene cluster which is located directly downstream of the filamentous haemagglutinin gene. 136 Jan 39

In the guinea pig myometrium, carbachol, oxytocin, and fluoroaluminates stimulated the breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, which was insensitive to pertussis toxin [Biochem. J. 255:705-713 (1988)]. We now demonstrate that an increased accumulation of inositol phosphates, with an early production of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate [Ins(1,4,5)P3], could also be obtained with K+ (30 mM) and the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin. Removal of extracellular Ca2+ or addition of the Ca2+ channel antagonists nifedipine and verapamil almost totally abolished stimulations elicited by high K+ and partially attenuated receptor- and fluoroaluminate-mediated increases in inositol phosphates. Isoproterenol similarly attenuated the accumulation of inositol phosphates elicited by carbachol, oxytocin, and fluoroaluminates (maximal inhibition, 35%; EC50, 0.5 nM), with no change in the rate of Ins(1,4,5)P3, inositol bisphosphate, and inositol monophosphate generation. The beta-adrenergic receptor-induced inhibition was prevented by pertussis toxin and could not be reproduced by forskolin, indicating that cAMP was not involved. Experimental findings were, rather, consistent with a predominant role for Ca2+. Thus, inhibition due to isoproterenol was lost in a Ca(2+)-depleted medium and was not additive with that caused by nifedipine. Accumulation of inositol phosphates triggered by high K+ was insensitive to the beta-adrenergic receptor inhibition. The inhibitory effect of isoproterenol, similar to that of nifedipine, was counteracted by ionomycin and also by the Ca2+ channel agonist Bay K 8644. These data indicate that in the myometrium 1) phospholipase C can be activated through a voltage-gated Ca2+ entry-dependent process that contributes at least partially to the stimulations triggered by receptor- and/or guanine nucleotide-binding protein-mediated activation and 2) beta-adrenergic receptor activation is linked via a cAMP-independent, pertussis toxin-sensitive pathway to an inhibition of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, resulting in an attenuation of the Ca(2+)-associated generation of inositol phosphates.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Mar
PMID:Activation of beta-adrenergic receptors inhibits Ca2+ entry-mediated generation of inositol phosphates in the guinea pig myometrium, a cyclic AMP-independent event. 137 85

It has been proposed that mastoparan (INLKALAALAKKIL) and other mast cell secretagogues such as substance P (SP) or compound 48/80 act by direct activation of the pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive G-proteins in intact cells. Here we have investigated whether or not the antagonists of SP, [D-Trp7,9,10] SP1-11 and [D-Trp7,9,10, N-leu11]SP1-11, can similarly induce exocytosis from RINm5F cells. In intact cells mastoparan and the SP antagonists stimulated insulin release in a dose-dependent manner at concentrations ranging from 10 to 100 microM. The maximal effect on insulin release, of both mastoparan and the SP antagonists was comparable to that obtained with 100 microM forskolin. Pretreatment of the intact cells, for 18 h with PTX or 6 h with cholera toxin, did not change the responses induced by both mastoparan and the SP antagonists. This absence of PTX effect, despite the fact that the three PTX substrates at 41, 40 and 39 kDa were ADP ribosylated after pretreatment suggests intrinsic differences between mast and RINm5F cells. Thus the SP antagonists behave similarly to mastoparan in its ability to induce insulin release in RINm5F cells. However, the higher concentrations required with RINm5F cells compared to that needed for mast cells suggest differences either in G-proteins composition or in the phospholipid composition of the membranes.
Mol Cell Biochem 1992 Feb 12
PMID:Insulin releasing effects of mastoparan and amphiphilic substance P receptor antagonists on RINm5F insulinoma cells. 137 73

Human neutrophils and dibutyryl-cAMP (Bt2cAMP)-differentiated HL-60 cells possess receptors for the chemotactic peptide N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine (fMet-Leu-Phe), which mediate activation of phospholipase C, with subsequent increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) and activation of specific cell functions. In many cell types, histamine, via H1 receptors, activates phospholipase C, but it is unknown whether neutrophilic cells possess functional H1 receptors. We compared the effects of histamine with those of fMet-Leu-Phe on activation of these cells. In Bt2cAMP-differentiated HL-60 cells, substances increased [Ca2+]i in the effectiveness order fMet-Leu-Phe greater than histamine greater than betahistine. Pertussis toxin diminished fMet-Leu-Phe-induced rises in [Ca2+]i to a greater extent than those induced by histamine. H1 but not H2 antagonists inhibited histamine- and betahistine-induced rises in [Ca2+]i. fMet-Leu-Phe and histamine activated phospholipase C and increased [Ca2+]i through release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores and sustained influx of Ca2+ from the extracellular space. The substances also induced Mn2+ influx. Ca2+ and Mn2+ influxes were inhibited by 1-(beta-[3-(4-methoxyphenyl)propoxyl]-4-methoxyphenethyl)-1H-imida zole hydrochloride (SK&F 96365). The stimulatory effects of histamine on [Ca2+]i were more sensitive to inhibition by 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate than were those of fMet-Leu-Phe. Unlike fMet-Leu-Phe, histamine did not activate superoxide anion formation, release of beta-glucuronidase, and tyrosine phosphorylation. In neutrophils, histamine and betahistine did not induce rises in [Ca2+]i. Our data show that (i) in Bt2cAMP-differentiated HL-60 cells, histamine increases [Ca2+]i via H1 receptors coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive and possibly, pertussis toxin-insensitive heterotrimeric regulatory guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, (ii) histamine activates nonselective cation channels, and (iii) unlike fMet-Leu-Phe, histamine is an incomplete secretagogue.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Aug
PMID:Histamine increases cytosolic Ca2+ in dibutyryl-cAMP-differentiated HL-60 cells via H1 receptors and is an incomplete secretagogue. 138 Oct 43

Three oligonucleotide probe sequences were inferred from the 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) and the 16S-23S rRNA spacer sequences of Bordetella pertussis ATCC 10380. These probes were used in hybridization tests with deoxyribonucleic acid from Bordetella species and other relevant bacterial taxa. A probe from the spacer region hybridized exclusively to the B. pertussis strains tested and not to strains from other species. Using a combination of three probes, B. pertussis, B. parapertussis/B. bronchiseptica and B. avium could be specifically identified and differentiated from other taxa. Differentiation between B. parapertussis and B. bronchiseptica was not possible with the probes used. Using the spacer probe, a colorimetric hybridization assay specific for B. pertussis was developed based on enzymatic amplification of the 16S-23S rRNA spacer and reverse hybridization in microtitre wells. As compared with results using agarose gel electrophoresis, and Southern and dot-spot hybridization with a 32P-labelled probe, this assay proved to be faster and easier to perform and was found to be at least as sensitive and specific.
Mol Cell Probes 1992 Aug
PMID:DNA probes for Bordetella species and a colorimetric reverse hybridization assay for the detection of Bordetella pertussis. 138 21

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) can stimulate inositol lipid hydrolysis in rat hepatocytes and can accelerate GTP/GDP exchange in hepatic membranes. Both of these responses can be abolished by pretreatment with pertussis toxin, suggesting that EGF may regulate phospholipase C (PLC) activity via a guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein (G protein) in liver cells. In contrast, in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells EGF can induce a rapid phosphorylation of PLC-gamma on tyrosine residues that increases the activity of immunoprecipitated PLC-gamma, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-gamma may be the mechanism for EGF-stimulated inositol trisphosphate production in these cells. To determine the importance of the phosphorylation of PLC-gamma on tyrosine residues in a system where the EGF receptor apparently couples to a G protein, the effect of EGF on tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-gamma was examined in rat hepatocytes. PLC-gamma was immunoprecipitated from cell lysates with a PLC-gamma antiserum and its tyrosine phosphorylation state was determined using both Western blot analysis with phosphotyrosine antibodies and direct measurement of phosphorylated amino acids. The results were compared with analogous experiments performed with A431 cells and another cultured cell line expressing high levels of human EGF receptors, Rat1hER fibroblasts. Although the amount of PLC-gamma in rat hepatocytes is similar to that in A431 cells and slightly higher than that in Rat1hER cells, EGF causes a barely detectable increase in the phosphorylation of PLC-gamma on tyrosine in hepatocytes, whereas it stimulates a significant degree of phosphorylation of PLC-gamma on tyrosine in Rat1hER or A431 cells. Pretreatment of hepatocytes with pertussis toxin abolishes the ability of EGF to activate PLC, as determined by an increase in intracellular Ca2+, but has no effect on the small amount of phosphate incorporated into tyrosine residues on the PLC-gamma protein, demonstrating that this low level of PLC-gamma phosphorylation does not correlate with changes in PLC activity. The data suggest that phosphorylation of PLC-gamma on tyrosine is not important for EGF-enhanced PLC activity in hepatocytes. This conclusion implies that EGF may use a mechanism to regulate PLC activity in hepatocytes that is different from that used in cultured cells expressing high levels of EGF receptors.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Nov
PMID:Epidermal growth factor activates phospholipase C in rat hepatocytes via a different mechanism from that in A431 or rat1hER cells. 143 49

Pertussis toxin (PTX) ADP-ribosylates alpha subunits of GTP-binding proteins (G proteins) when they are in association with beta gamma dimers, and free alpha subunits are thought not to be substrates under standard assay conditions. We now report the rather unexpected discovery that synthetic peptides encompassing the last 10-20 amino acids of alpha subunits of PTX-sensitive G proteins are substrates for PTX by themselves and in the absence of beta gamma dimers. As determined for G13, the Km of PTX for the 20-amino acid carboxyl-terminal peptide is 10-fold higher than that for the trimeric G protein. Interestingly, PTX ADP-ribosylates the free full length alpha 13 subunit with a Km not different from that of the trimer but with a Vmax that is only 1% of that with which it ADP-ribosylates the trimer. It follows that the primary role of beta gamma dimers in ADP-ribosylation of G proteins is one of increasing the Vmax of the reaction without affecting the Km of the substrate for the toxin. Mutant peptides lacking the ADP-ribose acceptor site act as competitive inhibitors.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Nov
PMID:Peptide inhibitors of ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin are substrates with affinities comparable to those of the trimeric GTP-binding proteins. 143 50


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