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1.
Human prepro atrial natriuretic factors 26-55, 56-92, and 104-123 as well as human atrial natriuretic factor (4-28) in the present investigation increased renal cortical and medullary cyclic GMP levels and maximally enhanced particulate guanylate cyclase activity [E.C. 4.6.1.2] two-fold in whole kidney homogenates, renal cortical and medullary membranes, and in isolated distal nephrons at their 1 microM concentrations. Dose-response relationships revealed that the half maximal [ED50] activation of guanylate cyclase was at their 10 nM concentrations in rat, rabbit, and dog kidneys. Both human atrial natriuretic factor and the prepro factors decreased adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest that prepro factors 26-55, 56-92, 104-123 may also be functionally active.  相似文献   

2.
Human prohormone atrial natriuretic peptides 1-30, 31-67, and 79-98 caused vasodilation of porcine aortas which began in 30 seconds and was maximal at 10 minutes. These three peptides were found to be equally potent to atrial natriuretic factor in their vasodilatory activity which was found with or without endothelium present. This vasodilation was associated with a 4 to 5 fold increase in cyclic GMP in the aorta secondary to activation of particulate guanylate cyclase [E.C. 4.6.12]. These data demonstrate that three N-terminal peptide segments of the atrial natriuretic factor prohormone cause vasodilation.  相似文献   

3.
We used cultured rat lung fibroblasts to evaluate the role of particulate and soluble guanylate cyclase in the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF)-induced stimulation of cyclic GMP. ANF receptors were identified by binding of 125I-ANF to confluent cells at 37 degrees C. Specific ANF binding was rapid and saturable with increasing concentrations of ANF. The equilibrium dissociation constant (KD) was 0.66 +/- 0.077 nM and the Bmax. was 216 +/- 33 fmol bound/10(6) cells, which corresponds to 130,000 +/- 20,000 sites/cell. The molecular characteristics of ANF binding sites were examined by affinity cross-linking of 125I-ANF to intact cells with disuccinimidyl suberate. ANF specifically labelled two sites with molecular sizes of 66 and 130 kDa, which we have identified in other cultured cells. ANF and sodium nitroprusside produced a time- and concentration-dependent increase in intracellular cyclic GMP. An increase in cyclic GMP by ANF was detected at 1 nM, and at 100 nM an approx. 100-fold increase in cyclic GMP was observed. Nitroprusside stimulated cyclic GMP at 10 nM and at 1 mM a 500-600-fold increase in cyclic GMP occurred. The simultaneous addition of 100 nM-ANF and 10 microM-nitroprusside to cells resulted in cyclic GMP levels that were additive. ANF increased the activity of particulate guanylate cyclase by about 10-fold, but had no effect on soluble guanylate cyclase. In contrast, nitroprusside did not alter the activity of particulate guanylate cyclase, but increased the activity of soluble guanylate cyclase by 17-fold. These results demonstrate that rat lung fibroblasts contain ANF receptors and suggest that the ANF-induced stimulation of cyclic GMP is mediated entirely by particulate guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

4.
S Schulz  S Singh  R A Bellet  G Singh  D J Tubb  H Chin  D L Garbers 《Cell》1989,58(6):1155-1162
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) binds directly to a plasma membrane form of guanylate cyclase (GC-A), stimulating the production of the second messenger cyclic GMP. We show that a second guanylate cyclase/receptor (GC-B) exists, with distinctly different specificities for various natriuretic peptides. A cDNA clone encoding GC-B was isolated by low-stringency screening of a rat brain cDNA library using GC-A cDNA as a probe. The deduced amino acid sequence of GC-B is 78% identical with GC-A within the intracellular region, but 43% identical within the extracellular domain. Cyclic GMP concentrations in cells transfected with GC-A were half-maximally elevated at 3 nM ANP, 25 nM brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), and 65 nM atriopeptin 1, while 25 microM ANP, 6 microM BNP, and greater than 100 microM atriopeptin 1 were required for half-maximal stimulation of GC-B. The potencies of natriuretic peptides on GC-A and GC-B activity are therefore markedly different; furthermore, despite the specificity of GC-B for BNP, the relatively high BNP concentration required to elicit a response suggests the possible presence of a more potent, unidentified natural ligand.  相似文献   

5.
The effects on guanylate cyclase and cyclic GMP accumulation of a synthetic peptide containing the amino acid sequence and biological activity of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) were studied. ANF activated particulate guanylate cyclase in a concentration- and time- dependent fashion in crude membranes obtained from homogenates of rat kidney. Activation of particulate guanylate cyclase by ANF was also observed in particulate fractions from homogenates of rat aorta, testes, intestine, lung, and liver, but not from heart or brain. Soluble guanylate cyclase obtained from these tissues was not activated by ANF. Trypsin treatment of ANF prevented the activation of guanylate cyclase, while heat treatment had no effect. Accumulation of cyclic GMP in kidney minces and aorta was stimulated by ANF activation of guanylate cyclase. These data suggest a role for particulate guanylate cyclase in the molecular mechanisms underlying the physiological effects of ANF such as vascular relaxation, natriuresis, and diuresis.  相似文献   

6.
The natriuretic agent amiloride induces a shift of the dose-response curve of particulate guanylate cyclase to atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) to the left. The ANF concentration for half-maximal activation of guanylate cyclase is shifted from 20 to 3 nM in the presence of 100 microM amiloride. This effect is observed with GTP*Mn2+, but not with GTP*Mg2+ as substrate. Amiloride derivatives, which inhibit a specific Na+-channel, also shift the dose-response curve to the left. These data suggest that some of the effects of amiloride may be mediated by an increased sensitivity of particulate guanylate cyclase to ANF.  相似文献   

7.
Atrial natriuretic factors (ANFs) were tested for their effects on cyclic GMP production in two neurally derived cell lines, the C6-2B rat glioma cells and the PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells. These cell lines were selected because both are known to possess high amounts of the particulate form of guanylate cyclase, a proposed target of ANF in peripheral organs. Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that ANF selectively activates particulate, but not soluble, guanylate cyclase in homogenates of a variety of rat tissues and that one class of ANF receptor appears to be the same glycoprotein as particulate guanylate cyclase. In the present study we found that four analogs of ANF stimulate cyclic GMP accumulation in both C6-2B and PC12 cells with the rank order of potency being atriopeptin III = atriopeptin II greater than human atrial natriuretic polypeptide greater than atriopeptin I. Atriopeptin II (100 nM) for 20 min elevated cyclic GMP content in C6-2B cells fourfold and in PC12 cells 12-fold. Atriopeptin II (100 nM) for 20 min also stimulated the efflux of cyclic GMP from both C6-2B cells (47-fold) and PC12 cells (12-fold). Accumulation of cyclic GMP in both cells and media was enhanced by preincubation with the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (250 microM). After 20 min of exposure to atriopeptin II, cyclic GMP amounts in the media were equal to or greater than the amounts in the cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The relaxant effects of atrial natriuretic factor on vascular smooth muscle   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
R J Winquist 《Life sciences》1985,37(12):1081-1087
Extracts prepared from rat atria, which cause natriuresis and diuresis when injected into bioassay rats, relax aortic smooth muscle preparations. A family of atrial peptides has been isolated, purified and synthesized which elicit similar biological responses as the atrial extracts. The in vitro vasodilator profile of synthetic atrial natriuretic factor (sANF) exhibits many similarities to sodium nitroprusside including inhibition of agonist-induced but not high-K+-induced contractions, relaxation independent of the vascular endothelium and elevation of cyclic GMP in aortic smooth muscle coincident with relaxation. Aortic rings remain relaxed in the presence of sANF but can be recontracted following a sufficient washout period. sANF causes a significant activation of the particulate (but not soluble) form of guanylate cyclase which is seemingly consistent with the presence of high affinity receptors for sANF in plasma membranes prepared from aortic tissue. Both species and regional vascular differences exist for the vasodilator activity of the synthetic atrial peptides.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of atrial natriuretic factor on the mechanisms involved in norepinephrine release were studied 'in vitro' in slices of Wistar rat hypothalamus. Atrial natriuretic factor (10, 50 and 100 nM) decreased spontaneous [3H]norepinephrine secretion in a concentration dependent way. In addition, the peptide (10 nM) also reduced acetylcholine induced output of norepinephrine. The atrial factor (10 nM) was unable to alter the amine secretion when the incubation medium was deprived of calcium or when a calcium channel blocker such as diltiazem (100 microM) was added. In conclusion, atrial natriuretic factor reduced both spontaneous and acetylcholine evoked [3H]norepinephrine release in the rat hypothalamus. These findings suggest that the atrial natriuretic factor may alter catecholamine secretion by modifying the calcium available for the exocytotic process of catecholamine output.  相似文献   

10.
ATP is an obligatory agent for the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and the type C natriuretic peptide (CNP) signaling of their respective receptor guanylate cyclases, ANF-RGC and CNP-RGC. Through a common mechanism, it binds to a defined ARM domain of the cyclase, activates the cyclase and transduces the signal into generation of the second messenger cyclic GMP. In this presentation, the authors review the ATP-regulated transduction mechanism and refine the previously simulated three-dimensional ARM model (Duda T, Yadav P, Jankowska A, Venkataraman V, Sharma RK. Three dimensional atomic model and experimental validation for the ATP-regulated module (ARM) of the atrial natriuretic factor receptor guanylate cyclase. Mol Cell Biochem 2000;214:7-14; reviewed in: Sharma RK, Yadav P, Duda T. Allosteric regulatory step and configuration of the ATP-binding pocket in atrial natriuretic factor receptor guanylate cyclase transduction mechanism. Can J Physiol Pharmacol 2001;79: 682-91; Sharma RK. Evolution of the membrane guanylate cyclase transduction system. Mol Cell Biochem 2002;230:3-30). The model depicts the ATP-binding dependent configurational changes in the ARM and supports the concept that in the first step, ATP partially activates the cyclase and primes it for the subsequent transduction steps, resulting in full activation of the cyclase.  相似文献   

11.
Effect of a synthetic atrial natriuretic peptide, rat atriopeptin II (rAP-II) on the formation of cyclic nucleotides and progesterone production in Percoll-purified rat luteal cells was investigated. Incubation of luteal cells with varying concentrations of rAP-II resulted in a dose-related stimulation of intracellular cyclic GMP content; maximum stimulation being achieved with 10 nM rAP-II. The increase in cyclic GMP formation was extremely rapid and a 12-fold increase in the cyclic GMP content over basal level was attained within 5 min of incubation of the cells with 10 nM rAP-II. In the presence of phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine, both basal and rAP-II-stimulated levels of cyclic GMP were increased approximately 10 times, but the magnitude of stimulation remained similar in the presence or absence of the inhibitor. The atrial peptide at the concentration of 1-100 nM, however, had no effect on either basal or gonadotropin-stimulated progesterone production and cyclic AMP formation by the luteal cells. Furthermore, the increase in the level of cellular cyclic GMP content of rAP-II was demonstrated to result from a selective activation of particulate guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
Oxytocin increased cyclic GMP levels in LLC-PK1 porcine kidney epithelial cells through activation of soluble guanylate cyclase. NG-Monomethyl-L-arginine and N omega-nitro-L-arginine inhibited oxytocin (10 microM) induced cyclic GMP accumulation with IC50 values of 2.3 microM and 140 nM, respectively, and the inhibition was prevented with L-arginine. Both inhibitors at 100 microM lowered the basal levels of cyclic GMP, but did not affect those induced by 1 microM sodium nitroprusside and 100 nM atrial natriuretic factor. These data support our hypothesis that an endothelium-derived relaxing factor-like substance is formed as the endogenous activator of soluble guanylate cyclase in an L-arginine-dependent fashion in various cell types. N omega-Nitro-L-arginine is 16 times more potent than NG-monomethyl-L-arginine as a specific inhibitor of this pathway in LLC-PK1 cells.  相似文献   

13.
Potentiation of platelet aggregation by atrial natriuretic peptide   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A L Loeb  A R Gear 《Life sciences》1988,43(9):731-738
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) has binding sites on a variety of tissues, including human platelets. We have used a new, quenched-flow approach coupled to single-particle counting to investigate the effects of ANP (rat, 1-28) on the initial events (within the first several seconds) following human platelet activation. While ANP alone (1 pM-100 nM) had no effect, ANP significantly potentiated thrombin (0.4 units/ml)-, epinephrine (15 microM)- and ADP (2 or 10 microM)-induced aggregation. Maximum stimulation occurred between 10 to 100 pM. ANP had no influence on the thrombin or ADP-induced increase in platelet volume associated with the "shape change." Since ANP receptors are coupled to a particulate guanylate cyclase and some ANP-induced effects may be mediated through cyclic GMP, we studied how another activator of platelet guanylate cyclase, sodium nitroprusside, affected platelet activation and cyclic nucleotide levels. Sodium nitroprusside (1 microM) inhibited ADP, but not thrombin or epinephrine-induced aggregation. Both sodium nitroprusside (1 microM) and ANP (10 nM) increased cyclic GMP levels by 80% and 37%, respectively, within 60 sec in washed platelets. ANP had no effect on platelet cyclic AMP, while sodium nitroprusside induced a 77% increase. These data suggest that the platelet ANP receptor may be coupled to guanylate cyclase and the rise in cyclic GMP may potentiate platelet function.  相似文献   

14.
The stimulation of cyclic GMP accumulation and particulate guanylate cyclase activity by atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) was compared to the affinity and number of ANP receptors in eight cultured cell types. At 100 nM, ANP increased cyclic GMP by 13-fold in bovine adrenal cortical, 35-fold in human lung fibroblast, 58-fold in canine kidney epithelial, 60-fold in bovine aortic smooth muscle, 120-fold in rat mammary epithelial, 260-fold in rat Leydig, 300-fold in bovine kidney epithelial, and 475-fold in bovine aortic endothelial cells. ANP (1 microM) increased particulate guanylate cyclase activity by 1.5-, 2.5-, 3.1-, 3.2-, 5.0-, 7.0-, 7.8-, and 8.0-fold in bovine adrenal cortical, bovine aortic smooth muscle, human lung fibroblast, canine kidney epithelial, rat mammary epithelial, rat Leydig, bovine kidney epithelial, and bovine aortic endothelial cells, respectively. Specific 125I-ANP binding to intact rat Leydig (3,000 sites/cell; Kd = 0.11 nM), bovine aortic endothelial (14,000 sites/cell; Kd = 0.09 nM), bovine adrenal cortical (50,000 sites/cell; Kd = 0.12 nM), human lung fibroblast (80,000 sites/cell; Kd = 0.32 nM), and bovine aortic smooth muscle (310,000 sites/cell; Kd = 0.82 nM) cells was saturable and high affinity. No specific and saturable ANP binding was detected in bovine and canine kidney epithelial and rat mammary epithelial cells. Two ANP-binding sites of 66,000 and 130,000 daltons were specifically labeled by 125I-ANP after cross-linking with disuccinimidyl suberate. The 130,000-dalton ANP-binding sites bound to a GTP-agarose affinity column, and the specific activity of guanylate cyclase was increased by 90-fold in this fraction. Our results demonstrate that the increase in cyclic GMP accumulation and particulate guanylate cyclase activity by ANP does not correlate with the affinity and number of ANP-binding sites. These results suggest that multiple populations of ANP receptors exist in these cells and that only one receptor subtype (130,000 daltons) is associated with particulate guanylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

15.
Tolbutamide and its non-hypoglycemic analog carboxytolbutamide increased soluble and particulate guanylate cyclase [E.C.4.6.1.2] activity twofold in liver, lung, colon, pancreas, kidney cortex, heart and spleen at a concentration of 1 microM. The ED50 for stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity was 50 nM for both agents. No stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity was observed with either agent when their concentrations were decreased to 1 nM. Maximal enhancement was at a concentration of 100 nM for both agents. Butylated hydroxytoluene, an antioxidant and hydroxyl radical scavenger, completely blocked any enhancement of guanylate cyclase by carboxytolbutamide, suggesting that its effect was due to a nonspecific oxidation reaction. Tolbutamide's augmentation of guanylate cyclase activity was not blocked by butylated hydroxytoluene. Varying the concentration of the guanylate cyclase co-factor manganese indicated that these sulfonylureas could not maximally activate guanylate cyclase without manganese being present. In addition to increased insulin receptors in monocytes and fibroblasts, the present findings, plus similar findings with the oral hypoglycemic agent glibenclamide, may help explain the mechanism of the extra-pancreatic effects of oral sulfonylurea agents at the cellular level.  相似文献   

16.
This study examines the roles of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels (VDCC), ryanodine receptors (RyRs), large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (BK) channels, and small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (SK) channels in the regulation of phasic contractions of guinea pig urinary bladder smooth muscle (UBSM). Nisoldipine (100 nM), a dihydropyridine inhibitor of VDCC, abolished spontaneous UBSM contractions. Ryanodine (10 microM) increased contraction frequency and thereby integrated force and, in the presence of the SK blocker apamin, had a greater effect on integrated force than ryanodine alone. Blocking BK (iberiotoxin, 100 nM) or SK (apamin, 100 nM) channels increased contraction amplitude and duration but decreased frequency. The contractile response to iberiotoxin was more pronounced than to apamin. The increases in contraction amplitude and duration to apamin were substantially augmented with ryanodine pretreatment. These results indicate that BK and SK channels have prominent roles as negative feedback elements to limit UBSM contraction amplitude and duration. RyRs also appear to play a significant role as a negative feedback regulator of contraction frequency and duration, and this role is influenced by the activity of SK channels.  相似文献   

17.
Rat adrenocortical carcinoma cells possess a high density of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) receptors which are coupled with membrane guanylate cyclase and corticosterone production. Herein we show that pretreatment of these cells with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), a known activator of protein kinase C, attenuates the ANF-stimulated cyclic GMP accumulation in a dose-dependent manner. The half maximum inhibitory concentration of PMA was 10(-10) M. When these cells were incubated with PMA in the presence of 1-(5-isoquinolinyl-sulfonyl)-2-methyl piperazine, a protein kinase C inhibitor, the PMA-mediated attenuation of ANF-stimulated cyclic GMP formation is blocked. These results suggest that protein kinase C negatively regulates the ANF-receptor coupled membrane guanylate cyclase system in these cells.  相似文献   

18.
The endothelial cell has a unique intrinsic feature: it produces a most potent vasopressor peptide hormone, endothelin (ET-1), yet it also contains a signaling system of an equally potent hypotensive hormone, atrial natriuretic factor (ANF). This raises two related curious questions: does the endothelial cell also contain an ET-1 signaling system? If yes, how do the two systems interact with each other? The present investigation was undertaken to determine such a possibility. Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial (BPAE) cells were chosen as a model system. Identity of the ANF receptor guanylate cyclase was probed with a specific polyclonal antibody to the 180 kDa membrane guanylate cyclase (mGC) ANF receptor. A Western-blot analysis of GTP-affinity-purified endothelial cell membrane proteins recognized a 180 kDa band; the same antibody inhibited the ANF-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity; the ANF-dependent rise of cyclic GMP in the intact cells was dose-dependent. By affinity cross-linking technique, a predominant 55 kDa membrane protein band was specifically labeled with [125I]ET-1. ET-1 treatment of the cells showed a migration of the protein kinase C (PKC) activity from cytosol to the plasma membrane; ET-1 inhibited the ANF-dependent production of cyclic GMP in a dose-dependent fashion with an EC50 of 100 nM. This inhibitory effect was duplicated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), a known PKC-activator. The EC50 of PMA was 5 nM. A PKC inhibitor, 1-(5-isoquinolinyl-sulfonyl)-2-methyl piperazine (H-7), blocked the PMA-dependent attenuation of ANF-dependent cyclic GMP formation. These results demonstrate that the 180 kDa mGC-coupled ANF and ET-1 signaling systems coexist in endothelial cells and that the ET-1 signal negates the ANF-dependent guanylate cyclase activity and cyclic GMP formation. Furthermore, these results support the paracrine and/or autocrine role of ET-1.  相似文献   

19.
Discrepancies exist between extent of guanylate cyclase activation by atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in cell-free systems and ANP-stimulated levels of cyclic GMP in whole cells, and also between receptor affinity and dose effectiveness of ANP. Therefore, we have investigated whether, in addition to receptor-coupled guanylate cyclase activation, other second-messenger cascade systems may be involved in mediating both an increase in cyclic GMP and the physiological response to ANP. Equilibrium 125I-ANP binding studies on cultured thoracic aorta smooth muscle cells revealed the existence of low-affinity (approximately 10(-8) M, 84.5 fmol/10(5) cells) and high-affinity (approximately 10(-10) M, 12.5 fmol/10(5) cells) binding sites. We confirm that ANP elevates intracellular cyclic GMP (EC50 approximately 10(-8) M) and inhibits agonist-(isoproterenol and forskolin)-induced increases in intracellular cyclic AMP (IC50 approximately 10(-9) M). ANP also stimulated breakdown of phosphatidylinositol phosphates and generation of inositol phosphates with a half-maximally effective concentration of approximately 10(-10) M. The extent of phosphatidylinositol polyphosphate hydrolysis was small (120%) in comparison to that of phosphatidylinositol (Ptd-Ins) (200%). Ptd-Ins hydrolysis was paralleled by the appearance of glycerophosphoinositol, and there was also a close temporal relationship between these processes and the accumulation of intracellular cyclic GMP. Smooth muscle cells released [3H]arachidonic acid label in response to ANP (EC50 approximately 10(-10) M). Taken together, the data suggest that the vasorelaxant hormone ANP has stimulatory effects on phosphoinositol lipid metabolism via both phospholipase C (generation of inositol phosphates) and phospholipase A2 (generation of releasable [3H]arachidonic acid and indirectly glycerophosphoinositol). In contrast, stimulation of phosphatidylinositol phosphate breakdown by the vasoconstrictive hormone angiotensin II is not associated with glycerophosphoinositol formation, and neither cyclic GMP nor cyclic AMP levels were influenced by this hormone.  相似文献   

20.
CaCl2 inhibited ATP-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity, but had little effect on basal and atrial natriuretic factor-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity in rat lung membranes. LaCl3 had similar effects as CaCl2 on basal and stimulated guanylate cyclase activity. LiCl and other monovalent salts inhibited ATP-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity more than basal enzyme activity. However, atrial natriuretic factor somehow stabilized the enzyme against the inhibitory effect of LiCl. These results suggest that ATP and atrial natriuretic factor activate the enzyme through different mechanisms. Since the effect of calcium on guanylate cyclase activity is different from that of monovalent salts and can be mimicked by lanthanum, it may be mediated by a specific calcium binding site or binding protein.  相似文献   

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