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1.
The possibility that Ca2+ ions are involved in the control of the increased phosphatidylinositol turnover which is provoked by alpha-adrenergic or muscarinic cholinergic stimulation of rat parotid-gland fragments has been investigated. Both types of stimulation provoked phosphatidylinositol breakdown, which was detected either chemically or radiochemically, and provoked a compensatory synthesis of the lipid, detected as an increased rate of incorporation of 32Pi into phosphatidylinositol. Acetylcholine had little effect on the incorporation of labelled glycerol, whereas adrenaline stimulated it significantly, but to a much lower extent than 32P incorporation: this suggests that the response to acetylcholine was entirely accounted for by renewal of the phosphorylinositol head-group of the lipid, but that some synthesis de novo was involved in the response to adrenaline. The responses to both types of stimulation, whether measured as phosphatidylinositol breakdown or as phosphatidylinositol labelling, occurred equally well in incubation media containing 2.5 mm-Ca2+ or 0.2 mm-EGTA [ethanedioxybis(ethylamine)-tetra-acetic acid]. Incubation with a bivalent cation ionophore (A23187) led to a small and more variable increase in phosphatidylinositol labelling with 32Pi, which occurred whether or not Ca2+ was available in the extracellular medium: this was not accompanied by significant phosphatidylinositol breakdown. Cinchocaine, a local anaesthetic, produced parallel increases in the incorporation of Pi and glycerol into phosphatidylinositol. This is compatible with its known ability to inhibit phosphatidate phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.4) and increase phosphatidylinositol synthesis de novo in other cells. These results indicate that the phosphatidylinositol turnover evoked by alpha-adrenergic or muscarinic cholinergic stimuli in rat parotid gland probably does not depend on an influx of Ca2+ into the cells in response to stimulation. This is in marked contrast with the K+ efflux from this tissue, which is controlled by the same receptors, but is strictly dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+. The Ca2+-independence of stimulated phosphatidylinositol metabolism may mean that it is controlled through a mode of receptor function different from that which controls other cell responses. Alternatively, it can be interpreted as indicating that stimulated phosphatidylinositol breakdown is intimately involved in the mechanisms of action of alpha-adrenergic and muscarinic cholinergic receptor systems.  相似文献   

2.
The metabolism of the inositol lipids and phosphatidic acid in rat lacrimal acinar cells was investigated. The muscarinic cholinergic agonist methacholine caused a rapid loss of 15% of [32P]phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] and a rapid increase in [32P]phosphatidic acid (PtdA). Chemical measurements indicated that the changes in 32P labelling of these lipids closely resembled changes in their total cellular content. Chelation of extracellular Ca2+ with excess EGTA caused a significant decrease in the PtdA labelling and an apparent loss of PtdIns(4,5)P2 breakdown. The calcium ionophores A23187 and ionomycin provoked a substantial breakdown of [32P]PtdIns(4,5)P2 and phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P); however, a decrease in [32P]PtdA was also observed. Increases in inositol phosphate, inositol bisphosphate and inositol trisphosphate were observed in methacholine-stimulated cells, and this increase was greatly amplified in the presence of 10 mM-LiCl; alpha-adrenergic stimulation also caused a substantial increase in inositol phosphates. A23187 provoked a much smaller increase in the formation of inositol phosphates than did either methacholine or adrenaline. Experiments with excess extracellular EGTA and with a protocol that eliminates intracellular Ca2+ release indicated that the labelling of inositol phosphates was partially dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ and independent of intracellular Ca2+ mobilization. Thus, in the rat lacrimal gland, there appears to be a rapid phospholipase C-mediated breakdown of PtdIns(4,5)P2 and a synthesis of PtdA, in response to activation of receptors that bring about an increase in intracellular Ca2+. The results are consistent with a role for these lipids early in the stimulus-response pathway of the lacrimal acinar cell.  相似文献   

3.
To help elucidate the possible role of phosphatidylinositol in the regulation of membrane permeability to Ca2+, the relationship in the rat parotid gland of phosphatidylinositol turnover to hormone receptor binding and to the hormone-mediated increase in K+ permeability (a Ca2+-dependent phenomenon) was investigated. The concentrations of adrenaline and substance P required to stimulate phosphatidylinositol turnover were found to be similar to those required for the Ca2+-mediated change in K+ permeability and for ligand binding. However, in the case of muscarinic (cholinergic) receptor stimulation, the phosphatidylinositol response was better correlated to the increase in membrane permeability to Ca2+, as determined by the change in K+ permeability, than to receptor occupation. Consistent with this relationship between the phosphatidylinositol response and Ca2+-channel activation were results obtained by simultaneous administration of maximal or submaximal concentrations of muscarinic and alpha-adrenergic agonists. The extent of 32P incorporation when stimulated by maximal concentrations of two agonists did not summate, but, rather, was intermediate between the response of either agonist alone. One interpretation for these observations is that the phosphatidylinositol response may not be related to receptor occupation or activation, but may be involved in the Ca2+-gating mechanism itself.  相似文献   

4.
We describe the effects of lanthanum on protein secretion, potassium efflux, calcium uptake and phosphatidylinositol turnover stimulated by cholinergic agonists in rat parotid glands. Carbachol increases in vitro calcium uptake, protein secretion and K+ efflux through muscarinic receptor; however it fails to stimulate protein discharge or K+ release in a incubation medium free of calcium. Lanthanum inhibits calcium uptake, protein secretion and K+ efflux induced by carbachol without impairing protein discharge stimulated by norepinephrine through the beta-adrenergic receptor. Norepinephrine, in the presence of calcium in the incubation medium, stimulates the K+ efflux through the alpha-adrenergic receptor: this effect is suppressed by lanthanum. These results emphasize the role of increased influx of calcium in the cellular phenomena controlled by muscarinic or alpha-adrenergic receptors. Carbachol increases phosphatidylinositol turnover in the absence of calcium in extracellular medium; indeed it is shown that carbachol increases the rate of phosphatidylinositol breakdown and that lanthanum impairs this cholinergic effects. From these data it is suggested that the interaction between cholinergic agonist and muscarinic receptor could induce a stimulation of 'phosphatidylinositol turnover' which could control the calcium influx according to the gradient through the plasmalemma membrane.  相似文献   

5.
1. The metabolism of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidate was investigated in fragments of longitudinal smooth muscle from guinea-pig ileum incubated with cholinergic and anticholinergic drugs. 2. Incorporation of Pi into these lipids was enhanced by acetylcholine and carbamoylcholine. 3. The receptor responsible for triggering this response was of the muscarinic type, since (a) the response was also produced by the muscarinic agonists acetyl-beta-methylcholine, carbamoyl-beta-methylcholine and pilocarpine, and (b) the response was prevented by atropine and prophylbenzilylcholine mustard, but not by tubocurarine. 4. Increased phosphatidylinositol labellin was clearly observed within 5 min in tissue treated with a high concentration of carbamoylcholine. 5. Halfmaximal stimulation of phosphatidylinositol labelling occurred at approx. 10 muM-muM-carbamoylcholine. 6. Incubation of muscle fragments with carbamoylcholine provoked a decrease in phosphatidylinositol concentration, as would be expected if phosphatidyl-inositol breakdown is the reaction controlled by agonists. 7. This information all appears consistent with the proposal that phosphatidylinositol breakdown may be a reaction intrinsic to the mechanisms of muscarinic cholinergic receptor systems.  相似文献   

6.
Incubation of fragments of guinea-pig ileum smooth muscle in the presence of an elevated extracellular K+ concentration, which causes an increase in cell-surface Ca2+ permeability and thus leads to contraction, caused a marked increase in phosphatidylinositol turnover, as assessed by incorporation of 32Pi. This response was not diminished by atropine or propylbenzilycholine mustard, two muscarinic cholinergic antagonists, and was therefore not caused by the release of endogenous acetylcholine within the tissue. In contrast, exposure of guinea-pig pancreas fragments to high extracellular [K+], which does not increase cell-surface Ca2+ permeability or evoke secretion, did not cause an increase in phosphatidylinositol turnover, even though such an increase was triggered by carbamoylcholine, which is a secretagogue. These observations are consistent with a suggested function for phosphatidylinositol breakdown in the mechanisms of cell-surface Ca2+ gates.  相似文献   

7.
1. The effects on phosphatidylinositol metabolism of three Ca(2+)-mobilizing glycogenolytic hormones, namely angiotensin, vasopressin and adrenaline, have been investigated by using rat hepatocytes. 2. All three hormones stimulate both phosphatidylinositol breakdown and the labelling of this lipid with (32)P. 3. The response to angiotensin occurs quickly, requires a high concentration of the hormone and is prevented by [1-sarcosine, 8-isoleucine]angiotensin, a specific angiotensin antagonist that does not prevent the responses to vasopressin and to adrenaline. This response therefore seems to be mediated by angiotensin-specific receptors. 4. [1-Deaminocysteine,2-phenylalanine,7-(3,4-didehydroproline),8-arginine] vasopressin, a vasopressin analogue with enhanced antidiuretic potency, is relatively ineffective at stimulating phosphatidylinositol metabolism. This suggests that the hepatic vasopressin receptors that stimulate phosphatidylinositol breakdown are different in their ligand selectivity from the antidiuretic vasopressin receptors that activate renal adenylate cyclase. 5. Incubation of hepatocytes with ionophore A23187, a bivalent-cation ionophore, neither mimicked nor appreciably changed the effects of vasopressin on phosphatidylinositol metabolism, suggesting that phosphatidylinositol breakdown is not controlled by changes in the cytosol Ca(2+) concentration. This conclusion was supported by the observation that hormonal stimulation of phosphatidylinositol breakdown and resynthesis persists in cells incubated for a substantial period in EGTA, although this treatment somewhat decreased the phosphatidylinositol response of the hepatocyte. The phosphatidylinositol response of the hepatocyte therefore appears not to be controlled by changes in cytosol [Ca(2+)], despite the fact that this ion is thought to be the second messenger by which the same hormones control glycogenolysis. 6. These results may be an indication that phosphatidylinositol breakdown is an integral reaction in the stimulus-response coupling sequence(s) that link(s) activation of alpha-adrenergic, vasopressin and angiotensin receptors to mobilization of Ca(2+) in the rat hepatocyte.  相似文献   

8.
We elucidated the interaction of small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (SK(Ca)) channels and L-type Ca(2+) channels in muscarinic receptor-mediated control of catecholamine secretion in the isolated perfused rat adrenal gland. The muscarinic agonist methacholine (10-300 microM) produced concentration-dependent increases in adrenal output of epinephrine and norepinephrine. The SK(Ca) channel blocker apamin (1 microM) enhanced the methacholine-induced catecholamine responses. The facilitatory effect of apamin on the methacholine-induced catecholamine responses was not observed during treatment with the L-type Ca(2+) channel blocker nifedipine (3 microM) or Ca(2+)-free solution. Nifedipine did not affect the methacholine-induced catecholamine responses, but it inhibited the responses during treatment with apamin. The L-type Ca(2+) channel activator Bay k 8644 (1 microM) enhanced the methacholine-induced catecholamine responses, whereas the enhancement of the methacholine-induced epinephrine and norepinephrine responses were prevented and attenuated by apamin, respectively. These results suggest that SK(Ca) channels are activated by muscarinic receptor stimulation, which inhibits the opening of L-type Ca(2+) channels and thereby attenuates adrenal catecholamine secretion.  相似文献   

9.
In nonexcitable cells, receptor stimulation evokes Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum stores followed by Ca(2+) influx through store-operated Ca(2+) channels in the plasma membrane. In mast cells, store-operated entry is mediated via Ca(2+) release-activated Ca(2+) (CRAC) channels. In this study, we find that stimulation of muscarinic receptors in cultured mast cells results in Ca(2+)-dependent activation of protein kinase Calpha and the mitogen activated protein kinases ERK1/2 and this is required for the subsequent stimulation of the enzymes Ca(2+)-dependent phospholipase A(2) and 5-lipoxygenase, generating the intracellular messenger arachidonic acid and the proinflammatory intercellular messenger leukotriene C(4). In cell population studies, ERK activation, arachidonic acid release, and leukotriene C(4) secretion were all graded with stimulus intensity. However, at a single cell level, Ca(2+) influx was related to agonist concentration in an essentially all-or-none manner. This paradox of all-or-none CRAC channel activation in single cells with graded responses in cell populations was resolved by the finding that increasing agonist concentration recruited more mast cells but each cell responded by generating all-or-none Ca(2+) influx. These findings were extended to acutely isolated rat peritoneal mast cells where muscarinic or P2Y receptor stimulation evoked all-or-none activation of Ca(2+)entry but graded responses in cell populations. Our results identify a novel way for grading responses to agonists in immune cells and highlight the importance of CRAC channels as a key pharmacological target to control mast cell activation.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the effects of two halogenoalkylamine drugs, dibenamine and phenoxybenzamine, on the stimulated phosphatidylinositol turnover that is produced by neurotransmitters and hormones which interact with receptors to bring about an increase in cell surface Ca2+ permeability. The phosphatidylinositol responses we have investigated were those evoked by muscarinic cholinergic stimuli (parotid gland and pancreas), by α-adrenergic stimuli (parotid gland, vas deferens smooth muscle), by pancreozymin or caerulein (pancreas), by phytohaemagglutinin (lymphocytes) and by either 5-hydroxytryptamine or elevation of the extracellular K+ concentration (ileum smooth muscle). Phenoxybenzamine inhibited the muscarinic cholinergic, α-adrenergic, 5-hydroxytryptamine and high K+ responses, but not the responses to phytohaemagglutinin and to pancreozymin (or caerulein). Dibenamine was less effective than phenoxybenzamine in inhibiting the α-adrenergic response and the high K+ response, and it did not inhibit the responses to muscarinic cholinergic stimuli, to 5-hydroxytryptamine or to the polypeptides. N,N-dimethyl-2-bromo-2-phenylethylamine (DMPEA) inhibited the α-adrenergic response, but not the response to muscarinic cholinergic stimulation. The specificity of DMPEA for the α-adrenergic response agrees with its postulated site of action at the noradrenaline-binding site of this receptor system, whereas dibenamine and phenoxybenzamine are less specific drugs which inhibit a variety of the ‘physiological’ responses of cells, including those to muscarinic cholinergic, H1-histaminergic, α-adrenergic and 5-hydroxytryptamine stimuli. Previously, we suggested that dibenamine and phenoxybenzamine might show a constant pattern of effects on the phosphatidylinositol responses evoked through different receptors, phenoxybenzamine being inhibitory and dibenamine without effect [Jafferji & Michell (1976) Biochem. J. 160, 163–169]. However, this pattern has not been sustained throughout the present study of a larger range of Ca2+-mobilising stimuli.  相似文献   

11.
We elucidated the functional contribution of K(+) channels to cholinergic control of catecholamine secretion in the perfused rat adrenal gland. The small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (SK(Ca))-channel blocker apamin (10-100 nM) enhanced the transmural electrical stimulation (ES; 1-10 Hz)- and 1, 1-dimethyl-4-phenyl-piperazinium (DMPP; 5-40 microM)-induced increases in norepinephrine (NE) output, whereas it did not affect the epinephrine (Epi) responses. Apamin enhanced the catecholamine responses induced by acetylcholine (6-200 microM) and methacholine (10-300 microM). The putative large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel blocker charybdotoxin (10-100 nM) enhanced the catecholamine responses induced by ES, but not the responses induced by cholinergic agonists. Neither the K(A) channel blocker mast cell degranulating peptide (100-1000 nM) nor the K(V) channel blocker margatoxin (10-100 nM) affected the catecholamine responses. These results suggest that SK(Ca) channels play an inhibitory role in adrenal catecholamine secretion mediated by muscarinic receptors and also in the nicotinic receptor-mediated secretion of NE, but not of Epi. Charybdotoxin-sensitive Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels may control the secretion at the presynaptic site.  相似文献   

12.
R J Parod  J W Putney 《Life sciences》1979,25(26):2211-2215
The effects of carbachol (10?5M) and epinephrine (10?5M) on efflux of 45Ca from rat exorbital lacrimal gland slices were examined. Both carbachol and epinephrine stimulated a transient release of 45Ca from the tissue. The quantity of Ca released was estimated to be of the order of 0.5 μmol/g. Release of 45Ca by one agonist prevented subsequent release of 45Ca by a different agonist. These data support the hypothesis put forth previously that in the lacrimal gland muscarinic or α-adrenergic receptor activation causes a transient increase in membrane permeability to K by triggering the release of a sizable intracellular pool of Ca common to both receptors.  相似文献   

13.
Inositol lipids and cell stimulation in mammalian salivary gland   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
J W Putney 《Cell calcium》1982,3(4-5):369-383
The rat parotid salivary gland shows marked alterations in phospholipid metabolism when stimulated by certain agonists. These agonists are those which cause cellular Ca mobilization by activation of muscarinic, alpha-adrenergic or peptidergic (substance P) receptors. The phospholipid changes apparently reflect the activation of a phosphoinositide-phosphatidic acid cycle, the precise pathways of which are not known with certainty. The observed effects include (1) an increased labelling by 32PO4 of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidic acid, (2) net synthesis of phosphatidic acid, (3) net breakdown of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate. These effects apparently do not require the presence of extracellular Ca or the release of internal Ca and cannot be produced by the artificial introduction of Ca into the cytosol with Ca ionophores. These findings are consistent with the view that a receptor-mediated alteration in phosphoinositide metabolism represents an early step in the stimulus-response pathway in the parotid acinar cell. It has been suggested that phosphatidic acid synthesis might be of central importance in mediating Ca influx and that PIP2 breakdown might play a role in activation of Ca release. Evidence for these latter ideas is for the present largely circumstantial.  相似文献   

14.
Muscarinic-receptor stimulation by 0.1 mM-carbachol in longitudinal muscle of the guinea-pig ileum increases the incorporation of [3H]inositol into inositol-containing phospholipid. This effect was blocked by 16 microM-atropine. After 60 min incubation, carbachol increased the accumulation of total inositol phosphates 20-fold in the presence of 10 mM-Li+. Less than 20% of the total inositol phosphate corresponded to inositol 1-phosphate by ion-exchange chromatography, whereas of the remainder about two-thirds corresponded to inositol bisphosphate and one third to inositol trisphosphate. It is concluded that stimulation of muscarinic receptors in guinea-pig ileum enhances breakdown of polyphosphoinositides, suggesting that this may be a primary event associated with Ca2+ mobilization in the guinea-pig ileum.  相似文献   

15.
A number of drugs classed as calcium antagonists, spasmolytics, non-specific receptor antagonists or receptor antagonists with multiple sites of action were tested to determine whether they prevent the stimulation of phosphatidylinositol turnover caused in various tissues by the activation of receptors which increase cell-surface Ca2+ permeability. The experiments were done with fragments of longitudinal smooth muscle from guinea-pig ileum; these were incubated in vitro with 32Pi and either 100 muM-carbamoylcholine or 100 muM-histamine, in the presence of antagonistic drugs at concentrations at least sufficient to cause complete blockade of smooth-muscle contraction. The phosphatidylinositol response to carbamoylcholine was not changed by cinchocaine, papaverine, nifedipine, dibenamine, amethocaine, cinnarizine, lidoflazine, methoxyverapamil, prenylamine or two antimuscarinic alkane-bis-ammonium compounds, and the response to histamine was unaffected by the first four drugs. In contrast, phenoxybenzamine prevented the increase in phosphatidylinositol labelling caused by either carbamoylcholine or histamine. The insensitivity of the phosphatidylinositol response to most of the drugs provides further experimental support for the conclusion that the receptor-stimulated phosphatidylinositol breakdown which initiates the increase in phosphatidylinositol turnover is not caused by an increase in intracellular Ca2+. The simplest interpretation of the available information appears to be that phosphatidylinositol breakdown plays a role in the coupling between the receptor-agonist interaction and the opening of cell-surface Ca2+ gates [Michell, R. H. (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 415, 81-147]. If this is correct, then phenoxybenzamine must exert its inhibitory effects on phosphatidylinositol breakdown early in this sequence of events, but the drugs must act at a stage later than phosphatidylinositol breakdown. The unexpected difference in the effects of dibenamine and phenoxybenzamine, which are chemically very similar, may provide a useful experimental tool with which to explore the way in which activated receptors provoke the opening of cell-surface Ca2+ gates.  相似文献   

16.
The hypothesis that arachidonic acid metabolism might be involved in Ca-mobilization mechanisms in exocrine gland cells was investigated. Arachidonate (10−4M) failed to stimulate protein secretion from slices of pancreas, parotid or lacrimal glands and failed to stimulate 86Rb efflux from parotid or lacrimal glands. The stimulation of protein secretion (all three glands) or 86Rb efflux (parotid and lacrimal glands) by appropriate secretagogues was unaffected by 10−5M indomethacin. Eicosatetraynoic acid (2×10−5M) inhibited 86Rb efflux due to carbachol but not that due to physalaemin or ionomycin. Nordihydroguaiaretic acid inhibited lacrimal and parotid gland responses only at high (10−4M) concentration. Collectively, these results argue against an obligatory role for arachidonate metabolites in Ca-mediated responses of these exocrine glands.In the exocrine glands activation by neurotransmitters (or analogs) of receptors that mobilize cellular Ca also stimulates the incorporation of 32PO4 into phosphatidylinositol (1–3). Michell (4,5) has suggested that in some manner this alteration in phospholipid metabolism may be functionally responsible for the opening of surface membrane Ca gates which presumably precedes the expression of a number of Ca-mediated responses by the exocrine cell. That this reaction probably preceeds Ca mobilization is deduced primarily from two experimental observations. First, receptor activation of phosphatidylinositol turnover is not prevented by Ca omission (6–8). Second, the effect is not mimicked by the divalent cationophore A-23187, while other effects of receptor activation are mimicked by this compound (7–9).There has also been some speculation as to the manner in which altered phosphatidylinositol metabolism might be involved in the Ca-gating mechanism (10–14). One such hypothesis suggests that receptor activation may lead to phosphatidylinositol breakdown which in turn leads to the release of free arachidonate (13, 14). As free arachidonate is generally believed to be the rate-limiting substrate for prostaglandin synthesis (15), the resulting prostaglandins might act to mobilize Ca or might act in concert with Ca (13, 14). There is evidence for this hypothesis for the mouse pancreas, where exogenous arachidonate and prostaglandins can stimulate amylase release (13). The effects of arachidonate, carbachol, caerulein and pancreozmin were all antagonized by sub-micromolar concentrations of indomethacin (13), a potent cyclooxygenase inhibitor (15). Additionally, recent reports have demonstrated stimulation by acetylcholine of prostaglandin E synthesis in mouse pancreas (16, 17).The purpose of this study was to examine the general applicability of this hypothesis by investigating the effects of arachidonate and substances that inhibit prostaglandin formation in two other exocrine tissues that show a prominent phosphatidylinositol turnover — the rat parotid and lacrimal glands.  相似文献   

17.
We previously found that addition of cAMP and a Ca(2+)/PKC-dependent agonist causes synergism or potentiation of protein secretion from rat lacrimal gland acini. In the present study we determined whether cAMP decreases p44/p42 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activity in the lacrimal gland. Since we know that activation of MAPK attenuates protein secretion stimulated by Ca(2+)- and PKC-dependent agonists, we also determined whether this activation causes potentiation of secretion. Freshly prepared rat lacrimal gland acinar cells were incubated with dibutyryl cAMP (DBcAMP), carbachol (a cholinergic agonist), phenylephrine (an alpha(1)-adrenergic agonist), or epidermal growth factor (EGF). The latter three agonists are known to activate p44/p42 MAPK. p44/p42 MAPK activity and protein secretion were measured. As measured by Western blot analysis, DBcAMP inhibited both basal and agonist-stimulated p44/p42 MAPK activity. Cellular cAMP levels were increased by 1) using two different cell-permeant cAMP analogs, 2) activating adenylyl cyclase (L-858051), or 3) activation of G(s)-coupled receptors (VIP). The cell-permeant cAMP analogs, L-858051, and VIP inhibited basal p44/p42 MAPK activity by 50, 40, and 40%, respectively. DBcAMP and VIP inhibited carbachol- and EGF-stimulated MAPK activity. cAMP, but not VIP, inhibited phenylephrine-stimulated MAPK activity. Potentiation of secretion was detected when carbachol, phenylephrine, or EGF was simultaneously added with DBcAMP. We conclude that increasing cellular cAMP levels inhibits p44/p42 MAPK activity and that this could account for potentiation of secretion obtained when cAMP was elevated and Ca(2+) and PKC were increased by agonists.  相似文献   

18.
Substance P, muscarinic and alpha-adrenoceptor agonists stimulated the incorporation of [3H]inositol into phosphatidylinositol in rat parotid gland slices. Surgical denervation of the sympathetic input to the rat parotid gland by superior cervical ganglionectomy produced marked reductions in these responses. The stimulated incorporation of radiolabelled precursors into phosphatidylinositol is a measure of its resynthesis after receptor-mediated breakdown of inositol phospholipids. We therefore examined the enzymic site of the lesion induced by sympathetic denervation using parotid gland slices labelled with either [3H]inositol or [32P]phosphate and stimulated with substance P. Receptor-activated phospholipase C attack upon [3H]inositol phospholipids was assayed by measuring the formation of [3H]inositol 1-phosphate in the presence of 10 mM-Li+ to inhibit further breakdown. It was not affected by denervation. Substance P elicited a rapid breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate and this response was reduced in the denervated gland. The second step in stimulated phosphatidylinositol turnover, phosphorylation of diacylglycerol to phosphatidate was not affected by denervation. Sympathetic denervation appears to induce a specific enzymic lesion in the parotid gland that impairs receptor-stimulated resynthesis of phosphatidylinositol from phosphatidate. This change in membrane lipid metabolism may be related to a number of the effects of sympathetic denervation, such as agonist supersensitivity, reduced gland cell proliferation and induction of new surface receptors.  相似文献   

19.
The effect has been investigated of the alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, on excretion of water and electrolytes (Na, K, and HCO3) by the parotid and mandibular glands of the rat. In the mandibular glands the agonist was as effective as acetylcholine (or parasympathetic nerve stimulation) in stimulating secretion, and the electrolyte excretory patterns seen in the two modes of stimulation were similar. In the parotid gland, phenylephrine was only one-fifth as potent as acetylcholine (or parasympathetic nerve stimulation) in evoking a secretory response but, when due allowance for flow rate differences is made, the electrolyte excretion patterns were similar. In both glands the secretory response to phenylephrine was totally different, in magnitude and in electrolyte excretion pattern, to that evoked by the beta-adrenergic agonist, isoprenaline. It is concluded, as has already been established for secretion of exportable protein, that alpha-adrenergic agonists have very similar effects to muscarinic agonists both on endpiece and on duct cells and that these actions are completely different from those evoked by activation of beta-adrenergic receptors.  相似文献   

20.
The incorporation of [(32)P]P(i) into phosphatidylinositol by rat fat-cells was markedly increased in the presence of adrenaline. Phosphatidic acid labelling was also increased, but to a lesser extent. These effects are due to alpha(1)-adrenergic stimulation since they were unaffected by propranolol, blocked by alpha-blockers in the potency order prazosin相似文献   

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