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1.
Aluminium is neurotoxic and is considered a possible etiologic factor in Alzheimer's disease, dialysis syndrome and other neurological disorders. The molecular mechanism of aluminium-induced impairment of neurological functions remains unclear. We showed that aluminium impairs the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway in cultured neurons. The aim of this work was to assess by in vivo brain microdialysis whether chronic administration of aluminium in the drinking water (2.5% aluminium sulfate) also impairs the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway in the cerebellum of rats in vivo. Chronic exposure to aluminium reduced NMDA-induced increase of extracellular cGMP by ca 50%. The increase in extracellular cGMP induced by the nitric oxide generating agent S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine was higher (240%) in rats treated with aluminium than in controls. Immunoblotting experiments showed that aluminium reduced the cerebellar content of calmodulin and nitric oxide synthase by 34 and 15%, respectively. Basal activity of soluble guanylate cyclase was decreased by 66% in aluminium-treated rats, while the activity after stimulation with S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine was similar to controls. Basal cGMP in the cerebellar extracellular space was decreased by 50% in aluminium-treated rats. These results indicate that chronic exposure to aluminium reduces the basal activity of guanylate cyclase and impairs the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway in the animal in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
2,5-Hexanedione is a neurotoxic metabolite of hexane. The mechanisms of its neurotoxicity remain unclear. We assessed whether chronic exposure to 2,5-hexanedione affects the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway in primary cultures of cerebellar neurons and/or in the cerebellum of rats.

Chronic exposure of cultured cerebellar neurons to 2,5-hexanedione (200 μM) reduced by ≈50% NMDA-induced formation of cGMP. Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide was reduced by 46%. This treatment reduced the content of neuronal nitric oxide synthase and soluble guanylate cyclase in neurons by 23 and 20%, respectively.

In the cerebellum of rats chronically exposed to 2,5-hexanedione (in the drinking water) NMDA-induced formation of cGMP was reduced by 55% as determined by in vivo brain microdialysis. Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide was reduced by 65%. The content of neuronal nitric oxide synthase and of soluble guanylate cyclase was reduced by 25 and 21%, respectively, in the cerebellum of these rats.

The effects are the same in both systems, indicating that cultured neurons are a good model to study the mechanisms of neurotoxicity of 2,5-hexanedione.

These results indicate that chronic exposure to 2,5-hexanedione affects the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway at different steps both in cultured neurons and in cerebellum of the animal in vivo. The alteration of this pathway may contribute to the neurotoxic effects of 2,5-hexanedione.  相似文献   


3.
Hepatic encephalopathy is a complex neuropsychiatric syndrome present in patients with liver disease that includes impaired intellectual function and alterations in personality and neuromuscular coordination. Hyperammonemia and liver failure result in altered glutamatergic neurotransmission, which contributes to hepatic encephalopathy. Alterations in the function of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway may be responsible for some of the neurological alterations found in hepatic encephalopathy. The function of this pathway is altered in brain from patients died with liver cirrhosis and one altered step of the pathway is the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide, which is increased in cerebral cortex and reduced in cerebellum from these patients. Portacaval anastomosis and bile duct ligation plus hyperammonemia in rats reproduce the alterations in the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by NO both in cerebellum and cerebral cortex. We assessed whether hyperammonemia is responsible for the region-selective alterations in guanylate cyclase modulation in liver cirrhosis and whether the alteration occurs in neurons or in astrocytes. Activation of guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide is lower in cerebellar neurons exposed to ammonia (1.5-fold) than in control neurons (3.3-fold). The activation of guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide is higher in cortical neurons exposed to ammonia (8.7-fold) than in control neurons (5.5-fold). The activation is not affected in cerebellar or cortical astrocytes. These findings indicate that hyperammonemia is responsible for the differential alterations in the modulation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide in cerebellum and cerebral cortex of cirrhotic patients. Moreover, under the conditions used, the alterations occur selectively in neurons and not in astrocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Hyperammonemia is the main responsible for the neurological alterations in hepatic encephalopathy in patients with liver failure. We studied the function of the glutamate-nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP pathway in brain in animal models of hyperammonemia and liver failure and in patients died with liver cirrhosis. Activation of glutamate receptors increases intracellular calcium that binds to calmodulin and activates neuronal nitric oxide synthase, increasing nitric oxide, which activates soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), increasing cGMP. This glutamate-NO-cGMP pathway modulates cerebral processes such as circadian rhythms, the sleep-waking cycle, and some forms of learning and memory. These processes are impaired in patients with hepatic encephalopathy. Activation of sGC by NO is significantly increased in cerebral cortex and significantly reduced in cerebellum from cirrhotic patients died in hepatic coma. Portacaval anastomosis in rats, an animal model of liver failure, reproduces the effects of liver failure on modulation of sGC by NO both in cerebral cortex and cerebellum. In vivo brain microdialisis studies showed that sGC activation by NO is also reduced in vivo in cerebellum in hyperammonemic rats with or without liver failure. The content of alpha but not beta subunits of sGC are increased both in frontal cortex and cerebellum from patients died due to liver disease and from rats with portacaval anastomosis. We assessed whether determination of activation of sGC by NO-generating agent SNAP in lymphocytes could serve as a peripheral marker for the impairment of sGC activation by NO in brain. Chronic hyperammonemia and liver failure also alter sGC activation by NO in lymphocytes from rats or patients. These findings show that the content and modulation by NO of sGC are strongly altered in brain of patients with liver disease. These alterations could be responsible for some of the neurological alterations in hepatic encephalopathy such as sleep disturbances and cognitive impairment.  相似文献   

5.
Exposure to aluminum (Al) produces neurotoxic effects in humans. However, the molecular mechanism of Al neurotoxicity remains unknown. Al interferes with glutamatergic neurotransmission and impairs the neuronal glutamate-nitric oxide-cyclic GMP (cGMP) pathway, especially in rats prenatally exposed to Al. The aim of this work was to assess whether Al interferes with processes associated with activation of NMDA receptors and to study the molecular basis for the Al-induced impairment of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway. We used primary cultures of cerebellar neurons prepared from control rats or from rats prenatally exposed to Al. Prenatal exposure to Al prevented glutamate-induced proteolysis of the microtubule-associated protein-2, disaggregation of microtubules, and neuronal death, indicating an impairment of NMDA receptor-associated signal transduction pathways. Prenatal exposure to Al reduced significantly the content of nitric oxide synthase and guanylate cyclase and increased the content of calmodulin both in cultured neurons and in the whole cerebellum. This effect was selective for proteins of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway as the content of mitogen-activated protein kinase and the synthesis of most proteins were not affected by prenatal exposure to Al. The alterations in the expression of proteins of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway could be responsible for some of the neurotoxic effects of Al.  相似文献   

6.
It has been proposed that impairment of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) pathway in brain contributes to cognitive impairment in hepatic encephalopathy. The aims of this work were to assess whether the function of this pathway and of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) are altered in cerebral cortex in vivo in rats with chronic liver failure due to portacaval shunt (PCS) and whether these alterations are due to hyperammonemia. The glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway function and NOS activation by NMDA was analysed by in vivo microdialysis in cerebral cortex of PCS and control rats and in rats with hyperammonemia without liver failure. Similar studies were done in cortical slices from these rats and in cultured cortical neurons exposed to ammonia. Basal NOS activity, nitrites and cGMP are increased in cortex of rats with hyperammonemia or liver failure. These increases seem due to increased inducible nitric oxide synthase expression. NOS activation by NMDA is impaired in cerebral cortex in both animal models and in neurons exposed to ammonia. Chronic liver failure increases basal NOS activity, nitric oxide and cGMP but reduces activation of NOS induced by NMDA receptors activation. Hyperammonemia is responsible for both effects which will lead, independently, to alterations contributing to neurological alterations in hepatic encephalopathy.  相似文献   

7.
Aluminium (Al) is a neurotoxicant and appears as a possible etiological factor in Alzheimer's disease and other neurological disorders. The mechanisms of Al neurotoxicity are presently unclear but evidence has emerged suggesting that Al accumulation in the brain can alter neuronal signal transduction pathways associated with glutamate receptors. In cerebellar neurons in culture, long term-exposure to Al added 'in vitro' impaired the glutamate-nitric oxide (NO)-cyclic GMP (cGMP) pathway, reducing glutamate-induced activation of NO synthase and NO-induced activation of the cGMP generating enzyme, guanylate cyclase. Prenatal exposure to Al also affected strongly the function of the glutamate-NO-cGMP pathway. In cultured neurons from rats prenatally exposed to Al, we found reduced content of NO synthase and of guanylate cyclase, and a dramatic decrease in the ability of glutamate to increase cGMP formation. Activation of the glutamate-NO-cGMP pathway was also strongly impaired in cerebellum of rats chronically treated with Al, as assessed by in vivo brain microdialysis in freely moving rats. These findings suggest that the impairment of the Glu-NO-cGMP pathway in the brain may be responsible for some of the neurological alterations induced by Al.  相似文献   

8.
Hepatic encephalopathy is a complex neuropsychiatric syndrome present in patients with chronic or acute liver disease. We review here some recent advances in the study, in animal models, of the mechanisms involved in the impairment in intellectual function in hepatic encephalopathy. These studies show that the function of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway is impaired in brain in vivo in rats with chronic hyperammonemia or liver failure and from patients died in hepatic encephalopathy. This impairment leads to a reduced extracellular concentration of cGMP in the cerebellum and is associated with reduced learning ability in these animal models. Moreover, learning ability of hyperammonemic rats was restored by increasing cGMP by: (1) continuous intracerebral administration of zaprinast, an inhibitor of the cGMP-degrading phosphodiesterase, (2) chronic oral administration of sildenafil, an inhibitor of the phosphodiesterase that crosses the blood-brain barrier and (3) continuous intracerebral administration of cGMP. The data summarized indicate that impairment of learning ability in rats with chronic liver failure or hyperammonemia is due to impairment of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway. Moreover, increasing extracellular cGMP by pharmacological means may be a new therapeutic approach to improve cognitive function in patients with hepatic encephalopathy.  相似文献   

9.
Impaired function of the glutamate-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway contributes to cognitive impairment in hyperammonemia and hepatic encephalopathy. The mechanisms by which hyperammonemia impairs this pathway remain unclear. Understanding these mechanisms would allow designing clinical treatments for cognitive deficits in hepatic encephalopathy. The aims of this work were: (i) to assess whether chronic hyperammonemia in vivo alters basal activity of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in cerebellum and/or its activation in response to NMDA receptor activation and (ii) to analyse the molecular mechanisms by which hyperammonemia induces these alterations. It is shown that hyperammonemia reduces both basal activity of nNOS and its activation following NMDA receptor activation. Reduced basal activity is because of increased phosphorylation in Ser847 (by 69%) which reduces basal activity of nNOS by about 40%. Increased phosphorylation of nNOS in Ser847 is because of increased activity of calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CaMKII) which in turn is because of increased phosphorylation at Thr286. Inhibiting CaMKII with KN-62 normalizes phosphorylation of Ser847 and basal NOS activity in hyperammonemic rats, returning to values similar to controls. Reduced activation of nNOS in response to NMDA receptor activation in hyperammonemia is because of altered subcellular localization of nNOS, with reduced amount in post-synaptic membranes and increased amount in the cytosol.  相似文献   

10.
Hyperammonemia is considered the main factor responsible for the neurological and cognitive alterations found in hepatic encephalopathy and in patients with congenital deficiencies of the urea cycle enzymes. The underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Chronic moderate hyperammonemia reduces nitric oxide-induced activation of soluble guanylate cyclase and glutamate-induced formation of cGMP. NMDA receptor-associated transduction pathways, including activation of soluble guanylate cyclase, are involved in the induction of long-term potentiation (LTP), a phenomenon that is considered to be the molecular basis for some forms of memory and learning. Using an animal model we show that chronic hyperammonemia significantly reduces the degree of long-term potentiation induced in the CA1 of hippocampus slices (200% increase in control and 50% increase in slices of hyperammonemic animals). Also, addition of 1 mM ammonia impaired the maintenance of non-decremental LTP. The LTP impairment could be involved in the intellectual impairment present in chronic hepatocerebral disorders associated with hyperammonemia.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of polyamines (putrescine, spermidine, and spermine) on the activity of human platelet soluble guanylate cyclase and the stimulation of the enzyme by sodium nitroprusside (SNP), YC-1 and their combination was investigated. All these polyamines stimulated the guanylate cyclase activity and potentiated its activation by sodium nitroprusside. The stimulatory effects of sodium nitroprusside and putrescine (or spermine) were addidive; spermidine produced a synergistic activation and increased the additive effect. All the polyamines inhibited the enzyme activation by YC-1 and decreased the synergistic activation of SNP-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity by YC-1 with nearly the same potency. The ability of the investigated polyamines to potentiate and to increase synergistically (similar to to YC-1, but less effective) NO-dependent activation of soluble guanylate cyclase represents a new biochemical effect of these compounds; this effect should be taken into consideration, especially due to the endogenous nature of polyamines. The data obtained suggest, that specific biological functions of polyamines in the processes of growth and differentiation of cells may be also related to the ability of compounds to activate soluble guanylate cyclase and to increase intracellular cGMP level.  相似文献   

12.
Changes in cerebral cytochrome oxidase (COX) activity, nitric oxide (NO)-cyclic GMP (cGMP) pathway and cholinergic muscarinic receptors (MRs) have been reported in rodents acutely exposed to carbon monoxide (CO). These endpoints measurable in lymphocytes may serve as peripheral markers of CO neurotoxicity. The early and delayed effects of repeated and acute in vivo CO inhalation were investigated on COX activity, cGMP formation and MR binding in rat brain and lymphocytes to assess whether each endpoint was similarly affected both centrally and peripherally. Male Wistar rats either inhaled 500 ppm CO, 6 h/day, 5 days/week, 4 weeks (repeated exposure) or 2,400 ppm, 1 h (single exposure). Neither treatment altered brain or lymphocyte COX activity 1 and 7 days post-treatment. Also ineffective were repeated and acute CO treatments towards (3)H-quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) binding to MRs in cerebral cortex, hippocampus, striatum, cerebellum (respective controls, mean+/-S.D.: 171 +/- 45, 245 +/- 53, 263 +/- 14 and 77 +/- 7 fmol/mg protein) and lymphocytes (24 +/- 10 fmol/million cells) at the same time points. In lymphocytes control cGMP levels averaged 1.98 +/- 0.99 pmol/mg protein under basal conditions, and 3.94 +/- 0.55 pmol/mg protein after NO-stimulation. One day after chronic treatment cessation, the CO-treated group displayed about a 50% decrease in both basal and NO-stimulated cGMP values, which persisted up to 7 days after, compared to air-exposed rats. Acutely, CO caused a delayed enhancement (+140%) of NO-induced activation of soluble guanylate cyclase. The finding that the NO-cGMP pathway is a target for the delayed effects of CO in peripheral blood cells is in accordance with our data in brain [Hernández-Viadel, M., Castoldi, A.F., Coccini, T., Manzo, L., Erceg, S., Felipo, V., 2004. In vivo exposure to carbon monoxide causes delayed impairment of activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide in rat brain cortex and cerebellum. Journal of Neurochemistry 89, 1,157-1,165], and supports the use of this peripheral endpoint as a biomarker of CO central effects.  相似文献   

13.
The review highlights the molecular mechanism underlying the physiological effects of nitric oxide (NO), the role of signaling system: NO-soluble guanylate cyclase-cyclic 3′,5′-guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) in the realization of NO action. This review considers data on basic chemical characteristics of guanylate cyclase, such as the subunits structure, isoforms, modern concepts of the catalytic and regulatory centers of this enzyme. Realization of physiological effects of NO by guanylate cyclase depends on its heme prostetic group. NO-dependent activation of guanylate cyclase may be synergistically increased by a new NO-independent, allosteric activator of soluble guanylate cyclase-YC-1-(benzyl indasol derivative). Special attention is paid to the data on guanylate cyclase sites responcible for binding of the enzyme with YC-1 and the possible molecular mechanism underlying the synergistic increase of NO-dependent activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by YC-1. New compounds of endogenous nature capable to potentiate and synergistically increase the activation of guanylate cyclase by NO-donors have been found and investigated. The important physiological, pharmacotherapeutical and pathophysiological significance of this new fact is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a long-lasting enhancement of synaptic transmission efficacy and is considered the base for some forms of learning and memory. Nitric oxide (NO)-induced formation of cGMP is involved in hippocampal LTP. We have studied in hippocampal slices the effects of application of a tetanus to induce LTP on cGMP metabolism and the mechanisms by which cGMP modulates LTP. Tetanus application induced a transient rise in cGMP, reaching a maximum at 10s and decreasing below basal levels 5 min after the tetanus, remaining below basal levels after 60 min. Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) activity increased 5 min after tetanus and returned to basal levels at 60 min. The decrease in cGMP was due to sustained tetanus-induced increase in cGMP-degrading phosphodiesterase activity, which remained activated 60 min after tetanus. Tetanus-induced activation of PDE and decrease of cGMP were prevented by inhibiting protein kinase G (PKG). This indicates that the initial increase in cGMP activates PKG that phosphorylates (and activates) cGMP-degrading PDE, which, in turn, degrades cGMP. Inhibition of sGC, of PKG or of cGMP-degrading phosphodiesterase impairs LTP, indicating that proper induction of LTP involves transient activation of sGC and increase in cGMP, followed by activation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase, which, in turn, activates cGMP-degrading phosphodiesterase, resulting in long-lasting reduction of cGMP content. Hyperammonemia is the main responsible for the neurological alterations found in liver disease and hepatic encephalopathy, including impaired intellectual function. Hyperammonemia impairs LTP in hippocampus by altering the modulation of this sGC-PKG-cGMP-degrading PDE pathway. Exposure of hippocampal slices to 1 mM ammonia completely prevents tetanus-induced decrease of cGMP by impairing PKG-mediated activation of cGMP-degrading phosphodiesterase. This impairment is responsible for the loss of the maintenance of LTP in hyperammonemia, and may be also involved in the cognitive impairment in patients with hyperammonemia and hepatic encephalopathy.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies show that chronic hyperammonemia impairs learning ability of rats by impairing the glutamate-nitric oxide (NO)-cyclic guanosine mono-phosphate (cGMP) pathway in cerebellum. Three types of glutamate receptors cooperate in modulating the NO-cGMP pathway: metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5), (RS)-α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) and N-methyl-d-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors. The aim of this work was to assess whether hyperammonemia alters the modulation of this pathway by mGluR5 and AMPA receptors in cerebellum in vivo. The results support that in control rats: (1) low AMPA concentrations (0.1mM) activate nearly completely Ca(2+)-permeable (glutamate receptor subunit 2 (GluR2)-lacking) AMPA receptors and the NO-cGMP pathway; (2) higher AMPA concentrations (0.3 mM) also activate Ca(2+)-impermeable (GluR2-containing) AMPA receptors, leading to activation of NMDA receptors and of NO-cGMP pathway. Moreover, the data support that chronic hyperammonemia: (1) reduces glutamate release and activation of the glutamate-NO-cGMP pathway by activation of mGluR5; (2) strongly reduces the direct activation by AMPA receptors of the NO-cGMP pathway, likely due to reduced entry of Ca(2+) through GluR2-lacking, high affinity AMPA receptors; (3) strongly increases the indirect activation of the NO-cGMP pathway by high affinity AMPA receptors, likely due to increased entry of Na(+) through GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors and NMDA receptors activation; (4) reduces the indirect activation of the NO-cGMP pathway by low affinity AMPA receptors, likely due to reduced activation of NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Although the phenomenon of opioid tolerance has been widely investigated, neither opioid nor nonopioid mechanisms are completely understood. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of the nitric oxide (NO)-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) pathway in the development of morphine-induced analgesia tolerance. The study was carried out on male Wistar albino rats (weighing 180-210 g; n = 126). To develop morphine tolerance, animals were given morphine (50 mg/kg; s.c.) once daily for 3 days. After the last dose of morphine was injected on day 4, morphine tolerance was evaluated. The analgesic effects of 3-(5'-hydroxymethyl-2'-furyl)-1-benzylindazole (YC-1), BAY 41-2272, S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP), N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), and morphine were considered at 15 or 30 min intervals (0, 15, 30, 60, 90, and 120 min) by tail-flick and hot-plate analgesia tests (n = 6 in each study group). The results showed that YC-1 and BAY 41-2272, a NO-independent activator of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), significantly increased the development and expression of morphine tolerance, and L-NAME, a NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor, significantly decreased the development of morphine tolerance. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that the nitric oxide-cGMP signal pathway plays a pivotal role in developing tolerance to the analgesic effect of morphine.  相似文献   

17.
Glutamate, one of the major neurotransmitters in the central nervous system, is released into the synaptic spaces and bound to the glutamate receptors which facilitate normal synaptic transmission, synaptic plasticity, and brain development. Past studies have shown that glutamate with high concentration is a potent neurotoxin capable of destroying neurons through many signal pathways. In this research, our main purpose was to determine whether the specific soluble guanylyl cyclase activator YC-1 (3-(5′-hydroxymethyl-2′-furyl)-1-benzyl indazole) had effect on glutamate-induced apoptosis in cultured PC12 cells. The differentiated PC12 cells impaired by glutamate were used as the cell model of excitability, and were exposed to YC-1 or/and ODQ (1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one) with gradient concentrations for 24 h. MTT (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl) assay was used to detect the cellular viability. Radioimmunoassay (RIA) was used to detect the cGMP (cyclic guanosine monophosphate) concentrations in PC12 cells. Hoechst 33258 staining and flow cytometric analysis were used to detect the cell apoptosis. The cellular viability was decreased and the apoptotic rate was increased when PC12 cells were treated with glutamate. Cells treated with YC-1 or/and ODQ showed no significant differences in the cell viability and intracellular cGMP levels compared with those of control group. The specific soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) inhibitor ODQ showed an inhibitory effect on cGMP level and aggravated the apoptosis of PC12 cells induced by glutamate. YC-1 elevated cGMP level thus decreased PC12 cell apoptosis induced by glutamate, but this effect could be reversed by ODQ. These results revealed that YC-1 might attenuate glutamate-induced PC12 cell apoptosis via a sGC–cGMP involved pathway.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of protoporphyrin IX derivatives—2,4-di(1-methoxyethyl)-deuteroporphyrin IX disodium salt (dimegin) and hematoporphyrin IX (HP)—on the activation of human platelet soluble guanylate cyclase by sodium nitroprusside was investigated. Dimegin and HP, like 1-benzyl-3-(hydroxymethyl-2-furyl)indazole (YC-1), produce synergistic effects on the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by sodium nitroprusside. The synergistic activation of the enzyme by the combination of 10 μM sodium nitroprusside and 5 μM dimegin (or 5 μM HP) was 190 ± 19 and 134 ± 10%, respectively. The synergistic activation of guanylate cyclase by 3 μM YC-1 and 10 μM sodium nitroprusside was 255 ± 19%. Dimegin and HP had no effect on the activation of guanylate cyclase by YC-1; they did not change the synergistic effect of YC-1 (3 μM) and sodium nitroprusside (10 μM) on guanylate cyclase activity. The synergistic activation of NO-stimulated guanylate cyclase activity by dimegin and HP represents a new biochemical effect of these compounds that may have important pharmacotherapeutic and physiological significance. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2006, Vol. 71, No. 3, pp. 426–431.  相似文献   

19.
There is substantial evidence that hyperammonemia is one of the main factors contributing to the neurological alterations found in hepatic encephalopathy. The mechanisms by which chronic moderate hyperammonemia affects brain function involves alterations in neurotransmission at different steps. This article reviews the effects of hyperammonemia on phosphorylation of key brain proteins involved in neurotransmission (the microtubule-associated protein (MAP-2), Na+/K+-ATPase and NMDA receptors). The physiological function of these proteins is modulated by phosphorylation and its altered phosphorylation in hyperammonemia may contribute to impairment of neurotransmission. The effects of chronic hyperammonemia on signal transduction pathways associated to glutamate receptors, such as the glutamate-nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP pathway, are also reviewed. The possible contribution of the impairment of this pathway in brain in vivo to the neurological alterations present in patients with hepatic encephalopathy is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Exposure of RINm5F cells to interleukin-1beta and to several chemical NO donors such as sodium nitroprusside (SNP), SIN-1 and SNAP induce apoptotic events such as the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria, caspase 3 activation, Bcl-2 downregulation and DNA fragmentation. SNP exposure led to transient activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) and prolonged protein kinase G (PKG) activation but apoptotic events were not attenuated by inhibition of the sGC/PKG pathway. Prolonged activation of the cGMP pathway by exposing cells to the dibutyryl analogue of cGMP for 12 h induced both apoptosis and necrosis, a response that was abolished by the PKG inhibitor KT5823. These results suggest that NO-induced apoptosis in the pancreatic beta-cell line is independent of acute activation of the cGMP pathway.  相似文献   

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