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1.
7-oxa-13-prostynoic acid (OPA) and polyphloretin phosphate (PPP) are believed to act as specific antagonists of prostaglandin action. In order to estimate their specificity, the inhibitory effects of these drugs were tested on the activity of adenylate cyclase from several tissues which were stimulated by prostaglandins and several other compounds. In adenylate cyclase preparation from L-fibroblasts both OPA (0.15-1.5 MM) and PPP (0.01-1.0 MG/ML) antagonized not only the stimulatory effects of PGE but also the stimulatory effects of sodium fluoride and increased enzyme activity due to the previous treatment of cell cultures by cholera toxin. Both OPA and PPP produced a dose dependent depression of adenylate cyclase activity to zero values both under basal conditions and after stimulation by sodium fluoride and various hormones in all preparations studied, including rat liver, heart, brain, epididymal adipose tissue, small intestine, renal cortex and renal medulla. The present results indicate that both prostaglandin antagonists may, in higher concentrations, act as nonspecific inhibitors of the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase rather than specific antagonists of the prostaglandin effects on adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the effect of the b isoform of S-100 proteins on adenylate cyclase activity of rat skeletal muscle. S-100b inhibits the adenylate cyclase activity in the presence of Mg2+ (5.0–50 mM), while it activates the same enzyme in the presence of Ca2+ (0.1–1.0 mM) dose-dependently in both cases. S-100b counteracts the stimulatory effect of NaF on adenylate cyclase in the presence of Mg2+ and the inhibitory effect of RMI 12330 A in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
Molybdate activation of rat liver plasma membrane adenylate cyclase has been examined and compared with the effect of glucagon, Gpp(NG)p and fluoride. Glucagon does not stimulate the detergent solubilized enzyme, though molybdate, fluoride, and Gpp(NH)p are effective in this regard. The stimulatory effects of either fluoride or molybdate are additive with those of GTP and do not require guanyl nucleotide to evoke their activation. Neither fluoride nor molybdate can substitute for GTP when glucagon is the activator of rat liver adenylate cyclase. The stimulatory effects of either ion on adenylate cyclase are additive with that produced by glucagon. Activation of adenylate cyclase by either molybdate or fluoride occurs by a mechanism distinct from that of glucagon or guanyl nucleotide. The data presented here suggest that fluoride and molybdate may act via a similar mechanism of action. Neither ion displays a lag in activation of adenylate cyclase. The pH profiles of fluoride and molybdate-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity are similar, and distinct from guanyl nucleotide-stimulated activity. Cholera toxin treatment of adenylate cyclase blocks fluoride and molybdate stimulation of the enzyme to the same extent, while enhancing the activation obtained with GTP and hormones.  相似文献   

4.
Adenylate cyclase activity was assayed in a crude particulate fraction of one benign and one malignant human insulinoma. Adenylate cyclase of both tumours responded to 5'-guanylyl-imidodiphosphate, sodium fluoride, glucagon and prostaglandin E2, and in addition the adenylate cyclase of the benign tumour responded to isoprenaline. Glucose and prostaglandin I2 (prostacyclin) did not stimulate the adenylate cyclase in either tumour, although prostaglandin I2 stimulated insulin secretion in cultures of the benign tumour. The in vitro responsiveness of the adenylate cyclase to glucagon did not correlate closely with the effect of glucagon on insulin secretion in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of prostaglandin (PG) E1, E2, A1, F1alpha, F2alpha or D2 on the rat renal cortical, outer medullary and inner medullary adenylate cyclase-cyclic AMP systems were examined. While high concentrations (8X10-4M) of each prostaglandin stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in each area of the kidney, PGE1 was the only prostaglandin to stimulate at 10-7M. PGA's were the only prostaglandins tested besides PGE's which stimulated adenylate cyclase at less than 10-4M. This effect of PGA's was limited to the outer medulla. PGD2 was the least stimulatory. Observations with renal slices yielded qualitatively similar results. The PGE's were the most potent in each area with PGA's only stimulatory in the outer medulla. O2 deprivation (5% O2) lowered the slice cyclic AMP content in each area of the kidney. In the cortex and outer medulla, prostaglandin mediated increases in cyclic AMP content were either lower or absent at 5% O2 compared to 95% O2. However, in the inner medulla PGE stimulation was observed only at 5% O2 and not 95% O2. No other prostaglandins were found to increase inner medullary cyclic AMP content at 95% or 5% O2. These results illustrate that the adenylate cyclase-cyclic AMP system responds uniquely to prostaglandins in each area of the kidney. Consideration of these results along with correlative observations suggests that inner medullary produced PGE's may act as local modulators of inner medullary adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: Chronic etorphine treatment of neuroblastoma × glioma NG108-15 cells results in both an increase in adenylate cyclase activity (upon addition of the opiate antagonist naloxone) as well as an homologous desensitization of the opiate receptor. The continued ability of opiate agonists to regulate adenylate cyclase activity following opiate receptor desensitization can be understood by proposing that the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase in NG108-15 cells is under tonic regulation by both guanine nucleotide regulatory (Ni) and stimulatory (Ns) components. Inactivation of Ni by pertussis toxin (PT) treatment resulted in elevated adenylate cyclase activities comparable to those observed in control cells following chronic opiate treatment. This increased enzymatic activity could not be further induced by PT treatment of cells exposed to opiate previously. In addition, procedures that prevented receptor-mediated activation of Ns, i.e., treatment with NaF or desensitization of the stimulatory receptors (prostaglandin E1, adenosine) eliminated the increase in adenylate cyclase activity induced by naloxone following chronic opiate exposure. Hence, the increase in enzymatic activity observed following chronic opiate treatment may be due to a loss in tonic inhibitory regulation of adenylate cyclase mediated through Ni resulting in the unimpeded expression of Ns activity. This tonic inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity is one of the multiple mechanisms by which Ni regulates adenylate cyclase in this cell line.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism by which chloride stimulates adenylate cyclase was investigated. Depletion of GDP increased basal adenylate cyclase activity and reduced the stimulation by isoprenaline. Restoration of bound GDP partially reversed these effects. Chloride stimulated cyclase activity by the same proportion in control, GDP-depleted and GDP-restored preparations, as did Gpp(NH)p. Fluoride increased adenylate cyclase activity to the same final level in both GDP-depleted and GDP-restored membranes; addition of Gpp(NH)p as well as fluoride had no further effect. Solubilisation of adenylate cyclase reduced the stimulatory effect of Gpp(NH)p only slightly, but greatly attenuated the activation by chloride. We conclude that chloride does not stimulate cyclase activity by an action on GDP exchange. Activation by chloride may be due to a disrupting or chaotropic effect on membrane/protein interactions.  相似文献   

8.
The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of adenosine on the adenylate cyclases of human and pig platelets were studied. Stimulation occurred at lower concentrations than did inhibition, and the stimulatory effect was prevented by methylxanthines. Stimulation by adenosine was immediate in onset and was reversible, under conditions when cyclic AMP formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration. The stimulatory and inhibitory effects could be distinguished further by the use of various analogues of adenosine and could be prevented by adenosine deaminase. The data suggest that both stimulation and inhibition were due to adenosine itself and not one of its degradation products and that in the platelet preparation, neither formation nor degradation of adenosine during the adenylate cyclase incubation appreciably influenced measured activity. Stimulation by adenosine was additive with the effects of GMP-P(NH)P, and alpha- or beta-adrenergic stimulation, but was abolished by prostaglandin E1 or by NaF. Prostaglandin E1 and NaF increased the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to inhibition by adenosine. The data suggest that guanyl-5'-yl-(beta-gamma-imino)diphosphate and/or adrenergic stimulation and adenosine exert their effects on adenylate cyclase by distinct mechanisms, but that prostaglandin E1 or F- and adenosine increase enzyme activity by mechanisms which may involve common intermediates in the coupling to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

9.
In order to explain the differences in the hormone stimulated lipolysis during ontogenic development of rats, the activity of adenylate cyclase was determined in crude plasma membranes of subcutaneous adipocytes of 5, 14, 21 and 45 to 55-day-old animals. Stimulatory effects of nonhormonal and hormonal agents were expressed as the increment in percentage of basal values which were not significantly changed in the age groups studied. The highest stimulatory effect was observed after sodium fluoride in 14 and 21-day-old rats. Guanylylimidodiphosphate and GTP revealed the lowest stimulatory effects in adult animals (greater than 45-day-old). The beta-adrenergic agent isoproterenol revealed the highest stimulatory effect in the 5 and 45-day-old group while in the preparation from 14-day-old rats the adenylate cyclase activity was significantly lower. On the other hand, tetracosactide (beta 1-24-corticotropin) revealed the smallest stimulatory effect on the preparation from 5-day-old rats; its stimulatory effect steadily increased and reached the highest value in adenylate cyclase preparations from adult animals. It can be concluded that the adenylate cyclase system in subcutaneous adipocytes is already basically mature at early ontogenic stages of development in rats. Nevertheless, the explanation for the small variations of the enzyme activity in different age groups requires further study.  相似文献   

10.
Forskolin, a diterpene that exerts several pharmacological effects, activates adenylate cyclase in brain and in some other mammalian tissues. Properties of forskolin activation of adenylate cyclase from central nervous system of the dipterous Ceratitis capitata are described. The interaction of forskolin with the insect adenylate cyclase system was studied by evaluating its effect on metal-ATP kinetics, protection against thermal inactivation, membrane fluidity and enzyme modulation by fluoride, guanine nucleotides, octopamine, and ADP-ribosylation by cholera toxin. The diterpene stimulated basal enzyme activity both in membranes and Triton X-100-solubilized preparations, apparently devoid of functional regulatory unit, this effect being rapidly reversed by washing the membranes. An increase of Vmax accounts for the activation of soluble and membrane adenylate cyclase preparations by forskolin, whereas the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate was not affected. Forskolin apparently protects the membrane enzyme from thermal inactivation, and at concentrations that promote the enzyme activity the diterpene does not alter membrane microviscosity. Forskolin does not appear to alter the sensitivity of insect adenylate cyclase to sodium fluoride, guanine nucleotide, or regulatory subunit ADP ribosylated by cholera toxin, the combined effect of these factors with the diterpene resulting in a nearly additive enzymatic activation. However, forskolin blocks the octopamine stimulatory input. Results obtained with the insect adenylate cyclase system are discussed and compared to what is known about mammalian systems to propose a mechanism of enzyme activation by forskolin.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of angiotensin II (A II) on adenylate cyclase activities in membranes of the zona glomerulosa (the capsular fraction) and the zona fasciculata (the decapsulated fraction) from rat adrenocortical glands were investigated. A time- and GTP-dependent stimulation by A II of adenylate cyclase activity was observed in the capsular fraction but not in the decapsulated fraction. The activation of adenylate cyclase by ACTH and A II was additive. Stimulation by A II was inhibited by an angiotensin antagonist, DD-3487 (DD). Moreover, the addition of a prostaglandin antagonist, a mixture of polyesters of polyphloretin phosphate (PPP) and an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis, indomethacin, was effective in inhibiting A II-induced stimulation of the capsular adenylate cyclase activity, suggesting that the activation of A II receptors located on the capsular membrane leads to the release of prostaglandins, which in turn stimulates the adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
Atrial natriuretic factor inhibits adenylate cyclase activity   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The synthetic atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) (8- 33AA ) inhibited adenylate cyclase activity in aorta washed particles, mesenteric artery, and renal artery homogenates in a concentration dependent manner with an apparent Ki between 0.1 to 1nM . The extent of inhibition of adenylate cyclase by ANF varied from tissue to tissue. The adenylate cyclase from mesenteric artery and renal artery was inhibited to a greater extent as compared to that from aorta. ANF was also able to inhibit the stimulatory effects of hormones on adenylate cyclase activity and of agents such as F- and forskolin which activate adenylate cyclase by receptor- independent mechanism. In addition, ANF showed an additive effect with the inhibitory response of angiotensin II on adenylate cyclase from rat aorta. These studies for the first time demonstrate that ANF is an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase of several systems.  相似文献   

13.
Summary We investigated the influence of Mg2+ and Mn2+ on the effects of adenosine and some derivatives on basal adenylate cyclase activity in rat fat cell membranes as well as on enzyme activity stimulated by isoprenaline or sodium fluoride. Adenosine and derivatives modified in the ribose function were inhibitory, irrespective of the stimulant used, both in the presence of MgCl2 or MnCl2. Inhibition of basal and sodium fluoride stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was more pronounced in the presence of MnCl2 than in the presence of MgCl2. N6-substituted adenosine analogs proved to be inhibitory in the presence of 5 MM MgCl2, but in the presence of 1 mM MnCl2 the fluoride stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was potentiated, while basal and isoprenaline stimulated activity were not significantly inhibited. These effects of adenosine and derivatives could not be blocked by theophylline with or without guanyl nucleotides.The potentiating effect of N6-substituted adenosine derivatives on sodium fluoride activated adenylate cyclase is dependent on the structure of the N6-substitutent and consists of an enhancement of Vrnax in combination with a small decrease of the Km for MnATP2–, indicative of an allosteric effect on adenylate cyclase. No potentiation by N6-phenylisopropyladeno sine of sodium fluoride stimulated cyclase was found on digitonin solubilized cyclase, while the inhibitory effect of adenosine was retained. The relevance of these findings is discussed in connection with the current hypothesis concerning the presence of two adenosinesensitive sites on rat fat cell membranes.  相似文献   

14.
In the present study effects of a new local anaesthetics, pentacaine (trans-2-pyrolidinocyclohexylester of 3-pentyloxyphenylcarbamic acid), and of some chemically related compounds on rat hepatic adenylate cyclase activity were studied under various experimental conditions. As compared with tetracaine, the local anaesthetics tested showed stronger inhibitory effects, regardless of the type of stimulating agents used to activate adenylate cyclase. The most potent effect was observed with pentacaine. Its inhibitory effects on glucagon, guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp/NH/p), sodium fluoride or forskolin stimulated activity suggest that it may directly act on the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase. The same conclusion can be drawn based on its inhibitory effects on adenylate cyclase, regardless ATP concentrations used as the enzyme substrate, and on octylpyranoside solubilized enzyme activated by preincubation of the enzyme preparation with Gpp/NH/p. Structure-activity studies have suggested that the pentacaine molecule as a whole and none of its parts alone or its analogs are responsible for the inhibitory effect. However, the inhibitory effects of these compounds on the rat adenylate cyclase activity do not correlate with their local anaesthetic properties. The possibility of using adenylate cyclase inhibitors to decrease cyclic AMP production under pathological conditions, like in cholera, known to be due to a high adenylate cyclase activity, is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Some effects of salts on the adenylate cyclase of partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver have been studied. Under conditions where cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration, the enzyme was stimulated 3- to 6-fold by 10 mM NaF, 10- to 30-fold by 1 muM glucagon, 4- to 5-fold by 0.1 mM 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate, and in the presence of 3 muM GTP, 2-fold by 10 mug/ml of prostaglandin E1. Various salts were found to stimulate basal activity slightly, but enhanced the response to NaF 3- to 4-fold, to glucagon 1.5- to 2-fold, to 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate 2- to 3-fold, and to prostaglandin E1 1.5-fold. This enhancement was observed at maximally effective concentrations of each of the respective activators. Of the salts tested, NaN3 and the Na- or K-halides were most effective. Their action appeared to be due to the respective anions. Stimulation was detectable with 1.5 mM NaN3 or 3 mM NaCl and was maximal with 30 mM NaN3 or 60 mM NaCl. The stimulatory effect of NaN3 was not due to ATP-sparing, nor to an altered cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate recovery. It was independent of the chromatography and assay methods used, and was therefore not due to procedural artifact. Fluoride-stimulated cyclase activity was enhanced by salts to a greater degree than were 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate-, glucagon-, or (prostaglandin E1 + GTP)-stimulated activities. The effects of NaN3 were not the result of significant changes in the enzyme's responses to GTP, which increased basal and glucagon-stimulated activities but inhibited F--stimulated activity. The effects of NaN3 were greater when cyclase was assayed with Mn2+ than with Mg2+. The facilitatory effect of NaN3 or NaCl on fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was partially reversible as was the stimulatory effect of fluoride in the presence of NaN3. Enhancement of hormonal stimulation by NaN3 was also demonstrable with cardiac and adipose tissue adenylate cyclase. However, NaN3 did not stimulate detergent-dispersed adenylate cyclases from either liver plasma membranes or brain. The data suggest that stimulation of adenylate cyclase by salts may require the added presence of other stimulatory agents and an intact membrane structure.  相似文献   

16.
Human erythrocyte membranes were incubated in the presence of sodium fluoride. After centrifugation at 30,000 g for 30 min the supernatant was able to stimulate the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase. The stimulatory factor was purified from the supernatant of fluoride-treated membranes by three subsequent chromatographic steps including DEAE-Sephacel ion-exchange chromatography in the absence of detergent, gel-filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44 in the presence of 1% sodium cholate and phenyl-Sepharose CL/4B hydrophobic chromatography. The final preparation showed approximately 120-fold purification in stimulatory activity over the initial extract and contained two polypeptides (Mr 42 kDa and 36 kDa). The stimulator activity of the preparation was inhibited by 60% by beta gamma-subunits of the GTP-binding protein of bovine brain membranes, G0. The data obtained suggest that the regulatory GTP-binding stimulatory protein of adenylate cyclase, GS, dissociates from human erythrocyte membranes as a result of fluoride-ion treatment.  相似文献   

17.
The interdependent effects of divalent cations, pH, and various activators of adenylate cyclase were examined in partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver. This adenylate cyclase was found to exhibit largely alkaline pH optima, in the range of 8.3 to 9.3, for the expression of basal activity, and activities with GTP, GPP(NH)P, prostaglandin E1 and GTP, and N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine and GTP. Glucagon and GTP, while increasing activity 8- to 10-fold, shifted the optimum activity to about pH 7.5. However, stimulation of the enzyme by 10 mm NaF or 3 mm Na3VO4 was strikingly dependent on pH. In both cases activation was optimal at pH values between 6.3 and 7.3, though above about pH 8.5 fluoride was barely stimulatory and vanadate was slightly inhibitory. This effect of elevated pH to reduce fluoride- or vanadate-stimulated activity could be prevented by glucagon plus guanine nucleotide, but could not be reversed once activity was lowered during preincubation. The data suggest that this effect was not due to the formation of an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase per se, nor to an artifact of assay methods. The effect of elevated pH was more pronounced with Mn2+ as activating cation than with Mg2+. With fluoride and lower pH adenylate cyclase was essentially Mn2+ requiring, whereas with fluoride and higher pH activity was comparable with either cation. The data suggested that combinations of pH, divalent cation, and activating ligand dictate the interactions of the constitutive subunits of the adenylate cyclase and provide additional criteria with which current models for the regulation of adenylate cyclase may be tested.  相似文献   

18.
The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of adenosien of the adenylate cyclases of human and pig platelets were studied. Stimulation occurred at lower concentrations than did inhibition, and stimulatory effect was prevented by methylxanthines. Stimulation by adenosine was immediate in onset and was reversible, under conditions when cyclic AMP formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration.The stimulatory and inhibitory effects could be distinguished further by the use of various analogues of adenosine and could be prevented by adenosine deaminase. The data suggest that both stimulation and inhibition were due to adenosine itself and not one of its degradation products and that in the platelet preparation, neither formation nor degradation of adenosine during the adenylate cyclase incubation appreciably influenced measured activity.Stimulation by adenosine was additive with the effects of GMP-P(NH)P, and α- or β-adrenergic stimulation, but was abolished by prostaglandin E1 or by NaF. Prostaglandin E1 and NaF increased the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to inhibition by adenosine. The data suggests that guanly-5′-yl(β-γ imino)diphosphate and/or adrenergic stimulation and adenosine exert their effects on adenylate cyclase by distinct mechanisms, but that prostaglandin E1 or F? and adenosine increase enzyme activity by mechanisms which may involve common intermediates in the coupling to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: Adenylate cyclase in microvessels isolated from rat cerebral cortex was stimulated by guanine nucleotides, catecholamines, prostaglandin E1, prostaglandin E2, and 2-chloroadenosine. Catecholamine stimulation was mediated by interaction with β-adrenergic receptors. The order of relative potency was: isoproterenol > epinephrine > norepinephrine. Activation of microvessel adenylate cyclase by prostaglandins E1 and E2 as well as by 2-chloroadenosine was dose related. Twenty-two peptides were tested for possible effects on the microvessel adenylate cyclase. Only vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) was stimulatory. No inhibitory action was observed. Activation by VIP required guanosine triphosphate and was dose dependent from 10 n M to μ M (ED50= 0.1 μ M ). At 30°C, stimulation of adenylate cyclase by the peptide increased linearly with time for up to 15 min. The effect of VIP was not inhibited by phentolamine or propranolol, suggesting that its action was not elicited by interaction with α- or β-adrenergic receptors. Activation achieved by VIP and isoproterenol, prostaglandin E1, or 2-chloroadenosine was the sum of the individual stimulations, suggesting that receptors for VIP were distinct from those for isoproterenol, prostaglandin E1, and 2-chloroadenosine.  相似文献   

20.
Prostaglandin D2 (PGD2) is one of several prostaglandins that can inhibit platelet aggregation and activate adenylate cyclase. Platelets were exposed to varying concentrations of PGD2 washed, and the adenylate cyclase response to prostaglandins, epinephrine, and sodium fluoride determined. Incubating platelets with 5 x 10(-5) M PGD2 for 2 hr resulted in a 45% decrease in PGD2 activation of adenylate cyclase and a 25% decrease in stimulation by PGE1. Fluoride activation (7-fold) epinephrine inhibition (30%) and basal enzyme activity were unchanged by exposure of the platelets to PGD2. Desensitization was concentration dependent, with loss of enzyme activity first noted when platelets were incubated with 10(-7) M PGD2. Enzyme sensitivity could be partially restored when desensitized platelets were washed free of PGD2 and incubated in buffer for 2 hr; complete resensitization required incubation for 24 hr in plasma. Regulation of prostaglandin sensitive platelet adenylate cyclase could be of importance in mediating the response of platelets to aggregating agents.  相似文献   

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