首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The guanylin family of bioactive peptides consists of three endogenous peptides, including guanylin, uroguanylin and lymphoguanylin, and one exogenous peptide toxin produced by enteric bacteria. These small cysteine-rich peptides activate cell-surface receptors, which have intrinsic guanylate cyclase activity, thus modulating cellular function via the intracellular second messenger, cyclic GMP. Membrane guanylate cyclase-C is an intestinal receptor for guanylin and uroguanylin that is responsible for stimulation of Cl- and HCO3- secretion into the intestinal lumen. Guanylin and uroguanylin are produced within the intestinal mucosa to serve in a paracrine mechanism for regulation of intestinal fluid and electrolyte secretion. Enteric bacteria secrete peptide toxin mimics of uroguanylin and guanylin that activate the intestinal receptors in an uncontrolled fashion to produce secretory diarrhea. Opossum kidney guanylate cyclase is a key receptor in the kidney that may be responsible for the diuretic and natriuretic actions of uroguanylin in vivo. Uroguanylin serves in an endocrine axis linking the intestine and kidney where its natriuretic and diuretic actions contribute to the maintenance of Na+ balance following oral ingestion of NaCl. Lymphoguanylin is highly expressed in the kidney and myocardium where this unique peptide may act locally to regulate cyclic GMP levels in target cells. Lymphoguanylin is also produced in cells of the lymphoid-immune system where other physiological functions may be influenced by intracellular cyclic GMP. Observations of nature are providing insights into cellular mechanisms involving guanylin peptides in intestinal diseases such as colon cancer and diarrhea and in chronic renal diseases or cardiac disorders such as congestive heart failure where guanylin and/or uroguanylin levels in the circulation and/or urine are pathologically elevated. Guanylin peptides are clearly involved in the regulation of salt and water homeostasis, but new findings indicate that these novel peptides have diverse physiological roles in addition to those previously documented for control of intestinal and renal function.  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin (STa), guanylin and uroguanylin are novel natriuretic and kaliuretic peptides that bind to and activate membrane guanylate cyclase (GC) receptors such as GC-C and OK-GC that are expressed in the kidney and intestine. Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and its renal form (urodilatin, UROD) elicit natriuretic effects by activation of a different membrane guanylate cyclase, GC-A. Experiments were done in perfused rat kidneys to search for possible synergistic interactions between ANP, UROD, guanylin and uroguanylin on renal function. Pretreatment with ANP (0.03 nM) enhanced guanylin (0.19 microM) natriuretic activity (%ENa(+); from 18.5+/-4.25 to 31.5+/-1.69, P<0.05, 120 min) and its kaliuretic activity (%EK(+); from 24.5+/-4.43 to 50.6+/-3.84, P<0.05, 120 min). Furthermore, ANP increased the natriuretic (29.05+/-3.00 to 37.8+/-2.95, P<0.05, 120 min) and kaliuretic (from 33.2+/-3.52 to 42.83+/-2.45, P<0.05, 120 min) responses of perfused kidneys treated with low-dose (0.06 microM) uroguanylin. In contrast, ANP clearly inhibited the uroguanylin-induced (0.31 microM) increase in %ENa(+) (from 35.9+/-2.37 to 14.8+/-1.93, P<0.05, 120 min), and in %EK(+) (from 51.0+/-4.43 to 38.8+/-3.61, P<0.05, 120 min). UROD (0.03 nM) also enhanced the guanylin-induced natriuresis (to %ENa(+)=31.0+/-1.93, P<0.05, 120 min) and kaliuresis (to %EK(+)=54.2+/-3.61, P<0.05, 120 min), and inhibited the %ENa(+) of uroguanylin (0.31 microM) to 17.9+/-1.67 as well as its %EK(+) to 24.3+/-3.13 (both at 120 min, P<0.05). The synergism between ANP and UROD with either guanylin or uroguanylin at sub-threshold doses and the unexpected antagonism between ANP and UROD with uroguanylin at a pharmacological dose point to possible interactions between natriuretic peptide receptor (NPR) and uroguanylin/guanylin receptor signaling pathways. The interactions herein described may play a contributory role in the regulation of kidney function in many pathophysiological states, such as in the saliuresis following ingestion of salty meals.  相似文献   

3.
Guanylin and related peptides.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Guanylin and uroguanylin are short peptides homologous to heat-stable enterotoxins of Escherichia coli and other enteric bacteria. Guanylin and uroguanylin are synthetized from the respective prepropeptides mainly in gastrointestinal mucosa and are secreted both into intestinal lumen and into the blood. Luminally secreted peptides stimulate chloride and bicarbonate secretion in the intestine through the mechanism involving guanylate cyclase C receptor, cyclic GMP, protein kinase G and cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) chloride channel. Bacterial enterotoxins, which have greater potency than endogenous peptides, induce excessive fluid secretion into intestinal lumen leading to secretory diarhea. Uroguanylin is expressed mainly in enterochromaffin cells of duodenum and proximal small intestine whereas guanylin is abundant in goblet cells of colonic epithelium. Uroguanylin and guanylin increase urinary sodium and potassium excretion both as circulating hormones and as paracrine mediators produced within the kidney. Uroguanylin functions as "intestinal natriuretic hormone" which is secreted in response to oral sodium loading and maintains sodium balance during postprandial period. Plasma and urinary concentrations of guanylin and uroguanylin increase in renal failure and heart failure. Guanylin peptides possess antiproliferative activity in intestinal cells culture and their expression decreases in colonic carcinoma indicating that their deficiency may contribute to the pathogenesis of this disease.  相似文献   

4.
Membrane guanylate cyclase C (GC-C) is the receptor for guanylin, uroguanylin, and heat-stable enterotoxin (STa) in the intestine. GC-C-deficient mice show resistance to STa in intestine but saluretic and diuretic effects of uroguanylin and STa are not disturbed. Here we describe the cellular effects of these peptides using immortalized human kidney epithelial (IHKE-1) cells with properties of the proximal tubule, analyzed with the slow-whole-cell patch clamp technique. Uroguanylin (10 or 100 nm) either hyperpolarized or depolarized membrane voltages (V(m)). Guanylin and STa (both 10 or 100 nm), as well as 8-Br-cGMP (100 microm), depolarized V(m). All peptide effects were absent in the presence of 1 mm Ba(2+). Uroguanylin and guanylin changed V(m) pH dependently. Pertussis toxin (1 microg/ml, 24 h) inhibited hyperpolarizations caused by uroguanylin. Depolarizations caused by guanylin and uroguanylin were blocked by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, genistein (10 microm). All three peptides increased cellular cGMP. mRNA for GC-C was detected in IHKE-1 cells and in isolated human proximal tubules. In IHKE-1 cells GC-C was also detected by immunostaining. These findings suggest that GC-C is probably the receptor for guanylin and STa. For uroguanylin two distinct signaling pathways exist in IHKE-1 cells, one involves GC-C and cGMP as second messenger, the other is cGMP-independent and connected to a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Guanylins and uroguanylins are natriuretic peptides with different effects in many of tissues. In context with guanylins, the intestine-renal axis is presented. The overproduction of guanylin or uroguanylin leads to secondary diarrhea with stimulation of Cl(-) secretion. A diet high in salt lead especially to increased guanylin and uroguanylin secretion. Interesting applications with guanylins measurement could to be in hypertension diagnosis, monitoring of heart dysfunction treatment, intensive care etc.  相似文献   

7.
Kuhn M 《Peptides》2005,26(6):1078-1085
Since the original discovery of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) more than two decades ago, the application of gene targeting technology in mice has provided new insights into the diverse physiological functions of natriuretic peptides and their membrane guanylyl cyclase (GC) receptors. Disruption of the genes for ANP or its receptor, GC-A, demonstrated that this system is not only essential for the maintenance of normal blood pressure and volume, but in addition exerts local antihypertrophic effects in the heart. Disruption of the genes encoding B-type (BNP) or C-type natriuretic peptides (CNP) or the CNP-receptor, GC-B, demonstrated that these "natriuretic" peptides are in fact unlikely to physiologically regulate renal sodium excretion but instead exert important autocrine/paracrine cGMP-mediated effects on cellular proliferation and differentiation in various tissues. Notably, the intestinal peptide uroguanylin, which activates a third guanylyl cyclase receptor (GC-C), exerts diuretic/natriuretic activity and links the intestine and kidney in an endocrine way to modulate renal function in response to oral salt load. Reviewed here is the physiology of cardiac and intestinal natriuretic peptides and their guanylyl cyclase receptors, with special focus on the information gained to date from genetically modified mice.  相似文献   

8.
The ultracytochemical localization of membrane-bound guanylate cyclases A and C, stimulated by atrial natriuretic peptide and guanylin respectively, has been studied in human sweat glands. The results showed that the peptides stimulated guanylate cyclases A and C in both eccrine and apocrine glands. In the secretory cells, enzymatic activity was present on the plasma membranes and on intracellular membranes involved in the secretory mechanism. In eccrine glands, the cells of the excretory duct also presented enzymatic activity on the plasma membranes. In both glands, myoepithelial cells, surrounding the secretory cells, exhibited only guanylate cyclase A activity. These localizations of enzymatic activity suggest a role for both atrial natriuretic peptide and guanylin in regulating glandular secretion.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Penile corpus cavernosum smooth muscle relaxation can be induced by both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP-elevating agents, but possible interactions between these two signalling pathways are still poorly understood. Using in vitro cultured rat penile corpus cavernosum smooth muscle (CCSM) cells, we have characterized the local expression and functional activities of receptors for the cAMP-elevating peptides, PACAP and VIP, and for the cGMP-elevating peptides, CNP and ANP. Stimulation of the cells with various concentrations of PACAP(-27/-38) or VIP resulted in rapid and dose-dependent increases in cyclic AMP levels. RT-PCR analyses revealed gene expression of PAC(1) and VPAC(2) but not of VPAC(1) receptors in the cells. The natriuretic peptide, CNP, and the nitric oxide donor, sodium nitroprusside, were capable of enhancing cyclic GMP formation, indicating the presence of membrane-associated in addition to soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) activities in these cells. Findings that cyclic GMP formation was preferentially activated by CNP but not by the related peptide, ANP, were consistent with RT-PCR analyses, demonstrating gene expression of the CNP receptor, GC-B, but not of the ANP receptor, GC-A, in these cells. Prior exposure of the cells to 10(-8) M PACAP resulted in a marked down-regulation of GC-B activity, whereas sGC was not affected. These findings provide functional and molecular evidence for the presence of three receptors, PAC(1), VPAC(2) and GC-B, involved in cyclic nucleotide signalling in penile CCSM cells. The observed cross-talk of the PACAP/VIP receptors with GC-B but not with sGC may have implications for the therapy of erectile dysfunction.  相似文献   

11.
Guanylin and uroguanylin are newly discovered intestinal peptides that have been shown to affect NaCl transport in both the intestine and kidney. The present study tests the hypothesis that guanylin and uroguanylin mRNA expression in each major region of the intestine is regulated by NaCl intake. Semiquantitative multiplex RT-PCR analysis was used to determine the molecular expression of guanylin and uroguanylin in the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, and colon in rats maintained on low (LS), normal (NS), or high (HS) NaCl intake for 4 days. LS intake reduced the expression of uroguanylin, and to a lesser degree, guanylin mRNA in all intestinal segments compared to NS intake. The duodenum was the site of the greatest decrease for both. In contrast, HS intake significantly increased the expression of guanylin mRNA only in the duodenum and jejunum and had minimal effect on uroguanylin mRNA. The minimum time required for altered gene expression was determined by delivering an oral NaCl challenge directly to the gastrointestinal tract by oro-gastric administration to LS or NS animals. In LS rats, NaCl oro-gastric administration significantly increased mRNA expression of both peptides in all intestinal segments. Furthermore, the increases in guanylin and uroguanylin mRNA were detected within 4 h and plateaued by 8 h. Conversely, acute oro-gastric administration of the same NaCl solution to NS rats caused elevations of guanylin mRNA only in the duodenum and jejunum, and of uroguanylin mRNA only in the ileum and colon. In conclusion, the data demonstrate that variations in NaCl intake lead to intestinal segment-specific changes in guanylin and uroguanylin mRNA expression.  相似文献   

12.
Activation of the urotensin II (U-II) receptor, GPR14, leads to an increase in Ca(2+), activation of phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) and an increase in arachidonic acid. The signaling pathway for guanylin peptides in the kidney involves an unknown G-protein coupled receptor which activates PLA(2) and increases arachidonic acid as well. To test if guanylin peptides could be, as U-II, agonists for the GPR14 receptor in the kidney, we used HEK293 and CHO cells transfected with hGPR14 (HEK293+hGPR14, CHO+hGPR14, respectively). Effects of guanylin peptides and U-II were studied by slow-whole-cell patch-clamp analysis and microfluorimetric measurements of intracellular Ca(2+). Guanylin peptides and U-II depolarized HEK293+hGPR14 significantly more than wild type cells. These effects were inhibited in the presence of Ba(2+) or PLA(2) inhibition (AACOCF(3)), suggesting that guanylin peptides and U-II increase arachidonic acid and inhibit ROMK channels in these cells. However, only U-II was capable to increase the cellular Ca(2+), suggesting different mechanism of GPR14 activation by guanylin peptides and U-II. This signaling pathway of U-II involves PKC, because U-II effects in HEK293+hGPR14 cells were inhibited by calphostin C. Guanylin peptides activate PLA(2) and inhibit ROMK channels in HEK293 cells transfected with the human GPR14 receptor. Since GPR14 is present in mouse and human CCD it is a candidate for the guanylate cyclase independent receptor for guanylin peptides.  相似文献   

13.
As the intestine is an essential organ for fish osmoregulation, the intestinal hormone guanylins may perform major functions, especially in euryhaline fish such as eels and salmonids. From the intestine of an eel, we identified cDNAs encoding three distinct guanylin-like peptides. Based on the sequence of mature peptide and sites of production, we named them guanylin, uroguanylin, and renoguanylin. Renoguanylin is a novel peptide that possesses the characteristics of both guanylin and uroguanylin and was abundantly expressed in the kidney. By immunohistochemistry, guanylin was localized exclusively in goblet cells, but not enterochromaffin cells, of the intestine. After transfer of eels from fresh water to seawater, mRNA expression of guanylin and uroguanylin did not change for 3 h, but it increased after 24 h. The increase was profound (2-6-fold) after adaptation to seawater. The expression of uroguanylin was also up-regulated in the kidney of seawater-adapted eels, but that of renoguanylin was not so prominent as other guanylins in both intestine and kidney. Collectively, the novel eel guanylin family appears to have important functions for seawater adaptation, particularly long-term adaptation. Eel guanylin may be secreted from goblet cells into the lumen with mucus in response to increased luminal osmolality and act on the epithelium to regulate water and salt absorption.  相似文献   

14.
Heat-stable enterotoxin (ST(a)) elaborated by E. coli is a major cause of diarrhea. The transmembrane protein guanylyl cyclase C (GC-C) is the acknowledged receptor for ST(a) and for the mammalian peptides guanylin and uroguanylin. Binding to GC-C results in generation of cGMP, activation of type II cGMP-dependent protein kinase, phosphorylation of CFTR and increased chloride and bicarbonate secretion. We had previously shown that ST(a) receptors (GC-C) are found on the brush border membranes of small intestinal enterocytes and of colonocytes. However, since it has subsequently been shown that the endogenous ligands for these receptors, guanylin and uroguanylin, circulate in blood, we proposed the existence of ST(a) binding sites on the basolateral membranes (BLM) of colonocytes. Specific binding of 125I-ST(a) to rat colonocyte BLM was seen. The kinetics of binding to the BLM were similar to binding to BBM. The nature of the BLM receptor is unknown. This suggests that circulating guanylin and uroguanylin, analogues of ST(a), may also function via the basolateral surface.  相似文献   

15.
《Life sciences》1993,52(17):PL153-PL157
HS-142-1, a novel non-peptide antagonist for natriuretic peptide, exerts antagonistic actions almost equally on two similar guanylate cyclase-linked natriuretic peptide receptors (GC-A and GC-B), but has little or no effect on the binding of natriuretic peptides to a membrane protein, the so-called “clearance receptor”, which binds all natriuretic peptides. The third mammalian form of membrane bound guanylate cyclases (GC-C) was identified not as a natriuretic peptide receptor, but as a receptor for heat-stable enterotoxins (STa). In this study, we examined effects of HS-142-1 on GC-C (STaR) in T84 cells and showed that HS-142-1 exerts neither agonistic nor antagonistic activity for GC-C, indicating that HS-142-1 is not a common antagonist for a family of membrane bound guanylate cyclase receptors, but a specific antagonist for the guanylate cyclase-linked natriuretic peptide receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The ultracytochemical localization of particulate guanylate cyclase has been studied in lamb olfactory mucosa after activation with rat atrial natriuretic factor (rANF), porcine brain natriuretic peptide (pBNP), porcine C-type natriuretic peptide (pCNP) or rat brain natriuretic peptide (rBNP). Particulate guanylate cyclase is the receptor for these peptides and recently two subtypes of the cyclase have been identified. These isoforms are stimulated differently by ANF, BNP and CNP. Under our experimental conditions, rANF, pCNP and pBNP were strong activators of particulate guanylate cyclase in lamb olfactory mucosa, as demonstrated by the presence of reaction product. Samples incubated in basal conditions without rANF, pCNP or pBNP, or samples incubated in presence of rBNP did not reveal any cyclase activity. The rANF-stimulated cyclase activity was localized in the apical portion of olfactory epithelium. pCNP-stimulated guanylate cyclase was detected to the lamina propria in association with secretory cells of Bowman's glands and with cells in close relation with Bowman's glands (elongated cells and myoepithelial cells). The cyclase activity stimulated by pBNP was limited to cells of Bowman's glands. The present data indicate that ANF and CNP are recognized by different receptors and that BNP and CNP bind to the same receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Membrane-bound guanylate cyclase activity was detected by ultracytochemistry at the electron microscope level in several mammalian tissues. The technique used in these studies allows the detection of active enzyme at the membrane site where it is located. In a few cases, such as normal and regenerating peripheral nerves and placenta, membrane-bound guanylate cyclase could be detected in the absence of stimulators of enzyme activity. However, in the majority of these studies membrane-bound guanylate cyclase was investigated following stimulation with natriuretic peptides, guanylin, or the Ca2+ sensor proteins, S100B and S100A1. In general, membrane-bound guanylate cyclase was localized to plasma membranes, in accordance with the functional role of this enzyme. Yet, in secretory cells the enzyme activity was localized on intracellular membranes, suggesting a role of membrane-bound guanylate cyclase in secretory processes. Finally, S100B and S100A1 were found to colocalize with membrane-bound guanylate cyclase on photoreceptor disc membranes and to stimulate enzyme activity at these sites in dark-adapted retinas in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The results of these analyses are discussed in relation to the proposed functional role(s) of this enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Yuge S  Takei Y 《Zoological science》2007,24(12):1222-1230
Since the gene expression of guanylin peptides and their receptors, guanylyl cyclase Cs, is enhanced in the intestine of seawater (SW)-adapted eels compared with fresh water (FW)-adapted fish, the guanylin family may play an important role in SW adaptation in eels. The present study analyzed the effect of three homologous guanylin peptides, guanylin, uroguanylin and renoguanylin, on ion movement through the eel intestine, and examined the target of guanylin action using Ussing chambers. The middle and posterior parts of the intestine, where water and ion absorption occurs actively in SW eels, exhibited serosa-negative transepithelial potential, while the anterior intestine was serosa-positive. Mucosal application of each guanylin in the middle or posterior intestine reduced the short-circuit current (Isc) dose dependently and reversed it at high doses, and reduced electric tissue resistance. The effects were greater in the middle intestine than in the posterior intestine. All three guanylins showed similar potency in the middle segment, but guanylin was more potent in the posterior segment. 8-bromo cGMP mimicked the effect of guanylins. The intestinal response to guanylin was smaller in FW eels. The mucosal presence of NPPB utilized as a CFTR blocker, but not of other inhibitors of the channels/transporters localized on the luminal surface in SW fish intestine, inhibited the guanylin-induced decrease in Isc. In eels, therefore, the guanylin family may be involved in osmoregulation by the intestine by binding to the receptors and activating CFTR-like channels on the mucosal side through cGMP production, perhaps resulting in Cl(-) and HCO3(-) secretion into the lumen.  相似文献   

19.
Guanylyl cyclase C (GC-C), universally overexpressed on primary and metastatic colorectal carcinoma cells, is activated by endogenous ligands, guanylin, and uroguanylin, and by exogenous 18-residue heat-stable enterotoxins (STa) produced by diarrheagenic bacteria. Two 12-residue STa analogs with alternate combinations of two interlocked disulfide bonds, peptides 3 and 6, were synthesized by orthogonal solid phase synthesis routes. Peptides 3 and 6 bound GC-C with a rank order potency of STa > peptide 3 > peptide 6. Peptides 3 and 6 behaved as agonists in stimulating cGMP production. The results reveal that the toxic domain of STa can be reduced to 12 amino acids.  相似文献   

20.
The intestinal peptides guanylin and uroguanylin regulate the electrolyte/water transport in the gastrointestinal epithelium via activation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the cystic fibrosis gene product. Because a major but incompletely understood function of the salivary glands is the CFTR-mediated secretion of an electrolyte-rich fluid, we investigated the rat and guinea pig parotid and submandibular glands for expression, cellular distribution, and subcellular localization of guanylin and uroguanylin. RT-PCR analyses with guanylin and uroguanylin-specific primers revealed that both peptides are highly expressed in the parotid and submandibular glands. At the translational level, western blotting analyses with peptide-specific guanylin and uroguanylin antibodies identified the expected 12.5-kDa immunoreactive peptides in these organs. At the cellular level, guanylin and uroguanylin were exclusively confined to epithelial cells of the intralobular and interlobular ducts. At the subcellular level, the immunoreactivities were localized by preembedding immunoelectron microscopy to small vesicles which were concentrated at the apical part of the secretory epithelial cells. The expression and cell-specific localization of guanylin and uroguanylin in the salivary glands indicate that these peptides may be specifically involved in the regulation of CFTR-mediated electrolyte/water secretion in the salivary gland ductal system.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号