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1.
Summary Gonadotropin releasing hormone enhanced guanylate cyclase [E.C.4.6.1.2] two- to threefold in pituitary, testis, liver and kidney. Dose response relationships revealed that at a concentration of 1 nanomolar, gonadotropin releasing hormone caused a maximal augmentation of guanylate cyclase activity and that increasing its concentration to the millimolar range caused no further enhancement of this enzyme. There was an absolute cation requirement for gonadotropin releasing hormone's enhancement of guanylate cyclase activity as there was no increase without any cation present. Gonadotropin releasing hormone could increase guanylate cyclase activity with either calcium or manganese in the incubation medium but more augmentation was observed with manganese. The data in this investigation suggest that guanylate cyclase may play a role in the mechanism of action of gonadotropin releasing hormone.  相似文献   

2.
Tolbutamide and its non-hypoglycemic analog carboxytolbutamide increased soluble and particulate guanylate cyclase [E.C.4.6.1.2] activity twofold in liver, lung, colon, pancreas, kidney cortex, heart and spleen at a concentration of 1 microM. The ED50 for stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity was 50 nM for both agents. No stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity was observed with either agent when their concentrations were decreased to 1 nM. Maximal enhancement was at a concentration of 100 nM for both agents. Butylated hydroxytoluene, an antioxidant and hydroxyl radical scavenger, completely blocked any enhancement of guanylate cyclase by carboxytolbutamide, suggesting that its effect was due to a nonspecific oxidation reaction. Tolbutamide's augmentation of guanylate cyclase activity was not blocked by butylated hydroxytoluene. Varying the concentration of the guanylate cyclase co-factor manganese indicated that these sulfonylureas could not maximally activate guanylate cyclase without manganese being present. In addition to increased insulin receptors in monocytes and fibroblasts, the present findings, plus similar findings with the oral hypoglycemic agent glibenclamide, may help explain the mechanism of the extra-pancreatic effects of oral sulfonylurea agents at the cellular level.  相似文献   

3.
Prolactin enhanced guanylate cyclase [E.C.4.6.1.2] two- to threefold in ovary, testis, mammary gland, liver and kidney. Dose response relationships revealed that maximal activation of this enzyme was at a concentration of one nanomolar and that increasing prolactin's concentration to the millimolar range caused no further increase in activity. There was an absolute cation requirement for prolactin's enhancement of guanylate cyclase. Calcium or manganese allowed prolactin to increase guanylate cyclase activity. Greater enhancement of this enzyme's activity by prolactin was observed when manganese was the co-factor. The data in this investigation suggest that guanylate cyclase may play a role in the mechanism of action of prolactin.  相似文献   

4.
Substance P, a peptide endogenous to the splanchnic nerve, is known to inhibit the acetylcholine-and nicotine-induced release of catecholamines from isolated adrenal chromaffin cells. In the present study the effect of substance P on desensitization of catecholamine release from these cells was examined. Substance P (10(-5) M) completely protected against desensitization of catecholamine release produced by acetylcholine at 37 degrees C or 23 degrees C and by nicotine at 23 degrees C; substance P also afforded appreciable protection against nicotine-induced desensitization at 37 degrees C. The peptide had no effect on K+-induced desensitization of catecholamine release. Like substance P, d-tubocurarine also prevented nicotinic desensitization. Substance P prevented both of two components of nicotinic desensitization, i.e. the Ca2+-dependent component and the Ca2+-independent, depletion-independent component of desensitization. Substance P had little effect on subsequent catecholamine uptake, indicating that substance P's protection against desensitization is a result of facilitation of catecholamine release rather than inhibition of catecholamine reuptake. Nicotine-induced catecholamine release and nicotinic desensitization of catecholamine release were Na+-independent, although substance P's inhibition of nicotine-induced catecholamine release was reduced by extracellular Na+. These in vitro studies suggest a similar role for substance P in vivo: substance P's protection against nicotinic desensitization may ensure a maintained output of adrenal catecholamines during stress, when the splanchnic nerve releases large amounts of acetylcholine.  相似文献   

5.
Substance P was incubated in an adenylate cyclase assay of a particulate fraction of caudate-putamen tissue of the rat in order to examine the effect of the peptide on D-1 receptor coupled adenylate cyclase in vitro. Substance P did not influence basal adenylate cyclase activity or the stimulation of the enzyme by dopamine. No influence of substance P was seen on the effects of calcium and magnesium chloride as a cofactor of adenylate cyclase. Also the inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by the dopamine antagonist fluphenazine was not influenced by substance P. However, substance P was able to enhance cyclic AMP formation in the presence of guanosine-imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), whereas the stimulatory effect of guanosine-triphosphate (GTP) was inhibited by substance P. In our study we suggest that substance P interacts with the guanine nucleotide regulatory subunit without directly affecting D-1 dopamine receptors in the caudate-putamen of the rat.  相似文献   

6.
Substance P is known to modulate acetylcholine-induced catecholamine release from adrenal chromaffin cells. To investigate the mechanisms involved in this modulation, the present study examined the effects of substance P on net 45Ca2+ fluxes in cultures of bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. Two effects of substance P were observed: (1) Substance P inhibited carbachol-induced 45Ca2+ uptake and 45Ca2+ efflux and (2) substance P protected against desensitization of carbachol-induced 45Ca2+ uptake and 45Ca2+ efflux. Thus substance P modulates two other cholinergic responses, 45Ca2+ uptake and 45Ca2+ efflux, in a manner similar to its modulation of catecholamine release. The results also indicate that substance P's inhibition of net carbachol-induced 45Ca2+ uptake is due to inhibition of 45Ca2+ uptake rather than enhancement of 45Ca2+ efflux. Substance P almost completely inhibited carbachol-induced 45Ca2+ uptake in both Na+-containing and Na+-free media, suggesting that substance P can inhibit the uptake of 45Ca2+ induced by carbachol regardless of whether 45Ca2+ is taken up through voltage-sensitive or acetylcholine receptor-linked channels. However, substance P produced only a small inhibition of K+-induced 45Ca2+ uptake, indicating that substance P does not interact directly with voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. In addition, substance P's inhibition of carbachol-induced 45Ca2+ uptake was noncompetitive with respect to Ca2+, were unable to overcome substance P's inhibition of [3H]-norepinephrine ( [3H]NE) release. It is concluded that substance P does not interact directly with Ca2+ channels in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

7.
Receptor-mediated regulation of guanylate cyclase activity in spermatozoa   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Two peptides, speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly) and resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Gly-Arg-Leu-NH2), which activate sperm respiration and motility and elevate cyclic GMP concentrations in a species-specific manner, were tested for effects on guanylate cyclase activity. The guanylate cyclase of sea urchin spermatozoa is a glycoprotein and it is localized entirely on the plasma membrane. When intact sea urchin sperm cells were incubated with the appropriate peptide for time periods as short as 5 s and subsequently homogenized in detergent, guanylate cyclase activity was found to be as low as 10% of the activity of cells not treated with peptide. The peptides showed complete species specificity and analogues of one peptide (speract) caused decreases in enzyme activity coincident with their receptor binding properties. The peptides did not inhibit enzyme activity when added after detergent solubilization of the enzyme. When detergent-solubilized spermatozoa were incubated at 22 degrees C, guanylate cyclase activity declined in previously nontreated cells to the peptide-treated level. The rate of decline was dependent on temperature and protein concentration. When spermatozoa were first incubated with 32P, the decrease in guanylate cyclase activity was accompanied by a shift in the apparent molecular weight of a major plasma membrane protein (160,000-150,000) and a loss of 32P label from the 160,000 band. Other agents (Monensin A, NH4Cl) which were capable of stimulating sperm respiration and motility also caused decreases of guanylate cyclase activity when added to intact but not detergent-solubilized spermatozoa. The maximal decrease in guanylate cyclase activity occurred 5-10 min after addition of these agents. The enzyme response to Monensin A required extracellular Na+ suggestive that the ionophore caused the effect on guanylate cyclase activity by virtue of its ability to catalyze Na+/H+ exchange. These studies demonstrate that guanylate cyclase activity of sperm cells can be altered by the specific interaction of egg-associated peptides with their plasma membrane receptors.  相似文献   

8.
The particulate fraction from murine plasmocytoma cells contained 90 per cent of the total guanylate cyclase activity. Triton X-100 produced a 6 fold stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity in plasma membrane enriched fractions obtained by zonal centrifugation. Isolated inside out (10) vesicles contained 9 times more activity than rightside out (RSO) vesicles. This difference was abolished by Triton X-100 treatment of the vesicles indicating that the catalytic site of guanylate cyclase is located on the inner face of the plasma membrane. Kinetic studies of membranous guanylate cyclase showed that optimal activity was found with manganese. Only 20 per cent of this activity was obtained with magnesium. The Km for GTP with magnesium (1.4 mM) was about 7 fold greater than with manganese (0.2 mM). Positive cooperativity was obtained in both cases and the Hill coefficients were 1.8 for manganese and 1.6 for magnesium. Physiological concentrations of ATP were found to inhibit both manganese and magnesium supported activities indicating a possible regulatory mechanism for this nucleotide in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Substance P is a vasoactive peptide. Nerve fibers containing substance P are present in the media of pulmonary arteries but the physiologic function of substance P in the pulmonary vasculature is unknown. Several doses of substance P were infused intravenously in the anesthetized dog to ascertain its effects on the pulmonary vasculature, both during normoxia and following preconstriction with hypoxia (F1O2 0.1) or prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha 5 mug/kg/min). Substance P resulted in systemic vasodilation during normoxia but had minimal effect on the pulmonary vasculature. During hypoxia and PGF2 alpha-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction, substance P significantly lowered pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, mean aortic pressure, and total systemic resistance. It had no effect on cardiac output, wedge pressure, and arterial blood gases. To investigate possible mechanisms for substance P-induced vasodilation, substance P was studied following pretreatment with N-acetylcysteine (a radical scavenging agent), methylene blue (an inhibitor of guanylate cyclase), meclofenamate (a cyclooxygenase inhibitor), and atropine (a muscarinic receptor antagonist). None of these agents impaired substance P-induced vasodilation. Substance P given intravenously is a nonselective vasodilator in the dog but the mechanism of its action remains uncertain.  相似文献   

10.
Hydroxylamine actived guanylate cyclase in particulate fraction of cerebral cortex of rat. Activation was most remarkable in crude mitochondrial fraction. When the crude mitochondrial fraction was subjected to osmotic shock and fractionated, guanylate cyclase activity recovered in the subfractions as assayed with hydroxylamine was only one-third of the starting material. Recombination of the soluble and the particulate fractions, however, restored guanylate cyclase activity to the same level as that of the starting material. When varying quantities of the particulate and soluble fractions were combined, enzyme activity was proportional to the quantity of the soluble fraction. Heating of the soluble or particulate fraction at 55 degrees for 5 min inactivated guanylate cyclase. The heated particulate fraction markedly activated guanylate cyclase activity in the native soluble fraction, while the heated soluble fraction did not stimulate enzyme activity in the particulate. The particulate fraction preincubated with hydroxylamine at 37 degrees for 5 min followed by washing activated guanylate cyclase activity in the soluble fraction in the absence of hydroxylamine. Further fractionation of the crude mitochondrial fraction revealed that the factor(s) needed for the activation by hydroxylamine is associated with the mitochondria. The mitochondrial fraction of cerebral cortex activated guanylate cyclase in supernatant of brain, liver, or kidney in the presence of hydroxylamine. The mitochondrial fraction prepared from liver or kidney, in turn, activated soluble guanylate cyclase in brain. Activation of guanylate cyclase by hydroxylamine was compared with that of sodium azide. Azide activated guanylate cyclase in the synaptosomal soluble fraction, while hydroxylamine inhibited it. The particulate fraction preincubated with azide followed by washing did not stimulate guanylate cyclase activity in the absence of azide. The activation of guanylate cyclase by hydroxylamine is not due to a change in the concentration of the substrate GTP, Addition of hydroxylamine did not alter the apparent Km value of guanylate cyclase for GTP. Guanylate cyclase became less dependent on manganese in the presence of hydroxylamine. Thus the activation of guanylate cyclase by hydroxylamine is due to the change in the Vmax of the reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Adenine nucleotides activate basal particulate guanylate cyclase in rat lung membranes. Activation is specific for adenine and not guanine, cytidine or uridine nucleotides. The concentration of adenine nucleotides yielding half-maximum activation of particulate guanylate cyclase is 0.1 mM and this nucleotide activates the enzyme by increasing maximum velocity 11-fold without altering affinity for substrate. Activation is specific for particulate guanylate cyclase, since soluble enzyme is inhibited by adenine nucleotides. Similarly, activation is specific for magnesium as the enzyme substrate cation cofactor, since adenine nucleotides inhibit particulate guanylate cyclase when manganese is used. Adenine nucleotide regulation of particulate guanylate cyclase may occur by a different molecular mechanism compared to other activators, since the effects of these nucleotides are synergistic with those of detergent, hemin and atrial natriuretic peptides. Cystamine inhibits adenine nucleotide activation of particulate guanylate cyclase at concentrations having minimal effects on basal enzyme activity suggesting a role for critical sulfhydryls in mechanisms underlying nucleotide regulation of particulate guanylate cyclase. Purification and quantitative recovery of particulate guanylate cyclase by substrate affinity chromatography results in the loss of adenine nucleotide regulation. These data suggest that adenine nucleotides may be important in the regulation of basal and activated particulate guanylate cyclase and may be mediated by an adenine nucleotide-binding protein which is separate from that enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
J K Bentley  H Shimomura  D L Garbers 《Cell》1986,45(2):281-288
Resact, a peptide obtained from eggs, causes a change in the Mr, and a loss of 32P from a plasma membrane protein identified as guanylate cyclase. Here, a resact analog (125I-[Tyr1, Ser8] resact) was synthesized and shown to bind to isolated sperm membranes. Resact, but not speract, competed with the radiolabeled ligand for binding. When membranes were prepared under appropriate conditions, guanylate cyclase remained at Mr 160,000; the incubation of membranes with gamma-32P-ATP resulted in the formation of 32P-labeled guanylate cyclase. The addition of resact to the membranes caused a shift in the Mr, a complete loss of 32P, and a 70% reduction in guanylate cyclase activity within 1 min; resact had an ED 50 at 100 nM concentration. Speract failed to cause any of these effects. This represents the first demonstration of receptor-mediated responses of isolated sperm membranes identical to those seen in the intact cell.  相似文献   

13.
Various thiols exert non-specific effects on the activity of soluble guanylate cyclase under aerobic conditions. We studied the effects of thiols under anaerobic conditions (pO2 less than 6 Torr) on soluble guanylate cyclase, purified from bovine lung. Reduced glutathione stimulated the enzyme concentration-dependently with half-maximal enzyme stimulation at a concentration of about 0.5 mM. The extend of maximal enzyme stimulation (up to 80-fold) was comparable with the activation by NO-containing substances. The activation by glutathione was additive with the effect of sodium nitroprusside. Cysteine and various other thiols increased the enzyme activity 20-fold and 2- to 5-fold, respectively. The stimulatory effect of these thiols was not related to their reducing potency. Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by glutathione was dose-dependently reduced in the presence of other thiols (cysteine greater than oxidized glutathione greater than S-methyl glutathione). Under aerobic conditions or with Mn-GTP as substrate, the effect of glutathione on soluble guanylate cyclase was suppressed. The results suggest a specific role for glutathione in the regulation of soluble guanylate cyclase activity and a modulation of this effect by redox reactions and other intracellular thiols.  相似文献   

14.
Interferon enhances guanylate cyclase activity in human lymphoma cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Treatment of the human Burkitt lymphoma derived cell line Daudi with electrophoretically pure human interferon α caused a rapid increase in the intracellular concentration of guanosine 3′,5′ cyclic-monophosphate (cyclic GMP). This increase was accompanied by an enhancement of guanylate cyclase activity in interferon-treated cells. No change in cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase was observed. However electrophoretically pure human interferon α was without effect on the guanylate cyclase activity of cell-free lysates of Daudi cells. This strongly suggests that the increase in the intracellular concentration of cyclic GMP in interferon treated cells is due to an activation of guanylate cyclase which is mediated via an interaction of interferon with its specific cell surface receptor.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The sulfur atom in the vitamin biotin has previously been suggested to be essential in biotin's mechanism of action. In a series of investigations on structure-function relationships with biotin analogs not containing the sulfur atom, the biotin analogs, azabiotin, bisnorazabiotin, carbobiotin and isoazabiotin enhanced guanylate cyclase, an enzyme that has recently been demonstrated to be activated by biotin. These analogs increased guanylate cyclase activity two-fold in liver, cerebellum, heart, kidney and colon at 1 M concentrations. The ED50 for stimulation of guanulate cyclase activity occurred at 0.1 M for each of the biotin analogs. These data indicate that the sulfur atom is not essential in biotin's activation of guanylate cyclase since these analogs do not contain the sulfur atom. Studies on the ring structure of biotin revealed that even compounds with a single 5-membered ring (2-imidazolidone) could augment guanylate cyclase activity. The guanylate cyclase co-factor manganese was not essential for the enhancement of guanylate cyclase by these agents but a maximal activation of this enzyme by these analogs could not be obtained without manganese present.  相似文献   

16.
Sodium nitroprusside, nitroglycerin, sodium azide and hydroxylamine increased guanylate cyclase activity in particulate and/or soluble preparations from various tissues. While sodium nitroprusside increased guanylate cyclase activity in most of the preparations examined, the effects of sodium azide, hydroxylamine and nitroglycerin were tissue specific. Nitroglycerin and hydroxylamine were also less potent. Neither the protein activator factor nor catalase which is required for sodium azide effects altered the stimulatory effect of sodium nitroprusside. In the presence of sodium azide, sodium nitroprusside or hydroxylamine, magnesium ion was as effective as manganese ion as a sole cation cofactor for guanylate cyclase. With soluble guanylate cyclase from rat liver and bovine tracheal smooth muscle the concentrations of sodium nitroprusside that gave half-maximal stimulation with Mn2+ were 0.1 mM and 0.01 mM, respectively. Effective concentrations were slightly less with Mg2+ as a sole cation cofactor. The ability of these agents to increase cyclic GMP levels in intact tissues is probably due to their effects on guanylate cyclase activity. While the precise mechanism of guanylate cyclase activation by these agents is not known, activation may be due to the formation of nitric oxide or another reactive material since nitric oxide also increased guanylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The objective of the present investigation was to determine if melatonin at physiological concentrations might have part of its mechanism of action through enhancement of guanylate cyclase (E.C.4.6.1.2) activity. Melatonin enhanced guanylate cyclase activity two-three fold in rat anterior pituitary, thyroid, testis, ovary, liver and small intestine at the 1 nanomolar concentration. Some stimulation of hepatic guanylate cyclase activity by melatonin was seen at concentrations as low as 1 picomolar. There was no stimulation of guanylate cyclase activity at concentrations below 1 picomolar. Maximal enhancement of guanylate cyclase activity was seen at the 1 nanomolar concentration of melatonin with no further enhancement being observed with increasing the concentration to the micromolar range. Thus, the data in the present investigation indicates that at concentrations at which melatonin is known to cause physiological effects, melatonin does cause an enhancement of the activity of the guanylate cyclase-cyclic GMP system.  相似文献   

18.
An increase in the K+ concentration in the medium to 60 mM which causes depolarization of cell membranes in the rat cerebral cortex is studied for its effect on the cGMP level, guanylate cyclase and cGMP phosphodiesterase activities in norm and one hour after X-ray irradiation. The cGMP content and guanylate cyclase activity in normal rats and 1 min after depolarization are shown to increase with the external K+ concentration. One hour after irradiation the activity of enzymes under examination is three times as high. The character of changes in the cGMP content caused by a rise of the external KCP concentration is mainly determined by variations in the guanylate cyclase activity under these conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Somatostatin has been shown to inhibit the release of various polypeptide hormones including insulin, glucagon, gastrin, thyroid stimulating hormone, and growth hormone. The mechanism by which somatostatin inhibits the release of these various polypeptide hormones has not been fully eluciadated. It has been reported that somatostatin increases the level of the second messenger cyclic GMP in rat brain and in the anterior pituitary gland. The present investigation was designed to determine if these responses seen in the anterior pituitary gland and brain were due to activation of guanylate cyclase GTP-pyrophosphate lyase (cyclizing), E.C.4.6.1.2., the enzyme that catalyzes the formation of cyclic GMP. Somatostatin at a concentration of 2 pm enhanced guanylate cyclase activity two-fold in rat cerebrum and anterior pituitary gland. This enhancement of guanylate cyclase activity was also seen in rat liver, pancreas, stomach, and small intestine at the same concentration of somatostatin. Increasing the concentration of somatostatin to 20 m, caused a marked inhibition of guanylate cyclase activity in all these tissues. Dose-response curves done on gastric guanylate cyclase activity revealed that over a concentration range of 2 pm to 0.2 m, somatostatin had a stimulatory effect on guanylate cyclase activity while at concentrations above 10 m somatostatin was inhibitory to guanylate cyclase activity. The biphasic pattern of enhancement of guanylate cyclase activity at lower concentrations of somatostatin and inhibition at higher concentrations may help to explain some of the discrepancies seen with previous investigations with somatostatin, hormone release, and cyclic nucleotide metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Native soluble and particulate guanylate cyclase from several rat tissues preferred Mn2+ to Mg2+ as the sole cation cofactor. Wtih 4mM cation, activities with Mg2+ were less than 25% of the activities with Mn2+. The 1 mM NaN3 markedly increased the activity of soluble and particulate preparations from rat liver. Wtih NaN3 activation guanylate cyclase activities wite similar with Mn2+ and Mg2+. Co2+ was partially effective as a cofactor in the presence of NaN3, while Ca2+ was a poor cation with or without NaN3. Activities with Ba, Cu2+, or Zn2+ were not detectable without or with 1 mM NaN3. With soluble liver enzyme both manganese and magnesium activities were dependent upon excess Mn2+ or Mg2+ at a fixed MnGTP or MgGTP concentration of 0.4 mm; apparent Km values for excess Mn2+ and Mg2+ were 0.3 and 0.24 mM, respectively. After NaN3 activation, the activity was less dependent upon free Mn2+ and retained its dependence for free Mg2+, at 0.4 mM MgGTP the apparent Km for excess Mg2+ was 0.3 mM. The activity of soluble liver guanylate cyclase assayed with Mn2+ or Mg2+ was increased with Ca2+. After NaN3 activiation, Ca2+ had no effect or was somewhat inhibitory with either Mn2+. After NaN activation, Ca2+ had no effect or was somewhat inhibitory with either Mn2+ or Mg2+. The stimulatory effect of NaN2 on Mn2+-and Mg2+-dependent guanylate cyclase activity from liver or cerebral cortex supernatant fractions required the presence of the sodium azide-activator factor. With partially purified soluble liver guanylate cyclase and azide-activator factor, the concentration (1 mjM) of NaN3 that gave half-maximal activation with Mn2+ or Mg2+ was imilar. Thus, under some conditions guanylate cyclase can effectively use Mg2+ as a sole cation cofactor.  相似文献   

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