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1.
Kunz S  Oberholzer M  Seebeck T 《The FEBS journal》2005,272(24):6412-6422
Cyclic-nucleotide-specific phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are key players in the intracellular signaling pathways of the important human pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi. We report herein the identification of an unusual PDE from this protozoal organism. This enzyme, TcrPDEC, is a member of the class I PDEs, as determined from the presence of a characteristic signature sequence and from the conservation of a number of functionally important amino acid residues within its catalytic domain. Class I PDEs include a large number of PDEs from eukaryotes, among them all 11 human PDE families. Unusually for an enzyme of this class, TcrPDEC contains a FYVE-type domain in its N-terminal region, followed by two closely spaced coiled-coil domains. Its catalytic domain is located in the middle of the polypeptide chain, whereas all other class I enzymes contain their catalytic domains in their C-terminal parts. TcrPDEC can complement a PDE-deficient yeast strain. Unexpectedly for a kinetoplastid PDE, TcrPDEC is a dual-specificity PDE that accepts both cAMP and cGMP as its substrates.  相似文献   

2.
This study reports the identification and characterization of a cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase from the parasitic hemoflagellate Trypanosoma brucei. TbPDE2A is a class I phosphodiesterase. Its catalytic domain exhibits 30-40% sequence identity with those of all 11 mammalian phosphodiesterase (PDE) families, as well as with PDE2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, dunce from Drosophila melanogaster, and regA from Dictyostelium discoideum. The overall structure of TbPDE2A resembles that of human PDE11A in that its N-terminal region contains a single GAF domain. This domain is very similar to those of the mammalian PDE2, -5, -6, -10, and -11, where it constitutes a potential cGMP binding site. TbPDE2A can be expressed in S. cerevisiae, and it complements an S. cerevisiae PDE deletion strain. Recombinant TbPDE2A is specific for cAMP, with a K(m) of approximately 2 micrometer. It is entirely resistant to the nonselective PDE inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, but it is sensitive to trequinsin, dipyridamole, sildenafil, and ethaverine with IC(50) values of 5.4, 5.9, 9.4, and 14.2 micrometer, respectively. All four compounds inhibit proliferation of bloodstream form trypanosomes in culture, indicating that TbPDE2A is an essential enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of sleeping sickness in humans and livestock, expresses at least three cAMP-specific class I phosphodiesterases (PDEs), all of which are essential for survival of the parasite. These PDEs have either one or two N-terminal GAF domains, which in other proteins function as signaling domains. However, neither the functional roles nor ligands for these domains in trypanosome PDEs are known. The present study shows that TbPDE2B, which contains two tandem GAF domains, binds cAMP with high affinity through its GAF-A domain. A purified recombinant N terminus + GAF-A domain binds cAMP with an affinity (Ki) of approximately 16 nM. It also binds cGMP but with a 15-fold lower affinity of approximately 275 nM. The TbPDE2B holoenzyme has a somewhat lower affinity (approximately 55 nM) for cAMP but a greatly lower affinity (approximately 10 microM) for cGMP. This suggests that both the selectivity and affinity for a ligand can be determined not only by the nature of the binding domain but also by the adjacent domains. Additionally, binding of cAMP to the holoenzyme showed positive cooperativity, with a Hill coefficient value of 1.75. However, binding of cGMP to the holoenzyme did not show any cooperativity, suggesting differences in the conformational changes caused by binding of these two cyclic nucleotides with the protein. Point mutation of a key predicted binding site residue (T317A) resulted in a complete loss of high affinity cAMP binding. This mutation increased the apparent Km of the mutant enzyme for substrate without altering the Vmax. A truncated catalytic domain construct of TbPDE2B also exhibited an increased Km, strongly suggesting that cAMP binding to the GAF-A domain can regulate TbPDE2B by allowing the full activity of the enzyme to be expressed. These properties of the GAF-A domain of TbPDE2B thus suggest that it could be a new target for anti-trypanosomal drugs.  相似文献   

4.
Cyclic AMP was the first second messenger to be identified. After five decades of research, much is currently known about its biological functions and clinical implications. Several components of the cAMP signalling pathways, such as the G-protein coupled receptors and the phosphodiesterases, have become sensitive and specific drug targets for a host of clinical applications. Surprisingly, very little effort has been invested so far into the study of cAMP signalling in parasites, and its significance in host/parasite interaction. Our laboratory has embarked on a study of cAMP signalling in Trypanosoma brucei. A newly identified adenylyl cyclase, GRESAG4.4B, a member of a small family of closely related genes, is being used as a model molecule for investigating the mechanisms which control cyclase activity in the T. brucei cell. On the other hand, a number of genes for different families of cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases have been identified and characterised. One enzyme, TbPDE1, is coded for by a single-copy gene. Knock-outs of this gene display an almost normal phenotype in culture, indicating that TbPDE1 is not an essential enzyme under culture conditions. A second phosphodiesterase which is being studied in detail, TbPDE2A, is clearly different from TbPDE1, and it is coded for by a member of a small gene family containing about six similar, but non-identical genes. TbPDE2A, as TbPDE1, is specific for cAMP. In its N-terminal, it contains a GAF domain which may represent an allosteric cGMP-binding site. The other members of the TbPDE2 family all exhibit strongly conserved catalytic domains, but vary widely in their N-terminal regulatory domains. With regard to downstream signalling by the cAMP generated through the interplay of adenylyl cyclases and phosphodiesterases, we have recently identified a single-copy gene (TbRSU1) which codes for a putative regulatory subunit of the cAMP-regulated protein kinase A. This protein exhibits considerable similarity with its mammalian counterparts. Immunoprecipitation co-precipitates a protein kinase activity with the characteristics of protein kinase A.  相似文献   

5.
Phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are enzymes that modulate cyclic nucleotide signaling and as such are clinical targets for a range of disorders including congestive heart failure, erectile dysfunction, and inflammation. The PDE3 family comprises two highly homologous subtypes expressed in different tissues, and inhibitors of this family have been shown to increase lipolysis in adipocytes. A specific PDE3B (the lipocyte-localized subtype) inhibitor would be a very useful tool to evaluate the effects of PDE3 inhibition on lipolysis and metabolic rate and might become a novel tool for treatment of obesity. We report here the three-dimensional structures of the catalytic domain of human PDE3B in complex with a generic PDE inhibitor and a novel PDE3 selective inhibitor. These structures explain the dual cAMP/cGMP binding capabilities of PDE3, provide the molecular basis for inhibitor specificity, and can supply a valid platform for the design of improved compounds.  相似文献   

6.
Although extensive structural and biochemical studies have provided molecular insights into the mechanism of cAMP-dependent activation of protein kinase A (PKA), little is known about signal termination and the role of phosphodiesterases (PDEs) in regulatory feedback. In this study we describe a novel mode of protein kinase A-anchoring protein (AKAP)-independent feedback regulation between a specific PDE, RegA and the PKA regulatory (RIα) subunit, where RIα functions as an activator of PDE catalysis. Our results indicate that RegA, in addition to its well-known role as a PDE for bulk cAMP in solution, is also capable of hydrolyzing cAMP-bound to RIα. Furthermore our results indicate that binding of RIα activates PDE catalysis several fold demonstrating a dual function of RIα, both as an inhibitor of the PKA catalytic (C) subunit and as an activator for PDEs. Deletion mutagenesis has localized the sites of interaction to one of the cAMP-binding domains of RIα and the catalytic PDE domain of RegA whereas amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry has revealed that the cAMP-binding site (phosphate binding cassette) along with proximal regions important for relaying allosteric changes mediated by cAMP, are important for interactions with the PDE catalytic domain of RegA. These sites of interactions together with measurements of cAMP dissociation rates demonstrate that binding of RegA facilitates dissociation of cAMP followed by hydrolysis of the released cAMP to 5'AMP. cAMP-free RIα generated as an end product remains bound to RegA. The PKA C-subunit then displaces RegA and reassociates with cAMP-free RIα to regenerate the inactive PKA holoenzyme thereby completing the termination step of cAMP signaling. These results reveal a novel mode of regulatory feedback between PDEs and RIα that has important consequences for PKA regulation and cAMP signal termination.  相似文献   

7.
The C-terminal catalytic domains of the 11 mammalian phosphodiesterase families (PDEs) are important drug targets. Five of the 11 PDE families contain less well-characterized N-terminal GAF domains. cGMP is the ligand for the GAF domains in PDEs 2, 5, 6 and 11, and cAMP is the ligand for PDE10. Structurally related tandem GAF domains signalling via cAMP are present in the cyanobacterial adenylate cyclases cyaB1 and cyaB2. Because current high-resolution crystal structures of the tandem GAF domains of PDE2 and cyaB2 do not reveal how cNMP specificity is encoded, we generated chimeras between the tandem GAF domains of cyaB1 and PDE2. Both bind the ligand in the GAF B subdomains. Segmental replacements in the highly divergent beta1-beta3 region of the GAF B subdomain of cyaB1 by the corresponding PDE2 regions switched signalling from cAMP to cGMP. Using 10 chimeric constructs, we demonstrated that, for this switch in purine specificity, only 11% of the sequence of the cyanobacterial GAF B needs to be replaced by PDE2 sequences. We were unable, however, to switch the purine specificity of the PDE2 tandem GAF domain from cGMP to cAMP in reverse constructs, i.e. by replacement of PDE2 segments with those from the cyaB1 GAF tandem domain. The data provide a novel view on the structure-function relationships underlying the purine specificity of cNMP-binding GAF domains and indicate that, as potential drug targets, they must be characterized structurally and biochemically one by one.  相似文献   

8.
Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, encodes a number of different cAMP-specific PDE (phosphodiesterase) families. Here we report the identification and characterization of TcrPDEB1 and its comparison with the previously identified TcrPDEB2 (formerly known as TcPDE1). These are two different PDE enzymes of the TcrPDEB family, named in accordance with the recent recommendations of the Nomenclature Committee for Kinetoplast PDEs [Kunz, Beavo, D'Angelo, Flawia, Francis, Johner, Laxman, Oberholzer, Rascon, Shakur et al. (2006) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 145, 133-135]. Both enzymes show resistance to inhibition by many mammalian PDE inhibitors, and those that do inhibit do so with appreciable differences in their inhibitor profiles for the two enzymes. Both enzymes contain two GAF (cGMP-specific and -stimulated phosphodiesterases, Anabaena adenylate cyclases and Escherichia coli FhlA) domains and a catalytic domain highly homologous with that of the T. brucei TbPDE2/TbrPDEB2 family. The N-terminus+GAF-A domains of both enzymes showed significant differences in their affinities for cyclic nucleotide binding. Using a calorimetric technique that allows accurate measurements of low-affinity binding sites, the TcrPDEB2 N-terminus+GAF-A domain was found to bind cAMP with an affinity of approximately 500 nM. The TcrPDEB1 N-terminus+GAF-A domain bound cAMP with a slightly lower affinity of approximately 1 muM. The N-terminus+GAF-A domain of TcrPDEB1 did not bind cGMP, whereas the N-terminus+GAF-A domain of TcrPDEB2 bound cGMP with a low affinity of approximately 3 muM. GAF domains homologous with those found in these proteins were also identified in related trypanosomatid parasites. Finally, a fluorescent cAMP analogue, MANT-cAMP [2'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)adenosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate], was found to be a substrate for the TcPDEB1 catalytic domain, opening the possibility of using this molecule as a substrate in non-radioactive, fluorescence-based PDE assays, including screening for trypanosome PDE inhibitors.  相似文献   

9.
Huai Q  Colicelli J  Ke H 《Biochemistry》2003,42(45):13220-13226
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) regulate the intracellular concentrations of cyclic 3',5'-adenosine and guanosine monophosphates (cAMP and cGMP, respectively) by hydrolyzing them to AMP and GMP, respectively. Family-selective inhibitors of PDEs have been studied for treatment of various human diseases. However, the catalytic mechanism of cyclic nucleotide hydrolysis by PDEs has remained unclear. We determined the crystal structure of the human PDE4D2 catalytic domain in complex with AMP at 2.4 A resolution. In this structure, two divalent metal ions simultaneously interact with the phosphate group of AMP, implying a binuclear catalysis. In addition, the structure suggested that a hydroxide ion or a water bridging two metal ions may serve as the nucleophile for the hydrolysis of the cAMP phosphodiester bond.  相似文献   

10.
Considerable structural similarities are present in a region of approximately 270 amino acids in most known cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) sequences, opening the possibility that this region encodes the catalytic domain of the enzyme. To test this hypothesis, the structure of a high affinity cAMP PDE (cAMP-PDE) was analyzed by deletion mutations and site-directed mutagenesis. A ratPDE3 cDNA was mutated using a strategy based on fragment amplification by polymerase chain reaction. The effect of the introduced mutations was determined by expressing wild type and mutated proteins in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. The level of expression of the PDE protein was monitored by immunoblot analysis using two specific cAMP-PDE polyclonal antibodies and by measuring the PDE activity. After removal of a 99-amino acid region at the carboxyl terminus flanking the conserved domain, the protein retains its catalytic activity even though its Km and velocity were changed. Internal deletions at the amino terminus of this PDE showed that the enzyme activity was increased when a 97-amino acid fragment (from Tyr49 to Lys145) was removed. Further deletions within the amino terminus produced inactive proteins. Within the domain that appears essential for catalysis, 1 threonine and 2 serine residues are conserved in all PDEs. Substitutions of the invariant threonine (Thr349) present in the most conserved region with alanine, proline, or serine yielded proteins of the correct size and a level of expression comparable to the wild type PDE. However, in both expression systems used, proteins were completely devoid of the ability to hydrolyze cyclic nucleotides, except when the threonine was substituted with a serine. Conversely, mutations of 2 other conserved serine residues (Ser305 and Ser398) present in the catalytic domain either had no effect or produced changes only in Km and Vmax, but did not abolish catalytic activity. In addition, 2 histidine residues (His278 and His311) present in proximity to Thr349 appeared to be essential for the structure of the catalytic domain, since any substitution performed in these residues yielded an inactive enzyme. Mutations of a serine residue (Ser295) in the region homologous to the cAMP binding site of the regulatory subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase demonstrated that this region does not have the same function in the two proteins. These data provide direct evidence that a 37-kDa domain, which in part corresponds to the region of conservation in all PDEs, contains the catalytic domain, and that threonine and histidine residues are probably involved in catalysis and/or are essential for the conformation of an active enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
N-terminal tandem GAF domains are present in 5 out of 11 mammalian phosphodiesterase (PDE) families. The ligand for the GAF domains of PDEs 2, 5, and 6 is cGMP, whereas those for PDEs 10 and 11 remained enigmatic for years. Here we used the cyanobacterial cyaB1 adenylyl cyclase, which has an N-terminal tandem GAF domain closely related to those of the mammalian PDEs, as an assay system to identify the ligands for the human PDEs 10 and 11 GAF domains. We report that a chimera between the PDE10 GAF domain and the cyanobacterial cyclase was 9-fold stimulated by cAMP (EC50= 19.8 microm), whereas cGMP had only low activity. cAMP increased Vmax in a non-cooperative manner and did not affect the Km for ATP of 27 microm. In an analogous chimeric construct with the tandem GAF domain of human PDE11A4, cGMP was identified as an allosteric activator (EC50 = 72.5 microm) that increased Vmax of the cyclase non-cooperatively 4-fold. GAF-B of PDE10 and GAF-A of PDE11A4 contain an invariant NKFDE motif present in all mammalian PDE GAF ensembles. We mutated the aspartates within this motif in both regions and found that intramolecular signaling was considerably reduced or abolished. This was in line with all data concerning GAF domains with an NKFDE motif as far as they have been tested. The data appeared to define those GAF domains as a distinct subclass within the >3100 annotated GAF domains for which we propose a tentative classification scheme.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are key enzymes that control the cellular concentrations of the second messengers cAMP and cGMP. The mechanism for selective recognition of substrates cAMP and cGMP by individual PDE families remains a puzzle. To understand the mechanism for substrate recognition by PDE enzymes, the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of an inactive D201N mutant of PDE4D2 in complex with substrate cAMP has been determined at 1.56 A resolution. The structure shows that Gln369 forms only one hydrogen bond with the adenine of cAMP. This finding provides experimental evidence against the hypothesis of two hydrogen bonds between the invariant glutamine and the substrate cAMP in PDE4, and thus suggests that the widely circulated "glutamine switch" model is unlikely the mechanism for substrate recognition by PDEs. A structure comparison between PDE4D2-cAMP and PDE10A2-cAMP reveals an anti configuration of cAMP in PDE4D2 but syn in PDE10A2, in addition to different contact patterns of cAMP in these two structures. These observations imply that individual PDE families have their characteristic mechanisms for substrate recognition.  相似文献   

13.
The Dictyostelium discoideum genome uncovers seven cyclic nucleotide PDEs (phosphodiesterases), of which six have been characterized previously and the seventh is characterized in the present paper. Three enzymes belong to the ubiquitous class I PDEs, common in all eukaryotes, whereas four enzymes belong to the rare class II PDEs that are present in bacteria and lower eukaryotes. Since all D. discoideum PDEs are now characterized we have calculated the contribution of each enzyme in the degradation of the three important pools of cyclic nucleotides: (i) extracellular cAMP that induces chemotaxis during aggregation and differentiation in slugs; (ii) intracellular cAMP that mediates development; and (iii) intracellular cGMP that mediates chemotaxis. It appears that each cyclic nucleotide pool is degraded by a combination of enzymes that have different affinities, allowing a broad range of substrate concentrations to be degraded with first-order kinetics. Extracellular cAMP is degraded predominantly by the class II high-affinity enzyme DdPDE1 and its close homologue DdPDE7, and in the multicellular stage also by the low-affinity transmembrane class I enzyme DdPDE4. Intracellular cAMP is degraded by the DdPDE2, a class I enzyme regulated by histidine kinase/phospho-relay, and by the cAMP-/cGMP-stimulated class II DdPDE6. Finally, basal intracellular cGMP is degraded predominantly by the high-affinity class I DdPDE3, while the elevated cGMP levels that arise after receptor stimulation are degraded predominantly by a cGMP-stimulated cGMP-specific class II DdPDE5. The analysis shows that the combination of enzymes is tuned to keep the concentration and lifetime of the substrate within a functional range.  相似文献   

14.
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are a superfamily of enzymes controlling cellular concentrations of the second messengers cAMP and cGMP. Crystal structures of the catalytic domains of cGMP-specific PDE5A1 and cAMP-specific PDE4D2 in complex with the nonselective inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine have been determined at medium resolution. The catalytic domain of PDE5A1 has the same topological folding as that of PDE4D2, but three regions show different tertiary structures, including residues 79-113, 208-224 (H-loop), and 341-364 (M-loop) in PDE4D2 or 535-566, 661-676, and 787-812 in PDE5A1, respectively. Because H- and M-loops are involved in binding of the selective inhibitors, the different conformations of the loops, thus the distinct shapes of the active sites, will be a determinant of inhibitor selectivity in PDEs. IBMX binds to a subpocket that comprises key residues Ile-336, Phe-340, Gln-369, and Phe-372 of PDE4D2 or Val-782, Phe-786, Gln-817, and Phe-820 of PDE5A1. This subpocket may be a common site for binding nonselective inhibitors of PDEs.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Pulmonary hypertension (PHT) is associated with increased vascular resistance due to sustained contraction and enhanced proliferation of pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMC); the abnormal tone and remodeling in the pulmonary vasculature may relate, at least in part, to decreased cyclic nucleotide levels. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs), of which 11 families have been identified, catalyze the hydrolysis of cAMP and cGMP. We tested the hypothesis that PASMC isolated from patients with PHT, either idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) or secondary pulmonary hypertension (SPH), have increased expression and activity of PDE isoforms that reduce the responsiveness of agents that raise cellular cAMP. Real-time PCR and immunoblotting demonstrated that the expression of PDE1A, PDE1C, PDE3B, and PDE5A was enhanced in PASMC from both IPAH and SPH patients compared with control PASMC. Consistent with this enhanced expression of PDEs, agonist-stimulated cAMP levels were significantly reduced in IPAH and SPH PASMC unless a PDE inhibitor was present. The use of specific PDE inhibitors revealed that an increase in PDE1 and PDE3 activity largely accounted for reduced agonist-induced cAMP levels and increased proliferation in IPAH and SPH PASMC. Treatment with PDE1C-targeted small interference RNA enhanced cAMP accumulation and inhibited cellular proliferation to a greater extent in PHT PASMC than controls. The results imply that an increase in PDE isoforms, in particular PDE1C, contributes to decreased cAMP and increased proliferation of PASMC in patients with PHT. PDE1 isoforms may provide novel targets for the treatment of both primary and secondary forms of the disease.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed an expression, refolding, and purification protocol for the catalytic domain of human Phosphodiesterase 3B (PDE3B). High level expression in Escherichia coli has been achieved with yields of up to 20mg/L. The catalytic domain of the enzyme was purified by affinity chromatography utilizing a novel affinity ligand. PDE3B, purified by affinity chromatography, with no single impurity #10878;1% as determined by SDS-PAGE, has a specific activity of 2210+/-442nmol/min/mg and a KM for cAMP of 44+/-4.5nM. Reducing the size of the expressed catalytic domain from residues 387-1112 to residues 654-1086 greatly reduced the aggregation phenomena observed with the affinity purified PDE3B. The definition of the N-terminus of the catalytic core was examined through the generation of several truncation mutants spanning amino acid residues 636-674. Constructs starting at E665 and M674 were fully active and devoid of activity, respectively. A construct starting at D668 had a Vmax reduced by approximately 10-fold relative to the longer constructs, yet the KM was not affected. This indicates the minimal N-terminus of the catalytic core lies between E665 and Y667. Refolding and affinity purification of the 654-1073 catalytic core of PDE3B has been employed to produce large quantities of highly pure enzyme for structural studies.  相似文献   

18.
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) catalyze the degradation of the cyclic nucleotides cAMP and cGMP, which are important second messengers. Five of the 11 mammalian PDE families have tandem GAF domains at their N termini. PDE10A may be the only mammalian PDE for which cAMP is the GAF domain ligand, and it may be allosterically stimulated by cAMP. PDE10A is highly expressed in striatal medium spiny neurons. Here we report the crystal structure of the C-terminal GAF domain (GAF-B) of human PDE10A complexed with cAMP at 2.1-angstroms resolution. The conformation of the PDE10A GAF-B domain monomer closely resembles those of the GAF domains of PDE2A and the cyanobacterium Anabaena cyaB2 adenylyl cyclase, except for the helical bundle consisting of alpha1, alpha2, and alpha5. The PDE10A GAF-B domain forms a dimer in the crystal and in solution. The dimerization is mainly mediated by hydrophobic interactions between the helical bundles in a parallel arrangement, with a large buried surface area. In the PDE10A GAF-B domain, cAMP tightly binds to a cNMP-binding pocket. The residues in the alpha3 and alpha4 helices, the beta6 strand, the loop between 3(10) and alpha4, and the loop between alpha4 and beta5 are involved in the recognition of the phosphate and ribose moieties. This recognition mode is similar to those of the GAF domains of PDE2A and cyaB2. In contrast, the adenine base is specifically recognized by the PDE10A GAF-B domain in a unique manner, through residues in the beta1 and beta2 strands.  相似文献   

19.
As cGMP hydrolyzing cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) have diverse regulatory and catalytic properties, the specific cGMP PDEs a cell expresses will determine the duration and intensity of a cGMP signal. This, in turn, results in different cellular responses between cell types and tissues. Therefore, identifying which cGMP PDEs are expressed in different tissues and cell types could increase our understanding of physiological and pathological processes. The brain is one area where large numbers of diverse cGMP PDEs are expressed in specific regions and cell types. A case in point is differential expression of cGMP PDEs in neuronal cells. For example, we have recently found that PDE5 is expressed in all Purkinje neurons while PDE1B is expressed in only a subset of these neurons. The expression of PDE2 has also been found to be selective for discrete populations of neurons. Another example of selective cGMP PDE expression is seen with cytokine-induced differentiation of monocytes to macrophages. We have recently discovered that monocyte differentiation with the cytokine macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) causes an upregulation of PDE2 and a small increase in PDE1B while granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) causes a large increase in PDE1B but a decrease in PDE2. These same cytokines can influence the phenotype of microglial cells and are likely to affect their expression of cGMP PDEs. In this report, we present recent results from our laboratory and review earlier findings illustrating the concept of highly specific expression of cGMP PDEs and discuss how this may be important for understanding brain function and dysfunction.  相似文献   

20.
As shown by transgenic mouse models and by using phosphodiesterase 3 (PDE3) inhibitors, PDE3B has an important role in the regulation of insulin secretion in pancreatic β-cells. However, very little is known about the regulation of the enzyme. Here, we show that PDE3B is activated in response to high glucose, insulin and cAMP elevation in rat pancreatic islets and INS-1 (832/13) cells. Activation by glucose was not affected by the presence of diazoxide. PDE3B activation was coupled to an increase as well as a decrease in total phosphorylation of the enzyme. In addition to PDE3B, several other PDEs were detected in human pancreatic islets: PDE1, PDE3, PDE4C, PDE7A, PDE8A and PDE10A. We conclude that PDE3B is activated in response to agents relevant for β-cell function and that activation is linked to increased as well as decreased phosphorylation of the enzyme. Moreover, we conclude that several PDEs are present in human pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

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