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1.
Human platelets are defective in processing of cholera toxin.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Cholera toxin is unable to elevate cyclic AMP levels in intact human platelets despite being very efficacious in this respect in other mammalian cells; in the presence of 0.5 mM-isobutylmethylxanthine, we found that 3-6nM-cholera toxin over 3h at 37 degrees C elevated platelet cyclic AMP from 33 +/- 13 to 39 +/- 12pmol/mg of protein (means +/- S.D.; n = 12). We have investigated the basis for this lack of response. 125I-labelled cholera toxin bound to platelets both saturably and with high affinity (Kd congruent to 60pM; Bmax. congruent to 50fmol/mg of protein). Incubation of platelets with the putative cholera toxin receptor monosialoganglioside GM1 enhanced 125I-labelled cholera toxin binding at least 40-fold but facilitated only a minimal (less than or equal to 3-fold) elevation of platelet cyclic AMP levels. In contrast, dithiothreitol-activated cholera toxin markedly stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in platelet membranes. Platelet cytosol both enhanced stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity by activated cholera toxin (A1 subunit) and supported stimulation by the A1-A2 subunit of cholera toxin. Neither GTP nor NAD+, both necessary for response to cholera toxin, was lacking in intact platelets. However, we found that platelets were unable to cleave cholera toxin to the active A1 subunit (as assessed by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis). By contrast, murine S49 lymphoma cells were able to generate the A1 subunit with a time course that closely resembled the kinetics of toxin-mediated cyclic AMP accumulation in these cells. Thus we conclude that human platelets are defective in their ability to process surface-bound cholera toxin. These results indicate that binding of cholera toxin to surface receptors is necessary, but not sufficient, for expression of the toxin effect and the generation of the A1 subunit of the toxin may be rate-limiting for expression of cholera toxin response.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Cyclic AMP increased 8- to 10-fold after a 3-h treatment with 6 nM cholera toxin in rat C6-2B astrocytoma cells. In the presence of cycloheximide, cholera toxin increased intracellular cyclic AMP about 50-fold. Qualitatively similar potentiation of cholera toxin action by cycloheximide was observed in isolated swine aortic vascular smooth muscle cells. Cycloheximide, by itself, had no effect upon cyclic AMP levels and did not alter the apparent Ka for cyclic AMP generation by cholera toxin in the cells. Also, cycloheximide did not appear to augment cholera toxin action via inhibition of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. Puromycin and actinomycin D also augmented cholera toxin action in C6-2B cells. Potentiation of cholera toxin-increased cyclic AMP formation by cycloheximide was correlated with the inhibition of [14C]leucine incorporation into protein. These results indicate that the ability of cholera toxin to stimulate cyclic AMP production in C6-2B astrocytoma and swine vascular smooth muscle cells is enhanced by inhibition of de novo protein synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The use of the B subunit of cholera toxin, a protein that binds specifically to ganglioside GM1, has provided a new paradigm for studying physiological functions of ganglioside GM1. The B subunit inhibited the growth of rat glioma C6 cells that had been pretreated with ganglioside GM1. In some preparations of the B subunit, the inhibition was independent of adenylate cyclase activation and was due to the binding of the B subunit to ganglioside GM1 inserted onto the cell surface. However, in other preparations of the B subunit, there was an additional inhibitory effect due to small contaminations with the A subunit, which caused increases in intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels and concomitant growth inhibition. This vanishingly small contamination with the A subunit could not be detected by conventional protein sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis but could be measured utilizing a sensitive adenylate cyclase activation assay. Thus caution must be used to ensure that any biological effects of the B subunit are not due to contaminating A subunit and are due solely to the binding of the B subunit to ganglioside GM1 exposed on the cell surface. This is especially important in cyclic nucleotide-sensitive systems.  相似文献   

5.
Rat C6-2B astrocytoma cells responded to cholera toxin treatment with an 8-fold increase in intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. Cyclic AMP levels began to rise 60--90 minutes after addition of the toxin and reached maximal concentrations in 3 hours. Cells exposed to cholera toxin and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine (MIX), displayed an increase in cyclic AMP of 15-fold. The peak isoproterenol response was reduced 80--90% in cells previously treated with cholera toxin. Cholera toxin-induced refractoriness was time dependent and was not altered by concurrent treatment with propranolol. Prolonged exposure of the cells to isoproterenol reduced the cyclic AMP response to cholera toxin by 80%. MIX augmented both cholera toxin-induced refractoriness and isoproterenol-induced refractoriness. Cycloheximide inhibited the full development of refractoriness to both cholera toxin and isoproterenol. These results indicate that C6-2B cell refractoriness to cholera toxin is mediated by cyclic AMP and requires new protein synthesis. Refractoriness in C6-2B cells does not appear to be agonist-specific and probably involves a common locus of action on adenylate cyclase beyond that of the membrane receptors for cholera toxin and isoproterenol.  相似文献   

6.
S Spiegel 《Biochemistry》1985,24(21):5947-5952
A fluorescent derivative of ganglioside GM1 was prepared by oxidation of the sialic acid residue with sodium periodate and reaction of the resulting aldehyde with Lucifer yellow CH. The biological activity of the fluorescent derivative was compared with that of native GM1 using GM1-deficient rat glioma C6 cells. When the cells were exposed to either native or fluorescent GM1, their ability to bind 125I-labeled cholera toxin was increased to a similar extent. This increase in binding was directly proportional to the amount of ganglioside added to the medium. The affinity of the toxin for cells treated with either native or fluorescent GM1 also was similar. More importantly, the fluorescent GM1 was as effective as native GM1 in enhancing the responsiveness of the cells to cholera toxin. Thus, the ganglioside-treated cells exhibited a 9-fold increase in toxin-stimulated cyclic AMP production over cells not exposed to GM1. There was a similar increase in iodotoxin binding and toxin-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in cells treated with other GM1 derivatives containing rhodaminyl or dinitrophenyl groups. On the basis of these results, it is clear that these modified gangliosides retain the ability to function as receptors for cholera toxin. Consequently, fluorescent gangliosides are likely to be useful as probes for investigating the dynamics and function of these membrane components.  相似文献   

7.
The B subunit of cholera toxin, which is multivalent and binds specifically to GM1 ganglioside on the cell surface, has previously been used as a ganglioside-specific probe to regulate DNA synthesis in thymocytes and fibroblasts. To explore in more detail this growth-regulatory action of gangliosides, C6 glioma cells (which are GM1 ganglioside deficient) were used as a model system. When cultures of C6 cells were first treated with GM1, followed by exposure to the B subunit, proliferation was inhibited, as measured by 3H-labeled thymidine incorporation into DNA. Pretreatment of the cells with 50 microM GM1 for 15 min (followed by washing with fetal calf serum) and incubation with 1 microgram/ml of B subunit for 21 h was sufficient to reduce DNA synthesis to 15% of control values (and confirmed by autoradiographic analysis), although maximal inhibition could be achieved with as little as 30 min exposure to B, followed by washing. Furthermore, the B subunit inhibited the response of the C6 cells to basic fibroblast growth factor only following GM1 pretreatment. The B subunit-induced inhibition of DNA synthesis was specific for the ganglioside GM1, and was unrelated to increases of cyclic AMP. These results demonstrate that cell-incorporated GM1 ganglioside may act as a receptor capable of undergoing a specific ligand interaction, subsequently affecting molecular processes at the nuclear level.  相似文献   

8.
A competitive binding assay has been developed to determine how modifications to the B subunit of cholera toxin affect the binding affinity of the subunit for an ileal brush border membrane surface. The Ricinus communis120 agglutinin (RCA120) specifically binds to terminal beta-D-galactosyl residues such as those found in oligosaccharide side chains of glycoproteins and ganglioside GM1. Conditions were designed to produce binding competition between the B subunit of cholera toxin and the RCA120 agglutinin. Displacement of RCA120 from brush border surfaces was proportional to the concentration of B subunit added. This assay was used to study the effect of modification of B subunit on competitive binding affinity for the ileal brush border surface. The B subunit of cholera toxin was modified by coupling an average of five sulfhydryl groups to each B subunit molecule and by reaction of the SH-modified B subunit with liposomes containing a surface maleimide group attached to phosphatidylethanolamine. SH-modified B subunit was approximately 200-fold more effective than native B subunit in displacing lectin from brush border surfaces in the competitive binding assay. The enhanced binding activity was retained on covalent attachment of the modified B subunit to the liposome surface. We conclude that the B subunit of cholera toxin may be a useful targeting agent for directing liposomes to cell surfaces that contain a ganglioside GM1 ligand.  相似文献   

9.
Human colon adenocarcinoma cells (HT29-ATCC) and the clone HT29-5F7 were cultured under conditions that differentiate cells to a polarized intestinal phenotype. Differentiated cells showed the presence of junctional complexes and intercellular lumina bordered by microvilli. Intestinal brush border hydrolase activities (sucrase, aminopeptidase N, lactase and maltase) were detected mainly in differentiated HT29-ATCC cells compared with the differentiated clone, HT29-5F7. The presence of non-GM1 receptors of Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT-I) on both types of differentiated HT29 cells was indicated by the inability of cholera toxin B subunit to block LT-I binding to the cells. Binding of LT-I to cells, when GM1 was blocked by the cholera toxin B subunit, was characterized by an increased number of LT-I receptors with respect to undifferentiated control cells. Moreover, both types of differentiated cells accumulated higher amounts of cyclic AMP in response to LT-I than undifferentiated cells. Helix pomatia lectin inhibited the binding of LT-I to cells and the subsequent production of cyclic AMP. LT-I recognized blood group A-active glycosphingolipids as functional receptors in both HT29 cell lines and the active pro-sucrase form of the glycoprotein carrying A-blood group activity present in HT29-ATCC cells. These results strongly suggest that LT-I can elicit an enhanced functional response using blood group A-active glycoconjugates as additional receptors on polarized intestinal epithelial cells.  相似文献   

10.
Previous studies have demonstrated that catecholamine responsiveness in a variety of cells can be altered by inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis. The neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid, NG108-CC15, which lacks catecholamine-stimulated accumulation of cyclic AMP, was investigated to determine if the responsiveness to prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) could be modified by inhibitors of protein synthesis. Cycloheximide in a time-dependent manner potentiated the ability of prostaglandin E1 to stimulate accumulation of intracellular cyclic AMP. However, the alpha-adrenergic inhibition of the prostaglandin response was not affected by cycloheximide. Withdrawal of norepinephrine following a long-term incubation resulted in a potentiation of subsequent PGE1-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation. Cycloheximide enhanced this norepinephrine withdrawal effect. Our previous studies have shown that cholera toxin induces refractoriness to beta-adrenergic agonists in C6-2B rat astrocytoma cells and that cycloheximide blocked this action of cholera toxin. In an analogous manner cholera toxin caused refractoriness to subsequent prostaglandin-stimulated cyclic AMP production in NG108-CC15 cells, and cycloheximide reduced cholera toxin-induced prostaglandin refractoriness. Thus cycloheximide potentiates the prostaglandin stimulatory effect, has no effect on the ability of alpha-agonists to inhibit the prostaglandin response, increases the stimulatory effect of PGE1 after norepinephrine withdrawal, and reduces cholera toxin-induced PGE1 refractoriness. these observations suggest that PGE1-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in NG108-CC15 cells contains components which are regulated by de novo protein synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of ceramide composition on the rate of GM1 association to HeLa cells has been investigated by incubating the cells in the presence of either native ganglioside or molecular species carrying highly homogeneous long chain base moieties, fractionated from native GM1. The GM1 ganglioside species carrying the unsaturated C18 long chain base moiety proved to have the fastest rate of association, whereas the saturated species carrying 20 carbon atoms had the slowest rate. After having increased the GM1 cell content (65-fold) by incubation with the various ganglioside species, the cells were incubated with cholera toxin and the time course of cyclic AMP accumulation was monitored. Remarkable differences among cells enriched with the various molecular species were found in the duration of the lag time preceding the accumulation of cyclic AMP, the shortest being displayed by the unsaturated C18 species. Moreover, the amount of cyclic AMP accumulated after a given time of incubation with cholera toxin was significantly higher when the C18:1-GM1 species was present than with native GM1. Fluorescence anisotropy experiments, carried out using the probe 1,3-diphenylhexatriene, show that the GM1 ganglioside ceramide moiety was also modifying the cell membrane fluidity of the host.  相似文献   

12.
In quiescent rat thyroid (FRTL-5) cells, the B subunit of cholera toxin, which binds to cell surface ganglioside GM1 specifically, alone induced DNA synthesis and markedly enhanced that induced by insulin in serum-free medium. On the other hand, the B subunit inhibited DNA synthesis induced by thyrotropin (TSH). The B subunit did not activate adenylate cyclase and had no effect on the TSH-induced cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) production. Moreover, the B subunit inhibited DNA synthesis induced by dibutyryl cAMP (Bt2cAMP) or phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA). These data demonstrate that the B subunit has both stimulatory and inhibitory effects on DNA synthesis in FRTL-5 cells depending on the presence of other growth factors and that these effects on cell proliferation by the interaction of the B subunit, possibly with cell surface ganglioside GM1, may involve a mechanism independent from the modulation of membrane receptor function through interaction with growth factor receptor.  相似文献   

13.
Cholera toxin was found to induce high accumulations of cyclic AMP in the isolated choroid plexus of the rabbit and in the incubation medium. The accumulation showed a characteristic lag phase of at least 30 min and continued for at least 3 hours. Inactivated cholera toxin was unable to increase cyclic AMP levels. There was only a moderate effect of cholera toxin on cyclic AMP “low Km” phosphodiesterase activity in homogenates. The effect of cholera toxin on cyclic AMP levels confirms the existance of a potent cyclic AMP generating system in the choroid plexus which is activated also by β-adrenergic agonists, histamine and prostaglandin E1.  相似文献   

14.
B Goins  E Freire 《Biochemistry》1988,27(6):2046-2052
The thermal stability of cholera toxin free in solution and in association with its cell-surface receptor ganglioside GM1 has been studied by using high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry and differential solubility thermal gel analysis. In the absence of ganglioside GM1, cholera toxin undergoes two distinct thermally induced transitions centered at 51 and 74 degrees C, respectively. The low-temperature transition has been assigned to the irreversible thermal denaturation of the active A subunit. The second transition has been assigned to the reversible unfolding of the B subunit pentamer. The isolated B subunit pentamer exhibits a single transition also centered at 74 degrees C, suggesting that the attachment of the A subunit does not contribute to the stability of the pentamer. In the intact toxin, the A subunit dissociates from the B subunit pentamer at a temperature that coincides with the onset of the B subunit thermal unfolding. In aqueous solution, the denatured A subunit precipitates after dissociation from the B subunit pentamer. This phenomenon can be detected calorimetrically by the appearance of an exothermic heat effect. In the presence of ganglioside GM1, the B subunit is greatly stabilized as indicated by an increase of 20 degrees C in the transition temperature. In addition, ganglioside GM1 greatly enhances the cooperative interactions between B subunits. In the absence of ganglioside, each monomer within the B pentamer unfolds in an independent fashion whereas the fully ganglioside-bound pentamer behaves as a single cooperative unit. On the contrary, the thermotropic behavior of the A subunit is only slightly affected by the presence of increasing concentrations of ganglioside GM1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Cholera toxin (1–10 μg/ml) had a biphasic inotropic action on the isolated canine ventricular muscle: it produced a transient negative and a long lasting positive inotropic effect. The negative effect reached a maximum 43 + 2 min (n = 12) after administration of the toxin, while it took 3–5 hrs for the positive effect to reach a steady level. The positive inotropic effect of cholera toxin was accompanied by a prominent abbreviation of the time to peak tension and the relaxation time of individual contractions. The level of adenosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) of the tissue was elevated by cholera toxin in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Carbachol (1 μmol/l) administered 3 or 5 hrs after the administration of cholera toxin (10 μg/ml) reversed the increase in force of contraction and the elevation of cyclic AMP levels induced by cholera toxin. These results indicate that cholera toxin exerts a cyclic AMP-dependent positive inotropic effect and a negative inotropic effect which is not related to cyclic AMP levels in canine ventricular myocardium.  相似文献   

16.
A cholera toxin substrate regulates cyclic GMP content of rat pinealocytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The adrenergic regulation of cyclic GMP in isolated pinealocytes was investigated. In this cell, norepinephrine stimulates cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP greater than 100-fold by activating both alpha 1- and beta-adrenoceptors. beta-Adrenergic activation is a requisite event and is potentiated by alpha 1-adrenergic activation (Vanecek, J., Sugden, D., Weller, J. L., and Klein, D. C. (1985) Endocrinology 116, 2167-2173). The current study found that cholera toxin could substitute for beta-adrenergic agonists in stimulating pinealocyte cyclic GMP content, as has been found to be the case for cyclic AMP. Treatment with cholera toxin alone (1 microgram/ml for 90 min) had a small effect (2- to 4-fold increase) on cyclic GMP; addition of the alpha 1-adrenergic agonists, phenylephrine, cirazoline, or methoxamine to cholera toxin-treated cells rapidly (peak at 5 min) caused a further 30- to 300-fold increase. The alpha 1-adrenergic agonists had little effect by themselves at concentrations which potentiated the effects of cholera toxin. The potentiating effect of phenylephrine was inhibited nearly completely by an alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist, but not by either an alpha 2- or beta-adrenergic antagonist. The purified cholera toxin subunits A and B did not stimulate cyclic GMP either alone or in the presence of phenylephrine. Furthermore, the potentiating action of phenylephrine was observed following 90 min but not 20 min of cholera toxin pretreatment. these results suggest that the regulation of cyclic GMP levels in the pineal gland involves an Ns-like GTP-binding regulatory protein. This is of interest because it is the first indication that cyclic GMP is regulated by such a GTP-binding protein in nonretinal tissue. It remains to be determined whether the mechanisms involved in the transmembrane regulation of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP in any other tissue are similar.  相似文献   

17.
We have studied the effect of cholera toxin on the constrictor responses of the isolated, perfused rabbit ear artery to nerve stimulation and to norepinephrine infusion. We found that when we perfussed arteries with cholera toxin (1–9 μg/ml) for five minutes or longer, the toxin gradually inhibited the responses to intermittent stimulation of the adrenergic nerves and to brief infusion of norepinephrine. The constrictor responses began to decrease between one and two hours after we added cholera toxin, and the responses were still depressed after 24 hours. Cholera toxin inhibited both the rapid, initial phase and the slower, sustained phase of the biphasic response of the ear artery to nerve stimulation. Propranolol and indomethacin did not block the effect of cholera toxin on vasoconstriction. However, when we mixed the toxin with antitoxin or GM1 ganglioside, we prevented the inhibitory effect on vasoconstriction. Levels of adenosine 3′:5′-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) in arteries treated with cholera toxin were greater than levels of cyclic AMP in untreated arteries. The cyclic AMP content increased and the constrictor responses decreased with a similar time course after the arteries were exposed to the toxin. Thus an increase in cyclic AMP may be involved in the relaxation of vascular smooth muscle induced by cholera toxin.  相似文献   

18.
Incubation of L6 skeletal myoblasts for 16 h with cholera toxin but not with pertussis toxin, led to the inhibition of inositol phosphate generation induced by subsequent exposure to vasopressin. The effects of the toxin on inositol lipid metabolism were accompanied by the total ADP-ribosylation of the available cholera-toxin substrates within the cells. Immunological analysis demonstrated that the two polypeptides modified in vivo by cholera toxin were different forms of Gs alpha (alpha subunit of Gs). No novel cholera-toxin substrate(s) were detected. The cholera-toxin-mediated inhibition of vasopressin-stimulated inositol phosphate generation could be mimicked by both forskolin and dibutyryl cyclic AMP, but not by the separated subunits of the toxin. Receptor-binding studies demonstrated that the inhibition of agonist-stimulated inositol phosphate generation was accompanied by a decrease in cell-surface vasopressin-binding sites, with no effect on the affinity of these for the hormone. We suggest that the effect of cholera toxin and agents which increase intracellular cyclic AMP on vasopressin-stimulated inositol lipid hydrolysis is an effect on receptor number, and that there is no requirement to postulate a role for a novel G-protein, which is a substrate for cholera toxin, in the regulation of inositol phospholipid metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
The acidic glycosphingolipid, ganglioside GM1, which is the binding site for cholera toxin on many cell types, was identified by chemical and by flow cytometric analyses of mouse interleukin 3-dependent, bone marrow culture-derived mast cells (BMMC). Ganglioside GM1 and other acidic glycosphingolipids were isolated from BMMC by chloroform/methanol extraction and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex and were analyzed by thin layer chromatography. The presence of ganglioside GM1 in the BMMC extract was demonstrated by its co-migration with ganglioside GM1 standard in thin layer chromatography and by the binding of peroxidase-labeled cholera toxin B subunit to both molecules. As assessed by fluorescence flow cytometric analysis of the binding of fluorescein-conjugated cholera toxin B subunit, the majority of BMMC expressed ganglioside GM1 on their surface, and the total presentation per cell increased as cells progressed from the G1 to S to G2 + M phases of the cell cycle. The addition of increasing amounts of cholera toxin starting with 0.08 microgram/ml to BMMC cultured in 50% WEHI 3-conditioned medium containing IL 3 for 48 hr caused the adhesion of BMMC to the tissue culture flasks to increase in a dose-related manner, from less than 1% adherent cells in cultures without toxin to a plateau value of approximately 17% adherent in the presence of 1.25 micrograms/ml of toxin. The histamine content of BMMC increased from 26.7 +/- 3.59 ng/10(6) cells (mean +/- SD, n = 4) for control cultures to 201 +/- 17.4 ng/10(6) cells (mean +/- SD, n = 4) for nonadherent cells and to 588 +/- 89.4 ng/10(6) cells (mean +/- SD, n = 4) for adherent cells after 48 hr of culture in 0.31 microgram/ml cholera toxin, which was the optimal dose for nonadherent and adherent populations. The content of another preformed intragranular mediator, beta-hexosaminidase, did not increase appreciably in the presence of cholera toxin (n = 3). The increase in the histamine content of BMMC after the addition of 0.31 microgram/ml cholera toxin was detectable at 4 hr, plateaued by 24 to 48 hr, and gradually declined over the next 6 days. Cholera toxin also augmented the histamine content of BMMC in the presence of purified synthetic IL 3. Preincubation of whole cholera toxin with purified ganglioside GM1 inhibited the histamine-augmenting effects of cholera toxin on BMMC, indicating that the effect was not due to a contaminant, and neither the A nor B subunit of cholera toxin alone increased the histamine content of BMMC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Cholera toxin activated beef thyroid cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase in a dose (0.2 to 8 microgram/ml)-related fashion. Thus, when beef thyroid slices were incubated with toxin (8 microgram/ml) for 90 minutes and then assayed for protein kinase, the activity ratio (i.e. -cyclic AMP/+cyclic AMP) increased from 0.32 +/- 0.02 to 0.77 +/- 0.06. The toxin (5 microgram/ml)-induced increase was abolished by inclusion of ganglioside GM1 in the incubation medium (I50, 0.7 microgram/ml), whereas, gangliosides GD1a and GT1 were without effect. In contrast, TSH-activated protein kinase was unaffected by ganglioside addition. Cholera toxin increased rat thyroid ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity in-vitro in a dose (0.1 to 10 microgram/ml)-related fashion [basal, 100 cf cholera toxin (10 microgram/ml), 1500 pmol 14CO2/g tissue/30 min]. The toxin (1 microgram/ml)- (but not TSH-) induced increase in ODC was abolished by inclusion of ganglioside Ga and GT1 were without effect. Cholera toxin stimulation of ODC was inhibited by indomethacin or iodide as are the stimulatory effects of TSH or dibutyryl cyclic AMP. These results demonstrate that although there are differences in the TSH and cholera toxin responses with respect to receptor (ganglioside) interaction, they nevertheless elicit similar intracellular responses in thyroid.  相似文献   

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