Membranes prepared from postmortem human brain were used to measure the activities of three components of the phosphoinositide second messenger system. [3H]Phosphatidylinositol ([3H]PI) hydrolysis was stimulated by directly activating phospholipase C with calcium, by activating guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins) with guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) or with AIF4, and by receptors activated with several agonists (in the presence of GTP gamma S), including (in order of increasing magnitudes of responses) carbachol, pilocarpine, histamine, trans-1-aminocyclopentyl-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (a selective excitatory amino acid metabotropic receptor agonist), serotonin, and ATP. Gq/11 was identified as the G protein most likely to mediate [3H]PI hydrolysis in human brain membranes based on the findings that this process was not impaired by pretreatment with pertussis toxin and it was inhibited by antibodies specific for the alpha-subunit of Gq/11 but not by antibodies for G0 or Gi1. The effects of postmortem delay on [3H]PI hydrolysis were examined by studying tissues obtained 6-21 h postmortem. A slight increase in basal [3H]PI hydrolysis was associated with increased postmortem time, suggesting a slow loss of the normal inhibitory control of phospholipase C. GTP gamma S-stimulated [3H]PI hydrolysis was unaffected by postmortem times within this range, but carbachol-induced [3H]PI hydrolysis tended to decrease with increasing postmortem times. These results demonstrate that the entire phosphoinositide complex remains functional and experimentally detectable in postmortem human brain membranes. This method provides a means to study the function, regulation, effects of diseases, and responses to drugs of the phosphoinositide system in human brain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.1994.62010180.x | DOI Listing |
Brain Res
March 1999
Neuroscience Department, Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, IN 46285, USA.
The present report describes the effect of mGluR agonists and antagonists administration on phospholipase C activation by measuring accumulation of [3H] inositol monophosphates (IP) in rats pre-labeled with [3H]myo-inositol (i.c.v.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
August 1998
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, E25-604, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Induction of neurite outgrowth by treating pheochromocytoma cells (PC12 cells) with nerve growth factor (NGF) is associated with major increases in cellular levels of diacylglycerol (DAG), an essential and probably limiting precursor in phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) syntheses. To identify the sources of this DAG we examined the effects of NGF treatment on the conversion of [3H]oleic acid (OA) or [3H]glycerol to [3H]glycerolipids, and the turnover of these products in PC12 cells. In kinetic studies on [3H]OA incorporation, most of the radioactivity in the cells initially was free [3H]OA; then it appeared predominantly as [3H]DAG and, eventually, as large amounts of [3H]phospholipids (PLs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurochem
June 1996
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294-0017, USA.
The function of the phosphoinositide second messenger system was assessed in occipital, temporal, and frontal cortex obtained postmortem from subjects with bipolar affective disorder and matched controls by measuring the hydrolysis of [3H]phosphatidylinositol ([3H]PI) incubated with membrane preparations and several different stimulatory agents. Phospholipase C activity, measured in the presence of 0.1 mM Ca2+ to stimulate the enzyme, was not different in bipolar and control samples.
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