Abstract

Under the total blockade of PDE1 and the presence of endogeneous ATP and MgCl2, the inhibitory effect of cAMP on HD activity could be demonstrated as low as 8.7 X 10(-8) M concentration in a 20,000 g supernatant of a sustained homogenate of rat hypothalamus. A total reverse of this action and also a partial release of the cAMP-induced inhibition of HD, occurred at higher concentrations of cAMP, and ATP could be achieved by an endogeneous inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase or by cyclic GMP. The reversal of cAMP action by PKI seems to serve a strong evidence for the role of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (EC 2.7.37: ATP-protein phosphotransferase) in this action and emphasized the involvement of a direct or an indirect phosphorylation in the regulation of HD activity. The stimulatory effect of cyclic GMP on cAMP-induced inhibition of HD or its 'direct' effect on histamine formation is asserted, probably through the activation of PDE, or through independent stimulatory machinery, coupled to the cyclic GMP system.

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