Literature DB >> 19076358

Discovery of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide-regulated genes through microarray analyses in cell culture and in vivo.

Lee E Eiden1, Babru Samal, Matthew J Gerdin, Tomris Mustafa, David Vaudry, Nikolas Stroth.   

Abstract

Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is an evolutionarily well conserved neuropeptide with multiple functions in the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems. PACAP provides neuroprotection from ischemia and toxin exposure, is anti-inflammatory in gastric inflammatory disease and sepsis, controls proliferative signaling pathways involved in neural cell transformation, and modulates glucohomeostasis. PACAP-based, disease-targeted therapeutics might thus be both effective and benign, enhancing homeostatic responses to behavioral, metabolic, oncogenic, and inflammatory stressors. PACAP signal transduction employs synergistic regulation of calcium and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), and noncanonical activation of both calcium- and cAMP-dependent processes. Pharmacological activation of PACAP signaling should consequently have highly specific effects even in vivo. Here, a combined cellular biochemical, pharmacologic, transcriptomic, and bioinformatic approach to understanding PACAP signal transduction by identifying PACAP target genes with oligonucleotide- and cDNA-based microarray is described. Calcium- and cAMP-dependent PACAP signaling pathways for regulation of genes encoding proteins required for neuritogenesis, changes in cell morphology, and cell survival have been traced in PC12 cells. Pharmacological experiments have linked gene expression to cell physiological responses in this system, in which gene silencing can also be employed to confirm the functional significance of induction of specific transcripts. Differential transcriptional responses to metabolic, ischemic, and other stressors in wild type compared to PACAP-deficient mice establish in principle which PACAP-responsive transcripts in culture are PACAP-dependent in vivo. Bioinformatic approaches aid in creating a pipeline for identifying neuropeptide-regulated genes, validating their cellular functions, and defining their expression in the context of neuropeptide signaling physiology, required for discovery of new targets for drug action.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19076358      PMCID: PMC2933652          DOI: 10.1196/annals.1418.019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  56 in total

Review 1.  Neuropeptides: opportunities for drug discovery.

Authors:  Tomas Hökfelt; Tamas Bartfai; Floyd Bloom
Journal:  Lancet Neurol       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 44.182

2.  Transsynaptic regulation of galanin, neurotensin, and substance P in the adrenal medulla: combinatorial control by second-messenger signaling pathways.

Authors:  R Fischer-Colbrie; R L Eskay; L E Eiden; D Maas
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  1992-08       Impact factor: 5.372

3.  PRG1: a novel early-response gene transcriptionally induced by pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide in a pancreatic carcinoma cell line.

Authors:  H Schäfer; A Trauzold; E G Siegel; U R Fölsch; W E Schmidt
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1996-06-01       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Pituitary adenylate-cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) evokes long-lasting secretion and de novo biosynthesis of bovine adrenal medullary neuropeptides.

Authors:  K Babinski; V Bodart; M Roy; A De Léan; H Ong
Journal:  Neuropeptides       Date:  1996-12       Impact factor: 3.286

5.  Glucocorticoid- and nerve growth factor-induced changes in chromogranin A expression define two different neuronal phenotypes in PC12 cells.

Authors:  D M Rausch; A L Iacangelo; L E Eiden
Journal:  Mol Endocrinol       Date:  1988-10

6.  Expression of depolarization-induced immediate early gene proteins in PC12 cells.

Authors:  Wei Liu; Jonathan D Feldman; Hidevaldo B Machado; Linda J Vician; Harvey R Herschman
Journal:  J Neurosci Res       Date:  2003-06-15       Impact factor: 4.164

7.  Impaired long-term potentiation in vivo in the dentate gyrus of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) or PACAP type 1 receptor-mutant mice.

Authors:  Shogo Matsuyama; Akira Matsumoto; Hitoshi Hashimoto; Norihito Shintani; Akemichi Baba
Journal:  Neuroreport       Date:  2003-11-14       Impact factor: 1.837

8.  The 38-amino acid form of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide stimulates dual signaling cascades in PC12 cells and promotes neurite outgrowth.

Authors:  P J Deutsch; Y Sun
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1992-03-15       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Selective deficits in the circadian light response in mice lacking PACAP.

Authors:  C S Colwell; S Michel; J Itri; W Rodriguez; J Tam; V Lelièvre; Z Hu; J A Waschek
Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol       Date:  2004-06-24       Impact factor: 3.619

Review 10.  Gene expression changes after focal stroke, traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries.

Authors:  S Thomas Carmichael
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurol       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 5.710

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  14 in total

1.  Acute Response of the Hippocampal Transcriptome Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury After Controlled Cortical Impact in the Rat.

Authors:  Babru B Samal; Cameron K Waites; Camila Almeida-Suhett; Zheng Li; Ann M Marini; Nihar R Samal; Abdel Elkahloun; Maria F M Braga; Lee E Eiden
Journal:  J Mol Neurosci       Date:  2015-08-29       Impact factor: 3.444

2.  RANTES release contributes to the protective action of PACAP38 against sodium nitroprusside in cortical neurons.

Authors:  Alma Sanchez; Debjani Tripathy; Paula Grammas
Journal:  Neuropeptides       Date:  2009-06-03       Impact factor: 3.286

3.  PACAP Protects the Adolescent and Adult Mice Brain from Ethanol Toxicity and Modulates Distinct Sets of Genes Regulating Similar Networks.

Authors:  Hélène Lacaille; Dominique Duterte-Boucher; Hubert Vaudry; Yasmine Zerdoumi; Jean-Michel Flaman; Hitoshi Hashimoto; David Vaudry
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2016-11-08       Impact factor: 5.590

4.  Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide controls stimulus-transcription coupling in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis to mediate sustained hormone secretion during stress.

Authors:  N Stroth; Y Liu; G Aguilera; L E Eiden
Journal:  J Neuroendocrinol       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 3.627

5.  PAC1hop, null and hip receptors mediate differential signaling through cyclic AMP and calcium leading to splice variant-specific gene induction in neural cells.

Authors:  Yvonne Holighaus; Tomris Mustafa; Lee E Eiden
Journal:  Peptides       Date:  2011-06-12       Impact factor: 3.750

6.  Neuropeptides, growth factors, and cytokines: a cohort of informational molecules whose expression is up-regulated by the stress-associated slow transmitter PACAP in chromaffin cells.

Authors:  Djida Ait-Ali; Babru Samal; Tomris Mustafa; Lee E Eiden
Journal:  Cell Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2010-11-24       Impact factor: 5.046

Review 7.  PACAP: a master regulator of neuroendocrine stress circuits and the cellular stress response.

Authors:  Nikolas Stroth; Yvonne Holighaus; Djida Ait-Ali; Lee E Eiden
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 5.691

8.  VIP, CRF, and PACAP act at distinct receptors to elicit different cAMP/PKA dynamics in the neocortex.

Authors:  Emilie Hu; Lynda Demmou; Bruno Cauli; Thierry Gallopin; Hélène Geoffroy; Ronald M Harris-Warrick; Danièle Paupardin-Tritsch; Bertrand Lambolez; Pierre Vincent; Régine Hepp
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2010-08-09       Impact factor: 5.357

Review 9.  Regulating the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway via cAMP-signaling: neuroprotective potential.

Authors:  He Huang; Hu Wang; Maria E Figueiredo-Pereira
Journal:  Cell Biochem Biophys       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 2.194

10.  Discrete signal transduction pathway utilization by a neuropeptide (PACAP) and a cytokine (TNF-alpha) first messenger in chromaffin cells, inferred from coupled transcriptome-promoter analysis of regulated gene cohorts.

Authors:  Babru Samal; Djida Ait-Ali; Stephen Bunn; Tomris Mustafa; Lee E Eiden
Journal:  Peptides       Date:  2013-04-19       Impact factor: 3.750

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