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Dive into the research topics where Cibele S. Pinto is active.

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Featured researches published by Cibele S. Pinto.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2011

Tolvaptan inhibits ERK-dependent cell proliferation, Cl− secretion, and in vitro cyst growth of human ADPKD cells stimulated by vasopressin

Gail A. Reif; Tamio Yamaguchi; Emily Nivens; Hiroyuki Fujiki; Cibele S. Pinto; Darren P. Wallace

In autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), arginine vasopressin (AVP) accelerates cyst growth by stimulating cAMP-dependent ERK activity and epithelial cell proliferation and by promoting Cl(-)-dependent fluid secretion. Tolvaptan, a V2 receptor antagonist, inhibits the renal effects of AVP and slows cyst growth in PKD animals. Here, we determined the effect of graded concentrations of tolvaptan on intracellular cAMP, ERK activity, cell proliferation, and transcellular Cl(-) secretion using human ADPKD cyst epithelial cells. Incubation of ADPKD cells with 10(-9) M AVP increased intracellular cAMP and stimulated ERK and cell proliferation. Tolvaptan caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of AVP-induced cAMP production with an apparent IC(50) of ∼10(-10) M. Correspondingly, tolvaptan inhibited AVP-induced ERK signaling and cell proliferation. Basolateral application of AVP to ADPKD cell monolayers grown on permeable supports caused a sustained increase in short-circuit current that was completely blocked by the Cl(-) channel blocker CFTR(inh-172), consistent with AVP-induced transepithelial Cl(-) secretion. Tolvaptan inhibited AVP-induced Cl(-) secretion and decreased in vitro cyst growth of ADPKD cells cultured within a three-dimensional collagen matrix. These data demonstrate that relatively low concentrations of tolvaptan inhibit AVP-stimulated cell proliferation and Cl(-)-dependent fluid secretion by human ADPKD cystic cells.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008

Activation and Inhibition of Adenylyl Cyclase Isoforms by Forskolin Analogs

Cibele S. Pinto; Dan Papa; Melanie Hübner; Tung-Chung Mou; Gerald H. Lushington; Roland Seifert

Adenylyl cyclase (AC) isoforms 1 to 9 are differentially expressed in tissues and constitute an interesting drug target. ACs 1 to 8 are activated by the diterpene, forskolin (FS). It is unfortunate that there is a paucity of AC isoform-selective activators. To develop such compounds, an understanding of the structure/activity relationships of diterpenes is necessary. Therefore, we examined the effects of FS and nine FS analogs on ACs 1, 2, and 5 expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda insect cells. Diterpenes showed the highest potencies at AC1 and the lowest potencies at AC2. We identified full agonists, partial agonists, antagonists, and inverse agonists, i.e., diterpenes that reduced basal AC activity. Each AC isoform exhibited a distinct pharmacological profile. AC2 showed the highest basal activity of all AC isoforms and highest sensitivity to inverse agonistic effects of 1-deoxy-forskolin, 7-deacetyl-1,9-dideoxy-forskolin, and, particularly, BODIPY-forskolin. In contrast, BODIPY-forskolin acted as partial agonist at the other ACs. 1-Deoxy-forskolin analogs were devoid of agonistic activity at ACs but antagonized the effects of FS in a mixed competitive/noncompetitive manner. At purified catalytic AC subunits, BODIPY-forskolin acted as weak partial agonist/strong partial antagonist. Molecular modeling revealed that the BODIPY group rotates promiscuously outside of the FS-binding site. Collectively, ACs are not uniformly activated and inhibited by FS and FS analogs, demonstrating the feasibility to design isoform-selective FS analogs. The two- and multiple-state models, originally developed to conceptualize ligand effects at G-protein-coupled receptors, can be applied to ACs to explain certain experimental data.


Kidney International | 2014

Periostin promotes renal cyst growth and interstitial fibrosis in polycystic kidney disease

Darren P. Wallace; Corey White; Lyudmyla Savinkova; Emily Nivens; Gail A. Reif; Cibele S. Pinto; Archana Raman; Stephen C. Parnell; Simon J. Conway; Timothy A. Fields

In renal cystic diseases, sustained enlargement of fluid-filled cysts is associated with severe interstitial fibrosis and progressive loss of functioning nephrons. Periostin, a matricellular protein, is highly overexpressed in cyst-lining epithelial cells of autosomal dominant polycystic disease kidneys (ADPKD) compared to normal tubule cells. Periostin accumulates in situ within the matrix subjacent to ADPKD cysts, binds to αVβ3- and αVβ5-integrins and stimulates the integrin-linked kinase to promote cell proliferation. We knocked out periostin (Postn) in pcy/pcy mice, an orthologous model of nephronophthisis type 3, to determine whether periostin loss reduces PKD progression in a slowly progressive model of renal cystic disease. At 20 weeks of age, pcy/pcy: Postn−/− mice had a 34% reduction in kidney weight/body weight, a reduction in cyst number and total cystic area, a 69% reduction in phosphorylated S6, a downstream component of the mTOR pathway, and fewer proliferating cells in the kidneys compared to pcy/pcy: Postn+/+ mice. The pcy/pcy Postn knockout mice also had less interstitial fibrosis with improved renal function at 20 weeks and significantly longer survival (51.4 compared to 38.0 weeks). Thus, periostin adversely modifies the progression of renal cystic disease by promoting cyst epithelial cell proliferation, cyst enlargement and interstitial fibrosis, all contributing to the decline in renal function and premature death.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2012

Calmodulin-sensitive adenylyl cyclases mediate AVP-dependent cAMP production and Cl− secretion by human autosomal dominant polycystic kidney cells

Cibele S. Pinto; Gail A. Reif; Emily Nivens; Corey White; Darren P. Wallace

In autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), binding of AVP to the V2 receptor (V2R) increases cAMP and accelerates cyst growth by stimulating cell proliferation and Cl(-)-dependent fluid secretion. Basal cAMP is elevated in human ADPKD cells compared with normal human kidney (NHK) cells. V2R mRNA levels are elevated in ADPKD cells; however, AVP caused a greater increase in global cAMP in NHK cells, suggesting an intrinsic difference in cAMP regulation. Expression, regulatory properties, and receptor coupling of specific adenylyl cyclases (ACs) provide temporal and spatial regulation of the cAMP signal. ADPKD and NHK cells express mRNAs for all nine ACs. Ca(2+)-inhibited ACs 5 and 6 are increased in ADPKD cells, while Ca(2+)/CaM-stimulated ACs 1 and 3 are downregulated. ACs 1, 3, 5, and 6 were detected in cyst cells in situ, and codistribution with aquaporin-2 suggests that these cysts were derived from collecting ducts. To determine the contribution of CaM-sensitive ACs to AVP signaling, cells were treated with W-7, a CaM inhibitor. W-7 decreased AVP-induced cAMP production and Cl(-) secretion by ADPKD cells. CaMKII inhibition increased AVP-induced cAMP, suggesting that cAMP synthesis is mediated by AC3. In contrast, CaM and CaMKII inhibition in NHK cells did not affect AVP-induced cAMP production. Restriction of intracellular Ca(2+) switched the response in NHK cells, such that CaM inhibition decreased AVP-induced cAMP production. We suggest that a compensatory response to decreased Ca(2+) in ADPKD cells switches V2R coupling from Ca(2+)-inhibited ACs 5/6 to Ca(2+)/CaM-stimulated AC3, to mitigate high cAMP levels in response to continuous AVP stimulation.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2006

Decreased GTP-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in HPRT-deficient human and mouse fibroblast and rat B103 neuroblastoma cell membranes

Cibele S. Pinto; Roland Seifert

Defect of the purine salvage enzyme, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT), results in Lesch–Nyhan disease (LND). It is unknown how the metabolic defect translates into the severe neuropsychiatric phenotype characterized by self‐injurious behavior, dystonia and mental retardation. There are abnormalities in GTP, UTP and CTP concentrations in HPRT‐deficient cells. Moreover, GTP, ITP, XTP, UTP and CTP differentially support Gs‐protein‐mediated adenylyl cyclase (AC) activation. Based on these findings we hypothesized that abnormal AC regulation may constitute the missing link between HPRT deficiency and the neuropsychiatric symptoms in LND. To test this hypothesis, we studied AC activity in membranes from primary human skin and immortalized mouse skin fibroblasts, mouse Neuro‐2a neuroblastoma cells and rat B103 neuroblastoma cells. In B103 control membranes, GTP, ITP, XTP and UTP exhibited profound stimulatory effects on basal AC activity that approached the effects of hydrolysis‐resistant nucleotide analogs. In HPRT– membranes, the stimulatory effects of GTP, ITP, XTP and UTP were strongly reduced. Similarly, in human and mouse skin fibroblast membranes we also observed a decrease in GTP‐stimulated AC activity in HPRT‐deficient cells compared with the respective controls. In mouse Neuro‐2a neuroblastoma membranes, AC activity in the presence of GTP was below the detection limit of the assay. We discuss several possibilities to explain the abnormalities in AC regulation in HPRT deficiency that encompass various species and cell types.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

Altered membrane NTPase activity in Lesch–Nyhan disease fibroblasts: comparison with HPRT knockout mice and HPRT-deficient cell lines

Cibele S. Pinto; H.A. Jinnah; Thomas L. Shirley; William L. Nyhan; Roland Seifert

Lesch–Nyhan disease (LND) is a rare disorder caused by a defect of an enzyme in the purine salvage pathway, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT). It is still unknown how the metabolic defect translates into the complex neuropsychiatric phenotype characterized by self‐injurious behavior, dystonia and mental retardation. There are abnormalities in purine and pyrimidine nucleotide content in HPRT‐deficient cells. We hypothesized that altered nucleotide concentrations in HPRT deficiency change G‐protein‐mediated signal transduction. Therefore, our original study aim was to examine the high‐affinity GTPase activity of G‐proteins in membranes from primary human skin and immortalized mouse skin fibroblasts, rat B103 neuroblastoma cells and mouse Neuro‐2a neuroblastoma cells. Unexpectedly, in membranes from human fibroblasts, B103‐ and Neuro‐2a cells, Vmax of low‐affinity nucleoside 5′‐triphosphatase (NTPase) activities was decreased up to 7‐fold in HPRT deficiency. In contrast, in membranes from mouse fibroblasts, HPRT deficiency increased NTPase activity up to 4‐fold. The various systems analyzed differed from each other in terms of Km values for NTPs, absolute Vmax values and Ki values for nucleoside 5′‐[β,γ‐imido]triphosphates. Our data show that altered membrane NTPase activity is a biochemical hallmark of HPRT deficiency, but species and cell‐type differences have to be considered. Thus, future studies on biochemical changes in LND should be conducted in parallel in several HPRT‐deficient systems.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2011

Structural Basis for the High-Affinity Inhibition of Mammalian Membranous Adenylyl Cyclase by 2',3'-O-(N-Methylanthraniloyl)-Inosine 5'-Triphosphate

Melanie Hübner; Anshuman Dixit; Tung Chung Mou; Gerald H. Lushington; Cibele S. Pinto; Andreas Gille; Jens Geduhn; Burkhard König; Stephen R. Sprang; Roland Seifert

2′,3′-O-(N-Methylanthraniloyl)-ITP (MANT-ITP) is the most potent inhibitor of mammalian membranous adenylyl cyclase (mAC) 5 (AC5, Ki, 1 nM) yet discovered and surpasses the potency of MANT-GTP by 55-fold (J Pharmacol Exp Ther 329:1156–1165, 2009). AC5 inhibitors may be valuable drugs for treatment of heart failure. The aim of this study was to elucidate the structural basis for the high-affinity inhibition of mAC by MANT-ITP. MANT-ITP was a considerably more potent inhibitor of the purified catalytic domains VC1 and IIC2 of mAC than MANT-GTP (Ki, 0.7 versus 18 nM). Moreover, there was considerably more efficient fluorescence resonance energy transfer between Trp1020 of IIC2 and the MANT group of MANT-ITP compared with MANT-GTP, indicating optimal interaction of the MANT group of MANT-ITP with the hydrophobic pocket. The crystal structure of MANT-ITP in complex with the Gsα- and forskolin-activated catalytic domains VC1:IIC2 compared with the existing MANT-GTP crystal structure revealed only subtle differences in binding mode. The higher affinity of MANT-ITP to mAC compared with MANT-GTP is probably due to fewer stereochemical constraints upon the nucleotide base in the purine binding pocket, allowing a stronger interaction with the hydrophobic regions of IIC2 domain, as assessed by fluorescence spectroscopy. Stronger interaction is also achieved in the phosphate-binding site. The triphosphate group of MANT-ITP exhibits better metal coordination than the triphosphate group of MANT-GTP, as confirmed by molecular dynamics simulations. Collectively, the subtle differences in ligand structure have profound effects on affinity for mAC.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2016

Phosphodiesterase Isoform Regulation of Cell Proliferation and Fluid Secretion in Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease

Cibele S. Pinto; Archana Raman; Gail A. Reif; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Corey White; James P. Calvet; Darren P. Wallace

cAMP stimulates cell proliferation and Cl(-)-dependent fluid secretion, promoting the progressive enlargement of renal cysts in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Intracellular cAMP levels are determined by the balance of cAMP synthesis by adenylyl cyclases and degradation by phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Therefore, PDE isoform expression and activity strongly influence global and compartmentalized cAMP levels. We report here that PDE3 and PDE4 expression levels are lower in human ADPKD tissue and cells compared with those of normal human kidneys (NHKs), whereas PDE1 levels are not significantly different. Inhibition of PDE4 caused a greater increase in basal and vasopressin (AVP)-stimulated cAMP levels and Cl(-) secretion by ADPKD cells than inhibition of PDE1, and inhibition of PDE4 induced cyst-like dilations in cultured mouse Pkd1(-/-) embryonic kidneys. In contrast, inhibition of PDE1 caused greater stimulation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and proliferation of ADPKD cells than inhibition of PDE4, and inhibition of PDE1 enhanced AVP-induced ERK activation. Notably, inhibition of PDE1, the only family of Ca(2+)-regulated PDEs, also induced a mitogenic response to AVP in NHK cells, similar to the effect of restricting intracellular Ca(2+). PDE1 coimmunoprecipitated with B-Raf and A-kinase anchoring protein 79, and AVP increased this interaction in ADPKD but not NHK cells. These data suggest that whereas PDE4 is the major PDE isoform involved in the regulation of global intracellular cAMP and Cl(-) secretion, PDE1 specifically affects the cAMP signal to the B-Raf/MEK/ERK pathway and regulates AVP-induced proliferation of ADPKD cells.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2009

Differential interactions of the catalytic subunits of adenylyl cyclase with forskolin analogs

Cibele S. Pinto; Melanie Hübner; Andreas Gille; Mark L. Richter; Tung Chung Mou; Stephen R. Sprang; Roland Seifert


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2011

Structure–activity relationships for the interactions of 2`- and 3`-(O)-(N-methyl)anthraniloyl-substituted purine and pyrimidine nucleotides with mammalian adenylyl cyclases

Cibele S. Pinto; Gerald H. Lushington; Mark L. Richter; Andreas Gille; Jens Geduhn; Burkhard König; Tung Chung Mou; Stephen R. Sprang; Roland Seifert

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Roland Seifert

University of Regensburg

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Jens Geduhn

University of Regensburg

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