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Entity

Name
cellular calcium ion homeostasis
Namespace
go
Namespace Version
20180921
Namespace URL
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pharmacome/terminology/b46b65c3da259b6e86026514dfececab7c22a11b/external/go-names.belns

Appears in Networks 4

In-Edges 6

composite(a(CHEBI:"amyloid-beta"), complex(p(HGNC:CHRNA3), p(HGNC:CHRNB2))) increases bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

Short-term application of Abeta to the SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cell line results in a rapid increase in intracellular calcium ions that is dependent upon both alpha3beta2 and alpha7 nAChRs (Dajas-Bailador et al., 2002a) PubMed:19293145

act(p(HGNCGENEFAMILY:"Ryanodine receptors")) increases bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

It has been shown that the alpha7 receptors, but not the alpha3beta2 receptors, specifically trigger calcium release from intracellular stores by activating ryanodine receptors. Such a specific functional coupling of alpha7 receptors and ryanodine-sensitive stores may provide another site of therapeutic intervention. However, the sustained calcium rise seen in these cells upon prolonged nicotine administration, which is more likely to be of relevance to neuroprotection than short-term responses, is more dependent upon the activation of inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptors (Dajas-Bailador et al., 2002a), which are also a target for phosphorylation by FYN (Cui et al., 2004). PubMed:19293145

act(a(HBP:"alpha-4 beta-2 nAChR")) decreases bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

Arora et al. (2013) investigated, in a cellular system, the effect of prolonged Abeta exposure on nAChR function. The rodent neuroblastoma cell line NG108-15 was transfected with alpha4beta2 nAChRs and treated for three days with 100 nM Abeta. The following acute stimulation with Abeta and nicotine led to receptor activation that caused a perturbation of intracellular calcium homeostasis followed by mitochondrial dysfunction and increased oxidative stress (Arora et al., 2013) PubMed:25514383

p(HBP:"Tau isoform F (441 aa)", var("p.Lys280del")) causesNoChange bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

By contrast, there was no significant increase in the calcium level in cells treated with TauRDΔK monomers even at higher concentration (10 mM) (Fig. 5E and F, green curves). PubMed:28528849

p(HBP:"Tau oligomers", var("p.Lys280del")) increases bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

The ratio of 340 to 380 nm in TauRDΔK oligomer-treated cells showed a steady concentration-dependent increase in the intracellular calcium with a maximum reached at 20 minutes of incubation with oligomers (10 mM) occurring in all cell compartments (Fig. 5D; arrows). PubMed:28528849

p(HGNC:WFS1) regulates bp(GO:"cellular calcium ion homeostasis") View Subject | View Object

In the 3-month-old hippocampi (Figure 4B), we found significant sex-dependent changes for Adnp+/– gene regulation and NAP rescue in the following genes in male mice: (a) apolipoprotein E (Apoe), the lead gene for Alzheimer’s disease risk, which was shown before to be a major gene regulated by ADNP (10, 13); (b) Gm21949, which is suggested to play a role in calcium-mediated responses, action potential conduction in myelinated cells, and axonal outgrowth and guidance (6); (c) lipase A (Lipa), which is related to lipid metabolism and was previously shown to be regulated by the Adnp genotype in mice (3); (d) autism-associated neuroligin 2 (Nlgn2), a postsynaptic membrane cell adhesion protein that mediates the formation and maintenance of synapses between neurons (12); (e) paired box protein 6 (Pax6), a key regulator in glutamatergic neuronal differentiation (38) and cortical development (39), which was shown before by us to be regulated by ADNP (complete knockout of Adnp rendered Pax6 expression undetectable in the brain primordium, contrasting with increased expression in Adnp+/– embryos [ref. 1] and in subcortical brain domains of 2-month-old male Adnp+/– mice [ref. 3]); and (f) Wolframin endoplasmic reticulum transmembrane glycoprotein (Wfs1), which is associated with neurodegeneration and cellular calcium homeostasis regulation and was previously shown to be regulated by NAP (34). PubMed:30106381

Out-Edges 0

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If you find BEL Commons useful in your work, please consider citing: Hoyt, C. T., Domingo-Fernández, D., & Hofmann-Apitius, M. (2018). BEL Commons: an environment for exploration and analysis of networks encoded in Biological Expression Language. Database, 2018(3), 1–11.