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1.
There is broad species variation in the type of cAMP-dependent protein kinase isozyme present in supernatant fractions of heart homogenates as determined by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, Isozyme I, which elutes at less than 0.1 M NaCl, is predominant in mouse and rat hearts; while isozyme II, which elutes at greater than 0.1 M NaCl, is the predominant type in beef and guinea pig. Human and rabbit hearts contain about equal amounts of the two types. The type I heart kinases are more easily dissociated into free regulatory and catalytic subunits by incubation with histone than are the type II kinases, and the separated regulatory and catalytic subunits of isozyme II of rat heart reassociate more rapidly than the subunits of isozyme I under the conditions used. The data from several experiments using rat heart indicate that the basal activity ratio of the protein kinase in crude extracts (approximately 0.15) is due mainly to basal endogenous cAMP and that cAMP elevation accounts entirely for the epinephrine effect on the enzyme. Addition of epinephrine and 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine to the perfusate causes a rapid (1 min) increase in cAMP, active supernatant protein kinase, and active phosphorylase in perfused hearts of both rat (mainly isozyme I) and guinea pig (mainly isozyme II). The elevation percentage in cAMP is about the same in the two species, but the increase in active protein kinase is greater in rat heart. If hearts from either animal are perfused continually (10 min) with epinephrine (0.8 muM) and 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine (10 muM), the cAMP level, active protein kinase, and active phosphorylase remain elevated. Likewise, all parameters return rapidly to the basal levels when epinephrine and 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthin are removed. Most of the epinephrine effect on the rat heart supernatant kinase is retained at 0 degrees if cAMP is removed by Sephadex G-25 chromatography, although this procedure completely reverses the epinephrine effect in the guinea pig heart. The epinephrine effect on the rabbit heart kinase (approximately equal amounts of isozymes I and II) is partially reversed by Sephadex G-25. These species differences can be accounted for by differences in association-dissociation behavior of the isozymes in vitro. The data suggest that epinephrine causes activation of both isozymes. The activity present in the particulate fraction comprises nearly half of the total cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity in homogenates of rabbit heart. Triton X-100 extracts of low speed particulate fractions from hearts of each species tested, including rat heart, contain predominantly or entirely the type II isozyme, suggesting differences in intracellular distribution of the isozymes. The binding of the protein kinase to the particulate fraction is apparently due to the properties of the regulatory subunit component. Differences in topographical distribution of the isozymes could provide for differences in either physiological regulation or substrate specificity.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The cytosol fraction from rat midbrain was chromatographed on DEAE-cellulose with a linear NaCl gradient (0–0.3 M). Two peaks of protein kinase activity were obtained when assayed with either historic or casein. A similar elution profile of the kinase activity was obtained from rat heart. The first peaks from midbrain and heart were compared in terms of their dependency upon cAMP and sensitivity to the endogenous protein kinase inhibitor. Neither of the two substances had an effect on the activity of the brain kinase. Furthermore, the dissociability of the midbrain and heart enzymes in the presence of cAMP or histone was compared by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The heart enzyme was dissociated into a catalytic subunit characteristic of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase, whereas the brain kinase was totally unaffected by the cAMP or histone. The results of these tests indicate that although the elution profiles from DEAE-cellulose are similar between midbrain and heart, the first peak from brain contains a protein kinase that appears to be cAMP independent.  相似文献   

3.
A cAMP dependent protein kinase was extracted from human erythrocyte membrane with hydrosoluble fraction and partially purified by ammonium sulfate-precipitation and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The pH of optimal activity is 6.5; the enzyme has an absolute requirement of Mg2+ ions at the concentration of 10 mM and is strongly inhibited by Ca2+. It uses ATP as phosphate donor with a Km of 3.7 × 10?6 M. Cyclic AMP stimulates the activity with an apparent Ka of 5 × 10?8 M; cIMP and cGMP also acts as activators. Enzyme activity is thermolabile and not protected by Mg ATP complex. The enzyme purified from erythrocyte membrane is a type I protein-kinase as proven by DEAE cellulose chromatography and dissociation of the subunits in presence of NaCl 0.5 M and histone.  相似文献   

4.
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase from human erythrocyte plasma membranes was solubilized with Triton X-100, partially purified, and systematically characterized by a series of physicochemical studies. Sedimentation and gel filtration experiments showed that the 6.6 S holoenzyme had a Stokes radius (a) of 5.7 nm and was dissociated into native 4.8 S cAMP-binding (a = 4.5 nm) and 3.2 S catalytic (a = 2.6 nm) subunits. A minimum subunit molecular weight of 48,000 was established for the regulatory subunit by photoaffinity labeling with 8-azido[32P]cAMP, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and autoradiography. These data suggest an asymmetric tetrameric (R2C2) structure (Mr approximately equal to 160,000) for the membrane-derived enzyme. Membrane-derived protein kinase was characterized as a type I enzyme on the basis of its R subunit molecular weight, pI values (R, 4.9; holoenzyme, 5.75 and 5.95), dissociation by 0.5 M NaCl and 50 microgram/ml of protamine, 20-fold reduced affinity for cAMP in the presence of 0.3 mM MgATP, elution from DEAE-cellulose at low ionic strength, and kinetic and cAMP-binding properties. The physicochemical properties of the membrane protein kinase closely parallel the characteristics of erythrocyte cytosolic protein kinase I but are clearly dissimilar from those of the soluble type II enzyme. Moreover, regulatory subunits of the membrane-associated and cytosolic type I kinases were indistinguishable in size, shape, subunit molecular weight, charge, binding and reassociation properties, and peptide maps of the photoaffinity-labeled cAMP-binding site, suggesting a high degree of structural and functional homology in this pair of enzymes. In view of the predominant occurrence of particulate type II protein kinases in rabbit heart and bovine cerebral cortex, the present results suggest that the distribution of membrane-associated protein kinases may be tissue- or species-specific, but not isoenzyme-specific.  相似文献   

5.
Cyclic nucleotide dependent protein kinase has been extracted wiht Tris or Lubrol PX from purified rod outer segments (ROS) of bovine retina. The activity of the enzyme is unaffected by light but is stimulated by either cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP) or cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP). Most of the solubilized enzyme elutes from DEAE-cellulose with about 0.18 M NaCl (type II protein kinase). An endogenous 30,000 molecular weight protein of the soluble fraction of ROS as well as exogenous histone are phosphorylated by the protein kinase in a cyclic nucleotide dependent manner. The Tris-extracted enzyme can be reassociated in the presence of Mg2+ with ROS membranes that are depleted of protein kinase activity. The reassociated protein kinase is insensitive to exogenous cyclic nucleotides, and it catalyzes the phosphorylation of the membrane protein, bleached rhodopsin. While the soluble and membrane-associated protein kinases may be interchangeable, they appear to be modulated by different biological signals; soluble protein kinase activity is increased by cyclic nucleotides whereas membrane-bound activity is enhanced when rhodopsin is bleached by light.  相似文献   

6.
The types and subunit composition of cAMP-dependent protein kinases in soluble rat ovarian extracts were investigated. Results demonstrated that three peaks of cAMP-dependent kinase activity could be resolved using DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Based on the sedimentation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and regulatory subunits using sucrose density gradient centrifugation, identification of 8-N3[32P]cAMP labeled RI and RII in DEAE-cellulose column and sucrose gradient fractions by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and Scatchard analysis of the cAMP-stimulated activation of the eluted peaks of kinase activity, the following conclusions were drawn regarding the composition of the three peaks of cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity: peak 1, eluting with less than or equal to 0.05 M potassium phosphate, consisted of the type I form of cAMP-dependent protein kinase; peak 2, eluting with 0.065-0.11 M potassium phosphate, consisted of free RI and a type II tetrameric holoenzyme; peak 3, eluting with 0.125 M potassium phosphate, consisted of an apparent RIIC trimer, followed by the elution with 0.15 M potassium phosphate of free RII. The regulatory subunits were confirmed as authentic RI and RII based upon their molecular weights and autophosphorylation characteristics. The more basic elution of the type II holoenzyme with free RI was not attributable to the ionic properties of the regulatory subunits, based upon the isoelectric points of photolabeled RI and RII and upon the elution location from DEAE-cellulose of RI and RII on dissociation from their respective holoenzymes by cAMP. This is the first report of a type II holoenzyme eluting in low salt fractions with free RI, and of the presence of an apparent RIIC trimer in a soluble tissue extract.  相似文献   

7.
The properties of the cAMP-dependent protein kinases in AtT20 mouse pituitary tumor cells were characterized by a combination of immunological and biochemical techniques. Ninety per cent of the total cAMP-dependent protein kinase was in the 40,000 X g supernatant fraction. Protein kinases I and II were immunoprecipitated with specific antisera directed against their regulatory subunits. The immunoprecipitated kinases bound [3H]cAMP and were catalytically active when incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP-Mg and protamine or histone H2B. Immunoprecipitated protein kinases I and II bound [3H]cAMP with apparent Kb values of 1.5 and 15 nM, respectively. Regulatory subunit concentrations in AtT20 cells were measured by immunoprecipitation of [3H]cAMP-R complexes. R-I and R-II levels were 2.7 and 3.0 pmol of [3H]cAMP binding activity per mg of cytosolic protein, respectively, however, the ratio of protein kinase II to protein kinase I was 2.5 indicating the presence of a significant amount of free R-I. This was confirmed by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and the isolation of immunoreactive R-I devoid of protein kinase activity. A significant amount of R-I also coeluted with protein kinase II when AtT20 cell extracts were subjected to DEAE-cellulose chromatography. In quantitative immunoprecipitation experiments, 0.1 microliter of anti-brain R-II serum complexed up to 0.5 pmol of the [3H]cAMP-binding activity of protein kinase II prepared from bovine and rat brain, and AtT20 cells while 2 microliter of anti-brain R-II serum was required to precipitate an equal amount of protein kinase II from bovine skeletal muscle showing that the protein kinase II in AtT20 cells contained the neural-specific R-II subunit.  相似文献   

8.
1. DEAE-cellulose chromatography of mouse brain cytosol indicated the presence of only the type II isoenzyme of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. Mouse heart cytosol contained approximately equal amounts of the type I and type II isoenzymes. 2. Both brain and heart type II isoenzymes reassociated after a transient exposure to cyclic AMP, but the heart type I isoenzyme remained dissociated. 3. Elution of brain cytosol continuously exposed to cyclic AMP resolved multiple peaks of protein kinase and cyclic AMP-binding activities. A single peak of kinase and multiple peaks of cyclic AMP-binding activities were found under the same conditions with heart cytosol. Various control experiments suggested that the heterogeneity within the brain type II isoenzymic class had not been caused by proteolysis. 4. Kinetic experiments with unfractionated brain cytosol showed that the binding of cyclic AMP, the dissociation of cyclic AMP from protein and the rate of heat denaturation of the cyclic AMP-binding activity gave results consistent with the presence of multiple binding species. 5. It concluded that the type II isoenzymic peak obtained by DEAE-cellulose chromatography of mouse brain cytosol represents a class of enzymes containing multiple regulatory and catalytic subunits. The two heart cytosol isoenzymes contain a common catalytic subunit. The degree of protein kinase 'microheterogeneity", defined as the presence of multiple regulatory and/or catalytic subunits within a single isoenzymic class, appears to be tissue-specific.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase of Neurospora crassa   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Neurosporacrassa was surveyed for cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Two peaks (I and II) of protein kinase activity were demonstrated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography of wild type Neurospora extracts. Peak I was stimulated by cyclic AMP, eluted below 60 mM NaCl and had high activity using histone H2B as substrate. Peak II eluted at 200–250 mM NaCl; its activity was not cyclic AMP stimulated and was highest with dephosphorylated casein as a substrate. Cyclic AMP binding to a protein associated with the protein kinase is specifically inhibited by certain cyclic AMP analogs.  相似文献   

10.
Two types of soluble cAMP-dependent protein kinase (I and II) were isolated from rabbit myometrium cytosol at functional rest and characterized. In pregnancy, protein kinase is represented by type II alone. Upon delivery, one isoform of the enzyme was detected, which was eluted from a DEAE-cellulose column with 0.15-0.22 M. NaCl. During the postnatal period, the elution profile of the enzyme is made up of two protein bands, one fraction being eluted with 0.15-0.22 M NaCl (93% of total enzyme content), and the other one being represented by a minor component eluted with 0.07-0.09 M. NaCl (7%). In terms off isoenzyme activity, main kinetic properties, ability to autophosphorylate and Kass for cAMP, the protein kinase isolated during delivery and the major protein kinase fraction obtained in the postnatal period can be related to protein kinases type II. Quantitative and qualitative expression of two types of soluble cAMP-dependent protein kinase from rabbit myometrium isolated at different functional states may be due to differences in their biological activity.  相似文献   

11.
Subcellular fractionation of oviduct tissue from estrogen-treated chicks indicated that the bulk of the protein kinase activity of this tissue is located in the cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions, DEAE-cellulose chromatography of cytosol revealed a major peak of cAMP stimulatable activity eluting at 0.2 M KCl. This peak was further characterized and found to exhibit properties consistent with cytoplasmic cAMP dependent protein kinases isolated from other tissues; it had a Km for ATP of 2 X 10(-5) M, preferred basic proteins such as histones, as substrate, and had a M of 165 000. Addition of 10(-6) M cAMP caused the holoenzyme to dissociate into cAMP binding regulatory subunit and a protein kinase catalytic subunit. Extraction of purified oviduct nuclei with 0.3 M KCl released greater than 80% of the kinase activity in this fraction. Upon elution from phospho-cellulose, the nuclear extract was resolved into two equal peaks of kinase activity (designated I and II). Peak I had a sedimentation coefficient of 3S and a Km for ATP of 13 muM. while peak II had a sedimentation coefficient of 6S and a Km for ATP of 9 muM. Both enzymes preferred alpha-casein as a substrate over phosvitin or whole histone, although they exhibited different salt-activity profiles. The cytoplasmic and nuclear enzymes were well separated on phospho-cellulose and this resin was used to quantitate the amount of cAMP dependent histone kinase activity in the nucleus and the amount of casein kinase activity in the cytosol. Protein kinase activity in nuclei from estrogen-stimulated chicks was found to be 40% greater than hormone-withdrawn animals. This increase in activity was not due to translocation of the cytoplasmic protein kinase in response to hormone, but to an increase in nuclear (casein) kinase activity. During the course of this work, we observed small but significant amounts of cAMP binding activity very tightly bound to the nuclear fraction. Solubilization of the binding activity by sonication in high salt allowed comparison studies to be performed which indicated that the nuclear binding protein is identical with the cytoplasmic cAMP binding regulatory subunit. The possible role of the nuclear binding activity is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Protein kinase (ATP:protein phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.37) and cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate binding activities have been identified in zoospore extracts of the water mold Blastocladiella emersonii. More than 75% of these activities is found in the soluble fraction. Soluble protein kinase activity is resolved in three peaks(I, II and III) by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Peak I is casein dependent and insensitive to cyclic AMP. Peak II is histone dependent and cyclic AMP independent; this enzyme is inhibited by the heat-stable inhibitor from bovine muscle. Peak III utilizes histone as substrate and is activated by cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

13.
No cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity is found upon DEAE-cellulose chromatography of mouse fat extracts at the low salt concentration characteristic of the Type I isozyme. The RI detected in fat extracts by photoincorporation of the analog, 8-N3 [32P]cAMP, elutes within the high salt Type II isozyme peak. The multiple charge variants of this photolabeled RI which can be resolved by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis are similar to those of the histoptypically-related cultured cells, SV3T3 and 3T6, which do contain Type I kinase isozyme activity peaks. This high salt-eluting RI may be part of a Type I holoenzyme whose elution properties are altered by interactions with other substances present in the extract.  相似文献   

14.
In this paper, cyclic adenosine-3′:5′-monophosphate-dependent protein kinase from yeast-like cells of Mucor rouxii is characterized. A scheme of partial purification is described together with Km for ATP (15 μm), histone (0.2 mg/ml), half-maximal activation constant for cyclic AMP (30 nm), and dissociation constant for the binding of cyclic AMP (40 nm). This enzyme is similar to type II protein kinases in two main aspects: the elution position in DEAE-cellulose chromatography and the readiness of its reassociation. But it has a singular characteristic: it does not dissociate completely with cyclic AMP alone (even at concentrations as high as 0.3 mm) unless histone or NaCl is present. NaCl displays several roles: helps dissociation, prevents inactivation of the catalytic subunit, inhibits enzyme activity, and does not prevent reassociation as occurs with type II protein kinases. Once the holoenzyme is dissociated, cyclic AMP is essential to maintain the enzyme in the dissociated state.  相似文献   

15.
Two major isozyme forms of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (termed protein kinase I and II according to their order of elution from DEAE-cellulose) were resolved by DEAE-cellulose chromatography of extracts from human renal cortex and renal cell carcinoma. The ratio between protein kinase I and protein kinase II in carcinoma extracts was about twice that in extracts of renal cortex. The total soluble cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity was similar in extracts from the normal and malignant tissue. Protein kinase isozymes prepared from renal cortex or carcinoma were highly dependent on cyclic AMP for activity under appropriate assay conditions, were activated to the same degree by various concentrations of cyclic AMP, and had similar affinity for the nucleotide, indicating that the mechanism for regulation of protein kinase activity by cyclic AMP was intact for the tumor kinases. The kinetics of endogenous phosphorylation of protein kinase II was similar for enzyme derived from normal or malignant tissue.  相似文献   

16.
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinases (EC 2.7.1.37; ATP:protein phosphotransferase) in the human diploid fibroblast WI-38 and an SV40-transformant WI-38-VA13-2RA (VA13) have been compared on the basis of their concentrations in cells, isoenzyme composition and susceptibility to hormonal activation. In high population density cultures, total soluble cyclic AMP-dependent kinase activities measured with histone were essentially the same in WI-38 and VA13. Two soluble protein kinase forms separated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose were present in both cell lines. The concentration of cyclic AMP required for half-maximal activation of both enzyme forms was 10-30 nM. Overall kinase stimulation was greater for the Peak I enzymes. Kinase activation induced in the presence of 0.5 M KCl was more rapid and complete for the Peak I enzymes. Under conditions which elevated the concentration of cyclic AMP in WI-38 and VA13 cells the activities of the soluble histone kinases were increased. Incubation of the cells with either of 5.7 micronM prostaglandin E1 or 1 micronM isopropylnorepinephrine induced complete activation of the cyclic AMP-dependent histone kinases within 5 min and maintained the effect for 20 min. When intracellular cyclic AMP levels were raised by prostaglandin E1, activation of glycogen phosphorylase (assayed-AMP) suggested that this enzyme cascade involving cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase(s) was intact and responsive in both cell lines.  相似文献   

17.
R H Lee  B M Brown  R N Lolley 《Biochemistry》1981,20(26):7532-7538
Protein kinase activity of dark-adapted bovine rod outer segments is partitioned by centrifugation into soluble and membrane-bound fractions. The soluble kinases are separated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography into three peaks of activity, which can be classified by substrate specificity and cyclic nucleotide dependence into two categories. One peak of protein kinase activity has the characteristics reported for rhodopsin kinase (category one); it phosphorylates only bleached rhodopsin, and its activity is not affected by light, exogenous adenosine cyclic 3',5'--monophosphate (cAMP), guanosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP), or a protein kinase inhibitor from skeletal muscle. Rhodopsin kinase has an apparent molecular weight of 68 000. The second category of kinase includes two peaks of activity which are stimulated severalfold by cAMP or cGMP but not by light. These protein kinases phosphorylate soluble proteins including histones and a protein kinase substrate prepared from rat intestine but not rhodopsin. The two peaks elute from DEAE-cellulose with 0.09 and 0.20 M KCl, suggesting that they are similar respectively to type I and type II cyclic nucleotide dependent protein kinases that have been characterized in other tissues. The activity of type I kinase is variable and much less than that of the type II enzyme; its molecular weight was not determined. The type II protein kinase has an apparent molecular weight of 165 000. This study confirms that different protein kinase enzymes catalyze selectively the phosphorylation of bleached rhodopsin and soluble proteins, and it repudiates the speculation in a previous publication [Farber, D. B., Brown, B. M., & Lolley, R. N. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 370-378] that a single protein kinase might catalyze both phosphorylation reactions.  相似文献   

18.
Two different phosphofructokinase-phosphorylating protein kinases were separated from extracts of Ascaris suum muscle by chromatography on DEAE-Fractogel. They were tentatively designated phosphofructokinase kinase I and phosphofructokinase kinase II. Phosphofructokinase kinase I eluted from the chromatography column at an ionic strength of 0.07 and contained about 25% of the phosphofructokinase-phosphorylating activity assayed in crude extracts. The protein kinase activity was not stimulated by the addition of either cAMP or cGMP. It was inhibited by the heat-stable protein kinase inhibitory protein from rabbit muscle (Walsh inhibitor), by the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase from beef heart, and by the cAMP-binding protein from Ascaris muscle. These properties suggest that phosphofructokinase kinase I is homologous to the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinases from mammals. This assumption is supported by the estimation of the Mr of 40,000 for the purified phosphofructokinase kinase I under denaturing conditions and by the fact that the presence of cAMP eliminated the inhibition by the cAMP binding proteins. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 8.7. Phosphofructokinase kinase II was eluted from the DEAE-Fractogel column at an ionic strength of 0.16 and contained approximately 75% of the phosphofructokinase kinase activity measured in the extracts. The molecular and kinetic properties were significantly different from those of phosphofructokinase kinase I. The enzyme was not inhibited by the heat-stable inhibitor protein nor by cAMP-binding proteins. The Mr of the native enzyme was estimated as 220,000 by molecular sieve chromatography. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was pH 5.45.  相似文献   

19.
A group of three mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells (10260, 10265, and 10223) which are resistant to cyclic AMP (Gottesman, M. M., LeCam, A., Bukowski, M., and Pastan I. (1980) Somatic Cell Genet. 6, 45-61) have been characterized in this work. By genetic analysis, these mutants are all recessive and fall into two complementation groups. Cycl AMP-stimulated protein kinase activity in crude extracts of these mutants using histone as a substrate is decreased to 10 and 7% (complementation group I), and 31% (complementation group II), respectively, of the activity found in wild type extracts. The binding of cyclic [3H]AMP by extracts of all of these mutants is decreased to 30 to 50% of the binding found in wild type extracts. We have used the photoaffinity label 8-azidoadenosine 3':5'-[32P]monophosphate to label the regulatory subunits of type I and type II protein kinase in wild type and mutant extracts analyzed by DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex chromatography. We find that all three mutants lack type I cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and have reduced amounts of type II kinase activity. The regulatory subunits of type I and type II kinase are present in both complementation groups. We conclude that type I protein kinase is not needed for normal growth of Chinese hamster ovary cells. The defect in both classes of mutants appears to be in the failure of the catalytic subunit to associate normally with its regulatory subunits.  相似文献   

20.
We have characterized a cyclic AMP-resistant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell mutant in which one of two major species of type I regulatory subunit (RI) of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase is altered. Wild-type CHO cell extracts contain two cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activities. As shown by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, there is a peak of type I protein kinase activity in mutant extracts, but the type II protein kinase activity is considerably reduced even though free type II regulatory subunit (RII) is present. The type I kinase from the mutant has an altered RI (RI*) whose KD for the binding of 8-N3[32P] cAMP (KD = 1.3 X 10(-5) M) is increased by more than 200-fold compared to RI from the wild-type enzyme (KD = 5.5 X 10(-8) M). No differences were found between the catalytic subunits from the wild-type and mutant type I kinases. A large portion of RI in mutant and wild-type extracts is present in the free form. The RI* derived from mutant type I protein kinase shows altered labeling by 8-N3[32P]cAMP (KD = 1.3 X 10(-5) M) whereas the free RI from the mutant is labeled normally by the photoaffinity label (KD = 7.2 X 10(-8) M), suggesting that the RI* which binds to the catalytic subunit is functionally different from the free form of RI. The decreased amount of type II kinase activity in the mutant appears to be due to competition of RI* with RII for binding to the catalytic subunit. Translation of mRNA from wild-type CHO cells results in the synthesis of two different charge forms of RI, providing biochemical confirmation of two different species of RI in CHO cells. Additional biochemical evidence based on isoelectric focusing behavior of 8-N3[32P]cAMP-labeled RI species and [35S]methionine-labeled RI from mutant and wild-type extracts confirms the charge heterogeneity of RI species in CHO cells. These genetic and biochemical data taken together are consistent with the conclusion that there are at least two different species of RI present in CHO cells and that one of these species is altered in the mutant analyzed in this work.  相似文献   

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