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1.
Phosphorylation reduces the affinity of protein 4.1 for spectrin   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
P S Eder  C J Soong  M Tao 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1764-1770
The phosphorylation of protein 4.1 by the membrane kinase and casein kinase A has been investigated. Each of these kinases catalyzed the incorporation of 2 mol of phosphate per mole of protein 4.1. The presence of both kinases in the reaction mixture did not lead to an increase in the incorporation of phosphates into the protein. An analysis of the acid hydrolysis products of the 32P-labeled protein 4.1 indicated that the radioactivities were distributed between phosphothreonine and phosphoserine in a ratio of about 2 to 1. The effects of phosphorylation on the binding of protein 4.1 to spectrin were investigated by using sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The affinity of protein 4.1 for spectrin was reduced about 5-fold, from a KD of 2 X 10(-6) M to a KD of 9.4 X 10(-6) M, by phosphorylation. The phosphorylation of spectrin, on the other hand, appeared to increase slightly its affinity for protein 4.1. The results suggest that phosphorylation may lead to a relaxation of the cytoskeletal network and the formation of a more flexible membrane structure that is important to red cell function.  相似文献   

2.
Human erythrocyte ankyrin was cleaved by restricted proteolysis at 0 degrees C into two distinct chemical domains. The site on ankyrin that binds spectrin was found to be within a 55,000-dalton domain by spectrin affinity chromatography and co-sedimentation with spectrin in a sucrose gradient. A 32,000-dalton fragment of this domain was prepared (tryptic digest, 0 degrees C, 24 h), separated by gel filtration, and shown to inhibit spectrin binding to the membrane. By comparison with previous two-dimensional peptide maps, the spectrin-binding site was located within this 32,000-dalton fragment near the end of the molecule. The band 3-binding site was identified within an 82,000-dalton domain by binding to a band 3 affinity column. Gel electrophoresis in the absence of detergents confirmed these results and demonstrated that a peptide from the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 retained the capacity to bind the 82,000-dalton domain. The binding properties of the structural domains of ankyrin were correlated with a determination of the affinity constant of the intact molecule. Ankyrin bound with a high affinity to the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 (KD = 8 X 10(-8) M) and to spectrin tetramer (KD = 1 X 10(-7) M) but less so to spectrin dimer (KD = 1 X 10(-6) M). These findings are summarized in a preliminary structural and functional model of ankyrin's role in linking spectrin to the membrane.  相似文献   

3.
The phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 by the human erythrocyte membrane kinase and casein kinase A has been investigated. The cytoplasmic domain of band 3 was released from erythrocyte vesicles by treatment with alpha-chymotrypsin and isolated as a 43,000-Da peptide. Both the membrane kinase and casein kinase A catalyzed the incorporation of about 1 mol of phosphate per mole of the band 3 fragment. The phosphorylation of the band 3 fragment by both kinases was not additive, suggesting that the two enzymes might recognize the same phosphorylation sites. Also in support of this notion was the observation that the phosphopeptide maps of the band 3 fragment phosphorylated by the two kinases were identical. Phosphoamino acid analysis of the band 3 fragment phosphorylated by casein kinase A revealed the presence of approximately equal amounts of phosphoserine and phosphothreonine and, to a lesser extent, phosphotyrosine. The interaction between the 43,000-Da peptide with ankyrin and the effect of phosphorylation on this interaction have been examined. The band 3 fragment was found to form two different types of complexes, termed C1 and C2, with ankyrin in a saturable manner. The C1 and C2 complexes contained about 1.7 and 0.43 mol of band 3 fragment per mole of ankyrin, respectively. Interestingly, these binding stoichiometries were found to be reduced by half by the phosphorylation of ankyrin but not by the phosphorylation of the band 3 fragment. The results suggest that the structure and dynamics of the erythrocyte membrane cytoskeletal network may be regulated by phosphorylation.  相似文献   

4.
A soluble casein kinase isolated and purified to homogeneity from the human erythrocyte cytosol by phosphocellulose and Sephadex G-200 chromatographies is indistinguishable from the membrane-bound casein (spectrin) kinase according to physical and site-specificity criteria. The soluble enzyme shows an Mr of about 30000 by gel filtration and comigrates with the purified membrane spectrin kinase as a single polypeptide of 32000 Da on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels. The soluble kinase phosphorylates spectrin in situ in spectrin kinase-depleted ghosts and catalyzes the in vitro phosphorylation of partially dephosphorylated spectrin with saturation kinetics identical to those displayed by the membrane spectrin kinase. When component 2 of spectrin that had been phosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP by either the soluble or the membrane kinases was subjected to limited proteolysis, the same 21500 Da papain-generated phosphopeptide was found to have been produced by the two enzymes. The same 21500 Da phosphopeptide was identified after papain digestion of spectrin isolated from intact cells that had been incubated with 32Pi. However, this particular peptide was not labeled in spectrin that had been phosphorylated in vitro by the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. Identical phosphopeptide patterns were obtained by gel filtration and two-dimensional peptide maps of trypsin-cleaved component 2 of spectrin that had been labeled in situ, in intact ghosts or in spectrin kinase-depleted ghosts supplemented with the soluble kinase. These findings indicate a possible identity of the soluble with the membrane-bound casein (spectrin) kinase.  相似文献   

5.
Ankyrin mediates the primary attachment between beta spectrin and protein 3. Ankyrin and spectrin interact in a positively cooperative fashion such that ankyrin binding increases the extent of spectrin tetramer and oligomer formation (Giorgi and Morrow: submitted, 1988). This cooperative interaction is enhanced by the cytoplasmic domain of protein 3, which is prepared as a 45-41-kDa fragment generated by chymotryptic digestion of erythrocyte membranes. Using sensitive isotope-ratio methods and nondenaturing PAGE, we now demonstrate directly (1) the enhanced affinity of ankyrin for spectrin oligomers compared to spectrin dimers; (2) a selective stimulation of the affinity of ankyrin for spectrin oligomer by the 43-kDa cytoplasmic domain of protein 3; and (3) a selective reduction in the affinity of ankyrin for spectrin tetramer and oligomer after its phosphorylation by the erythrocyte cAMP-independent membrane kinase. The phosphorylation of ankyrin does not affect its binding to spectrin dimer. Ankyrin also enhances the rate of interconversion between dimer-tetramer-oligomer by 2-3-fold at 30 degrees C, and in the presence of the 43-kDa fragment, ankyrin stimulates the rate of oligomer interconversions by nearly 40-fold at this temperature. These results demonstrate a long-range cooperative interaction between an integral membrane protein and the peripheral cytoskeleton and indicate that this linkage may be regulated by covalent protein phosphorylation. Such interactions may be of general importance in nonerythroid cells.  相似文献   

6.
Kidney Na+,K(+)-ATPase has been recently shown to bind erythroid ankyrin and to colocalize with ankyrin at the basolateral cell surface of kidney epithelial cells. These observations suggest that Na+,K(+)-ATPase is linked via ankyrin to the spectrin/actin-based membrane cytoskeleton. In the present study we show that Na+,K(+)-ATPase and analogs of spectrin, ankyrin and actin copurify from detergent extracts of pig kidney and parotid gland membranes. Actin, spectrin and ankyrin were extracted from purified Na+,K(+)-ATPase microsomes at virtually identical conditions as their counterparts from the erythrocyte membrane, i.e., 1 mM EDTA (spectrin, actin) and 1 M KCl (ankyrin). Visualization of the stripped proteins by rotary shadowing revealed numerous elongated spectrin-like dimers (100 nm) and tetramers (215 nm), a fraction of which (17%) was associated with globular (10 nm) ankyrin-like particles. Like erythrocyte ankyrin, kidney ankyrin was cleaved into a soluble 72 kDa fragment and a membrane-bound 90 kDa fragment. Consistent with our previous immunocytochemical findings on the pig kidney, Na+,K(+)-ATPase and ankyrin were found to be colocalized at the basolateral plasma membrane of striated ducts and acini of the pig parotid gland. The present findings confirm and extend the recently proposed concept that in polarized epithelial cells Na+,K(+)-ATPase may serve as major attachment site for the spectrin-based membrane cytoskeleton to the basolateral cell domain. Connections of integral membrane proteins to the cytoskeleton may help to place these proteins at specialized domains of the cell surface and to prevent them from endocytosis.  相似文献   

7.
A Tsuji  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6133-6139
The effects of incubation of erythrocyte ghosts under various conditions (ionic strength or addition of ankyrin, diamines, or ATP) on the lateral motion of band 3 in the membranes were studied by using the fluorescence photobleaching recovery technique. Incubation of ghosts with exogenous ankyrin increased the immobile fraction of band 3, from 0.6 in intact ghosts to 0.8-0.9 when an average of 0.2 mol of extra ankyrin was bound per mole of band 3. Ankyrin-free band 3 proteins were mobile, but their mobility was governed by the spectrin association state in the cytoskeletal network. The diffusion constant was 5.3 X 10(-11) cm2 s-1 at a spectrin tetramer mole fraction of 0.3-0.4 in 10 mM NaCl/5 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.8, and decreased 1 order of magnitude when the tetramer fraction increased to 0.5 in higher NaCl concentration (150 mM NaCl). A similar decrease was observed when the spectrin tetramer fraction was increased by 0.2 mM spermine in 10 mM NaCl/10 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane hydrochloride, pH 7.6. On the other hand, the rotational motion of band 3 in the membranes was not affected by the spectrin association state. Trypsin treatment of ghosts cleaved off the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 and caused a marked (8-fold) increase in the lateral mobility, D = 4.0 X 10(-10) cm2 s-1. These results indicate that the lateral mobility of ankyrin-free band 3 protein is restricted by interactions of their cytoplasmic domain with the cytoskeletal network. A model is presented that band 3 can pass the network when spectrins are in dissociated dimers and cannot pass when they are tetramers. The lateral diffusion constant is thus determined by the spectrin dimer population in the network.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The possibility that spectrin and band-3 protein are phosphorylated by the same membrane-bound protein kinase was investigated by adding casein to unsealed erythrocyte ghosts and examining competition of the three proteins for phosphorylation. The extent of spectrin and band-3 protein phosphorylation was reduced by up to approximately 55%. This indicated that casein was competing with these endogenous substrates for phosphorylation and was most probably phosphorylated by the same protein kinase(s). Furthermore, the extent of inhibition of the phosphorylation of the two endogenous substrates was indistinguishable over the range of casein concentrations tested (0.1 to 5mg/ml). This indicates that spectrin and band-3 protein may be phosphorylated by the same protein kinase. In contrast, casein was found to have no effect on the cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of band 4.5. This result indicates that casein only competes with the endogenous proteins phosphorylated by the cAMP-independent protein kinase(s).The extent of reduction of endogenous substrate phosphorylation in the presence of casein was found to be constant over incubation periods of 1 to 15 min, indicating that this reduction was not due to consumption of ATP.Since the spectrin and band-3 protein phosphorylations were specifically and identically reduced by casein and these reductions were not due to the ATP consumption or to a general alteration of the membrane, we conclude that the two substrates are likely phosphorylated by one kinase which also phosphorylates casein.  相似文献   

9.
An assay has been developed to measure association of brain ankyrin with protein site(s) in brain membranes that are independent of spectrin and tubulin, behave as integral membrane proteins, and appear to be similar in several respects to the erythrocyte anion channel. Brain membranes were depleted of ankyrin, spectrin, and other peripheral membrane proteins by a brief incubation in 0.1 M sodium hydroxide. Binding of ankyrin to these membranes fulfilled experimentally testable criteria for a specific protein-protein association. Binding was optimal at physiological values for ionic strength and pH, was of high affinity (Kd = 20-60 nM), and the capacity of 25 pmol/mg of brain membrane protein is in the same range as the number of spectrin tetramers (30 pmol/mg). The membrane-binding site(s) for brain ankyrin are likely to be related in some way to the cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte anion channel since binding was inhibited by the anion channel domain and by erythrocyte ankyrin. The binding site(s) for brain ankyrin were released from the membrane by limited proteolysis as active water-soluble fragments capable of inhibiting binding of ankyrin to membranes. Ankyrin-binding fragments of Mr = 40,000 and 68,000 were selectively bound to an erythrocyte ankyrin affinity column. The fragment of Mr = 40,000 is close to the size of the cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte anion channel. It is likely based on these results that membrane attachment proteins for ankyrin are present in brain and other tissues and that these membrane proteins have domains homologous at least in conformation to the ankyrin-binding site of the erythrocyte anion channel.  相似文献   

10.
A soluble casein kinase isolated and purified to homogeneity from the human erythrocyte cytosol by phosphocellulose and Sephadex G-200 chromatographies is indistinguishable from the membrane-bound casein (spectrin_kinase according and site-specificity criteria. The soluble enzyme shows an Mr of about 30 000 by gel filtration and comigrates with the purified membrane spectrin kinase as a single polypeptide of 32 000 Da on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels. The soluble kinase phosphorylates spectrin in situ in spectrin kinase-depleted ghosts and catalyzes the in vitro phosphorylation of partially dephosphorylated spectrin with saturation kinetics identical to those displayed by the membrane spectrin kinase. When component 2 of spectrin that has been phosphorylated with [γ-32P]ATP by either the soluble or the membrane kinases was subjected to limited proteolysis, the same 21500 Da papain-generated phosphopeptide was found to have been produced by the two enzymes. The same 21 500 Da phosphopeptide was identified after papain digestion of spectrin isolated from intact cells that had been incubated with 32Pi. However, this particular peptide was not labeled in spectrin that had been phosphorylated in vitro by the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. Identical phosphopeptide patterns were obtained by gel filtration and two-dimensional peptide maps of trypsin-cleaved component 2 of spectrin that had been labeled in situ, in intact ghosts or in spectrin kinase-depleted ghosts supplemented with the soluble kinase. These findings indicate a possible identity of the soluble with the membrane-bound casein (spectrin) kinase.  相似文献   

11.
Brain ankyrin was purified from pig brain membranes in milligram quantities by a procedure involving affinity chromatography on erythrocyte spectrinagarose. Brain ankyrin included two polypeptides of Mr = 210,000 and 220,000 that were nearly identical by peptide mapping and were monomers in solution. Brain ankyrin and erythrocyte ankyrin are closely related proteins with the following properties in common: 1) shared antigenic sites, 2) high-affinity binding to the spectrin beta subunit at the midregion of spectrin tetramers, 3) a binding site for the cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte anion channel, 4) a binding site for tubulin, 5) a similar domain structure with a protease-resistant domain of Mr = 72,000 that contains the spectrin-binding activity and domains of Mr = 95,000 (brain ankyrin) or 90,000 (erythrocyte ankyrin) that contain binding sites for both tubulin and the anion channel. Brain ankyrin is present at about 100 pmol/mg of membrane protein in demyelinated membranes based on radioimmunoassay with antibody raised against brain ankyrin and affinity purified on brain ankyrin-agarose. Brain spectrin tetramers are present at 30 pmol/mg of membrane protein. Brain ankyrin thus is present in sufficient amounts to attach spectrin to membranes. Brain ankyrin also may attach microtubules to membranes independently of spectrin and has the potential to interconnect microtubules and spectrin-associated actin filaments.  相似文献   

12.
Brain membranes contain an actin-binding protein closely related in structure and function to erythrocyte spectrin. The proteins that attach brain spectrin to membranes are not established, but, by analogy with the erythrocyte membrane, may include ankyrin and protein 4.1. In support of this idea, proteins closely related to ankyrin and 4.1 have been purified from brain and have been demonstrated to associate with brain spectrin. Brain ankyrin binds with high affinity to the spectrin beta subunit at the midregion of spectrin tetramers. Brain ankyrin also has binding sites for the cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte anion channel (band 3), as well as for tubulin. Ankyrins from brain and erythrocytes have a similar domain structure with protease-resistant domains of Mr = 72,000 that contain spectrin-binding activity, and domains of Mr = 95,000 (brain ankyrin) or 90,000 (erythrocyte ankyrin) that contain binding sites for both tubulin and the anion channel. Brain ankyrin is present at about 100 pmol/mg membrane protein, or about twice the number of copies of spectrum beta chains. Brain ankyrin thus is present in sufficient amounts to attach spectrin to membranes, and it has the potential to attach microtubules to membranes as well as to interconnect microtubules with spectrin-associated actin filaments. Another spectrin-binding protein has been purified from brain membranes, and this protein cross-reacts with erythrocyte 4.1. Brain 4.1 is identical to the membrane protein synapsin, which is one of the brain's major substrates for cAMP-dependent and Ca/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases with equivalent physical properties, immunological cross-reaction, and peptide maps. Synapsin (4.1) is present at about 60 pmol/mg membrane protein, and thus is a logical candidate to regulate certain protein linkages involving spectrin.  相似文献   

13.
The membrane skeleton plays a central role in maintaining the elasticity and stability of the erythrocyte membrane, two biophysical features critical for optimal functioning and survival of red cells. Many constituent proteins of the membrane skeleton are phosphorylated by various kinases, and phosphorylation of β-spectrin by casein kinase and of protein 4.1R by PKC has been documented to modulate erythrocyte membrane mechanical stability. In this study, we show that activation of endogenous PKA by cAMP decreases membrane mechanical stability and that this effect is mediated primarily by phosphorylation of dematin. Co-sedimentation assay showed that dematin facilitated interaction between spectrin and F-actin, and phosphorylation of dematin by PKA markedly diminished this activity. Quartz crystal microbalance measurement revealed that purified dematin specifically bound the tail region of the spectrin dimer in a saturable manner with a submicromolar affinity. Pulldown assay using recombinant spectrin fragments showed that dematin, but not phospho-dematin, bound to the tail region of the spectrin dimer. These findings imply that dematin contributes to the maintenance of erythrocyte membrane mechanical stability by facilitating spectrin-actin interaction and that phosphorylation of dematin by PKA can modulate these effects. In this study, we have uncovered a novel functional role for dematin in regulating erythrocyte membrane function.  相似文献   

14.
Brain ankyrin. Purification of a 72,000 Mr spectrin-binding domain   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Polypeptides of Mr = 190,000-220,000 that cross-react with erythrocyte ankyrin were detected in immunoblots of membranes from pig lens, pig brain, and rat liver. The cross-reacting polypeptides from brain were cleaved by chymotrypsin to fragments of Mr = 95,000 and 72,000 which are the same size as fragments obtained with erythrocyte ankyrin. The brain 72,000 Mr fragment associated with erythrocyte spectrin, and the binding occurred at the same site as that of erythrocyte ankyrin 72,000 Mr fragment since (a) brain 72,000 Mr fragment was adsorbed to erythrocyte spectrin-agarose and (b) 125I-labeled erythrocyte spectrin bound to brain 72,000 Mr fragment following transfer of the fragment from a sodium dodecyl sulfate gel to nitrocellulose paper, and this binding was displaced by erythrocyte ankyrin 72,000 Mr fragment. Brain 72,000 Mr fragment was purified about 400-fold by selective extraction and by continuous chromatography on columns attached in series containing DEAE-cellulose followed by erythrocyte spectrin coupled to agarose, and finally hydroxylapatite. The brain 72,000 Mr fragment was not derived from contaminating erythrocytes since peptide maps of pig brain and pig erythrocyte 72,000 Mr fragments were distinct. The amount of brain 72,000 Mr fragment was estimated as 0.28% of membrane protein or 39 pmol/mg based on radioimmunoassay with 125I-labeled brain fragment and antibody against erythrocyte ankyrin. Brain spectrin tetramer was present in about the same number of copies (30 pmol/mg of membrane protein) based on densitometry of Coomassie blue-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate gels. The binding site on brain spectrin for both brain and erythrocyte ankyrin 72,000 Mr fragments was localized by electron microscopy to the midregion of spectrin tetramers about 90 nM from the near end and 110 nM from the far end. These studies demonstrate the presence in brain membranes of a protein closely related to erythrocyte ankyrin, and are consistent with a function of the brain ankyrin as a membrane attachment site for brain spectrin.  相似文献   

15.
T Wei  M Tao 《FEBS letters》1991,292(1-2):141-144
The relationship and substrate specificity of the human erythrocyte membrane kinase and casein kinase A were investigated. Based on Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion patterns, the 2 kinases appeared to be structurally homologous. These enzymes also exhibited the same substrate specificity and phosphorylated the same synthetic peptides and domains of ankyrin. Both kinases did not utilize GTP effectively as a substrate and were not inhibited by low concentrations of heparin, suggesting that they were type I casein kinases. An analysis of synthetic peptide phosphorylation failed to reveal a specific pattern of recognition of the amino acid sequence surrounding the phosphorylation site.  相似文献   

16.
A cAMP-independent protein kinase from chicken liver phosphorylated and inactivated pyruvate kinase type M2 from the same tissue. Complete inactivation was reached when 4 mol of phosphate were incorporated/mol of tetrameric pyruvate kinase. The protein kinase bound with high affinity to pyruvate kinase type M2 (Km value for pyruvate kinase = 6 X 10(-10)M; it phosphorylated phosvitin and casein but not histones, ATP and GTP were substrates. The differences between the properties of this protein kinase in the interconversion of pyruvate kinase and that described previously are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Isolated human erythrocyte spectrin, ankyrin, and protein 4.1 have been labeled with the maleimide spin label, 3-maleimido-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxyl, and studied by saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The presence of the labels does not affect the reassociation of these proteins with erythrocyte membranes selectively depleted of either spectrin-actin or of all the extrinsic proteins. When maleimide spin-labeled spectrin is reassociated with the erythrocyte membrane in presence of all the cytoskeleton components, including endogeneous or purified muscle actin, spectrin still preserves its flexible character. The rotational mobilities of maleimide spin-labeled ankyrin and maleimide spin-labeled protein 4.1 are of the same order of magnitude (tau c (L"/L) approximately 5 X 10(-5) and 8 X 10(-5) s, respectively, at 2 degrees C), while protein 4.1 is almost three times smaller in size than ankyrin. This result indicates that the movements of membrane-bound maleimide spin-labeled protein 4.1 are more restricted than those of ankyrin. This suggests that their respective binding sites have different structural properties. The rotational movements of both proteins are slowed down on the addition of spectrin indicating that protein 4.1 as well as ankyrin also represents one of the links of the cytoskeleton to the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
1. In whole ghosts, ankyrin, protein 4.1, protein band 3 and spectrin are lysed by purified calpain I in the presence of calcium. 2. Limited calpain lysis of purified ankyrin results in several peptides, including a 85 kD peptide bearing the ankyrin interaction site for the protein band 3 internal fragment (43 kD), and a 55 kD peptide carrying the ankyrin-spectrin interaction site. 3. These peptides are differently phosphorylated: the 85 kD by cytosol casein kinase, and the 55 kD by membrane casein kinase. 4. Protein 4.1 lysis mainly produces a 30 kD peptide resistant to proteolysis. 5. The spectrin beta-chain is more sensitive to calpain cleavage than the alpha chain; both chains seem to be cleaved in a similar sequential manner. 6. Limited proteolysis of spectrin dimer does not impede tetramerization in vitro.  相似文献   

19.
Role of protein kinase C in the regulation of rat liver glycogen synthase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rat liver glycogen synthase was phosphorylated by purified protein kinase C in a Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent fashion to 1-1.4 mol PO4/subunit. Analysis of the 32P-labeled tryptic peptides derived from the phosphorylated synthase by isoelectric focusing and two-dimensional peptide mapping revealed the presence of a major radioactive peptide. The sites in liver synthase phosphorylated by protein kinase C appears to be different from those phosphorylated by other kinases. Prior phosphorylation of the synthase by protein kinase C has no significant effect on the subsequent phosphorylation by glycogen synthase (casein) kinase-1 or kinase Fa, but prevents the synthase from further phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, phosphorylase kinase, or casein kinase-2. Additive phosphorylation of liver glycogen synthase can be observed by the combination of protein kinase C with the former set of kinases but not with the latter. Phosphorylation of liver synthase by protein kinase C alone did not cause an inactivation nor did the combination of this kinase with glycogen synthase (casein) kinase-1 or kinase Fa produce a synergistic effect on the inactivation of the synthase. Based on these findings we conclude that the phorbol ester-induced inactivation of glycogen synthase previously observed in hepatocytes cannot be accounted for entirely by the activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

20.
Brain spectrin, through its beta subunit, binds with high affinity to protein-binding sites on brain membranes quantitatively depleted of ankyrin (Steiner, J., and Bennett, V. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14417-14425). In this study, calmodulin is demonstrated to inhibit binding of brain spectrin to synaptosomal membranes. Submicromolar concentrations of calcium are required for inhibition of binding, with half-maximal effects at pCa = 6.5. Calmodulin competitively inhibits binding of spectrin to protein(s) in stripped synaptosomal membranes, with Ki = 1.3 microM in the presence of 10 microM calcium. A reversible receptor-mediated process, and not proteolysis, is responsible for inhibition since the effect of calcium/calmodulin is reversed by the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine and by chelation of calcium with sodium [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. The target of calmodulin is most likely the spectrin attachment protein(s) rather than spectrin itself since: (a) membrane binding of the brain spectrin beta subunit, which does not associate with calmodulin, is inhibited by calcium/calmodulin, and (b) red cell spectrin which binds calmodulin very weakly, is inhibited from interacting with membrane receptors in the presence of calcium/calmodulin. Ca2+/calmodulin inhibited association of erythrocyte spectrin with synaptosomal membranes but had no effect on binding of erythrocyte or brain spectrin to ankyrin in erythrocyte membranes. These experiments demonstrate the potential for differential regulation of spectrin-membrane protein interactions, with the consequence that Ca2+/calmodulin can dissociate direct spectrin-membrane interactions locally or regionally without disassembly of the areas of the membrane skeleton stabilized by linkage of spectrin to ankyrin. A membrane protein of Mr = 88,000 has been identified that is dissociated from spectrin affinity columns by calcium/calmodulin and is a candidate for the calmodulin-sensitive spectrin-binding site in brain.  相似文献   

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