首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Activation of adenylate cyclase in cultured fibroblasts by trypsin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Adenylate cyclase activity measured in membranes of cultured normal rat kidney (NRK) fibroblasts was markedly increased by prior treatment of the intact cells with trypsin. Cell population density influenced the extent of activation observed. Trypsin treatment of sparse cells significantly enhanced adenylate cyclase activity, whereas similar treatment of confluent cells caused only a slight increase in adenylate cyclase activity. The degree of activation noted after trypsin treatment also varied depending on the adenylate cyclase function measured. Activity determined in the presence of GTP alone showed the greatest increase after trypsin treatment. Similar enhancement of adenylate cyclase activity of a washed cell membrane preparation was achieved by the addition of low concentrations of trypsin directly to the adenylate cyclase reaction mixture. The membranes of confluent NRK fibroblasts initially exhibited higher adenylate cyclase activity than did membranes of sparse cells. The present results suggest that this change in adenylate cyclase activity at cell confluence is not due to an increase in the amount of adenylate cyclase in the cell membrane but rather to a change in membrane components that regulate its activity. Proteolytic activation of adenylate cyclase appears to result from degradation of cell membrane proteins that modulate the activity of this enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Epithelial and stromal cells were isolated from endometrium of Day 1 pseudopregnant rabbits by enzymatic digestion with trypsin or trypsin:collagenase:deoxyribonuclease. Dispersed cells were grown in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% whole or steroid-depleted fetal bovine serum (FBS). Epithelial and stromal cells reached confluency after 6 to 7 days in culture and showed specific characteristics. Cells could be differentiated according to morphology, growth patterns, electrophoretic patterns, and response to estrogen or progesterone. Hormonal stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity was measured in broken cell preparations by catalytic transformation of alpha-32P-adenosine triphosphate into 32P-adenosine 3'-5' cyclic monophosphate (cAMP). Adenylate cyclase activity was present in fresh endometrial tissue and in dispersed cells after 7 days in culture. The enzyme activity was significantly higher in stromal than in epithelial cells at all stimulation levels: basal (9.2 +/- 1.0 vs. 2.3 +/- 0.6, p less than 0.001) and guanosine triphosphate (GTP, 300 microM) (25.4 +/- 2.9 vs. 7.0 +/- 1.6, p less than 0.001). Net response to prostaglandin E2 (PGE2, 10 microM) was three times higher (p less than 0.001) in stromal (17 +/- 2) than in epithelial (5.0 +/- 1) cells. These results suggest that PGE2 can stimulate adenylate cyclase in rabbit endometrium and that the enzyme is preferentially localized in the stroma. Our results are in agreement with the hypothesis that cAMP formed in endometrium in response to PGE2 might be involved in the decidual reaction.  相似文献   

3.
The extracellular adenylate cyclase of Bordetella pertussis was purified either as a free enzyme or as a complex with calmodulin. The purified enzyme has a specific activity of 1600 mumol of cAMP min-1 X mg-1 and exists under two molecular forms of 45 and 43 kDa which are apparently structurally related. Calmodulin increased considerably the resistance of adenylate cyclase to inactivation by trypsin. Although trypsin cleaved the adenylate cyclase-calmodulin complex, the digested fragments remained associated by noncovalent interactions in an active conformation. Specific mouse anti-adenylate cyclase antibodies inhibit adenylate cyclase activity and were used to develop a specific radioimmunoassay that allows detection of as little as 5 ng of adenylate cyclase in culture supernatants.  相似文献   

4.
The ejaculated porcine spermatozoa were fractionated into the cytosol, membrane, midpiece plus tail (flagella) and head fractions, and their adenylate cyclase activities were measured. About 65% of the total activity was located in the flagella fraction. For all the fractions, Mn2+-dependent adenylate cyclase activity was about 20 times higher than Mg2+-dependent activity, and guanine nucleotides, fluoride, and other reagents tested did not activate adenylate cyclase. The results suggest that the GTP-dependent regulatory subunit is absent in porcine spermatozoa. The porcine seminal plasma was found to stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity in spermatozoa. The stimulating factor in porcine seminal plasma was partially purified by gel filtration and the molecular weight of the factor appeared to be between 200 and 300. The partially purified factor is heat stable and is not inactivated by treatment with Pronase, trypsin, phospholipase A2 or D but is inactivated by acid hydrolysis. It is easily soluble in water, partially soluble in methanol, and insoluble in ethanol, ethyl ether, chloroform, or acetone. The activation of sperm adenylate cyclase by the factor occurred without a time lag. The activating effect was dose-dependent, saturated at high dose, and ascribed to the increase of the maximal velocity (Vmax). The effect of the factor appears to be limited to adenylate cyclase in spermatozoa; the factor activated adenylate cyclase both in porcine and bovine spermatozoa but failed to activate those in other porcine tissues. The factor was shown to activate the enzyme not only in the ejaculated spermatozoa but also in the epididymal sperm. The factor was also found to elevate the cAMP level in the intact porcine spermatozoa. The factor enhanced the motility of corpus and cauda epididymal spermatozoa. These findings indicate the possibility that this factor initiates the spermatozoan motility upon ejaculation through directly activating adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

5.
Epinephrine inhibits human platelet adenylate cyclase by an alpha 2-adrenoceptor-mediated and GTP-dependent process. The turn-off reaction for this epinephrine-inhibited enzyme was studied by measuring the rate of cyclic AMP formation upon addition of the alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonist, yohimbine, or upon addition of an excess of the stable GDP analog, guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S), which competitively inhibited the action of GTP in the epinephrine-induced inhibition. The decay of the inhibited state of the adenylate cyclase was used to calculate the rate constant of the turn-off reaction. With both methods, almost identical koff values of 0.6-0.7 min-1 at 25 degrees C were obtained for the epinephrine-inhibited platelet enzyme. Cholera toxin, which does not inhibit the epinephrine-induced GTPase stimulation in platelet membranes, did not affect this turn-off reaction. In contrast, the turn-off rate of the prostaglandin-E1-stimulated human platelet adenylate cyclase, measured with GDP beta S, was reduced from about 9 min-1 to 2 min-1 at 25 degrees C by pretreatment of the membranes with cholera toxin, which inhibits the prostaglandin-E1-stimulated GTPase activity. The data strongly suggest that the guanine nucleotide regulatory site, mediating epinephrine-induced adenylate cyclase inhibition, is activated and inactivated by similar mechanisms as is the site mediating adenylate cyclase stimulation, and that cholera toxin affects only the stimulatory site. The findings furthermore suggest that the activity states of these two regulatory sites control the activity of the adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: 4β-Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), added to a lysed mitochondrial fraction of rat striatum, stimulates adenylate cyclase activity with an apparent time lag of ~30 s. Half-maximal and maximal enzyme stimulations are obtained with 8 and 200 nM PMA, respectively. The PMA stimulation is GTP dependent, reaching a maximum of ~60% at 50 μ.M GTP, and is associated with disappearance of the enzyme inhibition induced by micromolar concentrations of GTP. Enhancement of enzyme activity by cholera toxin and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine is amplified by PMA only at micromolar concentrations of GTP. PMA does not affect the enzyme stimulation by forskolin but reverses the inhibition of forskolin-stimulated enzyme by GTP. When guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is substituted for GTP, PMA does not modify adenylate cyclase activity. Enzyme inhibition by acetylcholine, Leu-enkephalin, and R(-)N6-(2-phenylisopropyl)adenosine is magnified by PMA. Stimulation of adenylate cyclase by PMA is markedly reduced following EGTA treatment, is not observed when adenyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is substituted for ATP as substrate for adenylate cyclase, and is enhanced by l-α-phosphatidyl-l-serine. Like PMA, 4β-phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate and 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol stimulate striatal adenylate cyclase, whereas 4β-phorbol and 4β-phorbol 13-acetate are ineffective. The results indicate that phorbol esters increase striatal adenylate cyclase activity by reducing the GTP-induced inhibition of the enzyme, presumably as a result of protein kinase C activation.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies have described a decrease in the activity of adenylate cyclase in the parotid gland of isoproterenol-treated rats. In the present studies, a similar decrease was observed in mice treated with isoproterenol. Studies on the subcellular distribution of adenylate cyclase after isoproterenol stimulation of the parotid gland showed that enzyme activity was increased in the lysosomal fraction and decreased in the cellular membrane fractions. Cytochemical studies on the localization of adenylate cyclase in stimulated gland showed an increase in vesicles which contained enzyme activity and a decrease in activity at the luminal and plasma membranes. It is suggested, based on the present findings and results reported by other investigators, that after isoproterenol stimulation of the parotid gland, adenylate cyclase (along with excess membrane) is degraded by lysosomes. If this suggestion is true, then the observed decrease in adenylate cyclase would have a molecular explanation.  相似文献   

8.
Calcium (Ca2+) ion concentrations that are achieved intracellularly upon membrane depolarization or activation of phospholipase C stimulate adenylate cyclase via calmodulin (CaM) in brain tissue. In the present study, this range of Ca2+ concentrations produced unanticipated inhibitory effects on the plasma membrane adenylate cyclase activity of GH3 cells. Ca2+ concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 0.8 microM exerted an increasing inhibition on enzyme activity, which reached a plateau (35-45% inhibition) at around 1 microM. This inhibitory effect was highly cooperative for Ca2+ ions, but was neither enhanced nor dependent upon the addition of CaM (1 microM) to EGTA-washed membranes. The inhibition was greatly enhanced upon stimulation of the enzyme by vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and/or GTP. Prior exposure of cultured cells to pertussis toxin did not affect the inhibition of plasma membrane adenylate cyclase activity by Ca2+, although in these membranes, hormonal (somatostatin) inhibition was significantly attenuated. Maximally effective concentrations of Ca2+ and somatostatin produced additive inhibitory effects on adenylate cyclase. The addition of phosphodiesterase inhibitors demonstrated that inhibitory effects of Ca2+ were not mediated by Ca2(+)-dependent stimulation of a phosphodiesterase activity. These observations provide a mechanism for the feedback inhibition by elevated intracellular Ca2+ levels on cAMP-facilitated Ca2+ entry into GH3 cells, as well as inhibitory crosstalk between Ca2(+)-mobilizing signals and adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

9.
The muscarinic stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in rat olfactory bulb was characterized, with the aim of elucidating the nature of the molecular mechanism involved. Carbachol (CCh) stimulated the enzyme activity in either crude or purified cell membrane preparations and increased cyclic AMP accumulation in miniprisms of olfactory bulb. The CCh stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity displayed a fast onset and was rapidly reversed by addition of atropine. The stimulation was associated with an increase in the apparent Vmax of the enzyme, with no change in the Km for Mg-ATP. The affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+ was enhanced by CCh. The muscarinic effect required GTP at concentrations higher than those needed for enzyme stimulation with either l-isoproterenol or vasoactive intestinal peptide. Moreover, contrary to the beta-adrenergic stimulation, the muscarinic effect disappeared when guanosine 5'-O-(3'-thiotriphosphate) was substituted for GTP. In vivo treatment of olfactory bulbs with pertussis toxin completely prevented the muscarinic stimulation of adenylate cyclase, whereas cholera toxin was without effect. These results indicate that in rat olfactory bulb muscarinic receptors increase adenylate cyclase activity by interacting with a pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein different from the stimulatory GTP-binding protein.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of magnesium and sodium ions on adenylate cyclase activity in plasma membranes from chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa were studied. It was found that the increase in magnesium chloride concentration from 5 to 40 mM results in the stimulation (4.1-fold) of the adenylate cyclase activity. The increase in sodium chloride concentration up to 150 mM stimulated the enzyme activity 2-fold. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by magnesium and sodium ions was less pronounced in the eggshell gland. GTP did not activate adenylate cyclase. The activating effect of magnesium and sodium ions was accompanied by the attenuation of the enzyme sensitivity to NaF, guanylyl imidodiphosphate and isoproterenol. Activation by guanylyl imidodiphosphate was completely abolished in the presence of 40 mM magnesium chloride. It is assumed that high concentrations of the salt promote subunit dissociation of the adenylate cyclase regulatory protein and its interaction with the catalytic subunit in the presence of endogenous nucleotides. The differences in the adenylate cyclase sensitivity to cations in chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa correlate with the amount of pertussis toxin substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Adenylate cyclase was solubilized from rat brain particulate fraction with the nonionic detergent, Nonidet P-40. Incubation of detergent-solubilized adenylate cyclase with liposomes prepared from egg yolk phosphatidylcholine results in virtually quantitative incorporation of the enzyme activity into phospholipid vesicles. Incorporation of adenylate cyclase into liposomes results in an approximately 10- to 20-fold purification relative to the solubilized preparation giving a final specific activity of about 50 nmol of cAMP min-1 mg-1. The detergent-solubilized adenylate cyclase migrates as a broad band between 14 and 33% sucrose on density gradient centrifugation, separated from the endogenous phospholipid. Following overnight incubation of the solubilized enzyme with exogenous phospholipid, all enzyme activity is found in a narrow band between 7 and 9% sucrose, co-migrating with the phospholipid. The adenylate cyclase could not be released from the liposomes by extraction with high ionic strength, low ionic strength-EDTA, or sonication. Treatment of liposomal adenylates cyclase with soluble proteases or immobilized trypsin destroys enzyme activity. Thus, it is likely that a functionally important part of the enzyme molecule is exposed on the outer surface of the liposome. Optimal conditions for the incorporation of adenylate cyclase into liposomes, and some effects of manipulating the phospholipid composition on enzyme activity are reported.  相似文献   

12.
It has been proposed that a portion of the biologic actions of vasodilator prostaglandins occurs via an interaction with specific adenylate cyclase-linked receptors. This hypothesis was explored further in the renal microvasculature by examining the effects of PGI2, PGE1, and PGE2 on rabbit preglomerular microvascular adenylate cyclase. A membrane preparation derived from freshly isolated rabbit renal preglomerular microvessels was used in these studies. NaF, forskolin, or 5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate were found to be effective in increasing adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanosine-5'-triphosphate. A dose-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase was also observed with guanosine-5'-triphosphate. PGE1, PGE2, and PGI2 produced a dose-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity only in the presence of guanosine-5'-triphosphate suggesting that this nucleotide is essential for prostaglandin-induced stimulation of the enzyme. PGI2 exhibited a time-dependent increase in adenylate cyclase activity and this increased activity reached a plateau at 20-25 min. When PGE1 and PGE2 were added together, no additive effect on adenylate cyclase stimulation was noted whereas PGI2 and PGE2 when added together produced an additive stimulatory effect. When viewed together, these data suggest the presence of separate PGI2 and PGE adenylate cyclase-linked receptors in rabbit renal preglomerular microvessels. These findings also suggest that in the renal microvasculature, cyclic AMP may be a second messenger mediating the vasodilatory effects of both PGI2 and PGE2.  相似文献   

13.
Human platelet adenylate cyclase is stimulated by prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and is inhibited by epinephrine via alpha-adrenoceptors. Both agonists, epinephrine more than PGE1, increase the activity of a low Km GTPase in platelet membranes. Pretreatment of intact platelets or platelet membranes with the sulfhydryl reagent, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), abolished the inhibition of the adenylate cyclase and the concomitant stimulation of the GTPase by epinephrine. In contrast, stimulation of the adenylate cyclase by PGE1 was not affected or even increased by NEM pretreatment; only at high NEM concentrations were both basal and PGE1-stimulated activities decreased. Similarly, the PGE1-induced activation of the low Km GTPase was not or was only partially reduced by NEM. Adenylate cyclase activation by stable GTP analogs, NaF, and cholera toxin was also not decreased by NEM pretreatment. Exposure of intact platelets to NEM did not reduce alpha-adrenoceptor number and affinities for agonists and antagonists, as determined by [3H]yohimbine binding in platelet particles. The data indicate that NEM uncouples alpha-adrenoceptor-mediated inhibition of platelet adenylate cyclase, leaving the receptor recognition site and the adenylate cyclase itself relatively intact. Although the effect of NEM may be based on a reaction with the alpha-adrenoceptor site interacting with a coupling component, the selective loss of the adenylate cyclase inhibition together with an even increased stimulation of the enzyme by PGE1 suggests that there are two at least partially distinct regulatory sites involved in opposing hormonal regulations of adenylate cyclase activity, with that involved in hormonal inhibition being highly susceptible to inactivation by NEM.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of molybdate on adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) in rat liver plasma membranes has been examined. The apparent K alpha for molybdate activation of the enzyme is 4.5 mM, and maximal, 7-fold stimulation is achieved at 50 mM. The observed increase in cAMP formation in the adenylate cyclase assay is not due to: (a) an inhibition of ATP hydrolysis; (b) a molybdate-catalyzed conversion of ATP to cAMP; (c) an inhibition of cAMP hydrolysis; or (d) an artifact in the isolation of cAMP formed in the reaction. Molybdate activation of adenylate cyclase is a general phenomenon exhibited by the enzyme in brain, cardiac, and renal tissue homogenates and in erythrocyte ghosts. However, like fluoride and guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), molybdate does not activate the soluble rat testicular adenylate cyclase. Molybdate is a reversible activator of adenylate cyclase. Activation is not due to an increase in ionic strength and is independent of the salt used to introduce molybdate. Molybdate does not activate adenylate cyclase previously stimulated with Gpp(NH)p or fluoride. At concentration greater than 20 mM, molybdate inhibits fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase, and at concentrations greater than 100 mM, molybdate stimulation of basal adenylate cyclase activity is diminished.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the mechanism of serine protease stimulation of rat ovarian adenylate cyclase, a variety of synthetic protease inhibitors were used. These inhibitors blocked trypsin, chymotrypsin and hCG stimulation of adenylate cyclase in nearly the same manner. The inhibition of hormone stimulated adnylate cyclase could not be explained by a loss of [125I]hCG binding. Cholera toxin and epinephrine stimulation of adenylate cyclase were similarly inhibited, whereas basal and fluoride-stimulated activities were only affected by higher doses of the inhibitors. The results suggest that adenylate cyclase in the ovary may be regulated by membrane protease activity.  相似文献   

16.
In isolated perfused rat hearts, epidermal growth factor (EGF; 15 nM) increased cellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) content by 9.5-fold. In rat cardiac membranes, EGF also stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in a dose-dependent manner, with maximal stimulation (35% above control) being observed at 10 nM-EGF. Half-maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase was observed at 40 pM-EGF. Although the beta-adrenergic-receptor antagonist propranolol markedly attenuated the isoprenaline-mediated increase in cAMP content of perfused hearts and stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity, it did not alter the ability of EGF to elevate tissue cAMP content and stimulate adenylate cyclase. The involvement of a guanine-nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein) in the activation of adenylate cyclase by EGF was indicated by the following evidence. First, the EGF-mediated stimulation of adenylate cyclase required the presence of the non-hydrolysable GTP analogue, guanyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate (p[NH]ppG). Maximal stimulation was observed in the presence of 10 microM-p[NH]ppG. Secondly, in the presence of 10 microM-p[NH]ppG, the stable GDP analogue guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate at a concentration of 10 microM blocked the stimulation of the adenylate cyclase by 1 nM- and 10 nM-EGF. Third, NaF + AlCl3-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was not altered by EGF. The ability of EGF to stimulate adenylate cyclase was not affected by pertussis-toxin treatment of cardiac membranes. However, in cholera-toxin-treated cardiac membranes, when the adenylate cyclase activity was stimulated by 2-fold, EGF was ineffective. Finally, PMA by itself did not alter the activity of cardiac adenylate cyclase, but abolished the EGF-mediated stimulation of this enzyme activity. The experimental evidence in the present paper demonstrates, for the first time, that EGF stimulates adenylate cyclase in rat cardiac membranes through a stimulatory GTP-binding regulatory protein, and this effect is manifested in elevated cellular cAMP levels in perfused hearts exposed to EGF.  相似文献   

17.
Adenosine caused a dose-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase in homogenates from rat striatum and tuberculum olfactorium (200 and 300% stimulation by 100 muM adenosine). The effect of adenosine was not antagonized by haloperidol. Subcellular fractionation suggested that adenosine stimulates a different adenylate cyclase than dopamine. Basal adenylate cyclase activity in freshly prepared homogenates was reduced by dialysis and by the addition of adenosine deaminase. Basal adenylate cyclase activity was enchanced by papaverine and dipyridamole, but reduced by theophylline and isobutylmethylxanthine. The results are compatible with the opinion that endogenous adenosine is capable of activating adenylate cyclase in these areas of the rat brain.  相似文献   

18.
1. Renal tubular membranes from rat kidneys were prepared, and adenylate cyclase activity was measured under basal conditions, after stimulation by NaF or salmon calcitonin. Apparent Km value of the enzyme for hormone-linked receptor was close to 1 x 10(-8) M. 2. The system was sensitive to temperature and pH. pH was found to act both on affinity for salmon calcitonin-linked receptor and maximum stimulation, suggesting an effect of pH on hormone-receptor binding and on a subsequent step. 3. KCl was without effect areas whereas CoCl and CaCl2 above 100 muM and MnCl2 above 1 muM inhibited F- -and salmon calcitonin-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities. The Ca2+ inhibition of the response reflected a fall in maximum stimulation and not a loss of affinity of salmon calcitonin-linked receptor for the enzyme. 4. The measurement of salmon calcitonin-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity as a function of ATP concentration showed that the hormone increases the maximum velocity of the adenylate cyclase. GTP, ITP and XTP at 200 muM did not modify basal, salmon calcitonin- and parathyroid hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities. 5. Basal, salmon calcitonin- and F- -sensitive adenylate cyclase activities decreased at Mg2+ concentrations below 10 mM. High concentrations of Mg2+ (100 mM) led to an inhibition of the F- -stimulated enzyme. 6. Salmon calcitonin-linked receptor had a greater affinity for adenylate cyclase than human or porcine calcitonin-linked receptors. There was no additive effect of these three calcitonin peptides whereas parathyroid hormone added to salmon calcitonin increased adenylate cyclase activity, thus showing that both hormones bound to different membrane receptors. Human calcitonin fragments had no effect on adenylate cyclase activity. 7. Salmon calcitonin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity decreased with the preincubation time. This was due to progressive degradation of the hormone and not to the rate of binding to membrane receptors.  相似文献   

19.
The adenylate cyclase system of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains the CYR1 polypeptide, responsible for catalyzing formation of cyclic AMP (cAMP) from ATP, and two RAS polypeptides, which mediate stimulation of cAMP synthesis of guanine nucleotides. By analogy to the mammalian enzyme, models of yeast adenylate cyclase have depicted the enzyme as a membrane protein. We have concluded that adenylate cyclase is only peripherally bound to the yeast membrane, based on the following criteria: (i) substantial activity was found in cytoplasmic fractions; (ii) activity was released from membranes by the addition of 0.5 M NaCl; (iii) in the presence of 0.5 M NaCl, activity in detergent extracts had hydrodynamic properties identical to those of cytosolic or NaCl-extracted enzyme; (iv) antibodies to yeast adenylate cyclase identified a full-length adenylate cyclase in both membrane and cytosol fractions; and (v) activity from both cytosolic fractions and NaCl extracts could be functionally reconstituted into membranes lacking adenylate cyclase activity. The binding of adenylate cyclase to the membrane may have regulatory significance; the fraction of activity associated with the membrane increased as cultures approached stationary phase. In addition, binding of adenylate cyclase to membranes appeared to be inhibited by cAMP. These results indicate the existence of a protein anchoring adenylate cyclase to the membrane. The identity of this protein remains unknown.  相似文献   

20.
H R Masure  D R Storm 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):438-442
Bordetella pertussis produces a calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase that is associated with the whole bacteria and released into its culture media. Preparations of this enzyme invade animal cells, causing elevations in intracellular cAMP levels. Cell-associated adenylate cyclase accounted for 28% of the total adenylate cyclase activity while 72% was released into the culture supernatant. Over 90% of the cell-associated adenylate cyclase activity was sensitive to trypsin treatment of whole cells, indicating that the catalytic domain of the enzyme is localized on the outer surface of the bacterial cells. Enzyme activity was released from whole cells by treatment with SDS. This activity was resolved as a large form (Mr 215,000) by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In contrast, the culture supernatant contained only the 45,000-dalton catalytic subunit. Enzyme activity released from spheroplasts by sonication was resolved into a large form (Mr 215,000) and a small form (Mr 45,000). The appearance of the small form with spheroplast formation was probably the result of proteolytic degradation. Antibodies generated against the catalytic subunit purified from culture supernatants cross-reacted with and immunoprecipitated both the large and small forms of adenylate cyclase isolated from bacterial cells. Furthermore, incubation of the cell-associated enzyme with a crude bacterial extract resulted in a time-dependent disappearance of the 215,000-dalton form and a concomitant increase in the amount of the smaller 45,000-dalton form. There was also a parallel increase in the ability of the cell-associated preparation to elevate intracellular cAMP levels in N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号