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1.
Optimal conditions for activation of adenylate cyclase in membrane particles were studied. Enzyme activation with serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine). NaF, and guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)-triphosphate (GTP gamma S) was time-and temperature-dependent. Mg2+ was required for enzyme activation. Adenylate cyclase that was activated by NaF or GTP gamma S was gradually inhibited by N-methylmaleimide while enzyme activated with serotonin and GTP responded faster to inhibition by the same sulfhydryl reagent. Th enzyme responded in a similar fashion to a spin-labeled N-methylmaleimide analog 3-(maleimidomethyl)-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrolidinyloxyl (i.e., N-methylmaleimide nitroxide). Binding of the spin label was enhanced following enzyme activation by serotonin, NaF, or GTP gamma S in the presence of Mg2+. Activation of the enzyme was accompanied by an increase in the strong immobilization peaks in the EPR spectra. Both effects, the increase in binding and in the strong immobilization peaks, can be induced by Mg2+ alone. The results indicate that a general conformational induced by Mg2+ may be essential for adenylate cyclase activation.  相似文献   

2.
The thermal inactivation of adenylate cyclase was investigated in human lymphocytes and in the N-protein deficient cyc-S49 mouse lymphoma cell line. The enzyme is rapidly inactivated at 37C with a t12 of 5.5 and 4.5 min respectively in human and cyc? membranes. Thermal inactivation is prevented by at least two mechanisms. The first mechanism involves ATP which stabilizes adenylate cyclase in a concentration dependent manner similar to the Km of ATP for cAMP formation. However, the inhibition of inactivation does not require Mg++ while the enzyme catalysis of ATP to cAMP does. The second mechanism involves substances which activate the enzyme. The human lymphocyte enzyme is equally stabilized by either NaF, GppNHp, or forskolkin. In contrast, the cyc? enzyme is fully stabilized by forskolin but only partially stabilized by NaF. When human erythrocyte N-protein extract is added to cyc? membranes, NaF fully stabilizes the enzyme. These data suggest that an activated N-protein is instrumental in stabilizing adenylate cyclase and that there is some N-protein component in cyc? membranes through which NaF may be exerting its stabilizing action.  相似文献   

3.
The liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, has a very active adenylate cyclase which can be stimulated by NaF or by serotonin and guanine nucleotides. Micromolar amounts of AlCl3 augment the activation by F-. In contrast, when the enzyme is activated with serotonin and guanine nucleotides, AlCl3 inhibits the activation. Aluminum also inhibits the activation by forskolin. Gallium mimics the effects of aluminum.  相似文献   

4.
The interdependent effects of divalent cations, pH, and various activators of adenylate cyclase were examined in partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver. This adenylate cyclase was found to exhibit largely alkaline pH optima, in the range of 8.3 to 9.3, for the expression of basal activity, and activities with GTP, GPP(NH)P, prostaglandin E1 and GTP, and N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine and GTP. Glucagon and GTP, while increasing activity 8- to 10-fold, shifted the optimum activity to about pH 7.5. However, stimulation of the enzyme by 10 mm NaF or 3 mm Na3VO4 was strikingly dependent on pH. In both cases activation was optimal at pH values between 6.3 and 7.3, though above about pH 8.5 fluoride was barely stimulatory and vanadate was slightly inhibitory. This effect of elevated pH to reduce fluoride- or vanadate-stimulated activity could be prevented by glucagon plus guanine nucleotide, but could not be reversed once activity was lowered during preincubation. The data suggest that this effect was not due to the formation of an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase per se, nor to an artifact of assay methods. The effect of elevated pH was more pronounced with Mn2+ as activating cation than with Mg2+. With fluoride and lower pH adenylate cyclase was essentially Mn2+ requiring, whereas with fluoride and higher pH activity was comparable with either cation. The data suggested that combinations of pH, divalent cation, and activating ligand dictate the interactions of the constitutive subunits of the adenylate cyclase and provide additional criteria with which current models for the regulation of adenylate cyclase may be tested.  相似文献   

5.
The activation of uterine smooth muscle adenylate cyclase was studied by pretreating the particulate form of the enzyme with the GTP analog guanyl-5′-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p). Pretreatment with Gpp(NH)p left the enzyme in an irreversibly activated state which survived subsequent washing in guanyl nucleotide-free buffer. Activation under these conditions was multiphasic with rapid and slow components. At 23 °C slow activation proceeded at about 110th the rate of rapid activation. The onset of the slow phase took longer at lower temperatures. Routine adenylate cyclase assay conditions (conversion of [32P]ATP to cyclic [32P]AMP) carried out without pretreatment probably characterized the rapidly activated component. The simplest kinetic model suggests not only the generally accepted two-step association reaction, but also implies the existence of more than one enzyme form, each of which is characterized by a separate activation rate. The complex kinetics of activation might be explained by a heterogeneous mixture of unassociated and preassociated nucleotide binding and catalytic subunits.  相似文献   

6.
Certain biochemical characteristics of an adenylate cyclase that is activated by low concentrations of histamine (Ka, 8 μm) and that is present in cell-free preparations from the dorsal hippocampus of guinea pig brain have been studied. Histamine increased the maximal reaction velocity of adenylate cyclase without altering the Km (0.18 mm) for its substrate, MgATP. Increasing concentrations of free Mg2+ stimulated enzymatic activity; the kinetic properties of this activation by Mg2+ suggest the existence of a Mg2+ allosteric site on the enzyme. Histamine increased the affinity of this apparent site for free Mg2+. Free ATP was a competitive inhibitor with respect to the MgATP substrate. The apparent potency of free ATP as an inhibitor increased in the presence of histamine. In the presence of Mg2+, low concentrations of Ca2+ markedly inhibited adenylate cyclase activity; half-maximal inhibition of both basal and histamine-stimulated enzyme activity occurred at 40 μm Ca2+. Other divalent cations, including Zn2+, Cu2+, and Cd2+, were also inhibitory. Of the divalent cations tested, only Co2+ and Mn2+ could replace Mg2+ in supporting histamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. The nucleoside triphosphates GTP and ITP increased basal adenylate cyclase activity and markedly potentiated the stimulation by histamine. Preincubation of adenylate cyclase with 5′-guanylylimidodiphosphate dramatically increased enzyme activity; in this activated state, the adenylate cyclase was relatively refractory to further stimulation by histamine or F?. The subcellular distribution of histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity was studied in subfractions from guinea pig cerebral cortex. The highest total and specific activities were observed in those fractions enriched in nerve endings, while adenylate cyclase activity was not detectable in the brain cytosol fraction. A possible physiological role for this histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase in neuronal function is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
A comparison was made between the activation of membrane-bound adenylate cyclase from rat fat cell membranes and the enzyme solubilized with digitonin. The isoprenaline stimulation of the particulate enzyme was enhanced by GTP, both in the presence of Mg2+ and Mn2+, but no effect of the metal ion nor of GTP was found on the Ka of isoprenaline. The Ka of sodium fluoride for enzyme stimulation was shifted to 3-fold higher concentrations when Mg2+ was replaced by Mn2+, whereas V decreased. GTP did not influence the Ka of sodium fluoride but reduced V, irrespective of the metal ion. After digitonin solubilization the enzyme was no longer responsive to isoprenaline or GTP; however, V of the sodium fluoride activation was higher in the presence of Mn2+ than in the presence of Mg2+, and the Ka was found at 15-fold higher concentrations. Both the solubilized and the particulate adenylate cyclase were inhibited by adenosine; this inhibition was also seen with the fluoride stimulated enzyme. We conclude that solubilization with digitonin did not result in an enzyme preparation which preferentially turns over MnATP2+, although the fat cell adenylate cyclase possesses a metal ion regulatory site with a higher affinity for Mn2+ than for Mg2+. The data suggest that the guanyl nucleotide regulatory site and the sodium fluoride-sensitive site are located on different subunits while there is an interaction between the metal ion regulatory site and the fluoride-sensitive site.  相似文献   

8.
In hamster adipocyte ghosts, ACTH stimulates adenylate cyclase by a GTP-dependent process, whereas prostaglandin E E1, α-adrenergic agonists and nicotinic acid inhibit the enzyme by a mechanism which is both GTP- and sodium-dependent. The influence of the divalent cations Mn2+ and Mg2+, was studied on these two different, apparently receptor-mediated effects on the adipocyte adenylate cyclase. At low Mn2+ concentrations, GTP (1 μM) decreased enzyme activity by about 80%. Under this condition, ACTH (0.1 μM) stimulated the cyclase by 6- to 8-fold, and NaCl (100 mM) caused a similar activation. In the presence of both GTP and NaCl, prostaglandin E1 (1 or 10 μM) and nicotinic acid (30 μM) inhibited the enzyme by about 70–80% and epinephrine (300 μM, added in combination with a β-adrenergic blocking agent) by 40–50%. With increasing concentrations of Mn2+, the GTP-induced decrease and the NaCl-induced increase in activity diminished, with a concomitant decrease in prostaglandin E1?, nicotinic acid- and epinephrine-induced inhibitions as well as in ACTH-induced stimulation. At 1 mM Mn2+, inhibition of the enzyme was almost abolished and stimulation by ACTH was largely reduced, whereas activation of the enzyme by KF (10 mM) was only partially impaired. The uncoupling action of Mn2+ on hormone-induced inhibition was half-maximal at 100–200 μM and appeared not to be due to increased formation of the enzyme substrate, Mn · ATP. It occurred without apparent lag phase and could not be overcome by increasing the concentration of GTP. Similar but not identical findings with regard to adenylate cyclase stimulation and inhibition by hormonal factors were obtained with Mg2+, although about 100-fold higher concentrations of Mg2+ than of Mn2+ were required. The data indicate that Mn2+at low concentrations functionally uncouples inhibitory and stimulatory hormone receptors from adenylate adenylate cyclase in membrane preparations of hamster adipocytes, and they suggest that the mechanism leading to uncoupling involves an action of Mn2+ on the functions of the guanine nucleotide site(s) in the system.  相似文献   

9.
We report that the adenylate cyclase system in human platelets is subject to multiple regulation by guanine nucleotides. Previously it has been reported that GTP is either required for or has little effect on the response of the enzyme to prostaglandin E1. We have found that when platelet lysates were prepared in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, GTP lowered the basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of Mg2+. The basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were also increased by washing, which presumably removes endogenous GTP. The analog, guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate mimics the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity but it stimulates basal enzyme activity. The onset of the inhibitory effect of GTP on the adenylate cyclase system is rapid (1 min) and is maintained at a constant rate during incubation for 10 min. GTP and guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate were noncompetitive inhibitors of prostaglandin E1. An increase in the concentration of Mg2+ gradually reduces the effect of GTP while having little influence on the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate. Neither the substrate concentration nor the pH (7.2–8.5) is related to the inhibitory effect of guanine nucleotides. The inhibition by nucleotides was found to show a specificity for purine nucleotides with the order of potency being guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate > dGTP > GTP > ITP > XTP > CTP > TTP. The inhibitory effect of GTP is reversible while the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is irreversible. The GTP inhibitory effect was abolished by preparing the lysates in the presence of Ca2+. However, the inhibitory effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate persisted. Substitution of Mn2+ for Mg2+ in the assay medium resulted in a diminution of the inhibitory effect of GTP on basal activity and converted the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated activity to a stimulatory effect. At a lower concentration of Mn2+ (less than 2 mM) guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate inhibited prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but at a higher concentration of Mn2+, it caused an increase in enzyme activity exceeding that occuring in the presence of prostaglandin E1. In the presence of Mn2+, dGTP mimics the effect of GTP and is 50% as effective as GTP. Our data suggest that the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is mainly due to its direct effect on the enzyme itself, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is due to enhancement of the coupling between the prostaglandin E1 receptor and adenylate cyclase. These studies also indicate that the method of preparation of platelet lysates can profoundly alter the nature of guanine nucleotide regulation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

10.
Vasopressin-sensitive pig kidney adenylate cyclase is sensitive to several effectors, such as Mg2+, other divalent cations, and guanyl nucleotides. The purpose of the present study was to compare the main characteristics of adenylate cyclase activation by vasopressin, Mg2+, and GMPPNP, respectively. Mg2+·ions were shown to exert at least three different effects on adenylate cyclase. The substrate of the adenylate cyclase reaction is the Mg-ATP complex. Mg2+ interacts with an enzyme regulatory site. Finally, Mg2+ can modulate the hormonal response, with Mg2+ions affecting the coupling function–that is, the quantitative relationship between receptor occupancy and adenylate cyclase activation. At all the magnesium concentrations tested, from 0.25 mM to 16 mM, adenylate cyclase activation was not a direct function of receptor occupancy. At low Mg2+ concentrations, adenylate cyclase activation dose-response curve to the hormone tended to be superimposable to the hormone dose-binding curve. These results suggest a role of magnesium at the coupling step between the hormone-receptor complex and adenylate cyclase response. Cobalt, but not calcium, ions could exert the same effects as Mg2+ ions on this coupling step. GMPPNP induced considerable adenylate cyclase activation (15 to 35 times the basal value). Activation by GMPPNP was highly time and temperature dependent. At 30° C, a 20 to 60 min preincubation period in the presence of GMPPNP was needed to obtain maximal activation. The higher the dose of GMPPNP in the medium, the longer it took to reach equilibrium. At 15° C, activation was still increasing with time after 3 hr preincubation in the presence of the nucleotide. GMPPNP was active in a 10?8 M to 10?5 M concentration range. Unlike the results obtained with lysine vasopressin, the kinetic characteristics of dose-dependent adenylate cyclase activation curves by GMPPNP were unaffected by varying Mg2+ concentrations except for the increase in velocity when raising Mg2+ concentration. It was not clear whether or not the activation processes by the hormone and by GMPPNP had common mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of Adenosine-Sensitive Adenylate Cyclase from Rat Brain Striatum   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2  
An adenosine-sensitive adenylate cyclase has been characterized from rat brain striatum. In whole homogenates as well as in particulate fractions, N6-phenylisopropyl adenosine (PIA), 2-chloroadenosine, and adenosine N′-oxide were equipotent in stimulating adenylate cyclase. Although GTP inhibited basal as well as PIA-stimulated activity of whole homogenates, the enzyme showed an absolute dependency on GTP for stimulation by PIA, dopamine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine in a particulate fraction derived from discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation. Adenosine exerts two effects on this adenylate cyclase, stimulation at low concentrations and inhibition at high concentrations, suggesting the presence of two adenosine binding sites. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by PIA was dependent on the concentration of Mg2-. The degree of stimulation by PIA was greater at a low concentration of Mg2+, which suggests that stimulation by PIA was accompanied by increasing the apparent affinity for Mg2+. Activation of adenylate cyclase by PIA was blocked by theophylline or 3-isobutyl- 1-methylxanthine (IBMX). The pH optimum for basal or (PIA + GTP)-stimulated activities was broad, with a peak between 8.5 and 9.5. In the presence of GTP, stimulation by an optimal concentration of PIA was additive, with maximal stimulation by the catecholamines. Phospholipase A2 treatment at a concentration of 1 U/ml for 5 min completely abolished the stimulatory effect of dopamine, whereas PIA-stimulated activity remained unaltered. These data suggest that rat brain striatum either has a single adenylate cyclase, which is stimulated by catecholamines and adenosine by distinct mechanisms, or has different cyclase populations, stimulated by either adenosine or catecholamines.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The characteristics of the cholera toxin-stimulated adenylate cyclase of toad (Bufus marinus) and rat erythrocyte plasma membranes have been examined, with special emphasis on the response to purine nucleotides, fluoride, magnesium and catecholamine hormones. Toad erythrocytes briefly exposed to low concentrations of cholera toxin (40,000 to 60,000 molecules per cell) and incubated 2 to 4 hr at 30°C exhibit dramatic alterations in the kinetic and regulatory properties of adenylate cyclase. The approximateK m for ATP, Mg++ increases from about 1.8 to 3.4mm in the toxinstimulated enzyme. The stimulation by cholera toxin increases with increasing ATP, Mg++ concentrations, from 20% at low levels (0.2mm) to 500% at high concentrations (greater than 3mm). Addition of GTP, Mg++ (0.2mm) restores normal kinetic properties to the toxin-modified enzyme, such that stimulation is most simply explained by an elevation ofV max. GTP enhances the toxin-treated enzyme activity two-to fourfold at low ATP concentrations, but this effect disappears at high levels of the substrate. At 0.6mm ATP and 5mm MgCl2 the apparentK a for GTP, Mg++ is 5 to 10m. The control (unstimulated) enzyme demonstrates a very small response to the guanyl nucleotide. 5-ITP also stimulates the toxin-treated enzyme but cGMP, guanine, and the pyrimidine nucleotides have no effect. Cholera toxin also alters the activation of adenylate cyclase by free Mg++, decreasing the apparentK a from about 25 to 5mm. (–)-Epinephrine sensitizes the toad erythrocyte adenylate cyclase to GTP and also decreases the apparentK a for free metal. Sodium fluoride, which cause a 70- to 100-fold activation of enzyme activity, has little effect on sensitivity to GTP, and does not change the apparentK a for Mg++; moreover, it prevents modulation of these parameters by cholera toxin. Conversely, cholera toxin severely inhibits NaF activation, and in the presence of fluoride ion the usual three- to fivefold stimulation by toxin becomes a 30 to 60% inhibition of activity. The toxin-stimulated enzyme can be further activated by catecholamines; in the presence of GTP the (–)-epinephrine stimulation is enhanced by two- to threefold. The increased catecholamine stimulation of toad erythrocyte adenylate cyclase induced by cholera toxin is explained primarily by an increase in the maximal extent of activation by the hormones. Rat erythrocyte adenylate cyclase is also modified by cholera toxin. In the mammalian system the apparent affinity for the hormone appears to be increased. Cholera toxin thus induces profound and nearly permanent changes in adenylate cyclase by a unique process which mimics the stimulation by hormones in important ways, and which also accentuates the normal hormonal response. The relevance of these findings to the mechanism of action of cholera toxin is considered.Part of this work was reported at the 1974 meeting of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (Bennett & Cuatrecasas, 1974).  相似文献   

13.
Pretreatment of isolated rat liver plasma membranes by washing with NaHCO3 buffer or by exposure to the chelator ethyleneglycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) with or without the ionophore A23187, produced a decrease in the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase (ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing) EC 4.6.1.1) to subsequent stimulation by NaF or guanosine 5′-(β-γ-imino)triphosphate (GPP(NH)P). Sensitivity to activation by the nucleotide could be restored by addition of the lyophilized and ashed wash or by addition of Ca2+, Mg2+ or Mn2+. The factor extracted from the membranes by these various treatments which was responsible for loss of stimulation was identified as Ca2+. Determination of the metal ion content of isolated membranes by atomic absorption spectrometry indicated that Ca2+ was the only divalent cation present in sufficient concentration to support persistent activation by either NaF or GPP(NH)P.Pretreatment of liver plasma membranes with trifluoperazine, which inhibits the action of Ca2+-dependent regulator protein in other enzyme systems, reduced GPP(NH)P activation of adenylate cyclase and caused marked depletion of membrane Ca2+. The effects of low concentrations (less than 100 μM) of the phenothiazine could be reversed totally by Ca2+ and partly by regulator protein. At higher concentrations of trifluoperazine, slight restoration of enzyme activation was seen with either agent. The hypothesis is presented that Ca+ interacts with the nucleotide (GTP or GDP) regulatory site(s) of the adenylate cyclase. This interaction may be regulator-protein-dependent and may be important in determining the sensitivity of the enzyme to nucleotide activation in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Guanylate cyclase from crude homogenates of vegetative Dictyosteliumdiscoideum has been characterized. It has a pH optimum of 8.0, temperature optimum of 25°C and requires 1 mM dithiothreitol for optimal activity. It strongly prefers Mn++ to Mg++ as divalent cation, requires Mn++ in excess of GTP for detectable activity, and is inhibited by high Mn++ concentrations. It has an apparent Km for GTP of approximately 517 μM at 1 mM excess Mn++.The specific activity of guanylate cyclase in vegetative homogenates is 50–80 pmoles cGMP formed/min/mg protein. Most of the vegetative activity is found in the supernatant of a 100,000 x g spin (S100). The enzyme is relatively unstable. It loses 40% of its activity after 3 hours storage on ice. Enzyme activity was measured from cells that had been shaken in phosphate buffer for various times. It was found that the specific activity changed little for at least 8 hours. Cyclic AMP at 10?4 M did not affect the guanylate cyclase activity from crude homogenates of vegetative or 6 hour phosphate-shaken cells.  相似文献   

15.
CsCI-prepared 50S cores in the presence of groups of individual split proteins were tested for their capacity to support EF-G dependent GTP hydrolysis. The activity of cores prepared at 40 mM Mg2+ could be restored by adding L7L12 and L10 together, each in an amount of two copies per 50S particle, which abolishes the difference in activity between L7 and L12. In the range of 20-2 mM Mg2+, 50S cores lose the protein L6, which is also required for GTP hydrolysis. L10 cannot replace L6, or vice versa.  相似文献   

16.
A Ca2+-binding protein (TCBP), which was isolated from Tetrahymena pyriformis, enhanced about 20-fold particulate-bound guanylate cyclase activity in Tetrahymena cells in the presence of a low concentration of Ca2+, while the adenylate cyclase activity was not increased. The enhancement was eliminated by ethylene glycol-bis (β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid. The enzyme activity was not stimulated by rabbit skeletal muscle troponin-C, the Ca2+-binding component of troponin, or other some proteins. In the presence of TCBP, stimulating effect of calcium ion on the enzyme activity was observed within the range of pCa 6.0 to 4.6, and was immediate and reversible.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylosuccinate synthase (EC 6.3.4.4.) (l-aspartate + GTP + IMPMg2+adenylosuccinate + GDP + Pi) is an important site for the regulation of adenylate biosynthesis. A partially purified preparation of the enzyme from Escherichia coli B showed feedback inhibition by ADP and AMP, weak positive response to the adenylate energy charge, and weak positive response to the mole fraction of GTP in the GTP + GDP pool. These responses seem to ensure that the synthesis of adenine nucleotides will be controlled appropriately in response to the level of end products and to the energy state of the cell, and to avoid the potential difficulties arising from the fact that the end products of this sequence and the indicators of the energy state of the cell are the same compounds.  相似文献   

18.
The adenylate cyclase activity of a participate preparation of rat cerebral cortex is composed of at least two contributing components, one of which requires a Ca2+-dependent regulator protein (CDR) for activity (Brostrom, C. O., Brostrom, M. A., and Wolff, D. J. (1977) J. Biol. Chem.252, 5677–5685). Each of these components of the activity was activated by GTP and its synthetic analog, 5-guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p). The component of the adenylate cyclase activity which did not respond to CDR (CDR-independent activity) was stimulated approximately 60% by 100 μm GTP and 3.5-fold by 100 μm Gpp(NH)p. Concentrations of GTP required for maximal activation of the CDR-dependent adenylate cyclase component decreased as CDR concentrations in the assay were increased. Similarly, GTP pr Gpp(NH)p lowered the concentration of CDR required to produce half-maximal activation of this enzyme form. At saturating CDR concentrations, however, increases in activity were not observed with the addition of these nucleotides. The CDR-dependent component responded biphasically (activation followed by inhibition) to increasing free Ca2+ concentrations; both phases of this response occurred at lower free Ca2+ concentrations with GTP present in the assay. The concentration of chlorpromazine which inhibited activation of adenylate cyclase by CDR was elevated when GTP was present. The CDR-dependent form of activity, which is stabilized by CDR to thermal inactivation, was also stabilized by Gpp(NH)p. The increase in stability produced by Gpp(NH)p did not require the presence of CDR, and stabilization with both Gpp(NH)p and CDR was greater than that obtained with either Gpp(NH)p or CDR alone.  相似文献   

19.
ADP-ribosylation of the adenylate cyclase GF regulatory subunit by cholera toxin is a major tool for the study of this enzyme. Investigation of the brain enzyme has been hampered up to now by the failure to demonstrate cholera toxin-dependent ADP-ribosylation of membrane-bound proteins. Synaptosomes prepared by flotation from fresh brains homogenized in the presence of protease inhibitors yielded membranes of which several proteins could be ADP-ribosylated by the toxin. The same membranes subjected to mild proteolysis could not be ADP-ribosylated. Adenylate cyclase activation and ADP-ribosylation were simultaneous processes. The major labeled species was of 47,000 Mr. It was solubilized by Lubrol-PX, together with other labeled polypeptides. As analyzed on sucrose gradients, the 47,000 Mr protein was found both in the 3S region, and in the adenylate cyclase containing fraction (9.1S).  相似文献   

20.
The adenylate cyclase activity of human ejaculated spermatozoa in broken-cell preparations was investigated. In the presence of 5 mM metal cations and 0.1 mM ATP, the relative enzyme activity with Mn2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Ba2+ was 1.00, 0.28, 0.22, and 0.03, respectively. Added Ca2+ appeared to activate the enzyme in the presence of Mn2+ or Mg2+. The human sperm adenylate cyclase was stimulated by ~ 2-fold by free Ca2+ (lmM) in the presence of Mg2+ (5 mM). If the GTP analogue, 5′-guanylyl imidophosphate (Gpp(NH)p) was added to the sperm homogenate in the presence of 200 μM ethylene-glycol-bis (β-aminoethylether) N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), the adenylate cyclase activity was increased by approximately 25%, but with the addition of 280 μM Ca2+ there was a decrease in enzyme activity. A similar response to low concentrations of Ca2+ was obtained after complementation of the sperm enzyme with the guanine nucleotide regulatory component from human erythrocytes, where the addition of 40 μM Gpp(NH)p, 200 μM EGTA, and Ca2+ (≤ 160 μM) stimulated the sperm enzyme ~ 3–4-fold, but the further addition of Ca2+ (280 μM, final) neutralized the stimulatory effect. The addition of adenosine, and the nucleotides 5′-AMP and 5′-ADP inhibited the enzyme, whereas guanine and 5′-GMP had no appreciable effect. Human follicular fluid and serum also had little direct effect on the sperm adenylate cyclase. These resuls suggest that Ca2+ might be an important physiological modulator of the human sperm adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

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