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1.
Islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, is a hexameric protein composed of an A protomer and a B oligomer, the residual pentamer having such a subunit assembly that two different dimers, dimer 1 and dimer 2, are connected with each other by means of the smallest C subunit. Incubation of IAP with formaldehyde and pyridine-borane produced the modified toxin in which most of the free amino groups were dimethylated. The methylated and nonmethylated (native) IAP were disintegrated into their respective constituent components, which were then cross combined to reconstitute hybrid toxins with the original hexameric structure. The binding of the B oligomer to the mammalian cell surface via dimer 2 was, but the binding via dimer 1 was not, seriously impaired by methylation of amino groups in the protein. The binding of the B oligomer allowed the A protomer to enter cells and to catalyze ADP-ribosylation of a membrane Mr 41 000 protein. The diverse biological activities of IAP occurring by this mechanism were mimicked by not only methylated IAP but also all hybrid toxins, indicating that the free amino groups in the protein were not essential for the enzyme activity of the A protomer and that the A protomer was able to enter cells if the B oligomer bound to cells "monovalently" via dimer 1. An additional effect of the B oligomer binding, i.e., the direct stimulation, without the transport of the A protomer, of cells leading to mitosis in lymphocytes in vitro or increases in circulating lymphocytes in vivo, was not mimicked by hybrid toxins containing methylated dimer 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Guanine nucleotide regulation of membrane adenylate cyclase activity was uniquely modified after exposure of 3T3 mouse fibroblasts to low concentrations of islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin. The action of IAP, which occurred after a lag time, was durable and irreversible, and was associated with ADP-ribosylation of a membrane Mr = 41,000 protein. GTP, but not Gpp(NH)p, was more efficient and persistent in activating adenylate cyclase in membranes from IAP-treated cells than membranes from control cells. GTP and Gpp(NH)p caused marked inhibition of adenylate cyclase when the enzyme system was converted to its highly activated state by cholera toxin treatment or fluoride addition, presumably as a result of their interaction with the specific binding protein which is responsible for inhibition of adenylate cyclase. This inhibition was totally abolished by IAP treatment of cells, making it very likely that IAP preferentially modulates GTP inhibitory responses, thereby increasing GTP-dependent activation and negating GTP-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
A 40-kDa protein, in addition to the alpha-subunits of Gs (a GTP-binding protein involved in adenylate cyclase stimulation), was [32P]ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin (CT) in the membranes of neutrophil-like HL-60 cells, only if formyl Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP) was added to the ADP-ribosylation mixture. The 40-kDa protein proved to be the alpha-subunit of Gi serving as the substrate of pertussis toxin, islet-activating protein (IAP). No radioactivity was incorporated into this protein in membranes isolated from HL-60 cells that had been exposed to IAP. Gi-alpha purified from bovine brain and reconstituted into IAP-treated cell membranes was ADP-ribosylated by CT plus fMLP. Gi-alpha was ADP-ribosylated by IAP, but not by CT plus fMLP, in membranes from cells that had been pretreated with CT plus fMLP. When membrane Gi-alpha [32P]ADP-ribosylated by CT plus fMLP or IAP was digested with trypsin, the radiolabeled fragments arising from the two proteins were different from each other. These results suggest that CT ADP-ribosylates Gi-alpha in intact cells when coupled fMLP receptors are stimulated and that the sites modified by two toxins are not identical. CT-induced and fMLP-supported ADP-ribosylation of Gi-alpha was favored by Mg2+ and allow concentrations of GTP or its analogues but suppressed by GDP. The ADP-ribosylation did not occur at all, even in the presence of ADP-ribosylation factor that supported CT-induced modification of Gs, in phospholipid vesicles containing crude membrane extract in which Gi was functionally coupled to stimulated fMLP receptors. Thus, Gi activated via coupled receptors is the real substrate of CT-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation. This reaction may depend on additional factor(s) that are too labile to survive the process of membrane extraction.  相似文献   

4.
Exposure of NG108-15 hybrid cells to islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, caused strong ADP-ribosylation of one of the membrane proteins with a molecular weight of 41,000. This ADP-ribosylation was paralleled by decreases in the inhibition of cAMP accumulation in intact cells or associated with reversal of the inhibition of GTP-dependent membrane adenylate cyclase, via alpha-adrenergic, cholinergic muscarinic, or opiate receptors. The affinity of these receptors for agonists was lowered by guanyl-5'-yl beta-gamma-imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) reflecting their coupling to the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein in this cell line. This effect of Gpp(NH)p was lost in membranes of IAP-treated cells; in the absence of Gpp(NH)p, the affinity for agonist was lower in treated than in nontreated cells. In contrast, the function of these receptors to bind antagonists remained unaltered in IAP-treated cells. Thus, IAP treatment of NG108-15 cells caused specific uncoupling of negative signal transduction from inhibitory receptors to the adenylate cyclase catalytic unit via the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein, as a result of ADP-ribosylation of one of the subunits of the regulatory protein.  相似文献   

5.
The cAMP content of intact cells as well as adenylate cyclase of the membrane-rich particulate fractions was studied with C6 glioma cells that had been exposed to the culture medium supplemented with islet-activating protein (IAP), one of the pertussis toxins. Both the increase in the cellular cAMP content in response to a beta-adrenergic agonist and the stimulation of membrane adenylate cyclase by the beta-agonist and/or GTP were markedly enhanced by the IAP treatment of C6 cells, but no change was induced in affinities of the agonist (or an antagonist) or GTP for their respective sites of action (or binding). The concentration of IAP required for the half-maximal enhancement was as low as 1 pg/ml, when the time of cell exposure to the toxin was prolonged to 18 h. No enhancement was observed for the basal cAMP content or basal enzyme activity, nor was activation of adenylate cyclase by Gpp(NH)p (or NaF) affected by IAP treatment. The Vmax value of a specific and low Km GTPase was significantly smaller in the membranes of IAP-treated cells than in those of control cells. Cholera toxin treatment of cells activated adenylate cyclase without exerting any influence on these IAP actions. Thus, IAP would appear to enhance beta-receptor-coupled stimulation of adenylate cyclase, in a manner distinct from cholera toxin, by rendering more GTP available to the GTP sites on the regulatory subunit of the receptor-enzyme system.  相似文献   

6.
Adenylate cyclase of rat adipocyte membranes exhibited dual responses in a strictly GTP-dependent manner; an activation took place in the presence of certain receptor agonists such as isoproterenol or secretin, whereas an inhibitory phase was observed with other agonists such as prostaglandin E1 or purine-modified adenosine as well as with the stimulatory agonists at higher GTP concentrations. Treatment of membrane donor cells with islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, abolished the inhibitory phase while preserving the activatory phase. This unique action of IAP was associated with ADP-ribosylation of a membrane Mr = 41,000 protein. In contrast, the inhibitory phase was preserved in membranes from cholera toxin-treated cells. Monophasic and persistent activation of the cyclase was provoked by guanyl-5'-yl beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate. The time lag normally observed for the guanyl-5'-yl beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate activation was decreased by isoproterenol or cholera toxin but was not altered by IAP treatment. Our conclusion is that the sole site of IAP action is the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Ni) that is required for transmission of inhibitory signals from receptors to the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase; the function of Ni is lost upon IAP-catalyzed ADP ribosylation of the Mr = 41,000 protein which appears to be an active subunit of Ni. A possibility is discussed that rather diverse effects of IAP so far reported with various cell types are accounted for in terms of such interference with the function of Ni.  相似文献   

7.
A chemotactic peptide stimulated the high-affinity GTPase activity in membrane preparations from guinea pig neutrophils. The enzyme stimulation was inhibited by prior exposure of the membrane-donor cells to islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, or by direct incubation of the membrane preparations with its A-protomer (the active peptide) in the presence of NAD. The affinity for the chemotactic peptide binding to its receptors was lowered by guanyl-5'-yl beta, gamma-imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) reflecting its coupling to the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein in neutrophils. The affinity in the absence of Gpp(NH)p was lower, but the affinity in its presence was not, in the A-protomer-treated membranes than in nontreated membranes. The inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase (Ni) was purified from rat brain, and reconstituted into the membranes from IAP-treated cells. The reconstitution was very effective in increasing formyl-Met-Leu-Phe-dependent GTPase activity and increasing the chemotactic peptide binding to membranes due to affinity increase. The half-maximal concentration of IAP to inhibit GTPase activity was comparable to that of the toxin to inhibit the cellular arachidonate-releasing response which was well correlated with ADP-ribosylation of a membrane Mr = 41,000 protein (Okajima, F., and Ui, M. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 13863-13871). It is proposed that the IAP substrate, Ni, couples to the chemotactic peptide receptor and mediates arachidonate-releasing responses in neutrophils, as it mediates adenylate cyclase inhibition in many other cell types.  相似文献   

8.
M Tamura  K Nogimori  S Murai  M Yajima  K Ito  T Katada  M Ui  S Ishii 《Biochemistry》1982,21(22):5516-5522
The subunit structure of islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, has been analyzed to study a possibility that this protein is one of the A-B toxins [Gill, D. M. (1978) in Bacterial Toxins and Cell Membranes (Jeljaszewicz, J., & Wadstrom, T., Eds.) pp 291-332, Academic Press, New York]. Heating IAP with 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate caused its dissociation into five dissimilar subunits named S-1 (with a molecular weight of 28 000), S-2 (23 000), S-3 (22 000), S-4 (11 700), and S-5 (9300), as revealed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; their molar ratio in the native IAP was 1:1:1:2:1. The molecular weight of IAP estimated by equilibrium ultracentrifugation was 117 000 which was not at variance with the value obtained by summing up molecular weights of the constituent subunits. The preparative separation of these IAP subunits was next undertaken; exposure of IAP to 5 M ice-cold urea for 4 days followed by column chromatography with carboxymethyl-Sepharose caused sharp separation of S-1 and S-5, leaving the other subunits as two dimers. These dimers were then dissociated into their constituent subunits, i.e., S-2 and S-4 for one dimer and S-3 and S-4 for the other, after 16-h exposure to 8 M urea; these subunits were obtained individually upon further chromatography on a diethylaminoethyl-Sepharose column. Subunits other than S-1 were adsorbed as a pentamer by a column using haptoglobin as an affinity adsorbent. The same pentamer was obtained by adding S-5 to the mixture of two dimers. Neither this pentamer nor other oligomers (or protomers) exhibited biological activity in vivo. Recombination of S-1 with the pentamer at the 1:1 molar ratio yielded a hexamer which was identical with the native IAP in electrophoretic mobility and biological activity to enhance glucose-induced insulin secretion when injected into rats. In the broken-cell preparation, S-1 was biologically as effective as the native IAP; both catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a protein in membrane preparations from rat C6 glioma cells. In conclusion, IAP is an oligomeric protein consisting of an A (active) protomer (the biggest subunit) and a B (binding) oligomer which is produced by connecting two dimers by the smallest subunit in a noncovalent manner. Rationale for this terminology is discussed based on the A-B model.  相似文献   

9.
cyc--Variants of S49 lymphoma cells are defective in the stimulatory guanine nucleotide site of the adenylate cyclase but contain an inhibitory site. Treatment of cyc- cells with islet-activating protein (IAP), which causes ADP-ribosylation of an Mr 40 000 polypeptide in cyc- membranes, abolishes adenylate cyclase inhibition by GTP and the peptide hormone, somatostatin, but not that induced by GTP gamma S. Furthermore, somatostatin-induced stimulation of GTP hydrolysis is lost. Thus, the data indicate that IAP interferes with the adenylate cyclase system by an action at the inhibitory guanine nucleotide site.  相似文献   

10.
Pretreatment of rat cardiac myocytes with the beta-adrenergic agonist, db-cAMP or forskolin decreased ADP-ribosylation of 40-41 kDa protein by islet-activating protein (IAP) in cell membranes. Addition of activated cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A) catalytic subunit and MgCl2 also decreased ADP-ribosylation of 40-41 kDa protein by IAP in cell membranes. The alpha- and beta-subunits of partially purified inhibitory GTP-binding protein (Gi) were both phosphorylated by protein kinase A. The amounts of phosphate incorporated into the subunits of Gi were 0.34 and 0.18 mol/mol protein. These show that phosphorylation of Gi by protein kinase A results in a decrease in its ADP-ribosylation by IAP.  相似文献   

11.
Treatment of membranes with islet activating protein (IAP), a toxin from Bordetella pertussis, results in abolition of GTP-dependent, receptor-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase. This appears to result from IAP-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a 41,000-Da membrane-bound protein. A protein with 41,000- and 35,000-Da subunits has been purified from rabbit liver membranes as the predominant substrate for IAP. This protein has now been shown to be capable of regulating membrane-bound adenylate cyclase activity of human platelets under various conditions. The characteristics of the actions of the IAP substrate are as follows. 1) Purified 41,000/35,000-Da dimer is capable of restoring the inhibitory effects of guanine nucleotides and the alpha 2-adrenergic agonist, epinephrine, on the adenylate cyclase activity of IAP-treated membranes. 2) The subunits of the dimer dissociate in the presence of guanine nucleotide analogs or A1(3+), Mg2+, and F-. The 41,000-Da subunit has a high affinity binding site for guanine nucleotides. 3) The resolved 35,000-Da subunit of the dimer mimics guanine nucleotide- and epinephrine-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase. 4) The resolved (unliganded) 41,000-Da subunit stimulates adenylate cyclase activity and relieves guanine nucleotide- +/- epinephrine-induced inhibition of the enzyme. In contrast, the GTP gamma S-bound form of the 41,000-Da subunit inhibits adenylate cyclase activity, although with lower apparent affinity than does the 35,000-Da subunit. 5) The 35,000-Da subunit increases the rate of deactivation of Gs, the stimulatory regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase. In contrast, the 41,000-Da subunit can interact with Gs and inhibit its deactivation. These data strongly suggest that the IAP substrate is another dimeric, guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein and that it is responsible for inhibitory modulation of adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

12.
Bovine thyroid membranes possess both ADP ribosyltransferase and NAD glycohydrolase activities with the same Km values for NAD and the same pH optima. In intact membranes, the ADP ribosyltransferase is limited in its extent by the amount of available membrane acceptor which can be ADP-ribosylated; in membranes solubilized with lithium diiodosalicylate, an artificial acceptor, L-arginine methyl ester, can be substituted to eliminate this limitation. The product of the ADP ribosyltransferase is a mono-ADP-ribosylated acceptor whether the intact or solubilized membrane provides the enzyme activity and whether membrane or exogenous acceptor, L-arginine methyl ester, is utilized. The intact membranes and the solubilized preparation also have an enzyme activity which can release AMP from the mono-ADP-ribosylated acceptor whether formed by the action of the membrane ADP ribosyltransferase or the A promoter of cholera toxin. The NAD glycohydrolase activity appears to represent the half-reaction of the ADP ribosyltransferase, i.e. an activity measurable substituting water for a membrane acceptor or L-arginine methyl ester. Membranes from functional rat thyroid cells in culture, i.e. cells chronically stimulated by thyrotropin and unresponsive to further additions of thyrotropin, have low ADP-ribosylation but high NAD glycohydrolase activities. In contrast, membranes from nonfunctional rat thyroid cells, i.e. cells unresponsive to thyrotropin, have high ADP-ribosylation and low NAD glycohydrolase activities. NAD hydrolysis by the NAD glycohydrolase activity cannot account for the low ADP-ribosylation activity in membranes from the functioning cells, and its low level of ADP-ribosylation can be eliminated by solubilizing the membranes and substituting an artificial acceptor, L-arginine methyl ester. The ADP ribosyltransferase activity of rat thyroid cell membrane preparations can be enhanced by thyrotropin in a dose-dependent manner but not by insulin, glucagon, hydrocortisone, adrenocorticotropin, or its glycoprotein hormone analog, human chorionic gonadotropin. It is thus suggested (i) that, in analogy to cholera toxin, thyrotropin-stimulated ADP-ribosylation may be important in the regulation of the adenylate cyclase response and (ii) that the level of membrane acceptor available for ADP-ribosylation may relate both to a stable "'activated" state of the adenylate cyclase system in cells chronically stimulated with thyrotropin and/or to a desensitized state with regard to a failure of more thyrotropin to elicit additional functional responses.  相似文献   

13.
Islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, is an oligomeric protein composed of an A-protomer and a B-oligomer. There seem to be at least two molecular mechanisms by which IAP exerts its various effects in vivo and in vitro. On the one hand, some of the effects were not significantly affected by acetamidination of the ε-amino groups of the lysine residues in the molecule. These include the activities in vitro (1) catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of one of the membrane proteins directly, (2) enhancing membrane adenylate cyclase activity in C6 cells, (3) reversing receptor-mediated inhibition of insulin or glycerol release from pancreatic islets of adipocytes, respectively, and the activities in vivo (4) inhibiting epinephrine-induced hyperglycemia, (5) potentiating glucose-induced hyperinsulinemia, (6) reducing hypertension and increasing the heart rate in genetically hypertensive rats. These activities are concluded to develop as a result of ADP-ribosylation catalyzed by the A-protomer which is rendered accessible to its intramembrane substrate thanks to the associated B-oligomer moiety. Thus, neither the enzymic activity of the A-protomer nor the transporting activity of the B-oligomer needs free amino groups of the lysine residues in the IAP molecule. On the other hand, additional effects of IAP, such as (1) mitogenic, (2) lymphocytosis-promoting, (3) histamine-sensitizing, (4) adjuvant and (5) vascular permeability increasing, were markedly suppressed by acetamidination of the intrapeptide lysine residues. The free ε-amino group of lysine would play an indispensable role in the firm (or divalent) attachment of the B-oligomer of IAP to the cell surface that is responsible for development of these activities.  相似文献   

14.
Adrenergic mechanism for phosphorylase activation was gradually converted from an alpha 1- to a beta 2-type during primary culture of rat hepatocytes. beta 2-Receptor-mediated cAMP generation was also much greater in 8-h cultured cells than in fresh cells. Incubation of hepatocyte membranes with [alpha-32P]NAD and the preactivated A-protomer (an active component) of islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, resulted in the ADP-ribosylation of a specific IAP substrate protein (Mr = 41,000). This ADP-ribosylation diminished progressively when the membrane-donor hepatocytes had been cultured. The early diminution was interfered with by the addition of nicotinamide or isonicotinamide, a potent inhibitor of ADP-ribosyltransferase, to the culture medium. The decrease of the IAP substrate was well correlated with the potentiation of beta-adrenergic functions under various conditions of culture. beta-Receptor-mediated activation of GTP-dependent membrane adenylate cyclase was, but glucagon-induced activation was not enhanced by either prior culture of hepatocytes or prior exposure of membranes to the A-protomer of IAP. There was no further enhancement, however, when membranes from cultured cells were exposed to the active toxin. Thus, the IAP-susceptible inhibitory guanine nucleotide-regulatory protein is coupled to beta-adrenergic receptors in such a manner as to reduce the degree of activation of cyclase, and the decrease in this IAP substrate may be responsible, at least partly, for development of beta-receptor functions during culture of hepatocytes. Its possible relation to accompanying inhibition of alpha 1-receptor functions is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Modulation of adenylate cyclase in human keratinocytes by protein kinase C   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Adenylate cyclase (ATP-pyrophosphate lyase (cyclizing); EC 4.6.1.1) in the human keratinocyte cell line SCC 12F was potentiated by 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), phorbol-12,13-diacetate, and 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol. Keratinocytes exposed to TPA showed a 2-fold enhancement of adenylate cyclase activity when assayed in the presence of isoproterenol or GTP. The half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) for both isoproterenol and GTP were unaltered by TPA treatment of the cells. Basal adenylate cyclase activity in membranes from TPA-treated cultures was also increased 2-fold relative to activity in control membranes. Potentiation of adenylate cyclase activity was dependent on the concentration of TPA to which the keratinocytes were exposed (EC50 for TPA = 3 nM). TPA actions on adenylate cyclase were maximal after 15 min of incubation of the cells with the compound, correlating well with the time course of translocation of protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme) from cytosol to membrane. The action of cholera toxin on adenylate cyclase was additive with TPA. In contrast, pertussis toxin actions on adenylate cyclase were not additive with TPA. Treatment of control cells with pertussis toxin activated adenylate cyclase 1.5-fold, whereas cells exposed to pertussis toxin for 6 h followed by TPA for 15 min showed the same 2-fold increase in adenylate cyclase activity as observed in membranes from cells exposed to TPA without prior exposure to pertussis toxin. Pertussis toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation was increased 2-fold in membranes from SCC 12F cells exposed to TPA, indicating an increase in the alpha beta gamma form of Gi. These data suggest that exposure of human keratinocytes to phorbol esters increases adenylate cyclase activity by a protein kinase C-mediated increase in the heterotrimeric alpha beta gamma form of Gi resulting in decreased inhibition of basal adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

16.
Islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, is an oligomeric protein (Tamura, M., Nogimori, K., Murai, S., Yajima, M., Ito, K., Katada, T., Ui, M., and Ishii, S. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 5516-5522), the biggest subunit (Mr = 28,000, referred to as the A-protomer) of which catalyzes transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety of NAD to the membrane Mr = 41,000 protein. The pentamer, termed the B-oligomer, consisting of the residual subunits was the moiety of IAP that was responsible for binding to the cell surface, as revealed by competitive inhibition of the development of the IAP actions on intact rat C6 glioma cells and rat adipocytes. The binding of the B-oligomer to its receptor proteins was divalent via the constituent two dimers; it stimulated mitosis of lymphocytes and caused an insulin-like action to enhance glucose oxidation in adipocytes, just as did concanavalin A, presumably as a result of cross-linking or aggregation of the membrane proteins. The A-promoter displayed its biological action on adipocytes only when the B-oligomer had been bound to the cells. Thus, IAP is a typical A-B toxin in which the B-oligomer is first bound to the cell surface proteins to enable the A-protomer to reach to the site of its action within the cell. Diverse biological actions of pertussis toxin may be accounted for by the mitogenic action of the B-oligomer as well as ADP-ribosyltransferase activity of the A-promoter.  相似文献   

17.
In an attempt to identify the nature of guanine nucleotide binding protein(s) (G-protein) involved in the acetylcholine (ACh)-induced (muscarinic) response of pig coronary-artery smooth muscle, we studied the effect of ADP-ribosylation of specific membrane protein(s) catalysed by islet-activating protein (IAP; pertussis toxin). The ACh-stimulated and guanine nucleotide-dependent activities of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) phosphodiesterase (PDE), assessed by the production of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) from exogenously applied PIP2, were not modified, in either IAP-treated or non-treated cell homogenates used as the enzyme source. In intact tissues, pretreatment with up to 100 ng of IAP/ml inhibited neither the ACh-induced decrease in the amount of inositol phospholipids nor the increase in the amounts of phosphatidic acid and of inositol phosphates. IAP treatment increased the amount of cyclic AMP accumulated by isoprenaline. These observations suggest that G-protein which couples the muscarinic receptor to PIP2-PDE is insensitive to IAP. Such being the case, the nature of this protein(s) probably differs from that required for the regulation of adenylate cyclase activities (Ni or Gi).  相似文献   

18.
Pertussis toxin (PT) has been shown to have a variety of effects on T lymphocyte function, and its activity has been used to suggest the involvement of a G protein in the early events of T lymphocyte activation. In this report, the effects of PT on T lymphocytes have been investigated in detail. PT at a concentration of 10 micrograms/ml rapidly stimulated early events that are normally induced by occupancy of the TCR complex in Jurkat cells and cloned, murine CTL including increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration, serine esterase release, and induction of Ag non-specific target cell lysis. However, 1-h treatment with this concentration of PT induced a state that was refractory to further receptor stimulation in Jurkat cells but not cloned CTL although substrate membrane proteins were modified to a similar extent in both cell lines. The functional effects of PT were mimicked by the B oligomer of PT which did not, however, catalyze ADP-ribosylation of membrane proteins. In addition, overnight exposure of Jurkat cells to a lower concentration of PT also modified substrate membrane proteins but did not inhibit receptor stimulation. These findings indicate that PT catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a G protein does not account for the actions of the toxin on T lymphocytes. Finally, direct stimulation of increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration by PT and the B oligomer only occurred in T lymphocytes expressing CD3. This suggests that the mitogenic effect of PT holotoxin is mediated by the interaction of the B oligomer with CD3 and that this may account for many of the effects of PT holotoxin both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

19.
Choleragen exerts its effect on cells through activation of adenylate cyclase. Choleragen initially interacts with cells through binding of the B subunit of the toxin to the ganglioside GM1 on the cell surface. Subsequent events are less clear. Patching or capping of toxin on the cell surface may be an obligatory step in choleragen action. Studies in cell-free systems have demonstrated that activation of adenylate cyclase by choleragen requires NAD. In addition to NAD, requirements have been observed for ATP, GTP, and calcium-dependent regulatory protein. GTP also is required for the expression of choleragen-activated adenylate cyclase. In preparations from turkey erythrocytes, choleragen appears to inhibit an isoproterenol-stimulated GTPase. It has been postulated that by decreasing the activity of a specific GTPase, choleragen would stabilize a GTP-adenylate cyclase complex and maintain the cyclase in an activated state. Although the holotoxin is most effective in intact cells, with the A subunit having 1/20th of its activity and the B subunit (choleragenoid) being inactive, in cell-free systems the A subunit, specifically the A1 fragment, is required for adenylate cyclase activation. The B protomer is inactive. Choleragen, the A subunit, or A1 fragment under suitable conditions hydrolyzes NAD to ADP-ribose and nicotinamide (NAD glycohydrolase activity) and catalyzes the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety of NAD to the guandino group of arginine (ADP-ribosyltransferase activity). The NAD glycohydrolase activity is similar to that exhibited by other NAD-dependent bacterial toxins (diphtheria toxin, Pseudomonas exotoxin A), which act by catalyzing the ADP-ribosylation of a specific acceptor protein. If the ADP-ribosylation of arginine is a model for the reaction catalyzed by choleragen in vivo, then arginine is presumably an analog of the amino acid which is ADP-ribosylated in the acceptor protein. It is postulated that choleragen exerts its effects on cells through the NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of an arginine or similar amino acid in either the cyclase itself or a regulatory protein of the cyclase system.  相似文献   

20.
Neuropeptide Y, a major neuropeptide and potent vasoconstrictor, inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in cultured rat atrial cells as well as in atrial membranes. Prior treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin blocked the inhibitory action of neuropeptide Y. Pertussis toxin is known to uncouple the receptors for other inhibitors of adenylate cyclase by ADP-ribosylation of the alpha-subunit of Gi, the inhibitory guanine nucleotide binding component of adenylate cyclase. The toxin specifically catalyzed the ADP-ribosylation of a 41-kilodalton atrial membrane protein which corresponded to the Gi subunit. These results suggest that neuropeptide Y may mediate some of its physiological effects through specific receptors linked to the inhibitory pathway of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

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