'Cross-talk' between phospholipase C and adenylyl cyclase involves regulation of G-protein levels in GH3 rat pituitary cells. |
| |
Authors: | Eyvind J. Paulssen Ruth H. Paulssen Kaare M. Gautvik Jan O. Gordeladze |
| |
Affiliation: | Institute of Medical Biochemistry, University of Oslo, Norway |
| |
Abstract: | We have investigated the possibility that adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity and membrane protein levels of the -subunits of the stimulatory and inhibitory G-proteins of AC (Gs and Gi−2) in cultured prolactin-producing rat pituitary adenoma cells (GH3 cells) are modulated by phospholipase C (PLC)-generated second messengers. Pretreatment of cells (6–48 h) with ionomycin (1 μM) or 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol (OAG; 1μM) showed that ionomycin regulated Gs levels in a time-dependent, biphasic manner; a two-fold increase followed a 40% initial reduction, while OAG lowered Gs levels by more than 50% at all time-points. Gi−2 levels remained unchanged by both pretreatments. OAG, but not ionomycin, increased basal AC activity without increasing enzyme protein levels. Alterations in AC responsiveness to peptide hormones (e.g. thyroliberin and vasoactive intestinal peptide) correlated to membrane Gs protein -subunit content. These results demonstrate the involvement of G-protein translation regulation as one mechanism of ‘cross-talk’ between the PLC- and AC-dependent signalling pathways. |
| |
Keywords: | G-protein adenylyl cyclase GH cells ionomycin 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol phospholipase C ‘cross-talk’ |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |