Abstract: | In this study purified isoforms of rat ovarian regulatory subunit of type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase (R-II) were compared with R-II purified from rat brain. A special neural form of R-II has been previously described in bovine brain. Analysis by one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis resolved three isoforms of rat ovarian R-II (R-II54, Mr = 54,000; R-II52, Mr = 52,000; and R-II51, Mr = 51,000) compared to two R-II isoforms in rat brain (R-II54 and R-II52). Polychromatic silver-stained peptide maps of purified R-II subunits indicated that peptides generated from both rat ovarian R-II52 and R-II51 were similar (if not identical) to the peptides of the neural form, R-II52, purified from rat brain. These peptides differed markedly from those generated from R-II54 of either rat ovary, brain, or heart. Ovarian R-II52/51 photoaffinity labeled with 8-N3-32P]cAMP and analyzed by two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was shown to consist of three (rather than two) isoelectric variants, which were similar to three variants resolved from rat brain R-II and clearly distinct from that of rat heart R-II54. An antibody which recognized both the R-II54 and R-II52/51 isoforms of rat ovarian extracts also recognized both forms of rat brain R-II (R-II54 and R-II52) and similar forms in extracts of rat adrenal and parotid glands. These results strongly suggest that the R-II52 isoform previously designated as a neural specific form of R-II is present in high concentrations in a nonneural tissue, the rat ovary. |