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 46 毫秒
1.
Exposure of rat glioma C6 cells to either isoproterenol or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) resulted in desensitization of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. After either treatment, the affinity of beta-receptors for isoproterenol was reduced. Thus, desensitization by TPA or isoproterenol appeared to involve an "uncoupling" of the beta-receptor from the stimulatory regulatory component (Ns) of adenylate cyclase. The activity of Ns, assayed by reconstitution of S49 cyc- adenylate cyclase activity, was found to be unchanged after desensitization. The activity of beta-receptors was measured by inactivating Ns and the catalytic component of adenylate cyclase in C6 membranes and fusing them with membranes lacking beta-receptors. Receptors from isoproterenol-treated C6 cells were less active in "coupling" to the foreign adenylate cyclase than receptors from untreated cells, whereas receptors from TPA-treated cells were fully active. This unexpected latter result was explored further. Lysates from C6 cells were centrifuged on linear sucrose density gradients and the gradient fractions assayed for beta-receptor binding activity. Most of the receptors were recovered in a "heavy" plasma membrane peak but some receptors also appeared in a "light" membrane peak. After treatment of the cells with isoproterenol or TPA, the proportion of receptors in the light peak increased. Prior treatment of the cells with concanavalin A prevented the increase in light receptors caused by isoproterenol or TPA. In addition, the concanavalin A treatment prevented the desensitization of adenylate cyclase caused by TPA but not that caused by isoproterenol. Finally, desensitization of adenylate cyclase was reversed by polyethylene glycol-induced fusion of membranes from cells treated with TPA but not isoproterenol. We conclude that beta-agonists and phorbol esters desensitize adenylate cyclase by distinct mechanisms. Agonists cause a reduction in the functional activity of the beta-receptors followed by a segregation of the receptors into a light membrane fraction devoid of Ns. Phorbol esters do not alter the activity of the receptors but do cause their segregation.  相似文献   

2.
Densensitization of turkey erythrocytes by exposure to the beta-adrenergic agonist (-)isoproterenol leads to decreased activation of adenylate cyclase by agonist, NaF, and guanyl-5'-yl imido diphosphate, with no reduction in the number of beta-adrenergic receptors. Interactions between the receptor and the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (N protein) also seem to be impaired. These observations suggest that a component distal to the beta-adrenergic receptor may be a locus of modification. Accordingly we examined the N protein to determine whether it was altered by desensitization. The rate at which (-)isoproterenol stimulated the release of [3H]GDP from the N protein was substantially lower in membranes prepared from desensitized cells, providing further evidence for uncoupling of the receptor and the N protein. The amount of N protein in membranes from control and desensitized cells was compared by labeling the 42,000 Mr component of the N protein with [32P]NAD+ and cholera toxin; no significant difference was found. However, significantly more N protein (p less than .001) was solubilized by cholate extraction of desensitized membranes, suggesting an altered association of the N protein with the membrane after desensitization. The functional activity of the N protein was measured by reconstitution of cholate extracts of turkey erythrocyte membranes into S49 lymphoma cyc- membranes. Reconstitution of (-)isoproterenol stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity was reduced significantly (p less than .05) after desensitization. These observations suggest that desensitization of the turkey erythrocyte by (-)isoproterenol results in functional modifications of the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein, leading to impaired interactions with the beta-adrenergic receptor and reduced activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
S Kassis 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5666-5672
Exposure of HeLa cells to 5 mM sodium butyrate, but not 0.6 mM, resulted in a more efficient coupling between their beta-adrenergic receptors and the guanine nucleotide binding stimulatory (Ns) component of adenylate cyclase. Both concentrations of the fatty acid, however, caused an increase in receptor number. beta receptors from control and butyrate-treated cells had the same affinity for isoproterenol. Modulation of this affinity by GTP was greatly enhanced, however, in cells treated with 5 mM butyrate compared to untreated and 0.6 mM butyrate treated cells. The concentration of isoproterenol required to half-maximally stimulate adenylate cyclase (Kact) was reduced in cells treated with 5 mM butyrate. In addition, the Kact for GTP in the presence, but not the absence, of isoproterenol was reduced. The effect of butyrate on the coupling between beta receptors and Ns was analyzed in detail by monitoring the activation of Ns by guanine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) in a two-step assay. In the absence of isoproterenol, Ns from control and 5 mM butyrate treated cells was activated to the same extent with the same time course and Kact for GTP gamma S. In the presence of isoproterenol, Ns from 5 mM butyrate treated cells was activated more rapidly and extensively than Ns from control cells. The Kact for both GTP gamma S and isoproterenol also was reduced. The rate of agonist-mediated activation of Ns was strongly dependent on temperature, which accentuated the differences between 5 mM butyrate treated and control cells. At 4 degrees C, the difference in rate was 8.8-fold.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The effect of forskolin on adenylate cyclase in S49 wild type and cyc- cells was tested. Forskolin stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in cyc- membranes, particularly with Mn++ as cofactor. Forskolin stimulation of adenylate cyclase in wild type membranes was greater than in cyc- membranes, and the ability of forskolin to stimulate cyc- membranes was enhanced by Lubrol PX extracts of human erythrocyte membranes. Compared to its potent effect on intact wild type cells, forskolin was a poor stimulator of cAMP accumulation in cyc- cells. Cyc- cells proliferated in medium containing forskolin, while the growth of wild type cells in such medium was inhibited and the wild type cells ultimately died. Clones selected from a suspension of wild type cells on the basis of forskolin resistance showed the characteristics of cyc- cells. Thus, forskolin does not substantially activate adenylate cyclase activity in intact cyc- cells. Our data indicate that the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (G/F) enhances forskolin activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

5.
The maturing rat reticulocyte was used as a model system in which to study developmental changes in the protein components of hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase. Plasma membranes from rat erythrocytes display 10 to 20% of the adenylate cyclase activity and 30 to 50% of the beta-adrenergic receptors which are measured in membranes from rat reticulocytes, as noted by others. Reticulocyte membranes also display equal activities in response to (-)-isoproterenol in the presence of either GTP or GTP gamma S, whereas erythrocyte membrane adenylate cyclase is twice as active in the presence of isoproterenol plus GTP gamma S as in the presence of isoproterenol plus GTP. We have studied this system in greater detail by developing or applying independent assays for the catalytic protein (C) and the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein (G/F) of adenylate cyclase. C was assayed in membranes by its intrinsic Mn2+-stimulated activity. It was also measured by reconstituting membranes with saturating amounts of GTP gamma S-activated G/F, yielding an operationally defined Vmax for the catalyst. By either assay, reticulocytes display about 3-fold greater C activity than do erythrocytes. G/F was assayed by its ability to confer GTP gamma S-stimulated activity upon C (which was supplied by membranes of cyc- S49 lymphoma cells). This assay indicates that reticulocyte membranes contain about 3 times as much G/F as do erythrocyte membranes. Cholera toxin and [32P]NAD were used to [32P]ADP-ribosylate the 45,000- and 52,000-dalton subunits of G/F. Total incorporation of 32P into these subunits decreased 3- to 4-fold with reticulocyte maturation. The ratio of label in the 52,000-dalton peptide to that in the 45,000-dalton peptide decreased from 0.29 in reticulocyte membranes to 0.14 in erythrocyte membranes. The apparently coordinate decrease in the amounts of C, G/F, and beta-adrenergic receptors suggest that the stoichiometry between these components is maintained during maturation, and may account for the decrease in adenylate cyclase in the membranes. However, the qualitative changes in responsiveness to hormones in the presence of GTP or GTP gamma S may be related to loss or proteolysis of the 52,000-dalton subunit of G/F.  相似文献   

6.
Continuous treatment (1-10 days) of rats with desipramine (10 mg/kg, twice per day) caused desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor-coupled adenylate cyclase system of cerebral cortical membranes. The decrease in the isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was more rapid and greater than the decrease in the number of beta-adrenergic receptors in membranes during treatment of the membrane donor rats with desipramine, indicating that the desensitization occurring at an early stage of the treatment was not accounted for solely by the decrease in the receptor number. Neither the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (N) nor the adenylate cyclase catalyst was impaired by the drug treatment, since there was no decrease in the cyclase activity measured in the presence or absence of GTP, guanyl-5'-yl-beta-gamma-imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p], NaF, or forskolin. Gpp(NH)p-induced activation of membrane adenylate cyclase developed with a lag time of a few minutes in membranes from control or drug-treated rats. The lag was shortened by the addition of isoproterenol, indicating that beta-receptors were coupled to N in such a manner as to facilitate the exchange of added Gpp(NH)p with endogenous GDP on N. This effect of isoproterenol rapidly decreased during the drug treatment of rats. Thus, functional uncoupling of the N protein from receptors was responsible for early development of desensitization of beta-adrenergic receptor-mediated adenylate cyclase in the cerebral cortex during desipramine therapy.  相似文献   

7.
Cultured rat glioma C6 cells exfoliate membrane vesicles which have been termed 'exosomes' into the culture medium. The exosomes contained both stimulatory and inhibitory GTP-binding components of adenylate cyclase (the stimulatory, Gs, and the inhibitory, Gi, regulatory components) and beta-adrenergic receptors but were devoid of adenylate cyclase activity. It was therefore apparent that the catalytic component of adenylate cyclase was either not exfoliated or was inactivated during the exfoliation process. The presence of Gs or Gi in the exosomes was detected by ADP ribosylation using [alpha-32P]NAD in the presence of cholera or pertussis toxins, respectively. The exosomal concentration of each of the two components was estimated to be about one fifth of that of the cell membrane when expressed on a per mg protein basis. Exosomal Gs was almost as active as the membrane-derived Gs in its ability to reconstitute NaF- and guanine nucleotide-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in membranes of S49 cyc- cells, which lack a functional Gs. The ability of exosomal Gs to reconstitute isoproterenol-stimulated activity, however, was much lower than that of membrane Gs. The density of beta-adrenergic receptors in the exosomes was much less than that found in the membranes. Although the exosomal receptors bound the antagonist iodocyanopindolol with the same affinity as receptors from the cell membrane, the affinity for the agonist isoproterenol was 13- to 18-fold lower in the exosomes. In addition, this affinity was not modulated by GTP in the exosomes. Thus, exfoliated beta-adrenergic receptors seem to be impaired in their ability to couple to and activate Gs. This was directly tested by coupling the receptors to a foreign adenylate cyclase using membrane fusion. The fusates were then assayed for agonist-stimulated activity. While significant stimulation of the acceptor adenylate cyclase was obtained using C6 membrane receptors, the exosomal receptors were completely inactive. Thus during exfoliation, there appear to be changes in the components of the beta-adrenergic-sensitive adenylate cyclase that results in a nonfunctional system in the exosomes.  相似文献   

8.
We have examined the characteristics of the adenylate cyclase system from control and butyrate-treated cells. Butyrate treatment results in both an increased number of catecholamine receptors and an induction of a response to the hormone, as reported previously (Tallman, J.F., Smith, C.C., and Henneberry, R.C. (1977) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, 873-877); in addition, we found that the same treatment reduces the degree of activation of adenylate cyclase by GTP. We have demonstrated in two cell types that this decrease in GTP activation is inversely related to the degree of induction of the hormone response. Furthermore, in plasma membranes isolated from butyrate-treated cells, the hormone receptor is sensitive to GTP; i.e. GTP reduces the affinity of isoproterenol for the receptor. We propose that these changes reflect an interaction between the beta-adrenergic receptor and the nucleotide regulatory component and that this interaction represents, at least in part, the process of coupling. Several possible mechanisms which can account for the change in GTP activation are discussed in terms of our current understanding of the regulation of the adenylate cyclase system.  相似文献   

9.
"Spare" beta-adrenergic receptors of rat white adipocyte membranes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The apparent equilibrium dissociation constants for the interaction of isoproterenol with beta-receptors and adenylate cyclase were determined under the same conditions in rat adipocyte membranes and were compared with the apparent dissociation constant for the interaction of isoproterenol with cyclic AMP accumulation in the adipocyte. From these determinations, it was calculated that the occupancy of less than 4% of the receptor population is required for half-maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase in membranes and cyclic AMP accumulation in intact cells, provided that receptor-binding and adenylate cyclase assays are performed in the presence of guanine nucleotides. Since guanine nucleotides are also required for adenylate cyclase activation in intact cells, it is concluded that the beta-receptors of rat adipocytes are "spare" receptors.  相似文献   

10.
The inhibitory and stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory components (Gi and Gs) of adenylate cyclase both have an alpha X beta subunit structure, and the beta subunits are functionally indistinguishable. GTP-dependent hormonal inhibition of adenylate cyclase and that caused by guanine nucleotide analogs seem to result from dissociation of the subunits of Gi. Such inhibition can be explained by reduction of the concentration of the free alpha subunit of Gs as a result of its interaction with the beta subunit of Gi in normal Gs-containing membranes. However, inhibition in S49 lymphoma cyc- cell membranes presumably cannot be explained by the Gi-Gs interaction, since the activity of the alpha subunit of Gs is not detectable in this variant. Several characteristics of Gi-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase have been studied in both S49 cyc- and wild type membranes. There are several similarities between inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase by guanine nucleotides and somatostatin in cyc- and wild type membranes. 1) Somatostatin-induced inhibition of the enzyme is dependent on GTP; nonhydrolyzable GTP analogs are also effective inhibitors. 2) The effect of guanosine-5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) is essentially irreversible, and somatostatin accelerates GTP gamma S-induced inhibition. 3) Inhibition of adenylate cyclase by somatostatin or Gpp(NH)p is attenuated by treatment of cells with islet-activating protein (IAP). 4) Both cyc- and wild type membranes contain the substrate for IAP-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation (the alpha subunit of Gi). 5) beta Subunit activity in detergent extracts of membranes is liberated by exposure of the membranes to GTP gamma S. The alpha subunit of Gi in such extracts has a reduced ability to be ADP-ribosylated by IAP, which implies that this subunit is in the GTP gamma S-bound form. The resolved subunits of Gi have been tested as regulators of cyc- and wild type adenylate cyclase under a variety of conditions. The alpha subunit of Gi inhibits forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in cyc-, while the beta subunit stimulates; these actions are opposite to those seen with wild type membranes. The inhibitory effects of GTP plus somatostatin (or GTP gamma S) and the alpha subunit of Gi are not additive in cyc- membranes. In wild type, the inhibitory effects of the hormone and GTP gamma S are not additive with those of the beta subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

Several drugs known to induce differentiation in tumor cells were analyzed for their effects on the β-adrenergic receptor-coupled adenylate cyclase system in two human carcinoma cell lines, HeLa and A431. Each of the drugs was tested alone or in combination with sodium butyrate (NaBu), a known inducer of this signal transduction system. Puromycine amino nucleoside (PMAN) caused the largest increase in β-adrenergic receptors in HeLa cells followed by hexamethylenebisacetamide (HMBA) whereas 5′-azacytidine (5AZC) was ineffective. In addition, PMAN but not the others acted together with NaBu to elevate receptor levels 12-fold over control values. In contrast, HMBA and 5AZC were much more effective on A431 cells, PMAN caused only a slight increase in β receptors and none of the drugs acted in concert with NaBu. The increase in β receptors was usually accompanied by a corresponding increase in isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These effects of the drugs appeared to require protein synthesis as they were blocked by cycloheximide. In addition, some of the drugs caused a substantial decrease in basal adenylate cyclase activity. This effect on basal activity was abolished in cells treated with pertussis toxin, which ADP-ribosylates the inhibitory GTP-binding protein, Gi. Both HeLa and A431 cells contained a 41 kDalton substrate for the toxin which corresponds to the α; subunit of Gi. The Gi subunit was ADP-ribosylated by the toxin to a similar extent in membranes from control and drug-treated cells. Thus, the drugs appear to induce quantitative changes in β-adrenergic receptors and qualitative changes in Gi which results in a highly responsive β-adrenergic-stimulated adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
Prostaglandin E (PGE) receptor density in hepatic plasma membranes can be down-regulated by in vivo exposure to the 16,16-dimethyl analog of PGE2, and this is associated with desensitization of PGE-sensitive adenylate cyclase. These studies examined adenylate cyclase response to other agonists in membranes whose PGE receptor density was 51% decreased and whose maximal PGE-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was 31% decreased. Down-regulated membranes had a 37% decrease in their maximal response to glucagon, indicating that treatment with the PGE analog had induced both homologous and heterologous desensitization. To determine whether adenylate cyclase had been affected, stimulation with NaF, guanyl 5'-yl imidodiphosphate (GppNHp), and forskolin was examined in both intact and solubilized membranes. Intact membranes had decreased adenylate cyclase responses to all three stimulators (NaF, -41%; GppNHp, -25%; forskolin, -41%) as did solubilized membranes (NaF, -51%; GppNHp, -50%; forskolin, -50%), suggesting alterations in adenylate cyclase rather than indirect membrane effects. Cholera toxin activation and labeling were examined to more directly assess whether the guanine nucleotide (G/F) regulatory component of adenylate cyclase had been affected. Cholera toxin activation was 42% less in down-regulated membranes, and these membranes incorporated less label when the incubation was performed in the presence of [32]NAD. Solubilized G/F subunit activity from down-regulated membranes was less effective in reconstitution of adenylate cyclase activity from cyc- cell membranes than G/F activity from control membranes. These data indicate that in vivo exposure to the PGE analog causes both homologous and heterologous desensitization of adenylate cyclase as well as an apparent quantitative decrease in G/F.  相似文献   

13.
The ability of a series of B16 melanoma clones to form experimental lung metastases in syngeneic mice has been shown to correlate positively with adenylate cyclase activity. (Sheppard et al, Int. J. Cancer 37 (1986) 713-722). To begin to identify the components of the adenylate cyclase complex that account for enhanced enzyme activity in highly metastatic tumor populations, cholate extracts containing the GTP-binding protein GS from B16 melanoma clones of different metastatic capacities were reconstituted with membranes prepared from S49 cyc-, a variant lymphoma cell line that lacks GS function. The results revealed that extracts from a highly metastatic B16 clone (F10-C23) reconstituted significantly greater adenylate cyclase activities in S49 cyc- membranes than parallel preparations from a B16 clone (F1-C29) of low metastatic capacity. The data suggest that aberrations in GS function may contribute to the heightened responsiveness of adenylate cyclase observed in B16 melanoma clones of increased metastatic potential.  相似文献   

14.
Fat cells from the hypothyroid rat fail to synthesize cyclic AMP in response to beta-adrenergic agonists, although possessing normal amounts of beta-adrenergic receptors (R) and catalytic adenylate cyclase activity. Membranes of hypothyroid rat fat cells contain Mr = 42,000 (major form), 46,0000, and 48,000 (minor forms) peptides of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component (Ns) radiolabeled in the presence of cholera toxin and [32P]NAD+. Maps of fragments generated by partial proteolysis of these radiolabeled peptides are virtually identical in hypothyroid and euthyroid preparations. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed that the size and charge of the Mr = 42,000, 46,000, and 48,000 radiolabeled peptides are similar in euthyroid and hypothyroid rat fat cell membranes. Extracts of hypothyroid rat fat cell membranes express normal amounts of Ns activity as measured by their ability to reconstitute the adenylate cyclase of membranes of S49 mouse lymphoma cyc- mutant cells which lack functional Ns activity. Hybridization of hypothyroid rat fat cells with donor membranes of normal rat fat cells, rat hepatocytes, or S49 cyc- cells restores the beta-adrenergic response of these fat cells. Pretreating the donor membranes with a beta-adrenergic antagonist covalent label blocks the ability of these membranes to restore the response of the cells. Rat hepatocytes pretreated with a beta-adrenergic antagonist covalent label do not accumulate cyclic AMP in response to isoproterenol. Hybridization of these receptor-deficient hepatocytes with fat cell ghosts of euthyroid rats restores beta-adrenergic stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation, whereas hybridization with fat cell ghosts of hypothyroid rat does not restore this response. Ns of pigeon erythrocyte membranes radiolabeled with cholera toxin and [32P]NAD+, extracted in cholate, and reconstituted with fat cell membranes interacts with fat cell R. The ability of R to interact with Ns of pigeon erythrocyte membranes is impaired when the reconstitution is performed with membranes from the hypothyroid rat fat cell. Hypothyroidism appears to affect the ability of R to interact productively with Ns, without affecting either R number or Ns structure and function.  相似文献   

15.
The radiolabeled agonist [3H]hydroxybenzylisoproterenol ([3H]HBI) and antagonist [125I]iodopindolol ([125I]IPIN) were used to investigate the properties of beta-adrenergic receptors on membranes prepared from L6 myoblasts and S49 lymphoma cells. The high affinity binding of (-)-[3H]HBI to membranes prepared from L6 myoblasts was stereoselectively inhibited by the active isomers of isoproterenol and propranolol. The density of receptors determined with (-)-[3H]HBI was less than that determined with [125I]IPIN. The binding of (-)-[3H]HBI was inhibited by guanine nucleotides, suggesting an agonist-mediated association of the receptor with a guanine nucleotide-binding protein, presumably the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding protein (Ns) of adenylate cyclase. Results obtained in studies with membranes prepared from wild-type S49 lymphoma cells and the adenylate cyclase-deficient variant (cyc-) were similar to those obtained in experiments carried out with membranes prepared from L6 myoblasts. Thus, the high affinity binding of (-)-[3H]HBI to membranes prepared from wild-type and cyc- S49 lymphoma cells was stereoselectively inhibited by the active isomers of isoproterenol and propranolol, and was inhibited by GTP. Moreover, the density of sites determined with (-)-[3H]HBI was less than that determined with [125I]IPIN. These results suggest either that cyc- cells contain a partially functional Ns, or alternatively, that the inhibitory guanine nucleotide-binding protein (Ni) is capable of interacting with beta-adrenergic receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Adenosine, acting via A1 adenosine receptors, can inhibit adenylate cyclase activity in adipocytes. To assess the effects of chronic adenosine agonist exposure on the A1 adenosine receptor system of adipocytes, rats were infused with (-)-phenylisopropyladenosine or vehicle for 6 days and membranes were prepared. Basal as well as isoproterenol-, sodium fluoride-, and forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were significantly increased (approximately 2-fold) in membranes from treated animals. (-)-Phenylisopropyladenosine-mediated inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was significantly (p = 0.0001) attenuated in membranes from treated rats (20.1 +/- 2.1% inhibition) versus controls (31.6 +/- 2.3% inhibition). Prostaglandin E1-induced inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was also attenuated: 11.7 +/- 3.6 versus 23.2 +/- 4.6% (p = 0.001). Using the A1 adenosine receptor agonist radioligand (-)-N6-(3-[125I]iodo-4-hydroxyphenylisopropyl)adenosine, 32% fewer high affinity binding sites were detected in membranes from treated animals (p less than 0.04). Photoaffinity labeling with N6-2-(3-[125I]iodo-4-azidophenyl)ethyladenosine revealed no gross difference in receptor structure. The number of beta-adrenergic receptors as well as the percentage of receptors in the high affinity state as assessed by (-)-3-[125I]iodocyanopindolol binding were the same in both groups. In membranes from treated rats, the amount of [alpha-32P]NAD incorporated by pertussis toxin into the alpha subunit of the inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Ni) was decreased by 37 +/- 11%. Concurrently, the quantity of label incorporated by cholera toxin into the alpha subunit of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Ns) was increased by 44 +/- 14% in treated membranes. Finally, the capacity of Ns solubilized from treated membranes to stimulate adenylate cyclase activity when reconstituted into cyc- S49 lymphoma cell membranes was enhanced by approximately 50% compared to control. Thus, heterologous desensitization, manifested by a diminished capacity to inhibit adenylate cyclase and an enhanced responsiveness to stimulatory effectors, can be induced in the A1 adenosine receptor-adenylate cyclase system of adipocytes. A decrease in Ni alpha subunit concomitant with an increase in Ns alpha subunit quantity and activity may represent the biochemical mechanism of desensitization in this system.  相似文献   

17.
The stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component (G/F) of adenylate cyclase is activated by exposure to guanine nucleotide analogs or to Al3+ + F-. Activated G/F can reconstitute adenylate cyclase activity when mixed with the catalytic moiety of the enzyme system in the absence of an effective free concentration of stimulatory ligand. Activation is explained by dissociation of the alpha (45,000-Da) and beta (35,000-Da) subunits of G/F. The beta subunit of G/F facilitates reversal of the activated state of the regulatory protein. This phenomenon, which has been exploited as an assay for the resolved beta subunit, has the following properties. 1) Addition of the resolved beta subunit to fluoride-activated G/F increases the initial rate of deactivation from a t 1/2 of 10 min to less than 0.5 min. 2) The enhancement of the rate of deactivation is a saturable process with a K 1/2 value of 60 ng/ml (approximately 2 nM). 3) G/F does not display beta subunit activity unless the alpha subunit has been inactivated or the subunits have been resolved. beta Subunit activity is measurable in detergent extracts of rabbit liver membranes or plasma membranes from S49 cell clones. The activity in such extracts is similar to that found with purified G/F, in that incubation at 30 degrees C in the presence of Mg2+ is required for its expression. However, cyc-, UNC, and H21a (S49 cell mutants with deficient or altered G/F activity) have amounts of beta subunit activity similar to that found in wild type S49 cells. Furthermore, the amount of beta subunit activity exceeds by 5- to 10-fold the amount expected based on the quantity of G/F in wild type extracts. All of the beta subunit activity in detergent extracts of liver membranes can be purified as a 35,000-Da polypeptide that is indistinguishable from the beta subunit of G/F. The beta subunit activity in extracts of cyc- membranes is expressed after incubation with guanine nucleotide analogs, implying association of the beta subunit with a GTP-binding protein. By analysis of the chromatographic behavior of G/F and the recently identified 41,000/35,000-Da heterodimeric substrate for the islet-activating protein from Bordetella pertussis, we have identified the 41,000-Da subunit of the substrate for islet-activating protein as the GTP-binding protein with which the majority of the beta subunit activity associates. These data have direct bearing on the mechanisms of hormonal activation and inhibition of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

18.
We have compared the regulation of adenylate cyclase activity in membrane fractions from C6 glioma cells and in monolayer cultures of C6 cells that had been permeabilized with saponin. Guanine nucleotides (GTP and GTP gamma S) and isoproterenol increase adenylate cyclase activity in C6 membranes and in permeabilized C6 cells. In C6 membranes, guanine nucleotides activate adenylate cyclase in the presence or absence of isoproterenol; in permeabilized cells, however, guanine nucleotides increase adenylate cyclase activity only in the presence of isoproterenol. We suggest that the properties of the permeabilized cells more closely resemble those of intact cells, and that some component which is present in permeabilized cells but is lost following cell disruption may be important for the normal regulation of adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

19.
GTP-binding proteins have been implicated as transducers of a variety of biological signaling processes. These proteins share considerable structural as well as functional homology. Due to these similarities, it was thought that a monoclonal antibody that inhibits the light activation of the rod outer segment GTP-binding protein, tranducin (Gt), might exert some functional effect upon the G proteins that regulate the adenylate cyclase system. Antibody 4A, raised against the alpha subunit of Gt, cross-reacted (by hybridization on nitrocellulose) with purified alpha subunits of other G proteins (Gi and Gs, regulatory guanyl nucleotide-binding proteins that mediate inhibition and stimulation of adenylate cyclase, respectively) as long as they were not denatured. This antibody, which interferes with rod outer segment cGMP phosphodiesterase activation by blocking interaction between rhodopsin and Gt, also interfered with actions of both the stimulatory and inhibitory G proteins of adenylate cyclase from rat cerebral cortex membranes. Effects of monoclonal antibody (mAb) 4A were dose-dependent and not reversed by washing. mAb 4A also blocked the Gi-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase in the cyc- variant of S49 lymphoma and in doing so raised the level of adenylate cyclase activity in both the cyc- variant and the S49 wild type. There was no effect of mAb 4A on adenylate cyclase activity of the resolved catalytic subunit. These results suggest that the well known sequence homologies among the G proteins involved in cellular signal transduction may extend to the sites that interact with other members of signal-transducing cascades (receptors and effector molecules). Therefore, antibody 4A may serve as a useful tool to probe the similarities and differences among the various systems.  相似文献   

20.
Chronic exposure of frog erythrocytes to beta-adrenergic agonists leads to desensitization of the responsiveness of adenylate cyclase to isoproterenol and is accompanied by "down-regulation", a decrease in the number of beta-adrenergic receptors on the cell surface. When frog erythrocyte plasma membranes are prepared by osmotic lysis of cells, the receptors lost from the cell surface during desensitization can be recovered in a "light membrane fraction", obtained by centrifuging the cell cytosol at 158,000 X g for 1 hr. These receptors are sequestered away from the plasma membrane fraction which contains the adenylate cyclase and the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein. If desensitized frog erythrocytes are disrupted by gentler freeze/thaw procedures, however, the sequestered beta-adrenergic receptors can be demonstrated to be physically associated with the plasma membrane. Typically, plasma membranes prepared in this fashion do not demonstrate a significant down regulation despite attenuation of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. Under these conditions, beta-adrenergic receptors from control and desensitized preparations co-migrate on sucrose density gradients in exactly the same place as the plasma membrane marker, adenylate cyclase. In contrast, when membranes from osmotically lysed desensitized cells are fractionated on sucrose gradients the down regulated receptors are sequestered in a light membrane fraction which barely enters the gradient and which is physically separated from adenylate cyclase activity. The data are consistent with a novel mechanism of receptor down-regulation which appears to involve the sequestration of the beta-adrenergic receptors away from the cell surface into a membrane compartment which remains physically associated with the plasma membrane.  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