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1.
The Ca2+(calmodulin (CaM))-dependent protein kinase II, purified from either rabbit liver or rat brain, was preincubated under conditions that are known to promote its autophosphorylation. When kinase activity was assayed after this preincubation, it was observed that excess EGTA could block no more than 40-60% of the total Ca2+- and CaM-dependent activity compared to 95% inhibition by EGTA prior to preincubation. In the EGTA assay, free Ca2+ was calculated to be less than 1 nM; therefore, this activity was designated Ca2+-independent activity. Formation of this Ca2+-independent form of the kinase was shown to be associated with autophosphorylation based on the following observations: (a) it required the presence of Ca2+, CaM, and ATP; (b) the ATP analogs adenylyl imidodiphosphate and adenylyl methylenediphosphate could not substitute for ATP; (c) generation of the independent form was associated with incorporation of phosphate into the kinase; and (d) addition of protein phosphatase partially dephosphorylated the kinase and restored its Ca2+ dependence. This phenomenon may be of physiological importance because it would prolong the effects of extracellular signals that only transiently increase the intracellular Ca2+ level.  相似文献   

2.
A cDNA clone for the alpha subunit of mouse brain Ca2+/CaM-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) was transcribed in vitro and translated in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate system. Inclusion of [35S]methionine in the translation system yielded a single 35S-polypeptide of about 50 kDa. When the translation system was assayed for CaM-kinase II activity, there was a 5-10-fold enrichment of kinase activity which was totally dependent on Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). Both the 50-kDa 35S-polypeptide and the Ca2+/CaM-dependent protein kinase activity were quantitatively immunoprecipitated by rat brain CaM-kinase II antibody. When the translated wild-type kinase was subjected to autophosphorylation conditions in the presence of Ca2+, CaM, Mg2+, and ATP, the Ca2+-independent activity (assayed in the presence of [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid) increased from 5.8 +/- 0.7 to 26.5 +/- 2.1% of total activity (assayed in the presence of Ca2+/CaM). These properties confirm the identity of the kinase translated in vitro as CaM-kinase II. The role of Thr-286 autophosphorylation in formation of the Ca2+-independent activity was investigated by site-directed mutation of Thr-286 to Ala (Ala-286 kinase) and to Asp (Asp-286 kinase). The Ala-286 kinase was completely dependent on Ca2+/CaM for activity prior and subsequent to autophosphorylation. The Asp-286 kinase exhibited 21.9 +/- 0.8% Ca2+-independent activity, and this was not increased by autophosphorylation. These results establish that introduction of negative charge(s) at residue 286, either by autophosphorylation of Thr or by mutation to Asp, is sufficient and necessary to generate the partially Ca2+-independent form of CaM-kinase II.  相似文献   

3.
Calcium/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) contained within the postsynaptic density (PSD) was shown to become partially Ca2+-independent following initial activation by Ca2+/CaM. Generation of this Ca2+-independent species was dependent upon autophosphorylation of both subunits of the enzyme in the presence of Mg2+/ATP/Ca2+/CaM and attained a maximal value of 74 +/- 5% of the total activity within 1-2 min. Subsequent to the generation of this partially Ca2+-independent form of PSD CaM-kinase II, addition of EGTA to the autophosphorylation reaction resulted in further stimulation of 32PO4 incorporation into both kinase subunits and a loss of stimulation of the kinase by Ca2+/CaM. Examination of the sites of Ca2+-dependent autophosphorylation by phosphoamino acid analysis and peptide mapping of both kinase subunits suggested that phosphorylation of Thr286/287 of the alpha- and beta-subunits, respectively, may be responsible for the transition of PSD CaM-kinase II to the Ca2+-independent species. A synthetic peptide 281-309 corresponding to a portion of the regulatory domain (residues 281-314) of the soluble kinase inhibited syntide-2 phosphorylation by the Ca2+-independent form of PSD CaM-kinase II (IC50 = 3.6 +/- 0.8 microM). Binding of Ca2+/CaM to peptide 281-309 abolished its inhibitory property. Phosphorylation of Thr286 in peptide 281-309 also decreased its inhibitory potency. These data suggest that CaM-kinase II in the PSD possesses regulatory properties and mechanisms of activation similar to the cytosolic form of CaM-kinase II.  相似文献   

4.
Conditions that regulate the generation of the Ca2(+)-independent form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) in cultured rat cerebellar granule cells have been investigated. Under basal conditions, 4-5% of total CaM-kinase II activity, assayed in the presence of Ca2+/CaM, was the Ca2(+)-independent form active in the presence of EGTA. Depolarization with 56 mM K+ produced a transient increase to 9% Ca2+ independence within 15 s followed by a decline to 5-6% at 10 min. The divalent cation ionophore ionomycin elicited 10% Ca2+ independence, which remained elevated. Removal of Ca2+ from the Krebs-Ringer medium reduced basal Ca2+ independence to 1-2% and eliminated the elevation in response to K+ depolarization. Inclusion of 5 microM okadaic acid, a protein phosphatase inhibitor, in the incubation medium potentiated the levels of Ca2(+)-independent activity of CaM-kinase II. Additional studies in granule cell extracts indicated that there were both okadiac acid-sensitive and -insensitive protein phosphatases involved in the reversal of the Ca2+ independence of CaM-kinase II. Phosphopeptide mapping of the CNBr-cleaved 32P-labeled 58-60-kDa subunit of CaM-kinase II revealed that under basal conditions, the kinase contained phosphate in many sites. Conditions that promoted formation of the Ca2(+)-independent form of the kinase increased the 32P incorporation into multiple sites of the kinase. However, there was a good temporal correlation between 32P incorporation into CNBr peptide 1, which contains Thr-287, and generation of the Ca2(+)-independent kinase activity. These results indicate that formation of the Ca2(+)-independent species of CaM-kinase II is dynamically regulated in cerebellar granule cells by Ca2(+)-mobilizing agents and by protein phosphatase activity and is correlated with autophosphorylation of Thr-287.  相似文献   

5.
A neuronal Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase-Gr) undergoes autophosphorylation on a serine residue(s) in response to Ca2+ and calmodulin. Phosphate incorporation leads to the formation of a Ca(2+)-independent (autonomous) activity state, as well as potentiation of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent response. The autonomous enzyme activity of the phosphorylated enzyme approximately equals the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated activity of the unphosphorylated enzyme, but displays diminished affinity toward ATP and the synthetic substrate, syntide-2. The Km(app) for ATP and syntide-2 increased 4.3- and 1.7-fold, respectively. Further activation of the autonomous enzyme by Ca2+/calmodulin yields a marked increase in the affinity for ATP and peptide substrate such that the Km(app) for ATP and syntide-2 decreased by 14- and 8-fold, respectively. Both autophosphorylation and the addition of Ca2+/calmodulin are required to produce the maximum level of enzyme activation and to increase substrate affinity. Unlike Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II that is dephosphorylated by the Mg(2+)-independent phosphoprotein phosphatases 1 and 2A, CaM kinase-Gr is dephosphorylated by a Mg(2+)-dependent phosphoprotein phosphatase that may be related to the type 2C enzyme. Dephosphorylation of CaM kinase-Gr reverses the effects of autophosphorylation on enzyme activity. A comparison between the autophosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions of CaM kinase-Gr and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II provides useful insights into the operation of Ca(2+)-sensitive molecular switches.  相似文献   

6.
A Ca2+- and calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was partially purified by CaM affinity chromatography of the soluble fraction, and the properties of the enzyme were investigated. The protein kinase activity of the affinity-purified preparation was stimulated at least eightfold by the simultaneous presence of Ca2+ and CaM. The enzyme stimulation was strongly inhibited by trifluoperazine (TFP), a CaM antagonist. When the kinase was incubated in the presence of ATP, Ca2+, and CaM before the assay, the enzyme showed activity even in the presence of the Ca2+ chelator ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) and TFP. The conversion to this Ca2+- and CaM-independent form occurred very rapidly under the incubation conditions required for protein phosphorylation by the kinase. At the highest level of conversion, Ca2+- and CaM-independent kinase activity, which was measured in the presence of EGTA and TFP, was nearly equal to the total kinase activity, which was measured in the presence of Ca2+ and CaM. A protein with a molecular weight of 58,000 was the major species that was phosphorylated in a Ca2+- and CaM-dependent manner by incubation of the CaM affinity-purified proteins with [gamma-32P]ATP. The protein kinase activity of the protein with the same molecular weight was demonstrated by in situ protein phosphorylation in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels by using casein as the substrate, after removal of the detergent from electrophoresed CaM-binding proteins. These data indicate that phosphorylation of the kinase is responsible for the conversion of enzyme activity. Enzyme regulation by this mode may play an important role in integrating cellular functions during the cell cycle. A possible role for the Ca2+-and CaM-dependent protein kinase in the signal transduction of the mating pheromone alpha factor is also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ca2+-activated and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) isolated from rat brain cytosol undergoes autophosphorylation in the presence of Mg2+, ATP, Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, and diolein. Approximately 2-2.5 mol of phosphate were incorporated per mol of the kinase. After sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography, the phosphorylated kinase showed a single protein band of Mr = 82,000 compared to the Mr = 80,000 of the nonphosphorylated enzyme. Analysis of the 32P-labeled tryptic peptides derived from the autophosphorylated kinase by peptide mapping revealed that multiple sites were phosphorylated. Both serine and threonine residues were found to be labeled with 32P. Limited proteolysis of the autophosphorylated kinase with trypsin resulted in the conversion of the kinase into a phospholipid- and Ca2+-independent form. Two major 32P-labeled fragments, Mr = 48,000 and 38,000, were formed as a result of proteolysis, suggesting that the catalytic domain and possibly the Ca2+- and phospholipid-binding region were both phosphorylated. Protein kinase C autophosphorylation has a Km for ATP (1.5 microM) about 10-fold lower than that for phosphorylation of exogenous substrates. The kinetically preferred autophosphorylation appears to be an intramolecular reaction. The autophosphorylated protein kinase C, unlike the protease-degraded enzyme, still depends on Ca2+ and phospholipid for maximal activity. However, the autophosphorylated form of the kinase has a lower Ka for Ca2+ and a higher affinity for the binding of [3H]phorbol-12, 13-dibutyrate. These findings suggest that autophosphorylation of protein kinase C may be important in the regulation of the enzymic activity subsequent to signal transduction.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism for the generation of the Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM)-independent activity of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) by autophosphorylation was studied by characterizing the autothiophosphorylated enzyme, which is resistant to hydrolysis. When CaM-kinase II was incubated with adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) at 5 degrees C, the incorporation of thiophosphate into the enzyme occurred rapidly, reaching a maximum level within a few minutes, in parallel with increase in Ca2+/CaM-independent activity. The maximum level was 1 mol of thiophosphate per mol of subunit of the enzyme, and the thiophosphorylation occurred exclusively at Thr286 in the alpha subunit and Thr287 in the other subunits of the enzyme. These results, taken together, indicate that the autothiophosphorylation of Thr286/Thr287 of each subunit is involved in the generation of the Ca2+/CaM-independent activity. The activity of the autothiophosphorylated enzyme, when assayed in the presence of Ca2+/CaM, showed the same kinetic properties as did the Ca2+/CaM-dependent activity of the original non-phosphorylated enzyme, but when assayed in the absence of Ca2+/CaM, it showed the same Vmax as the Ca2+/CaM-dependent activity but higher Km values for protein substrates. Thus, the phosphorylation of Thr286/Thr287 of the subunit of the enzyme by autophosphorylation appears to not only enhance the affinity of its substrate-binding site for the protein substrate, although it is lower than that of the enzyme activated by the binding of CaM, but also convert the active site to the fully active state.  相似文献   

9.
The autophosphorylation of purified Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (Ca2+/CaM kinase II) on a threonine-containing phosphopeptide common to both the alpha and beta subunits was previously shown to convert this enzyme into a catalytically active Ca2+-independent species. We now have examined the phosphorylation and activation of Ca2+/CaM kinase II in synaptosomes, a Ca2+-dependent neurosecretory system consisting of isolated nerve terminals. Synaptosomes were prelabeled with 32Pi and the alpha subunit of Ca2+/CaM kinase II was immunoprecipitated. Under basal incubation conditions the alpha subunit was phosphorylated. Depolarization of synaptosomes produced a rapid (2-5 s) Ca2+-dependent increase of about 50% in the state of phosphorylation of the alpha subunit. This was followed by a slower increase in the 32P content of the alpha subunit over the next 5 min of depolarization. The enhanced phosphorylation was characterized by an initial rise (2 s) and subsequent decrease (30 s) in the phosphothreonine content of the alpha subunit. In contrast, the phosphoserine content of the alpha subunit slowly increased during the course of depolarization. Thermolytic two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps of the alpha subunit demonstrated that depolarization stimulated the labeling of a phosphopeptide associated with autoactivation. In parallel experiments, unlabeled synaptosomes were depolarized, and lysates of these synaptosomes were assayed for Ca2+/CaM kinase II activity. Depolarization produced a rapid (less than or equal to 2 s) increase in Ca2+-independent Ca2+/CaM kinase II activity. This activity returned to basal levels by 60 s. Thus, depolarization of intact synaptosomes is associated with the transient phosphorylation of Ca2+/CaM kinase II on threonine residues, presumably involving an autophosphorylation mechanism and concomitantly the transient generation of the Ca2+-independent form of Ca2+/CaM kinase II.  相似文献   

10.
Multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) that is transiently expressed in COS-7 cells is essentially inactive when assayed without Ca2+. Physiological activation of the kinase occurs by binding of Ca2+/calmodulin near a putative autoinhibitory subdomain that contains the sequence His282-Arg-Gln-Glu-Thr286. We have markedly increased the Ca2(+)-independent activity of CaM kinase by altering the charge of this sequence by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant containing Asp282-Gly-Glu-Glu-Thr286 is 67% Ca2+ independent. We also mimicked the effect of autophosphorylation at Thr286 by the mutant containing His282-Arg-Gln-Glu-Asp286, which is 36% Ca2+ independent. In addition to delineating the autoinhibitory domain by use of mutations that disable it, these constructs are of immediate practical value for simulating CaM kinase action in vivo without elevating Ca2+. To this end, we show that nuclear microinjection of cDNA of a constitutive mutant, but not of the wild-type kinase, initiates maturation of Xenopus oocytes.  相似文献   

11.
Spermine enhances electrogenic Ca2+ uptake and inhibits Na(+)-independent Ca2+ efflux in rat brain mitochondria. As a result, Ca2+ retention by brain mitochondria increases greatly and the external free Ca2+ level at steady-state can be lowered to physiologically relevant concentrations. The stimulation of Ca2+ uptake by spermine is more pronounced at low concentrations of Ca2+, effectively lowering the apparent Km for Ca2+ uptake from 3 microM to 1.5 microM. However, the apparent Vmax is also increased. At low Ca2+ concentrations, Ca2+ uptake is diffusion-limited. Spermine strongly inhibits Ca2+ binding to anionic phospholipids and it is suggested that this increases the rate of surface diffusion which reduces the apparent Km for uptake. The same effect could inhibit the Na(+)-independent efflux if the rate of efflux is limited by Ca2+ dissociation from the efflux carrier. In brain mitochondria (but not in liver) the spermine effect depends on the presence of ADP. In a medium that contains physiological concentrations of Pi, Mg+, K+, ADP and spermine, brain mitochondria sequester Ca2+ down to 0.1 microM and below, depending on the matrix Ca2+ load. Moreover, brain mitochondria under the same conditions buffer the external medium at 0.4 microM, a concentration at which the set point becomes independent of the matrix Ca2+ content. Thus, mitochondria appear to be capable of modulating calcium oscillations in brain cells.  相似文献   

12.
Purified rat brain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) is stimulated by brain gangliosides to a level of about 30% the activity obtained in the presence of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). Of the various gangliosides tested, GT1b was the most potent, giving half-maximal activation at 25 microM. Gangliosides GD1a and GM1 also gave activation, but asialo-GM1 was without effect. Activation was rapid and did not require calcium. The same gangliosides also stimulated the autophosphorylation of CaM-kinase II on serine residues, but did not produce the Ca2+-independent form of the kinase. Ganglioside stimulation of CaM-kinase II was also present in rat brain synaptic membrane fractions. Higher concentrations (125-250 microM) of GT1b, GD1a, and GM1 also inhibited CaM-kinase II activity. This inhibition appears to be substrate-directed, as the extent of inhibition is very dependent on the substrate used. The molecular mechanism of the stimulatory effect of gangliosides was further investigated using a synthetic peptide (CaMK 281-309), which contains the CaM-binding, inhibitory, and autophosphorylation domains of CaM-kinase II. Using purified brain CaM-kinase II in which these regulatory domains were removed by limited proteolysis. CaMK 281-309 strongly inhibited kinase activity (IC50 = 0.2 microM). GT1b completely reversed this inhibition, but did not stimulate phosphorylation of the peptide on threonine-286. These results demonstrate that GT1b can partially mimic the effects of Ca2+/CaM on native CaM-kinase II and on peptide CaMK 281-309.  相似文献   

13.
K A Ocorr  H Schulman 《Neuron》1991,6(6):907-914
In vitro phosphorylation of multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) converts it to a form that is independent of Ca2+. We demonstrate that significant Ca(2+)-independent CaM kinase activity is present in untreated hippocampal slices. Two manipulations that produce a long-lasting enhancement of neuronal activity in hippocampal slices, elevated extracellular Ca2+ or depolarization with high K+, generate additional Ca(2+)-independent activity. This increase is dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and is correlated with an increased phosphorylation of CaM kinase. In contrast, CaM kinase in posterior pituitary, a brain structure that is not thought to be involved in memory-related processes, is not modulated by depolarization. These results suggest that the Ca(2+)-independent form of CaM kinase may modulate neuronal activity in the hippocampus.  相似文献   

14.
Low concentrations of free Ca2+ stimulated the hydrolysis of ATP by plasma membrane vesicles purified from guinea pig neutrophils and incubated in 100 mM HEPES/triethanolamine, pH 7.25. In the absence of exogenous magnesium, apparent values obtained were 320 nM (EC50 for free Ca2+), 17.7 nmol of Pi/mg X min (Vmax), and 26 microM (Km for total ATP). Studies using trans- 1,2-diaminocyclohexane- N,N,N',N',-tetraacetic acid as a chelator showed this activity was dependent on 13 microM magnesium, endogenous to the medium plus membranes. Without added Mg2+, Ca2+ stimulated the hydrolysis of several other nucleotides: ATP congruent to GTP congruent to CTP congruent to ITP greater than UTP, but Ca2+-stimulated ATPase was not coupled to uptake of Ca2+, even in the presence of 5 mM oxalate. When 1 mM MgCl2 was added, the vesicles demonstrated oxalate and ATP-dependent calcium uptake at approximately 8 nmol of Ca2+/mg X min (based on total membrane protein). Ca2+ uptake increased to a maximum of approximately 17-20 nmol of Ca2+/mg X min when KCl replaced HEPES/triethanolamine in the buffer. In the presence of both KCl and MgCl2, Ca2+ stimulated the hydrolysis of ATP selectively over other nucleotides. Apparent values obtained for the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase were 440 nM (EC50 for free Ca2+), 17.5 nmol Pi/mg X min (Vmax) and 100 microM (Km for total ATP). Similar values were found for Ca2+ uptake which was coupled efficiently to Ca2+-stimulated ATPase with a molar ratio of 2.1 +/- 0.1. Exogenous calmodulin had no effect on the Vmax or EC50 for free Ca2+ of the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase, either in the presence or absence of added Mg2+, with or without an ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N',-tetraacetic acid pretreatment of the vesicles. The data demonstrate that calcium stimulates ATP hydrolysis by neutrophil plasma membranes that is coupled optimally to transport of Ca2+ in the presence of concentrations of K+ and Mg2+ that appear to mimic intracellular levels.  相似文献   

15.
We report that the rat pituitary cell line GH3 contains a Ca2(+)- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase with properties characteristic of multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) from rat brain. The GH3 kinase exhibits the hallmark of authentic CaM kinase: conversion from Ca2(+)-dependent to Ca2(+)-independent activity following a brief initial phosphorylation in vitro. This phosphorylation occurs at a site which is similar or identical to that of the "autonomy" site of the rat brain enzyme and thus may be an autophosphorylation event. GH3 CaM kinase is phosphorylated and becomes Ca2(+)-independent in situ. Depolarization of intact cells with K+ opens calcium channels and leads to the phosphorylation of CaM kinase at the autonomy site, and the kinase becomes significantly and persistently Ca2(+)-independent. Treatment of cells with thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), which activates the phosphatidylinositol signaling pathway, also generates a Ca2(+)-independent CaM kinase in situ. The primary effect of TRH on CaM kinase activity is transient and correlates with the spike of Ca2+ released from intracellular stores and the rapid phase of prolactin release from GH3 cells. This study demonstrates that CaM kinase is able to detect and respond to both calcium that enters the cell through voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels and calcium released from internal stores via the phosphatidylinositol pathway. We find that TRH, a hormone that causes release of prolactin and was previously believed to activate primarily protein kinase C, also significantly activates CaM kinase in intact cells.  相似文献   

16.
The interactions of Cd2+ with active Ca2+ transport systems in rat intestinal epithelial cells have been investigated. ATP-driven Ca2+ transport in basolateral plasma membrane vesicles was inhibited by Cd2+ with an I50 value of 1.6 nM free Cd2+ at 1 microM free Ca2+, using EGTA and HEEDTA to buffer Ca2+ and Cd2+ concentrations, respectively. The inhibition was competitive in nature since the Km value of Ca2+ increased with increasing Cd2+ concentrations while the Vmax remained constant. Cd2+ had similar effects on ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake by permeabilized enterocytes, indicating that non-mitochondrial and mitochondrial Ca2+ stores are also inhibited by nanomolar concentrations of Cd2+. We conclude that ATP-driven Ca2+ transport systems are the most sensitive elements so far reported in Cd2+ intoxication.  相似文献   

17.
A high-affinity Mg2+-independent Ca2+-ATPase (Ca2+-ATPase) has been differentiated from the Mg2+-dependent, Ca2+-stimulated ATPase (Ca2+,Mg2+-ATPase) in rat brain synaptosomal membranes. Using ATP as a substrate, the K0.5 of Ca2+ for Ca2+-ATPase was found to be 1.33 microM with a Km for ATP of 19 microM and a Vmax of 33 nmol/mg/min. Using Ca-ATP as a substrate, the Km for Ca-ATP was found to be 0.22 microM. Unlike Ca2+,Mg2+-ATPase, Ca2+-ATPase was not inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, trifluoperazine, lanthanum, zinc, or vanadate. La3+ and Zn2+, in contrast, stimulated the enzyme activity. Unlike Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase activity, ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake was negligible in the absence of added Mg2+, indicating that the Ca2+ transport into synaptosomal endoplasmic reticulum may not be a function of the Ca2+-ATPase described. Ca2+-ATPase activity was not stimulated by the monovalent cations Na+ or K+. Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase demonstrated a substrate preference for ATP and ADP, but not GTP, whereas Ca2+-ATPase hydrolyzed ATP and GTP, and to a lesser extent ADP. The results presented here suggest the high-affinity Mg2+-independent Ca2+-ATPase may be a separate form from Ca2+,Mg2+-ATPase. The capacity of Mg2+-independent Ca2+-ATPase to hydrolyze GTP suggests this protein may be involved in GTP-dependent activities within the cell.  相似文献   

18.
cDNAs containing the entire coding regions of the alpha and beta subunits of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) were isolated from a rat cerebrum cDNA library, ligated into an expression vector under the control of SV40 early promoter and introduced into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. To investigate the role of the alpha and beta subunits and their functional domains in CaM kinase II activity, the properties of the kinases expressed in the transfected cells were studied. CaM kinase II activity was detected in the transfected cells when the alpha and beta cDNAs were introduced into CHO cells simultaneously. RNA transfer blot and protein immunoblot analyses demonstrated the expression of the mRNAs and proteins of both alpha and beta subunits in the cloned cells. When alpha or beta cDNA was introduced into CHO cells separately, a significant level of the enzyme activity was also expressed, indicating that the alpha and beta subunits exhibited enzyme activity individually. The apparent Km values for ATP and MAP 2 were almost the same for the alpha subunit, beta subunit, alpha beta complex, and brain CaM kinase II. However, there was a slight difference in the affinity for calmodulin between the expressed proteins. The alpha and beta subunits expressed in the same cells polymerized to form alpha beta complex of a size similar to that of brain CaM kinase II. The alpha subunit also polymerized to form an oligomer, which showed almost the same S value as that of alpha beta complex and brain CaM kinase II. In contrast, the beta subunit did not polymerize. The alpha subunit, beta subunit, alpha beta complex, and brain CaM kinase II were autophosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, which resulted in the appearance of Ca2+-independent activity. The Ca2+-independent activity was 60-75% of the total activity as measured in the presence of Ca2+ plus calmodulin. To examine the functional relationship of peptide domains of the subunits of CaM kinase II, deleted cDNAs were introduced into CHO cells and the properties of the expressed proteins were studied. In cells transfected with alpha or beta cDNA from which the association domain was deleted, a significant level of kinase activity was expressed. However, the expressed proteins showed hardly any autophosphorylation and the appearance of Ca2+-independent enzyme activity was very low, indicating that the association domain was essential for the autophosphorylation and for the appearance of the Ca2+-independent activity.  相似文献   

19.
A monoclonal antibody against rat brain type II Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) precipitates three proteins from Drosophila heads with apparent molecular weights similar to those of the subunits of the rat brain kinase. Fly heads also contain a CaM kinase activity that becomes partially independent of Ca2+ after autophosphorylation, as does the rat brain kinase. We have isolated a Drosophila cDNA encoding an amino acid sequence that is 77% identical to the sequence of the rat alpha subunit. All known autophosphorylation sites are conserved, including the site that controls Ca(2+)-independent activity. The gene encoding the cDNA is located between 102E and F on the fourth chromosome. The protein product of this gene is expressed at much higher levels in the fly head than in the body. Thus, both the amino acid sequence and the tissue specificity of the mammalian kinase are highly conserved in Drosophila.  相似文献   

20.
The Ca2+ -activated neutral protease can proteolyze both Ca2+ -dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase. Ca2+ -dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from rat brain was converted to the Ca2+ -independent active form by Ca2+ -activated protease. The proteolytic effects on myosin light chain kinase of Ca2+-activated protease differed in the presence and absence of the Ca2+-calmodulin (CaM) complex. In the presence of bound CaM, myosin light chain kinase (130k dalton) was degradated to a major fragment of 62 kDa, which had Ca2+/CaM-dependent enzyme and CaM-binding activity. When digestion occurred in the absence of bound CaM, myosin light chain kinase cleaved to a fragment of 60 kDa. This peptide had no enzymatic activity in the presence or absence of the Ca2+-CaM complex. Available evidence suggests that the Ca2+-activated proteases may recognize the conformational change of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase induced by Ca2+-CaM complex.  相似文献   

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