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1.
The pleiotropic nature of insulin action suggests diverse mechanisms of signal transduction for the hormone. The specific protein phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, is utilized to differentiate metabolic pathways that may be regulated by phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of key enzymes. In H-35 hepatoma cells, okadaic acid inhibits insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis with an IC50 of 400 nM. In contrast, activation of lipogenesis by insulin is inhibited with an IC50 of 50 nM okadaic acid. The toxin also inhibits stimulation of lipogenesis in these cells by the insulin-sensitive inositol glycan enzyme modulator. In isolated rat adipocytes, insulin-stimulated lipogenesis is also inhibited by okadaic acid with an IC50 of approximately 1,700 nM. The antilipolytic effect of insulin in these cells is more sensitive to okadaic acid, exhibiting an IC50 of 150 nM. Maximal activation of lipogenesis by insulin is dramatically reduced by okadaic acid with no effect on the concentration required for half-maximal activation, whereas the sensitivity of insulin-induced antilipolysis is attenuated by okadaic acid, with no apparent reduction in the maximal effect of the hormone. Taken together, these data suggest that specific phosphatases may be differentially involved in some of the metabolic pathways regulated by insulin.  相似文献   

2.
Extracts of Brassica napus (oilseed rape) seeds contain type 1 and type 2A protein phosphatases whose properties are indistinguishable from the corresponding enzymes in mammalian tissues. The type 1 activity dephosphorylated the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase selectively and was inhibited by the same concentrations of okadaic acid [IC50 (concentration causing 50% inhibition) approximately 10 nM], mammalian inhibitor 1 (IC50 = 0.6 nM) and mammalian inhibitor 2 (IC50 = 2.0 nM) as the rabbit muscle type 1 phosphatase. The plant type 2A activity dephosphorylated the alpha-subunit of phosphorylase kinase preferentially, was exquisitely sensitive to okadaic acid (IC50 approximately 0.1 nM), and was unaffected by inhibitors 1 and 2. As in mammalian tissues, a substantial proportion of plant type 1 phosphatase activity (40%) was particulate, whereas plant type 2A phosphatase was cytosolic. The specific activities of the plant type 1 and type 2A phosphatases were as high as in mammalian tissue extracts, but no type 2B or type 2C phosphatase activity was detected. The results demonstrate that the improved procedure for identifying and quantifying protein phosphatases in animal cells is applicable to higher plants, and suggests that okadaic acid may provide a new method for identifying plant enzymes that are regulated by reversible phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases-1 and -2A, was studied on glucose transport and metabolism in soleus muscles isolated from lean and insulin-resistant obese mice. In muscles from lean mice, the uptake of 2-deoxyglucose, an index of glucose transport and phosphorylation, was increased by okadaic acid in a concentration-dependent manner. At 5 microM, okadaic acid was as efficient as a maximally effective insulin concentration. Glucose metabolism (glycolysis and glycogen synthesis) was also measured. Whereas glycolysis was stimulated by okadaic acid, glycogen synthesis was unchanged. When okadaic acid and insulin were added together in the incubation medium, the rates of glucose transport, glycolysis, and glycogen synthesis were similar to those obtained with insulin alone, whether maximal or submaximal insulin concentrations were used. Furthermore, okadaic acid did not activate the kinase activity of the insulin receptor studied in an acellular system or in intact muscles. These results indicate that a step in the insulin-induced stimulation of muscle glucose transport involves a serine/threonine phosphorylation event that is regulated by protein phosphatases-1 and/or -2A. In muscles of insulin-resistant obese mice, the absolute values of deoxyglucose uptake stimulated by okadaic acid were lower than in muscles from lean mice. However, the okadaic acid effect, expressed as a fold stimulation, was normal. These observations suggest that in the insulin-resistant state linked to obesity, the serine/threonine phosphorylation event is likely occurring normally, but a defect at the level of the glucose transporter itself would prevent a normal response to insulin or okadaic acid.  相似文献   

4.
Calyculin A and okadaic acid: inhibitors of protein phosphatase activity   总被引:44,自引:0,他引:44  
Calyculin A and okadaic acid induce contraction in smooth muscle fibers. Okadaic acid is an inhibitor of phosphatase activity and the aims of this study were to determine if calyculin A also inhibits phosphatase and to screen effects of both compounds on various phosphatases. Neither compound inhibited acid or alkaline phosphatases, nor the phosphotyrosine protein phosphatase. Both compounds were potent inhibitors of the catalytic subunit of type-2A phosphatase, with IC50 values of 0.5 to 1 nM. With the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase type-1, calyculin A was a more effective inhibitor than okadaic acid, IC50 values for calyculin A were about 2 nM and for okadaic acid between 60 and 500 nM. The endogenous phosphatase of smooth muscle myosin B was inhibited by both compounds with IC50 values of 0.3 to 0.7 nM and 15 to 70 nM, for calyculin A and okadaic acid, respectively. The partially purified catalytic subunit from myosin B had IC50 values of 0.7 and 200 nM for calyculin A and okadaic acid, respectively. The pattern of inhibition for the phosphatase in myosin B therefore is similar to that of the type-1 enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The type 2A protein phosphatases in mammalian tissue extracts are inhibited completely and specifically by 1–2 nM okadaic acid. In contrast, type 1 protein phosphatases are hardly affected at these concentrations, complete inhibition requiring 1 μM okadaic acid. These observations have been exploited to develop an improved procedure for the identification and quantitation of type 1, type 2A and type 2C protein phosphatases in tissue extracts.  相似文献   

6.
Rat transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) inhibits glycogen synthesis in rat and guinea pig hepatocyte cultures and counteracts the stimulation of glycogen deposition and activation of glycogen synthase caused by insulin. The EC50 for inhibition of glycogen deposition was 0.2nM. The inhibition of glycogen synthesis was also observed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ and was not blocked by indomethacin, suggesting that it is not mediated by production of prostaglandins. Since TGF alpha is produced by hepatocytes during liver regeneration and by macrophages during endotoxin stimulation, it may have an autocrine/paracrine effect on hepatic carbohydrate metabolism in these states, and may account for the low hepatic glycogen levels during liver regeneration and the impaired glucose tolerance associated with sepsis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
In human type 2 diabetes mellitus, loss of glucose-sensitive insulin secretion from the pancreatic beta-cell is an early pathogenetic event, but the mechanisms involved in glucose sensing are poorly understood. A messenger role has been postulated for L-glutamate in linking glucose stimulation to sustained insulin exocytosis in the beta-cell, but the precise nature by which L-glutamate controls insulin secretion remains elusive. Effects of L-glutamate on the activities of ser/thr protein phosphatases (PPase) and Ca(2+)-regulated insulin exocytosis in INS-1E cells were investigated. Glucose increases L-glutamate contents and promotes insulin secretion from INS-1E cells. L-glutamate also dose-dependently inhibits PPase enzyme activities analogous to the specific PPase inhibitor, okadaic acid. L-glutamate and okadaic acid directly and non-additively promote insulin exocytosis from permeabilized INS-1E cells in a Ca(2+)-independent manner. Thus, an increase in phosphorylation state, through inhibition of protein dephosphorylation by glucose-derived L-glutamate, may be a novel regulatory mechanism linking glucose sensing to sustained insulin exocytosis.  相似文献   

9.
Several studies have shown that organophosphate pesticides affect carbohydrate metabolism and produce hyperglycemia. It has been reported that exposure to the organophosphate pesticide dichlorvos affects glucose homeostasis and decreases liver glycogen content. Glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) is a tissue-specific enzyme expressed in liver and in pancreatic beta cells that plays a crucial role in glycogen synthesis and glucose homeostasis. In the present study we analyzed the effect of one or three days of dichlorvos administration [20 mg/kg body weight] on the activity and mRNA levels of hepatic and pancreatic glucokinase as well as on insulin mRNA abundance in the rat. We found that the pesticide affects pancreatic and hepatic glucokinase activity and expression differently. In the liver the pesticide decreased the enzyme activity; on the contrary glucokinase mRNA levels were increased. In contrast, pancreatic glucokinase activity as well as mRNA levels were not affected by the treatment. Insulin mRNA levels were not modified by dichlorvos administration. Our results suggest that the decreased activity of hepatic glucokinase may account for the adverse effects of dichlorvos on glucose metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
The level of protein phosphorylation is dependent on the relative activities of both protein kinases and protein phosphatases. By comparison with protein kinases, however, there have been considerably fewer studies on the functions of serine/threonine protein phosphatases. This is partly due to a lack of specific protein phosphatase inhibitors that can be used as probes. In the present study we characterize the inhibitory effects of microcystin-LR, a hepatotoxic cyclic peptide associated with most strains of the blue-green algae Microcystis aeruginosa found in the Northern hemisphere, that proves to be a potent inhibitor of type 1 (IC50 = 1.7 nM) and type 2A (IC50 = 0.04 nM) protein phosphatases. Microcystin-LR inhibited the activity of both type 1 and type 2A phosphatases greater than 10-fold more potently than okadaic acid under the same conditions. Type 2A protein phosphatases in dilute mammalian cell extracts were found to be completely inhibited by 0.5 nM microcystin-LR while type 1 protein phosphatases were only slightly affected at this concentration. Thus, microcystin-LR may prove to be a useful probe for the study and identification cellular processes which are mediated by protein phosphatases.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic subunits of bovine platelet protein phosphatases were separated into three distinct forms by chromatography on heparin-Sepharose. Each phosphatase was further purified to apparent homogeneity as judged in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel yielding single protein bands of 37, 41, and 36 kDa. The 37-kDa phosphatase was excluded from heparin-Sepharose and preferentially dephosphorylated the alpha-subunit of phosphorylase kinase. It was stimulated by polycations (polybrene or histone H1) and was inhibited by okadaic acid (IC50 = 0.3 nM), but its activity was not influenced by inhibitor-2 or heparin. The 41-kDa phosphatase was eluted from heparin-Sepharose by 0.20-0.25 M NaCl and preferentially dephosphorylated the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase. It was stimulated by polycations and inhibited by okadaic acid (IC50 = 2 nM), but its activity was not affected by inhibitor-2 or heparin. The 36-kDa phosphatase was eluted from heparin-Sepharose by 0.45-0.50 M NaCl and preferentially dephosphorylated the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase. It was inhibited by inhibitor-2, heparin, histone H1, and okadaic acid (IC50 = 70 nM). The 37- and 36-kDa phosphatases can be classified as type-2A and type-1 enzymes, respectively. The 41-kDa phosphatase does not precisely fit the criteria of either type, showing only partial similarities to both type-1 and type-2A enzymes and it may represent a novel type of protein phosphatase in bovine platelets.  相似文献   

12.
Okadaic acid, a selective inhibitor of serine/threonine protein phosphatases, was utilized to investigate the requirement for phosphatases in cell cycle progression of GH4 rat pituitary cells. Okadaic acid inhibited GH4 cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner with a half-maximal inhibition (IC50) of approximately 5 nM. Treatment of GH4 cells with 10 nM okadaic acid resulted in a 40-60% decrease in phosphatase activity and an increase in the proportion of phosphorylated retinoblastoma (RB) protein. Cell cycle analysis indicated that okadaic acid increased the percentage of cells in G2-M, decreased proportionally the percentage of cells in G1 phase, and had little effect on the percentage of cells in S-phase. The absence of a change in the proportion of S-phase cells indicates that G1-specific phosphatases responsible for dephosphorylation of RB protein were not inhibited by 10 mM okadaic acid. Mitotic index revealed that 10 nM okadaic acid decreased proliferation of GH4 cells specifically by slowing the progression through mitosis. Immunostaining with anti-tubulin demonstrated that 10 nM okadaic acid-treated mitotic cells contained mitotic spindles; however, the spindle apparatus in these cells frequently contained multiple poles. These results suggest that the organization of spindle microtubules during prometaphase requires a protein phosphatase that is sensitive to nanomolar concentrations of okadaic acid. Chromosomes in 10 nM okadaic acid-treated cells appear to be attached to spindle microtubules and the nuclear envelope is absent. The effects of okadaic acid on the spindle differ from those elicited by the calcium channel blocker, nimodipine, indicating that this okadaic acid sensitive phosphatase is not part of the calcium signalling events which participate in mitotic progression.  相似文献   

13.
Double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) is a participant in the cellular antiviral response and phosphorylates the alpha-subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2alpha (eIF-2alpha) to block protein synthesis. Treatment of human osteosarcoma cell line MG63 cells with a serine and threonine protein phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, at the concentration of 100 nM, but not at 20 nM, induced apoptosis. To investigate the functional relationship between phosphatases and apoptosis, we examined the phosphorylation levels of PKR and eIF-2alpha by Western blot analysis. During treatment of cells with it at the higher concentration (100 nM), okadaic acid increased the level of phosphorylated PKR in MG63 cells, this kinase phosphorylating eIF-2alpha. However, at the lower concentration (20 nM), okadaic acid did not affect the level of phosphorylated PKR. In the cells treated with 100 nM okadaic acid, activation of NF-kappaB also occurred. Even though inhibition of translation occurred simultaneously in MG63 cells, the expression of pro-apoptotic proteins Fas and Bax was not affected by 100 nM okadaic acid in these cells. We concluded that the inhibition of translation decreased anti-apoptotic protein expression, thus resulting in apoptosis. Our results also suggest that the inhibition of the protein phosphatase activity by okadaic acid induced apoptosis in MG63 cells through PKR and eIF-2alpha.  相似文献   

14.
The inhibitory effect of a marine-sponge toxin, okadaic acid, was examined on type 1, type 2A, type 2B and type 2C protein phosphatases as well as on a polycation-modulated (PCM) phosphatase. Of the protein phosphatases examined, the catalytic subunit of type 2A phosphatase from rabbit skeletal muscle was most potently inhibited. For the phosphorylated myosin light-chain (PMLC) phosphatase activity of the enzyme, the concentration of okadaic acid required to obtain 50% inhibition (ID50) was about 1 nM. The PMLC phosphatase activities of type 1 and PCM phosphatase were also strongly inhibited (ID50 0.1-0.5 microM). The PMCL phosphatase activity of type 2B phosphatase (calcineurin) was inhibited to a lesser extent (ID50 4-5 microM). Similar results were obtained for the phosphorylase a phosphatase activity of type 1 and PCM phosphatases and for the p-nitrophenyl phosphate phosphatase activity of calcineurin. The following phosphatases were not affected by up to 10 microM-okadaic acid: type 2C phosphatase, phosphotyrosyl phosphatase, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate phosphatase, acid phosphatases and alkaline phosphatases. Thus okadaic acid had a relatively high specificity for type 2A, type 1 and PCM phosphatases. Kinetic studies showed that okadaic acid acts as a non-competitive or mixed inhibitor on the okadaic acid-sensitive enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
The Arabidopsis thaliana type 1 protein phosphatase (PP1) catalytic subunit was released from its endogenous regulatory subunits by ethanol precipitation and purified by anion exchange and microcystin affinity chromatography. The enzyme was identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry from a tryptic digest of the purified protein as a mixture of PP1 isoforms (TOPP 1-6) indicating that at least 4-6 of the eight known PP1 proteins are expressed in sufficient quantities for purification from A. thaliana suspension cells. The enzyme had a final specific activity of 8950 mU/mg using glycogen phosphorylase a as substrate, had a subunit molecular mass of 35 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE and behaved as a monomeric protein of approx. 39 kDa on Superose 12 gel filtration chromatography. Similar to the mammalian type 1 protein phosphatases, the A. thaliana enzyme was potently inhibited by Inhibitor-2 (IC(50)=0.65 nM), tautomycin (IC(50)=0.06 nM), microcystin-LR (IC(50)=0.01 nM), nodularin (IC(50)=0.035 nM), calyculin A (IC(50)=0.09 nM), okadaic acid (IC(50)=20 nM) and cantharidin (IC(50)=60 nM). The enzyme was also inhibited by fostriecin (IC(50)=22 microM), NaF (IC(50)=2.1 mM), Pi (IC(50)=9.5 mM), and PPi (IC(50)=0.07 mM). Purification of the free catalytic subunit allowed it to be used to probe protein phosphatase holoenzyme complexes that were enriched on Q-Sepharose and a microcystin-Sepharose affinity matrix and confirmed several proteins to be PP1 targeting subunits.  相似文献   

16.
Okadaic acid, a potent inhibitor of Type 1 and Type 2A protein phosphatases, was used to investigate the mechanism of insulin action on membrane-bound low Km cAMP phosphodiesterase in rat adipocytes. Upon incubation of cells with 1 microM okadaic acid for 20 min, phosphodiesterase was stimulated 3.7- to 3.9-fold. This stimulation was larger than that elicited by insulin (2.5- to 3.0-fold). Although okadaic acid enhanced the effect of insulin, the maximum effects of the two agents were not additive. When cells were pretreated with 1-(5-isoquinolinylsulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H-7), the level of phosphodiesterase stimulation by okadaic acid was rendered smaller, similar to that attained by insulin. In cells that had been treated with 2 mM KCN, okadaic acid (like insulin) failed to stimulate phosphodiesterase, suggesting that ATP was essential. Also, as reported previously, the effect of insulin on phosphodiesterase was reversed upon exposure of hormone-treated cells to KCN. This deactivation of previously-stimulated phosphodiesterase was blocked by okadaic acid, but not by insulin. The above KCN experiments were carried out with cells in which A-kinase activity was minimized by pretreatment with H-7. Okadaic acid mildly stimulated basal glucose transport and, at the same time, strongly inhibited the action of insulin thereon. It is suggested that insulin may stimulate phosphodiesterase by promoting its phosphorylation and that the hormonal effect may be reversed by a protein phosphatase which is sensitive to okadaic acid. The hypothetical protein kinase thought to be involved in the insulin-dependent stimulation of phosphodiesterase appears to be more H-7-resistant than A-kinase.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of insulin on glycogen synthesis and key enzymes of glycogen metabolism, glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase, was studied in HepG2 cells. Insulin stimulated glycogen synthesis 1.83-3.30 fold depending on insulin concentration in the medium. Insulin caused a maximum of 65% decrease in glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and 110% increase in glycogen synthase activities in 5 min. Although significant changes in enzyme activities were observed with as low as 0.5 nM insulin level, the maximum effects were observed with 100 nM insulin. There was a significant inverse correlation between activities of glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and glycogen synthase 'a' (R2 = 0.66, p < 0.001). Addition of 30 mM glucose caused a decrease in phosphorylase 'a' activity in the absence of insulin and this effect was additive with insulin up to 10 nM concentration. The inactivation of phosphorylase 'a' by insulin was prevented by wortmannin and rapamycin but not by PD98059. The activation of glycogen synthase by insulin was prevented by wortmannin but not by PD98059 or rapamycin. In fact, PD98059 slightly stimulated glycogen synthase activation by insulin. Under these experimental conditions, insulin decreased glycogen synthase kinase-3 activity by 30-50% and activated more than 4-fold particulate protein phosphatase-1 activity and 1.9-fold protein kinase B activity; changes in all of these enzyme activities were abolished by wortmannin. The inactivation of GSK-3 and activation of PKB by insulin were associated with their phosphorylation and this was also reversed by wortmannin. The addition of protein phosphatase-1 inhibitors, okadaic acid and calyculin A, completely abolished the effects of insulin on both enzymes. These data suggest that stimulation of glycogen synthase by insulin in HepG2 cells is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway by activating PKB and PP-1G and inactivating GSK-3. On the other hand, inactivation of phosphorylase by insulin is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway involving a rapamycin-sensitive p70s6k and PP-1G. These experiments demonstrate that insulin regulates glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase through (i) a common signaling pathway at least up to PI-3 kinase and bifurcates downstream and (ii) that PP-1 activity is essential for the effect of insulin.  相似文献   

18.
Treatment of adipocytes with okadaic acid (a specific inhibitor of type 1 and 2a protein phosphatases) resulted in a rapid 8-10-fold stimulation of cell extract myelin basic protein (MBP) kinase activity (t1/2 = 10 min) and kinase activity toward a synthetic peptide RRLSSLRA (S6 peptide) (t1/2 = 5 min). Insulin brought about a smaller stimulation of these two activities (t1/2 = 2.5 min). MBP kinase activity from cells treated with okadaic acid or insulin was resolved by anion exchange chromatography into two well defined peaks; S6 peptide kinase activity was less well resolved. The two partially purified MBP kinases were inactivated by the protein tyrosine phosphatase CD45 or by protein phosphatase 2a (PP-2a). In contrast, partially purified S6 peptide kinase activity was inactivated only by PP-2a or protein phosphatase 1 (PP-1). Furthermore, a 38-kDa protein which co-eluted with one peak of MBP kinase and a 42-kDa protein which co-eluted with the other peak of MBP kinase were phosphorylated on tyrosine after treatment with okadaic acid. These findings illustrate several important points concerning regulation of MBP and S6 peptide kinases. First, these protein kinases are regulated by phosphorylation, and, second, in the absence of hormonal stimuli their activities are strongly suppressed by protein phosphatases. Lastly, the increased tyrosine phosphorylation accompanying the activation of MBP kinases following okadaic acid treatment suggests a role for PP-2a in events that are mediated by tyrosine phosphorylation.  相似文献   

19.
Okadaic acid is a powerful inhibitor of serine/threonine protein phosphatases 1 and 2A. Although it is known as a potent tumour promoter, the intracellular mechanism by which okadaic acid mediates its mitogenic effect remains to be clarified. We investigated the effect of okadaic acid on the activation of mitogenesis in Rat1 fibroblasts overexpressing insulin receptors. As previously reported, insulin induced Shc phosphorylation, Shc-Grb2 association, MAP kinase activation, and BrdU incorporation. Okadaic acid also stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of Shc and its subsequent association with Grb2 in a time- and dose-dependent manner without affecting tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor beta-subunit and IRS. However, to a lesser extent, okadaic acid stimulated MAP kinase activity and BrdU incorporation. Interestingly, preincubation of okadaic acid potentiated insulin stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation of Shc (213% of control), Shc-Grb2 association (150%), MAP kinase activity (152%), and BrdU incorporation (148%). These results further confirmed the important role of Shc, but not IRS, in cell cycle progression in Rat1 fibroblasts. Furthermore, serine/ threonine phosphorylation appears to be involved in the regulation of Shc tyrosine phosphorylation leading to mitogenesis by mechanisms independent of insulin signalling.  相似文献   

20.
The role of protein phosphatases in the regulation of insulin release from rat pancreatic islets was studied with protein phosphatase inhibitors, okadaic acid and calyculin A. Okadaic acid inhibited glucose- and glyceraldehyde-induced insulin release dose-dependently and also inhibited the potentiation of glucose-induced release either by adding forskolin, an activator of adenylate cyclase or by increasing K+ concentration to 25 mM. At a non-stimulatory concentration of 3 mM glucose, a high concentration (2 microM) of okadaic acid inhibited insulin release induced by high K+ or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), an activator of protein kinase C, but a low concentration (1 microM) of okadaic acid did not significantly inhibit TPA-induced insulin release. Calyculin A also inhibited glucose-induced insulin release, and the effect was greater than that of okadaic acid. The data suggest that protein phosphatases may play an important role in the regulation of insulin release.  相似文献   

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