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1.
The cytochemical localization of adenylate cyclase: fact or artifact?   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In a study of the location of adenylate cyclase activity in rat pancreas with the method of Reik et al. (Science 168:382, 1970), as modified by Howell and Whitfield (J Histochem Cytochem 20:873, 1972) it was found that (a) unspecific staining occurs in rat pancreatic tissue fragments incubated in the Reik-Howell medium in the absence of substrate; (b) addition of adenylyl-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) as substrate, either alone or together with stimulants of rat pancreas adenylate cyclase (secretin. NaF), does not result in increased precipitation; (c) cytochemical incubation of isolated rat pancreatic acinar cells and of rat liver and kidney fragments does not lead to substrate-specific precipitation. In subsequent chemical studies we have found that cyclic adenosine monophosphate (AMP) formation from [alpha32P]AMP-PNP in the presence of rat pancreatic particulate matter is very low in the Reik-Howell medium without lead ions, but is stimulated by addition of lead nitrate (4 mM). Whereas heat-treatment of the particulate matter abolishes all cyclic AMP formation in the absence of lead ions, it actually increases cyclic AMP production in the presence of 4 mM lead nitrate. This indicates that the cyclic AMP formation in the complet Reik-Howell medium occurs by a nonenzymatic mechanism. In addition, this medium shows a tendency to become turbid, particularly when calcium ions are added to the medium, suggesting a possible explanation for the apparently specific cytochemical detection observed by other authors. A revised cytochemical medium, with barium replacing lead and with a pH of 8.9 (optimal for adenylate cyclase with AMP-PNP substrate), leaves rat pancreatic adenylate cyclase activity intact and hormone sensitive, while it is still able to precipitate imidodiphosphate. However, cytochemical incubation of isolated rat pancreatic acinar cells in this revised medium in the presence of AMP-PNP and secretin does not yield an electron-dense precipitate, showing that the enzyme activity is to low to produce sufficient imidodiphosphate. These findings throw further doubt on the validity of the cytochemical detection of adenylate cyclase, reported by other investigators, notwithstanding the alleged positive results.  相似文献   

2.
1. The cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in homogenates of the submaxillary gland and pancreas was found to be associated mainly with the 300,000 times g supernatant fraction. A Lineweaver-Burk plot showed a high-affinity (Km app. = 1.6 muM) and a low-affinity (Km app. greater than 100muM) component for the cyclic AMP substrate. The enzyme was magnesium dependent, and strongly inhibited by papaverine, theophylline and caffeine. Cyclic GMP inhibited cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, but only in concentrations greatly exceeding that of the cyclic AMP. Calcium did not alter the activity of the enzyme. The activity of the submaxillary cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase was not influenced by noradrenaline, dopamine, histamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine or gamma-amino butyric acid, and that of the pancreatic enzyme by acetylcholine, pancreozymin or secretin. 2. Adenylate cyclases from guinea-pig submaxillary gland and cat pancreas are particulate enzymes. The highest specific activity was recovered from the 1500 times g pellet. Guineo-pig submaxillary adenylate cyclase was activated by fluoride, noradrenaline, isoprenaline and adrenaline. The noradrenaline activation was blocked by the beta-adrenoceptor blocker, propranolol, but not by the alphs-adrenoceptor blocker, phentolamine. Neither acetylcholine nor carbachol had any effect on the adenylate cyclase activity. The apparent Km value for the 10- minus 4 M noradrenaline activated adenylate cyclase activity was completely aboliched by 5 mM calcium. Cat pancreatic adenylate cyclase was clearly and consistently activated by secretin, but not by pancreozymin or carbachol.  相似文献   

3.
Previous investigators have shown that prefixation and lead staining completely inhibit the activity of adenylate cyclase. Lead has also been shown to stimulate the nonenzymatic hydrolysis of AMP-PMP (the substrate for adenylate cyclase) after 30 min incubation. The present studies were performed to determine if the omission of prefixation would provide a better method for localizing adenylate cyclase in cardiac muscle. These studies were also performed to determine the effect of short incubation on the lead-induced nonenzymatic hydrolysis of AMP-PNP. In prefixed sections the reaction product was diffusely localized over the section. However, in unfixed sections the reaction product appeared only on the sarcolemma and sarcotubule system. Results are presented showing that short incubation (i.e., 5 min) prevents the nonenzymatic hydrolysis of AMP-PMP by lead. In biochemical studies lead (10(-3) M) was shown to completely inhibit the activity of this enzyme. However, in the presence of 4 micrograms phosphatidylinositol, lead inhibition of this enzyme was reduced to 50% of the control value. Based on this observation, it is suggested that approximately 50% of adenylate cyclase is present in sections of cardiac muscle exposed to 2 x 10(-3) M lead, which is presumably enough activity for demonstration of adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Plasma membranes were isolated from bovine renal cortex. This particulate, adenylate cyclase-containing fraction was stimulated to produce cyclic AMP by parathyroid hormone and fluoride. When the time-course of adenylate cyclase activity was investigated, it was found that while PTH-stimulated cyclic AMP production comes to a halt in about 15 minutes after the initiation of the reaction, fluoride-stimulated activity continues unabated for at least an hour. Experiments to determine the cause of this showed that the cyclase enzyme is not degraded under our experimental conditions, but is inhibited by a soluble, unbound product of the reaction which requires ATP for its synthesis. In our experiments degradation of parathyroid hormone was relatively slow and could not account for the rapid inhibition of PTH-stimulated cyclase activity. Of the various agents tested, cyclic AMP was found capable of inhibiting PTH-stimulated cyclic AMP production by our purified membrane preparation. Half-maximal inhibition was observed at around 10(-6) M concentrations of the nucleotide. Pyrophosphate, adenosine, 5'-AMP and ADP had no effects. The significance of these results in relation to the regulation of adenylate cyclase activity is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin antagonists inhibited hormone-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in both cultured cells and cell lysates of mouse B16 melanoma. Particulate preparations of B16 melanoma contained 34-45% of total cell calmodulin, which could not be dissociated by extensive washing irrespective of the presence of EGTA in the buffer. The adenylate cyclase activity in such preparations was unaffected by the addition of exogenous calmodulin. However, the rare-earth-metal ion La3+, which can mimic or replace Ca2+ in many systems, produced an immediate inhibition of agonist-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and preincubation of particulate preparations was La3+ followed by washing with La3+-free buffer dissociated calmodulin (96% loss) from particulate preparations. The loss of calmodulin from particulate preparations was associated with a decrease in agonist responsiveness (74%) and a marked change in the Ca2+-sensitivity of the enzyme, low concentrations of calcium (approx. 10 nM) now failing to stimulate enzyme activity, high concentrations of calcium (greater than or equal to 100 nM) producing greater-than-normal inhibition of enzyme activity. Direct activation of adenylate cyclase by the addition of pure calmodulin was now demonstrable in such calmodulin-depleted particulate preparations. Half-maximal stimulation of agonist-responsive adenylate cyclase occurred at 80 nM-calmodulin in the presence of 10 microM free Ca2+. Maximal stimulation by calmodulin (at 300-600 nM) restored enzyme activity to 89 +/- 5% (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 7) of the activity in untreated, calmodulin-intact, preparations.  相似文献   

6.
Adenylate cyclase is the critical enzyme in the chemotactic signal relay mechanism of the slime mold amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum. However, few studies examining the regulation of this enzyme have been performed in vitro due to the instability of enzyme activity in crude lysates. For studies presented in this communication, a membrane preparation has been isolated that exhibits a high specific activity adenylate cyclase that is stable during storage at -70 degrees C and under assay conditions at 27 degrees C. The enzyme was activated by micromolar concentrations of MnCl2. GTP and its non-hydrolyzable analog, guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate, inhibited the enzyme non-competitively in the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+. However, this inhibition was more pronounced in the presence of Mn2+. Since guanylate cyclase activity in the D. discoideum membranes was less than 10% of the adenylate cyclase activity, there could not be a significant contribution by guanylate cyclase toward the production of cyclic AMP. Experiments indicate that D. discoideum adenylate cyclase was also regulated by adenosine analogs. The enzyme was inhibited by 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine and 2'-deoxyadenosine and inhibition was augmented by the presence of Mn2+. However, the inhibition was not entirely consistent with that which would be expected for the P-site of eukaryotic systems because some purine-modified adenosine analogs also inhibited the enzyme. Guanine nucleotides had no effect on the inhibition by either purine-modified or ribose-modified adenosine analogs. The binding of cyclic AMP to its receptor on the D. discoideum membranes was not affected by either MnCl2 or adenosine analogs.  相似文献   

7.
The role of oxidation of SH groups in the activity of adenylate cyclase and in radiosensitivity of the enzyme was investigated. Adenylate cyclase activity was measured in purified membrane preparation of 19 day old chicken embryo brains. N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM) and lead-acetate were used as SH inhibitors. Gamma irradiation was carried out with 60-Co source. NEM inhibition of adenylate cyclase was dose dependent and 50 per cent inhibition was observed at 40-50 microM NEM. Activity of adenylate cyclase was elevated at lower concentrations of lead-acetate (10 nM-100 microM) and was inhibited at higher concentrations (above 100 microM). The presence of 40 microM NEM did not alter the shape of lead acetate saturation curve of adenylate cyclase. Gamma irradiation in the dose range of 100-800 Gy elevated the adenylate cyclase activity measured in the presence of 5 mM NaF but did not alter the basal activity. Gamma irradiation did not have significant effect on NEM saturation of adenylate cyclase, while it altered slightly the lead acetate saturation curve.  相似文献   

8.
Y Chen  M Laburthe  B Amiranoff 《Peptides》1992,13(2):339-341
The ubiquitous neuropeptide, galanin, strongly inhibits adenylate cyclase in rat brain membranes. While basal enzyme activity was not altered, galanin from 10(-11) M to 5 x 10(-7) M decreased forskolin- and VIP-stimulated adenylate cyclase with a half-maximal effect being elicited by 0.7 nM neuropeptide and a maximal 80% inhibition of the enzyme activity. The galanin fragments (2-29) and (1-15) dose-dependently inhibited the forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase, while the fragments (3-29) and (10-29) were found inactive. These results indicate that the regulatory action of galanin in the central nervous system involves the coupling of galanin receptors to the inhibition of the adenylate cyclase system.  相似文献   

9.
The adenylate cyclase system present in a preparation enriched in plasma membranes derived from bovine adrenal cortex was investigated in considerable detail. This system is stimulated by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), by biologically active analogs of this hormone, and by fluoride ion. The preparation contains sodium-potassium- and magnesium-dependent ATPases that are markedly inhibited by 50 mM sodium fluoride. Incorporation of a pyruvate phosphokinase ATP generating system into the adenylate cyclase assay medium provided constant substrate levels. In the presence of the ATP generating system, the rate of cyclic AMP formation (basal, fluoride, and ACTH-activated) was proportional to enzyme concentration and was linear with time. Proportionality with respect to enzyme concentration as concerned the hormone-activated adenylate cyclase was achieved only when the ratio of hormone to enzyme protein was kept constant. The temperature optimum of the adenylate cyclase, basal or activated, was approximately 30 degrees. Michaelis-Menten kinetics were observed when the ratio of Mg2+ to ATP was approximately 6:1. Both calcium and ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid completely inhibited the adenylate cyclase system at concentrations of 5 and 0.5 mM, respectively. GTP was inhibitory at concentrations of 10-2 M but had little effect at lower concentrations. Freezing in liquid nitrogen and storage at -60 degrees exerted little effect on the fluoride-stimulated enzyme but lowered hormone stimulated activity. Preincubation in the presence of ACTH afforded a high degree of stabilization of the enzyme system while preincubation with a biologically inactive analog afforded no protection.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of glucose, a series of glucose metabolites, nicotinamide nucleotides, Ca2+ and p-chloromercuribenzenesulphonate on adenylate cyclase activity in homogenates of mouse pancreatic islets were studied. The basal activity of the adenylate cyclase was approx. 6 pmol of cyclic AMP formed/30 min per microng of DNA at 30 degrees C. The enzyme activity was stimulated by some 150% by fluoride. Starvation of the animals for 48h had no effect on either the basal or the fluoride-stimulated activity. The adenylate cyclase activity was increased by 40-50% when 17 mM-glucose, 10 micronM-phosphoenolpyruvate or 10 micronM-pyruvate was added to the assay medium. The effect of glucose was unchanged in the presence of 17 mM-mannoheptulose, and mannoheptulose alone had no effect. The other glycolytic intermediates, and the coenzymes NAD+, NADH and NADPH, at concentrations up to 1 mM were without any detectable effect on the rate of formation of cyclic AMP. The insulin secretagogue p-chloromercuribenzenesulphonate inhibited the adenylate cyclase markedly even at a concentration of 10 micronM. Calculated concentrations of free Ca2+ of 10 micronM and 0.1 mM inhibited adenylate cyclase by 29 and 71% respectively. It is concluded that both glucose itself and phosphoenolpyruvate and/or pyruvate are true activating ligands for islet and adenylate cyclase and that inhibition of the cyclase by Ca2+ may be of physiological significance.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of ribo- and deoxyribonucleic acids on the activity of detergent-dispersed adenylate cyclases from rat and bovine brain were examined. Mn2+ (10 mM)-activated adenylate cyclase was inhibited by micromolar concentrations of poly(A) (IC50 congruent to 0.45 microM). This inhibition was directly due to poly(A) and was not mediated by: (a) protein contamination of the poly(A) preparation, (b) metal chelation, (c) formation of an acid-soluble inhibitor of adenylate cyclase, (d) effects on the specific activity of [alpha-32P]ATP, (e) competition with MnATP for binding to adenylate cyclase, or (f) diversion of substrate to an alternate polymerase reaction. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase by poly(A) was on the enzyme's catalytic unit, as purified preparations of the enzyme from bovine brain were inhibited by poly(A). This inhibition by poly(A) was not likely mediated via the enzyme's "P"-site, through which activated forms of the enzyme are selectively inhibited by specific adenosine phosphates. In contrast with inhibition by the "P"-site agonist 3' AMP, inhibition of adenylate cyclase by poly(A) was slow in onset and was not reversible by dilution and showed a different metal-dependence. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase was relatively specific for poly(A) as poly(U) caused less than 50% inhibition and deoxyribonucleic acids had no effect. The potency and specificity of the inhibition of adenylate cyclase by poly(A) imply a biochemically interesting interaction that is possibly also of physiological significance.  相似文献   

12.
—Adenylate cyclase activity of permeabilized neuroblastoma cells was measured by the conversion of [α32P]ATP into labelled cyclic AMP. Adenosine (10?6 - 10?4m ) induced a dose-dependent increase in cyclic AMP formation. This effect could not be accounted for either by an adenosine-induced inhibition of the phosphodiesterase activity present in the enzyme preparation, or by a direct conversion of adenosine into cyclic AMP. This indicates that the observed increase in cyclic AMP accumulation reflected an activation of adenylate cyclase. Adenosine is partially metabolized during the course of incubation with the enzyme preparation. However, none of the identified non-phosphorylated adenosine metabolites were able to induce an adenylate cyclase activation. This suggests that adenosine itself is the stimulatory agent. The apparent Km of the adenylate cyclase for adenosine was 5 ± 10?6-10?5m . Maximal activation represented 3-4 times the basal value (10-100 pmol cyclic AMP formed/10 min/mg protein). The adenosine effect was stereospecific, since structural analogues of adenosine were inactive. Adenosine increased the maximal velocity of the adenylate cyclase reaction. The stimulatory effect of adenosine was inhibited by theophylline. Prostaglandin PGE1 had a stimulatory effect much more pronounced than that of adenosine (6-10-fold the basal value at 10?6m ). Dopamine and norepinephrine induced a slight adenylate cyclase activation which was not potentiated by adenosine. It is concluded that adenosine is able to activate directly neuroblastoma cell adenylate cyclase. It seems very likely that such a direct activation is also present in intact nervous tissue and account, at least partly, for the observed cyclic AMP accumulation in response to adenosine.  相似文献   

13.
The action of adenosine on lutropin (LH)-stimulated cyclic AMP production and LH-induced desensitization of adenylate cyclase in rat Leydig tumour cells was investigated. Adenosine and N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine caused a dose-dependent potentiation of LH-stimulated cyclic AMP production at concentrations (0.01-10 microM) which alone did not produce an increase in cyclic AMP production. However, 2-deoxyadenosine had no effect either alone or in combination with LH on cyclic AMP production. The potentiation produced by adenosine was unaffected by concentrations of the specific nucleoside-transport inhibitor dipyridamole, which inhibited [3H]adenosine uptake by up to 90%. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-l-methylxanthine, but not RO-10-1724, inhibited the adenosine-induced potentiation. In the presence of adenosine, the kinetics of LH-stimulated cyclic AMP production were linear with time up to 2h, compared with those with LH alone, which showed a characteristic decrease in rate of cyclic AMP production after the first 15-20 min. Consistent with the altered kinetics, adenosine also inhibited the LH-induced desensitization of adenylate cyclase. These results suggest that adenosine has effects on rat tumour Leydig cells through receptors on the external surface of the plasma membrane. This receptor has characteristics similar to those of the R-type receptors, which have been shown either to stimulate or to inhibit adenylate cyclase. However, the effects of adenosine in the present studies does not involve a direct inhibition or activation of adenylate cyclase, but may involve an as yet undefined receptor-mediated modulation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

14.
The prostaglandin endoperoxide PGH2 (15-hydroxy-9alpha, 11alpha-peroxidoprosta-5,13-dienoic acid), at a concentration of 2.8 x 10(-5) M inhibited basal adenylate cyclase activity 11% and epinephrine-stimulated activity 30 to 35%. PGH2 inhibited epinephrine-stimulated enzyme activity in the presence of 10 mM theophylline, 2.5 mM adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP), or in the absence of inhibitors or substrates of the cAMP phosphodiesterase. When the cAMP phosphodiesterase was assayed directly using 62 nM and 1.1 muM cAMP, PGH2 did not affect the 100,000 x g particulate cAMP phosphodiesterase from fat cells. The inhibition of adenylate cyclase by PGH2 was readily reversible. A 6-min preincubation of ghost membranes with PGH2, followed by washing, did not alter subsequent epinephrine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. During epinephrine stimulation, the PGH2 inhibition was apparent on initial rates of cAMP synthesis, and the addition of PGH2 to the enzyme system at any point during an assay markedly reduced the rate of cAMP synthesis. Between 2.8 x 10(-7) M and 2.8 x 10(-5) M, PGH2 inhibited epinephrine-stimulated enzyme activity in a concentration-dependent manner. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by thyroid-stimulating hormone, glucagon, and adrenocorticotropic hormone as well as by epinephrine was antagonized by PGH2, suggesting that PGH2 may be an endogenous feedback regulator of hormone-stimulated lipolysis in adipose tissue.  相似文献   

15.
Heparin was found to be the most potent inhibitor of rat ovarian luteinizing hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase (I50 = 2 microgram/ml) when compared to other naturally occurring glycosamin oglycans. This inhibition was also apparent when this enzyme was stimulated by follicle-stimulating hormone or prostaglandin E2. Heparin was also found to inhibit glucagon-sensitive rat hepatic adenylate cyclase, and the prostaglandin E1-sensitive enzyme from rat ileum and human platelets. In contrast, heparin stimulated the dopamine sensitive adenylate cyclase from rat caudate nucleus. The sulfated polysugar dextran sulfate exerts similar effects on adenylate cyclase activity of the rat ovary and was shown to inhibit hormone binding to rat ovarian plasma membrane in a manner similar to that exerted by heparin. In contrast to heparin, dextran sulfate inhibited dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase from rat caudate nucleus.  相似文献   

16.
Glucagon (10nM) prevented insulin (10nM) from activating the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. This effect of glucagon was abolished by either PIA [N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine] (100nM) or adenosine (10 microM). Neither PIA nor adenosine exerted any effect on the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity either alone or in combination with glucagon. Furthermore, PIA and adenosine did not potentiate the action of insulin in activating this enzyme. 2-Deoxy-adenosine (10 microM) was ineffective in mimicking the action of adenosine. The effect of PIA in preventing the blockade by glucagon of insulin's action was inhibited by low concentrations of theophylline. Half-maximal effects of PIA were elicited at around 6nM-PIA. It is suggested that adenosine is exerting its effects on this system through an R-type receptor. This receptor does not appear to be directly coupled to adenylate cyclase, however, as PIA did not affect either the activity of adenylate cyclase or intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations. Insulin's activation of the plasma-membrane cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, in the presence of both glucagon and PIA, was augmented by increasing intracellular cyclic AMP concentrations with either dibutyryl cyclic AMP or the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor Ro-20-1724. PIA also inhibited the ability of glucagon to uncouple (desensitize) adenylate cyclase activity in intact hepatocytes. This occurred at a half-maximal concentration of around 3 microM-PIA. However, if insulin (10 nM) was also present in the incubation medium, PIA exerted its action at a much lower concentration, with a half-maximal effect occurring at around 4 nM.  相似文献   

17.
Vanadate increases renal Na and water excretion. The mechanism whereby vanadate impairs water transport was examined in the toad bladder. Vanadate did not alter baseline water transport but caused a significant inhibition of water transport elicited by high doses of AVP. The inhibition of AVP stimulated water flow by vanadate was dose dependent with inhibition present with concentration as low as 10(-7) and maximal inhibition occurring at 10(-5) M. Vanadate also inhibited water transport stimulated by cyclic AMP or by phosphodiesterase inhibition indicating that vanadate has an effect beyond cyclic AMP step, in addition to whatever effect it might have on adenylate cyclase. The inhibitory effect of vanadate on AVP stimulated water flow was not altered by prior Na-K-ATPase or prostaglandin inhibition. Since vanadate has been shown to stimulate adenylate cyclase in other tissues we examined whether addition of vanadate 10 minutes after addition of AVP would enhance water transport. Vanadate caused a transient enhancement of AVP stimulated water flow. These data demonstrate that vanadate can inhibit or stimulate water flow in the toad bladder.  相似文献   

18.
Calmodulin regulation of adenylate cyclase activity   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Calmodulin-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase was initially thought to be a unique feature of neural tissues. In recent years evidence to the contrary has accumulated, calmodulin-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase now being demonstrated in a wide range of structurally unrelated tissues and species. Demonstration of the existence of calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase has in nearly all instances required the removal of endogenous calmodulin. It is not yet clear whether calmodulin-dependent and calmodulin-independent forms of the enzyme exist and whether some tissues (such as heart) lack a calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase. The presence of calmodulin appears largely responsible for the ability of the adenylate cyclase enzyme to be stimulated by submicromolar concentrations of calcium; it may not be relevant to the inhibition of the enzyme which occurs at higher concentrations of calcium. The physical relationship of calmodulin to the plasma membrane bound enzyme (or to the soluble forms of the enzyme) is not known nor is the mechanism of adenylate cyclase activation by calmodulin clear; current data suggest some involvement with both the N and C units of the enzyme. Finally, it is possible that in vivo calcium contributes to the duration of the hormone stimulated cyclic AMP signal. Thus current in vitro data suggest that optimal hormonal activation of calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase occurs at very low intracellular calcium concentrations, comparable to those found in the resting cell; conversely the enzyme is inhibited as intracellular calcium increases, following for example agonist stimulation of the cell. These higher calcium concentrations would then activate calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase. Such differential effects of calcium on adenylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase would ultimately restrict the duration of the hormone-induced cyclic AMP signal.  相似文献   

19.
Effects of proteinase inhibitors on adenylate cyclase.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of a number of proteinase inhibitors on rat ovarian and rat hepatic adenylate cyclase preparations were examined. N alpha-tosylarginine methyl ester, 7-amino-1-chloro-3-L-tosylamidoheptan-2-one, 1-chloro-4-phenyl-3-L-tosylamidobutan-2-one, 1-chloro-4-methyl-3-L-tosylamidopentan-2-one and other low-molecular-weight proteinase inhibitors blocked hormonally stimulated adenylate cyclase from either source with hepatic preparations requiring higher concentrations. Addition of nucleotides (ATP, GTP, GDP, CTP or ITP) to inhibited ovarian preparations did not reverse inhibition, nor did dithiothreitol reverse phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride-inhibited ovarian adenylate cyclase. The kinetics of the inhibition of rat ovarian adenylate cyclase were examined by following the production of cyclic AMP after the addition of inhibitors to membrane preparations preincubated under assay conditions with human choriogonadotropin, guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate of NaF. 7-Amino-1-chloro-3-L-tosylamidoheptan-2-one, 1-chloro-4-phenyl-3-L-tosylamidobutan-2-one and 1-chloro-4-methyl-3-L-tosylamidopentan-2-one had two effects on human-choriogonadotropin-stimulated adenylate cyclase. At low concentrations (less than or equal to 0.2 mM) there was an irreversible inhibition of hormonally-stimulated cyclase with maximum first-order inhibitory rate constants of 0.05--0.08 min-1. At higher concentrations the irreversible effect persisted, but, in addition, there was a marked decrease in the cyclase initial velocity to 25--50% of that of control values. N alpha-tosylarginine methyl ester had similar effects; at low concentrations (less than or equal to 2 mM) it inhibited irreversibly, and at higher concentrations it decreased the initial velocity (50% at 10 mM). At high concentrations (greater than 3 mM) N alpha-tosylarginine methyl ester also inhibited NaF- and guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imidol]-triphosphate-stimulated cyclase but in a reversible manner. 7-Amino-1-chloro-3-L-tosylamidoheptan-2-one inhibited NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase in two ways, as for human-choriogonadotropin-stimulated adenylate cyclase, but required 10--20-fold higher concentrations. The low-concentration irreversible effect can be explained by a continual inactive in equilibrium active conversion of adenylate cyclase during hormonal stimulation in which the inactive to active conversion is blocked by the inhibitors. The high-concentration effect is a direct one on the active catalytic moiety of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The conversion of the ATP-analogue adenylyl(,-methylene)diphosphonate (AMPPCP) to cyclic AMP by adenylate cyclase of rat liver membranes was demonstrated using a radioimmunoassay for cyclic AMP. The conversion was only insignificantly lower than with adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP), another ATP-analogue which is usually used in the histochemical adenylate cyclase assay. The unspecific phosphate production was lower with AMPPCP as compared to AMPPNP. Therefore AMPPCP is considered to be a more suitable substrate for the histochemical assay.Unspecific phosphate deposition in the histochemical assay was due to ATP:pyrophosphatase activity and could be significantly inhibited by 1mm NAD. However, a residual phosphate deposition due to cleavage of NAD could not be suppressed. Adenylate cyclase activity could be markedly activated by 5×10–5 m forskolin, an activator of the catalytic subunit of the enzyme, and inhibited by 1mm 25-dideoxyadenosine, a specific inhibitor of adenylate cyclase. Adenylate cyclase was localized predominantly in the sinusoidal part of the plasma membrane, while ATP-pyrophosphatase seemed to be restricted to the canalicular part. It is concluded that at least three parallel assays are necessary for routine histochemical demonstration of adenylate cyclase, namely (1) basal activity (2) activation by forskolin and (3) inhibition by 25-dideoxyadenosine, to demonstrate a specific enzyme reaction.  相似文献   

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