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 15 毫秒
1.
A comparative study on the structure of nonactivated and activated forms of phosphorylase kinase was carried out. The enzyme was activated by incubation in alkaline medium (pH 8.5), by phosphorylation with cAMP-dependent protein kinase and by limited proteolysis. The comparative analysis was based on the use of hydrophobic chromatography on phenyl-sepharose and electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gel density gradient. Activation of the enzyme was accompanied by separation of a low molecular weight component (Mr about 17 000). Using chromatography on phenyl-sepharose, this low molecular weight protein was obtained in a homogeneous state. It was found that the properties of the protein are close to those of calmodulin. The presence of calmodulin in phosphorylase kinase preparations was judged upon by the activation of the calmodulin-dependent form of phosphodiesterase. The boiled and subtilisin-treated kinase activates phosphodiesterase in the same way as does bovine brain calmodulin. The experimental results suggest that the delta-subunit is a protein inhibitor of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphorylase kinase is a calcium-regulated multimeric enzyme of composition (alpha beta gamma delta)4, which contains calmodulin as the integral delta subunit and also is activated further by addition of extrinsic calmodulin. Previous studies by Dasgupta, M., Honeycutt, T., and Blumenthal, D.K. ((1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 17156-17163) have identified gamma 302-326 and gamma 342-366 as two calmodulin binding regions. Using peptides that were synthesized based on alpha and beta primary structure and that were predicted to contain the basic amphiphilic alpha-helix motif thought important for calmodulin binding, four additional potential calmodulin binding domains have now been identified: one of high affinity, beta 770-794; two of intermediate affinity, beta 5-28 and beta 920-946; and one with marginally low affinity, alpha 1070-1093. Peptide beta 770-794 was of higher calmodulin affinity than either gamma 302-326 or gamma 342-366; it was of higher affinity than the model synthetic peptide IV defined by O'Neil, K.T., and DeGrado, W.F. ((1990) Trends Biochem. Sci. 15, 59-64); and it is currently the most potent calmodulin-binding peptide so far described. Correlated with their affinity for calmodulin, all six phosphorylase kinase-derived peptides and several other established calmodulin-binding peptides inhibited phosphorylase kinase previously activated by cAMP-dependent phosphorylation, reducing its activity to the level of the nonactivated enzyme. However, these peptides did not inhibit (and some peptides slightly activated) the nonphosphorylated enzyme. Even in the presence of these peptides both activated and nonactivated enzyme remained fully Ca(2+)-dependent. The beta 770-794 peptide has at least a 5-fold greater calmodulin binding affinity than the holo-phosphorylase kinase. This, and its higher affinity for calmodulin than either of the sites on the gamma subunit, raises the possibility that in the native enzyme it may be involved in binding the intrinsic delta subunit. Further, inhibition of activated but not nonactivated enzyme by calmodulin-binding peptides would suggest that the phosphorylation-dependent activation of phosphorylase kinase may be mediated by changes in the binding interactions of the intrinsic calmodulin delta subunit.  相似文献   

3.
The activation of different forms of muscle phosphorylase kinase by actin has been studied. F-actin which is polymerized by 2 mM MgCl2 is a more effective activator of phosphorylase kinase than F-actin polymerized by 50 mM KCl. There is evidence suggesting that the activation of phosphorylase kinase b by actin is not due to the presence of trace amounts of calmodulin in actin preparations: (1) Troponin I and trifluoperazine inhibit the activation of phosphorylase kinase by calmodulin but do not inhibit the activation by actin. (2) The activation induced by saturating concentrations of calmodulin and actin is additive. (3) The activation of phosphorylase kinase by calmodulin and actin has different pH profiles. An addition of F-actin does not affect the apparent Km value for ATP but increases the sensitivity to phosphorylase b and the value of V. F-actin has no stimulating effect on the phosphorylated form (a) of phosphorylase kinase or on the form a previously activated by proteolysis.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylase kinase was partially purified (530-970-fold) from chicken gizzard smooth muscle by a procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatography on 8-(6-aminohexyl)adenosine-5'-phosphate--Sepharose 4B and glycerol density gradient ultracentrifugation. The final and most efficient purification step takes advantage of the relatively high molecular mass of gizzard phosphorylase kinase, which was found to be similar to that of rabbit skeletal muscle enzyme. The gizzard kinase, further purified to near homogeneity by calmodulin-Sepharose 4 B affinity chromatography, showed one main protein band of 61 kDa, upon dodecyl sulfate acrylamide gel electrophoresis. Four minor protein bands of higher molecular mass were also present but no protein stain was seen at the position of the gamma subunit. The gizzard phosphorylase kinase showed a high pH 6.8/8.2 activity ratio of 0.53, it was stimulated by Ca2+, inhibited up to 80% by EGTA and it was activated about 1.9-fold by calmodulin. The km value for ATP was 0.45 mM, while the K0.5 for rabbit muscle phosphorylase b was extremely low, more than 200-fold lower than the Km of nonactivated skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase for its protein substrate. High concentrations of phosphorylase b were found to be inhibitory. At 10 mg/ml phosphorylase b, the maximum activity of the kinase was inhibited fivefold. No evidence has been obtained indicating autophosphorylation or the existence of active and inactive forms of gizzard phosphorylase kinase. Limited proteolysis of the smooth muscle kinase with trypsin was accompanied by a twofold activation at pH 6.8.  相似文献   

5.
A variety of proteases have been evaluated as potential structural and conformational probes of nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated phosphorylase kinase. In general, the enzyme's alpha subunit is rapidly degraded, followed in most cases by hydrolysis of the beta subunit; the gamma subunit is resistant to most proteases. Trypsin clearly distinguishes between the nonactivated and activated conformers of phosphorylase kinase, in that the beta subunit in phosphorylated enzyme, as opposed to nonphosphorylated enzyme, is markedly protected from tryptic attack. In contrast, only a small difference in the rates of proteolysis of the alpha subunit in phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated enzyme is seen, even when a protease is used that is highly selective for the alpha subunit, such as chymotrypsin or endoproteinase Arg C. Incubation of nonphosphorylated phosphorylase kinase with either Mg2+ or Ca2+, which are activating cations, also protects the beta subunit from tryptic hydrolysis, whereas Mn2+, which inhibits the kinase activity, has little effect on proteolysis. The allosteric activator ADP also causes the beta subunit to become refractory to trypsin and mimics the effects of phosphorylation. Similar effector-induced conformational changes in the beta subunit are also observed with enzyme in which the alpha subunit has previously been selectively destroyed. These data indicate that activation of phosphorylase kinase by dissimilar mechanisms is associated with a conformational change in the enzyme's beta subunit that is detectable by trypsin and confirm earlier studies from this laboratory employing a chemical cross-linker as a conformational probe for activated and nonactivated conformers of the enzyme (Fitzgerald, T. J., and Carlson, G. M. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3266-3274).  相似文献   

6.
Regulation of muscle phosphorylase kinase by actin and calmodulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The activation of muscle phosphorylase kinase b by actin has been studied. F-actin which is polymerized by 2 mM MgCl2 is a more effective activator of phosphorylase kinase than F-actin polymerized by 50 mM KCl. There is evidence suggesting that the activation of phosphorylase kinase by actin is not due to trace contamination of actin preparations with calmodulin: (1) Troponin I and trifluoperazine inhibit the activation of phosphorylase kinase by calmodulin but do not inhibit the activation of phosphorylase kinase by F-actin. (2) The activation induced by saturating concentrations of calmodulin and actin is additive both at pH 8.2 and at pH 6.8. (3) The activation of phosphorylase kinase by calmodulin and actin has different pH profiles. An addition of F-actin does not affect the apparent Km value for ATP but increases the sensitivity to phosphorylase b and the value of Vmax.  相似文献   

7.
Porcine uterine smooth muscle phosphorylase kinase has been partially purified. The enzyme was activated about 1.5-2.0-fold by exogenous calmodulin. Half maximal stimulation was observed at about 100 nM calmodulin. The activation was dependent on calcium and was maximum at pH 7.5 in the range of pH from 6 to 9. This activation was completely abolished by 100 microM trifluoperazine. The result suggested that unlike slow and cardiac muscles, phosphorylase kinase of uterine smooth muscle showed similar response to calmodulin with that of fast muscle. The physiological role of the calcium and calmodulin-dependent activation of myometrium phosphorylase kinase is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Using calmodulin covalently labeled with dansyl, the Ca2(+)-dependent interaction of phosphorylase kinase with calmodulin has been studied. It has been shown that at pH 6.8 the (alpha beta gamma delta) protomer of the enzyme binds 2.1 +/- 0.8 mol of calmodulin with Kd = (6.67 +/- 1.77).10(-8) M. The enzyme activation induced by the pH increase up to 8.2 does not affect the enzyme interaction with calmodulin [2.14 +/- 0.58 mol calmodulin per mol of (alpha beta gamma delta)]; Kd = (4.14 +/- 1.22).10(-8) M. However, the enzyme activation during its autocatalytic phosphorylation eliminates this effect practically completely.  相似文献   

9.
《Insect Biochemistry》1991,21(4):375-380
Inclusion of glucose or trehalose in the medium during the incubation of locust fat body in vitro leads to a reduction of the relative amount of active (AMP-independent) glycogen phosphorylase. The presence of adipokinetic hormone (AKH I) results in a rapid activation of phosphorylase, reaching a maximum within 5 min. This AKH effect is highly dependent on added Ca2+, and requires ⩾ 1 mM Ca2+ for maximal enzyme activation. Ca2+ alone has no effect on phosphorylase activity, but it does activate the enzyme when the ionophore A23187 is also included in the medium. In a cell-free system from locust fat body the activation of endogenous phosphorylase by phosphorylase kinase is stimulated by Ca2+. Activity of the latter enzyme can be increased further by high doses of calmodulin. Both in the presence and in the absence of external calmodulin, the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine has an inhibitory effect on phosphorylase kinase. Results are discussed in relation to the possible mechanisms underlying hormonal control of glycogenolysis.  相似文献   

10.
The activation of phosphorylase kinase (EC 2.7.1.38; ATP:phosphorylase b phosphotransferase) by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (EC 2.7.1.37; ATP:protein phosphotransferase) is inhibited by calmodulin. The mechanism of that inhibition has been studied by kinetic measurements of the interactions of the three proteins. The binding constant for calmodulin with phosphorylase kinase was found to be 90 nM when measured by fluorescence polarization spectroscopy. Glycerol gradient centrifugation studies indicated that 1 mol of calmodulin was bound to each phosphorylase kinase. Phosphorylation of the phosphorylase kinase did not reduce the amount of calmodulin bound. Kinetic studies of the activity of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase on phosphorylase kinase as a function of phosphorylase kinase and calmodulin concentrations were performed. The results of those studies were compared with mathematical models of four different modes of inhibition: competitive, noncompetitive, substrate depletion, and inhibition by a complex between phosphorylase kinase and calmodulin. The data conform best to the model in which the inhibitory species is a complex of phosphorylase kinase and calmodulin. The complex apparently competes with the substrate, phosphorylase kinase, which does not have exogenous calmodulin bound to it. In contrast, the phosphorylation of the synthetic phosphate acceptor peptide, Kemptide, is not inhibited by calmodulin.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphorylase kinase, a regulatory enzyme of glycogenolysis in skeletal muscle, is a hexadecameric oligomer consisting of four copies each of a catalytic subunit (gamma) and three regulatory subunits (alpha, beta, and delta, the last being endogenous calmodulin). The enzyme is activated by a variety of effectors acting through its regulatory subunits. To probe the quaternary structure of nonactivated and activated forms of the kinase, we used the heterobifunctional, photoreactive cross-linker N-5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyloxysuccinimide. Mono-derivatization of the holoenzyme with the succinimidyl group, followed by photoactivation of the covalently attached azido group, resulted in intramolecular cross-linking to form two distinct heterodimers: a major (alphagamma) and a minor (betadelta) conjugate. Formation of both conjugates was significantly altered in activated conformations of the enzyme induced by phosphorylation, alkaline pH, and several allosteric activators (ADP, exogenous calmodulin/Ca2+, and Ca2+ alone). Of these activating mechanisms, all increased formation of alphagamma, except Ca2+ alone, which inhibited its formation. When cross-linking was carried out at alkaline pH or in the presence of ADP or exogenous calmodulin/Ca2+, the cross-linked enzyme remained activated following removal of the activators; however, cross-linking in the presence of Ca2+ resulted in sustained inhibition. The results indicate that perturbations in the subunit cross-linking forming the alphagamma dimer reflect the subsequent extent of sustained activation of the holoenzyme that is measured. The region cross-linked to the catalytic gamma subunit was confined to the C-terminal 1/6th of the alpha subunit, which contains known regulatory regions. These results suggest that activators of the phosphorylase kinase holoenzyme perturb interactions between the C-terminal region of the inhibitory alpha subunit and the catalytic gamma subunit, ultimately leading to activation of the latter.  相似文献   

12.
The main kinetic parameters for purified phosphorylase kinase from chicken skeletal muscle were determined at pH 8.2: Vm = 18 micromol/min/mg; apparent Km values for ATP and phosphorylase b from rabbit muscle were 0.20 and 0.02 mM, respectively. The activity ratio at pH 6.8/8.2 was 0.1-0.4 for different preparations of phosphorylase kinase. Similar to the rabbit enzyme, chicken phosphorylase kinase had an absolute requirement for Ca2+ as demonstrated by complete inhibition in the presence of EGTA. Half-maximal activation occurred at [Ca2+] = 0.4 microM at pH 7.0. In the presence of Ca2+, the chicken enzyme from white and red muscles was activated 2-4-fold by saturating concentrations of calmodulin and troponin C. The C0.5 value for calmodulin and troponin C at pH 6.8 was 2 and 100 nM, respectively. Similar to rabbit phosphorylase kinase, the chicken enzyme was stimulated about 3-6-fold by glycogen at pH 6.8 and 8.2 with half-maximal stimulation occurring at about 0.15% glycogen. Protamine caused 60% inhibition of chicken phosphorylase kinase at 0.8 mg/ml. ADP (3 mM) at 0.05 mM ATP caused 85% inhibition with Ki = 0.2 mM. Unlike rabbit phosphorylase kinase, no phosphorylation of the chicken enzyme occurred in the presence of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Incubation with trypsin caused 2-fold activation of the chicken enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
  • 1.1. Purified native rabbit liver phosphorylase kinase becomes activated during the assay of its activity while low molecular weight forms of the same enzyme do not.
  • 2.2. The activation requires ATP and maganesium ions, suggesting the phosphorylation of the enzyme by a protein kinase as the mechanism involved.
  • 3.3. The activation of the enzyme can be reverted by the action of a type 1 protein phosphatase isolated from the same tissue.
  • 4.4. The activation can also be catalyzed by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in a process that requires a much lower ATP concentration to proceed.
  • 5.5. The activation is believed to be due to an autocatalytic phosphorylation of phosphorylase kinase itself. In support of this hypothesis are the regulation of the process through calcium ions, the low levels of endogenous protein kinase detected in the purified preparation, the high ATP concentrations required in the absence of cAMP dependent protein kinase and the fact that the process cannot be blocked by an excess of the heat stable inhibitor specific for the later enzyme.
  • 6.6. The low molecular weight forms of the enzyme on their side are not affected by the action of neither protein phosphatase 1 nor cyclic AMP dependent protein kinase.
  • 7.7. Both activated and nonactivated phosphorylase kinase are partially dependent on calcium ions, the affinity of the former being higher than that of the latter. The low molecular forms do not require calcium ions to express their activity.
  相似文献   

14.
In the I/Lyn mouse strain a mutation on the X chromosome results in a deficiency of the major calmodulin-regulated enzyme in skeletal muscle, phosphorylase kinase. Calmodulin has been identified as the delta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase, and it is estimated that approximately 40% of the total calmodulin in rabbit skeletal muscle is associated with the phosphorylase kinase hexadecamer (alpha, beta, gamma, delta)4. The absence of phosphorylase kinase in I/Lyn skeletal muscle results in a reduction in the total amount of calmodulin. The mechanisms affecting this reduction were investigated by comparing the abundance and heterogeneities in calmodulin mRNAs between normal and phosphorylase kinase-deficient skeletal muscles. The results demonstrate that in normal tissue there are four species of calmodulin mRNA distinguished by their molecular weight. All four of these species are present in the deficient tissue, and none of them are preferentially reduced. However, there is a 54% reduction in all four mRNAs as well as in calmodulin in the deficient skeletal muscle relative to normal skeletal muscle. These results indicate that the expression of calmodulin mRNAs is coordinated with the expression of its major enzyme target in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

15.
Stimulation of glycogen phosphorylase kinase by phospholipids   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The acidic phospholipids phosphatidylinositol (PI), phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP), phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate (PIP2) and the neutral phospholipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) were found to stimulate (3 to 8-fold) the activity of nonactivated rabbit skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase at pH 6.8, without significantly affecting the activity at pH 8.2. In this respect, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine were ineffective, while the anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and the anionic steroid dehydroisoandrosterone sulfate (DIAS) were able to mimic the action of phospholipids. SDS was also found to be a very efficient activator of the autophosphorylation of phosphorylase kinase (20-fold activation at 200 microM). The activating effect of phospholipids largely depends on the size of lipid vesicles, which is connected with the procedure of their preparation. These results suggest that phosphorylase kinase belongs to the class of Ca2+-dependent enzymes, which are sensitive to stimulation by calmodulin, limited proteolysis and anionic amphiphiles.  相似文献   

16.
Three forms of phosphorylase (I, II and III), two of which (I and II) were active in the presence of AMP and one (III) was active without AMP, were isolated from human skeletal muscles. The pI values for phosphorylases b(I) and b(II) were found to be identical (5.8-5.9). During chromatofocusing a low molecular weight protein (M(r) = 20-21 kDa, pI 4.8) was separated from phosphorylase b(II). This process was accompanied by an increase of the enzyme specific activity followed by its decline. During reconstitution of the complex the activity of phosphorylase b(II) returned to the initial level. Upon phosphorylation the amount of 32P incorporated into phosphorylase b(II) was 2 times as low as compared with rabbit phosphorylase b and human phosphorylase b(I). It may be supposed that in the human phosphorylase b(II) molecule one of the two subunits undergoes phosphorylation in vivo. This form of the enzyme is characterized by a greater affinity for glycogen and a lower sensitivity to allosteric effectors (AMP, glucose-6-phosphate, caffeine) compared with phosphorylase b(I). Thus, among the three phosphorylase forms obtained in this study, form b(II) is the most unusual one, since it is partly phosphorylated by phosphorylase kinase to form a complex with a low molecular weight protein which stabilizes its activity. A partially purified preparation of phosphorylase kinase was isolated from human skeletal muscles. The enzyme activity necessitates Ca2+ (c0.5 = 0.63 microM). At pH 6.8 the enzyme is activated by calmodulin (c0.5 = 15 microM). The enzyme activity ratio at pH 6.8/8.2 is equal to 0.18.  相似文献   

17.
Mammalian calmodulin containing trimethyllysine 115 can be covalently coupled to ubiquitin in a Ca2+-dependent manner in the presence of ATP/Mg2+ by reticulocyte lysate. This conjugation reaction can be quantitated in a novel test employing fluphenazine-Sepharose. It is shown that at least 3 ubiquitin molecules can be coupled to calmodulin indicating that more than one lysine residue is involved in the ubiquitination reaction. In addition only the free form of calmodulin can be ubiquitinated. Neither calmodulin bound to phosphorylase kinase as an integral subunit (delta-subunit) nor that bound as a peripheral subunit (delta'-subunit) is ubiquitinated. A total binding of equimolar calmodulin to phosphorylase kinase occurs since the affinity of binding of calmodulin to phosphorylase kinase as integral (KCaMm unknown) or peripheral subunit (KCaMm ca. 30-50nM) is several order of magnitude higher than the corresponding affinity of calmodulin for the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (KCaMm ca. 8 microM). We conclude that the "protective" effect of phosphorylase kinase towards calmodulin conjugation is due to a changed conformation of bound calmodulin and/or inacessibility of the ubiquitination sites (e.g. at subunit-subunit interface). Thus Ca2+-dependent ubiquitination only of free calmodulin may provide an efficient scavanging mechanism (with subsequent breakdown) for all free calmodulin in excess of that amount which can be bound by the calmodulin-binding proteins in the cell.  相似文献   

18.
Although it has been believed for several years that calcium ions are the means by which glycogenolysis and muscle contraction are synchronized, it is only over the past three years that this concept has started to be placed on a firm molecular basis. It appears that the regulation of phosphorylase kinase in vivo is achieved through the interaction of the enzyme with the two calcium binding proteins, calmodulin and troponin-C, and that the relative importance of these proteins depends on the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme (figure 3). In the dephosphorylated form of the enzyme, troponin-C rather than calmodulin is the dominant calcium dependent regulator providing an attractive mechanism for coupling glycogenolysis and muscle contraction, since the same calcium binding protein activates both processes. On the other hand, the phosphorylated form of the enzyme can hardly be activated at all by troponin-C, although it is still completely dependent on calcium ions. Calmodulin (the δ - subunit) is therefore the dominant calcium dependent regulator of phosphorylase kinase in its hormonally activated state.
Recent work has demonstrated that phosphorylase kinase not only activates phosphorylase, but also phosphorylates glycogen synthase thereby decreasing its activity (45–49). The regulation of phosphorylase kinase by calcium ions may therefore also provide a mechanism for co-ordinating the rates of glycogenolysis and glycogen synthesis during muscle contraction.  相似文献   

19.
A glycogen synthase kinase that is completely dependent on Ca2+ and calmodulin has been identified in mammalian skeletal muscle, and purified approximately 3000-fold by chromatography on phosphocellulose and calmodulin--Sepharose. The presence of 50 mM NaCl in the homogenisation buffer was critical for extraction of the enzyme. The calmodulin-dependent glycogen synthase kinase (app. Mr 850 000) is distinct from myosin light-chain kinase and phosphorylase kinase, but phosphorylates the same serine residue on glycogen synthase as phosphorylase kinase. The physiological role of the enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
In native nonactivated phosphorylase kinase [14C] iodacetamide interacts with 50 cysteinyl residues per enzyme molecule (alpha beta gamma delta)4. According to their reactivity towards iodacetamide these residues can be classified into 3 groups. The most reactive cysteinyl residues are involved in the enzyme activation caused by modification of SH-groups. The enzyme inhibition is biphasic. The fast and slow inactivation reactions follow the pseudo-first order kinetics. The rate of inactivation is increased by Ca2+. Mg-ATP effectively protects the enzyme against the inactivation and chemical modification of three SH-groups per protomer (apha beta gamma delta). The kinetics of inactivation and of the [14C] iodacetamide label incorporation demonstrate that two cysteinyl residues per enzyme protomer (alpha beta gamma delta) are essential for the enzyme activity. These residues are located near the ATP-binding site of the beta and gamma subunits of phosphorylase kinase.  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