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1.
Ca(2+) regulates mammalian adenylyl cyclases in a type-specific manner. Stimulatory regulation is moderately well understood. By contrast, even the concentration range over which Ca(2+) inhibits adenylyl cyclases AC5 and AC6 is not unambiguously defined; even less so is the mechanism of inhibition. In the present study, we compared the regulation of Ca(2+)-stimulable and Ca(2+)-inhibitable adenylyl cyclases expressed in Sf9 cells with tissues that predominantly express these activities in the mouse brain. Soluble forms of AC5 containing either intact or truncated major cytosolic domains were also examined. All adenylyl cyclases, except AC2 and the soluble forms of AC5, displayed biphasic Ca(2+) responses, suggesting the presence of two Ca(2+) sites of high ( approximately 0.2 microM) and low affinity ( approximately 0.1 mM). With a high affinity, Ca(2+) (i) stimulated AC1 and cerebellar adenylyl cyclases, (ii) inhibited AC6 and striatal adenylyl cyclase, and (iii) was without effect on AC2. With a low affinity, Ca(2+) inhibited all adenylyl cyclases, including AC1, AC2, AC6, and both soluble forms of AC5. The mechanism of both high and low affinity inhibition was revealed to be competition for a stimulatory Mg(2+) site(s). A remarkable selectivity for Ca(2+) was displayed by the high affinity site, with a K(i) value of approximately 0.2 microM, in the face of a 5000-fold excess of Mg(2+). The present results show that high and low affinity inhibition by Ca(2+) can be clearly distinguished and that the inhibition occurs type-specifically in discrete adenylyl cyclases. Distinction between these sites is essential, or quite spurious inferences may be drawn on the nature or location of high affinity binding sites in the Ca(2+)-inhibitable adenylyl cyclases.  相似文献   

2.
Nitric oxide (NO) regulates cardiovascular hemostasis by binding to soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC), leading to cGMP production, reduced cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), and vasorelaxation. Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1), a secreted matricellular protein, was recently discovered to inhibit NO signaling and sGC activity. Inhibition of sGC requires binding to cell-surface receptor CD47. Here, we show that a TSP-1 C-terminal fragment (E3CaG1) readily inhibits sGC in Jurkat T cells and that inhibition requires an increase in [Ca(2+)](i). Using flow cytometry, we show that E3CaG1 binds directly to CD47 on the surface of Jurkat T cells. Using digital imaging microscopy on live cells, we further show that E3CaG1 binding results in a substantial increase in [Ca(2+)](i), up to 300 nM. Addition of angiotensin II, a potent vasoconstrictor known to increase [Ca(2+)](i), also strongly inhibits sGC activity. sGC isolated from calcium-treated cells or from cell-free lysates supplemented with Ca(2+) remains inhibited, while addition of kinase inhibitor staurosporine prevents inhibition, indicating inhibition is likely due to phosphorylation. Inhibition is through an increase in K(m) for GTP, which rises to 834 μM for the NO-stimulated protein, a 13-fold increase over the uninhibited protein. Compounds YC-1 and BAY 41-2272, allosteric stimulators of sGC that are of interest for treating hypertension, overcome E3CaG1-mediated inhibition of NO-ligated sGC. Taken together, these data suggest that sGC not only lowers [Ca(2+)](i) in response to NO, inducing vasodilation, but also is inhibited by high [Ca(2+)](i), providing a fine balance between signals for vasodilation and vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

3.
In resting muscle, cytoplasmic Mg(2+) is a potent inhibitor of Ca(2+) release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). It is thought to inhibit calcium release channels (RyRs) by binding both to low affinity, low specificity sites (I-sites) and to high affinity Ca(2+) sites (A-sites) thus preventing Ca(2+) activation. We investigate the effects of luminal and cytoplasmic Ca(2+) on Mg(2+) inhibition at the A-sites of skeletal RyRs (RyR1) in lipid bilayers, in the presence of ATP or modified by ryanodine or DIDS. Mg(2+) inhibits RyRs at the A-site in the absence of Ca(2+), indicating that Mg(2+) is an antagonist and does not simply prevent Ca(2+) activation. Cytoplasmic Ca(2+) and Cs(+) decreased Mg(2+) affinity by a competitive mechanism. We describe a novel mechanism for luminal Ca(2+) regulation of Ca(2+) release whereby increasing luminal [Ca(2+)] decreases the A-site affinity for cytoplasmic Mg(2+) by a noncompetitive, allosteric mechanism that is independent of Ca(2+) flow. Ryanodine increases the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the A-sites by 10-fold, which is insufficient to explain the level of activation seen in ryanodine-modified RyRs at nM Ca(2+), indicating that ryanodine activates independently of Ca(2+). We describe a model for ion binding at the A-sites that predicts that modulation of Mg(2+) inhibition by luminal Ca(2+) is a significant regulator of Ca(2+) release from the SR. We detected coupled gating of RyRs due to luminal Ca(2+) permeating one channel and activating neighboring channels. This indicated that the RyRs existed in stable close-packed rafts within the bilayer. We found that luminal Ca(2+) and cytoplasmic Mg(2+) did not compete at the A-sites of single open RyRs but did compete during multiple channel openings in rafts. Also, luminal Ca(2+) was a stronger activator of multiple openings than single openings. Thus it appears that RyRs are effectively "immune" to Ca(2+) emanating from their own pore but sensitive to Ca(2+) from neighboring channels.  相似文献   

4.
Nitric oxide (NO), the principal endogenous ligand for soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), stimulates that enzyme and accumulation of intracellular cGMP, which mediates many of the (patho) physiological effects of NO. Previous studies demonstrated that 2-substituted adenine nucleotides, including 2-methylthioATP (2MeSATP) and 2-chloroATP (2ClATP), allosterically inhibit guanylate cyclase C, the membrane-bound receptor for the Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin in the intestine. The present study examined the effects of 2-substituted adenine nucleotides on crude and purified sGC. 2-Substituted nucleotides inhibited basal and NO-activated crude and purified sGC, when Mg2+ served as the substrate cation cofactor. Similarly, 2-substituted adenine nucleotides inhibited those enzymes when Mn2+, which activates sGC in a ligand-independent fashion, served as the substrate cation cofactor. Inhibition of sGC by 2-substituted nucleotides was associated with a decrease in Vmax, consistent with a noncompetitive mechanism. In contrast to guanylate cyclase C, 2-substituted nucleotides inhibited sGC by a guanine nucleotide-independent mechanism. These studies demonstrate that 2-substituted adenine nucleotides allosterically inhibit basal and ligand-stimulated sGC. They support the suggestion that allosteric inhibition by adenine nucleotides is a general characteristic of the family of guanylate cyclases. This allosteric inhibition is mediated by direct interaction of adenine nucleotides with sGC, likely at the catalytic domain in a region outside the substrate-binding site.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Adenylyl cyclase type 5 (AC5) is sensitive to both high and low affinity inhibition by Ca(2+). This property provides a sensitive feedback mechanism of the Ca(2+) entry that is potentiated by cAMP in sources where AC5 is commonly expressed (e.g. myocardium). Remarkably little is known about the molecular mechanism whereby Ca(2+) inhibits AC5. Because previous studies had showed that Ca(2+) antagonized the activation of adenylyl cyclase brought about by Mg(2+), we have now evaluated the Mg(2+)-binding domain in the catalytic site as the potential site of the interaction, using a number of mutations of AC5 with impaired Mg(2+) activation. Mg(2+) activation exerted contrasting effects on the high and low affinity Ca(2+) inhibition. In both wild type and mutants, activation by Mg(2+) decreased the absolute amount of high affinity inhibition without affecting the K(i) value, whereas the K(i) value for low affinity inhibition was decreased. These effects were directly proportional to the sensitivity of the mutants to Mg(2+). Parallel changes were noted in the efficacies of Ca(2+), Sr(2+), and Ba(2+) in the mutant species, suggesting a simple mutation in a shared domain. Strikingly, forskolin, which activates by a mechanism different from Mg(2+), did not modify inhibition by Ca(2+). Deletion of the N terminus and the C1b domain of AC5 and a chimera formed with AC2 confirmed that the catalytic domain alone was responsible for high affinity inhibition. We therefore conclude that both low and high affinity inhibition by Ca(2+) are exerted on different conformations of the Mg(2+)-binding sites in the catalytic domain of AC5.  相似文献   

7.
Maximal relaxation of airway smooth muscle (ASM) in response to atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), which stimulates particulate guanylyl cyclase (pGC), is less than that produced by nitric oxide (NO) and other compounds that stimulate soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC). We hypothesized that stimulation of pGC relaxes ASM only by decreasing intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), whereas stimulation of sGC decreases both [Ca(2+)](i) and the force developed for a given [Ca(2+)](i) (i.e., the Ca(2+) sensitivity) during muscarinic stimulation. We measured the relationship between force and [Ca(2+)](i) (using fura 2) under control conditions (using diltiazem to change [Ca(2+)](i)) and during exposure to ANP, diethylamine-NO (DEA-NO), sodium nitroprusside (SNP), and the Sp diastereoisomer of beta-phenyl-1,N(2)-etheno-8-bromoguanosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphorothionate (Sp-8-Br-PET-cGMPS), a cell-permeant analog of cGMP. Addition of DEA-NO, SNP, or Sp-8-Br-PET-cGMPS decreased both [Ca(2+)](i) and force, causing a significant rightward shift of the force-[Ca(2+)](i) relationship. In contrast, with ANP exposure, the force-[Ca(2+)](i) relationship was identical to control, such that ANP produced relaxation solely by decreasing [Ca(2+)](i). Thus, during muscarinic stimulation, stimulation of pGC relaxes ASM exclusively by decreasing [Ca(2+)](i), whereas stimulation of sGC decreases both [Ca(2+)](i) and Ca(2+) sensitivity.  相似文献   

8.
Soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) regulates several important physiological processes by converting GTP into the second-messenger cGMP. sGC has several structural and functional properties in common with adenylyl cyclases (ACs). Recently, we reported that membranous ACs and sGC are potently inhibited by 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-substituted purine and pyrimidine nucleoside 5'-triphosphates. Using a highly sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method, we report that highly purified recombinant sGC of rat possesses nucleotidyl cyclase activity. As opposed to GTP, ITP, XTP and ATP, the pyrimidine nucleotides UTP and CTP were found to be sGC substrates in the presence of Mn(2+). When Mg(2+) is used, sGC generates cGMP, cAMP, cIMP, and cXMP. In conclusion, soluble "guanylyl" cyclase possesses much broader substrate specificity than previously assumed. Our data have important implications for cyclic nucleotide-mediated signal transduction.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) on bone and osteosarcoma adenylate cyclase were investigated. The concentrations of the cations and other ionic species in the assay mixture were calculated by solving the simultaneous equations describing the relevant ionic interactions (multiple equilibria). We re-examined the effects of HATP(3-) and ATP(4-) on enzyme activity and found that (i) the concentration of the minor ATP species is less than 1% of that of MgATP(2-), and their ratio to MgATP(2-) is constant if Mg(2+) and H(+) concentrations are unchanged; (ii) Mg(2+) addition decreased the ratio of the minor species to MgATP(2-) and increased the enzyme activity, but no meaningful kinetic model could attribute this effect of HATP(3-) or ATP(4-). On the other hand, kinetic analysis of Mg(2+) effects showed: (i) stimulation via two metal sites, separate from the catalytic (MgATP(2-)) site, with apparent K(m) values of approximately 1 and 8mm; (ii) that the low affinity increased towards the higher one when the enzyme activity rose as a result of increased substrate or guanine nucleotide concentrations, this effect being less pronounced in tumour; (iii) conversely, that two apparent affinities for MgATP(2-) merged into one at high Mg(2+) concentration; (iv) kinetically, that this relationship is of the mixed con-competitive type, which is consistent with a role for Mg(2+) as a requisite activator, and binding occurring in non-ordered sequence. Analysis of the Ca(2+) effects showed: (i) competition with Mg(2+) at the metal site (K(i) 20mum for bone and 40mum for tumour); (ii) that relative to the substrate the inhibition was uncompetitive, i.e. velocity decreased and affinity increased proportionally, which is consistent with Ca(2+) binding after substrate binding. These findings support the existence of interacting enzyme complexes, losing co-operativity at increased enzyme activity. They also indicate a potential physiological role for Ca(2+) in enzyme regulation and point to quantitative differences between bone and tumour with regard to these properties.  相似文献   

10.
BK (Slo1) potassium channels are activated by millimolar intracellular Mg(2+) as well as micromolar Ca(2+) and membrane depolarization. Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) act in an approximately additive manner at different binding sites to shift the conductance-voltage (G(K)-V) relation, suggesting that these ligands might work through functionally similar but independent mechanisms. However, we find that the mechanism of Mg(2+) action is highly dependent on voltage sensor activation and therefore differs fundamentally from that of Ca(2+). Evidence that Ca(2+) acts independently of voltage sensor activation includes an ability to increase open probability (P(O)) at extreme negative voltages where voltage sensors are in the resting state; 2 microM Ca(2+) increases P(O) more than 15-fold at -120 mV. However 10 mM Mg(2+), which has an effect on the G(K)-V relation similar to 2 microM Ca(2+), has no detectable effect on P(O) when voltage sensors are in the resting state. Gating currents are only slightly altered by Mg(2+) when channels are closed, indicating that Mg(2+) does not act merely to promote voltage sensor activation. Indeed, channel opening is facilitated in a voltage-independent manner by Mg(2+) in a mutant (R210C) whose voltage sensors are constitutively activated. Thus, 10 mM Mg(2+) increases P(O) only when voltage sensors are activated, effectively strengthening the allosteric coupling of voltage sensor activation to channel opening. Increasing Mg(2+) from 10 to 100 mM, to occupy very low affinity binding sites, has additional effects on gating that more closely resemble those of Ca(2+). The effects of Mg(2+) on steady-state activation and I(K) kinetics are discussed in terms of an allosteric gating scheme and the state-dependent interactions between Mg(2+) and voltage sensor that may underlie this mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
The singular effects and interplay of cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA and PKG) on Ca(2+) mobilization were examined in dispersed smooth muscle cells. In permeabilized muscle cells, exogenous cAMP and cGMP inhibited inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3))-induced Ca(2+) release and muscle contraction via PKA and PKG, respectively. A combination of cAMP and cGMP caused synergistic inhibition that was exclusively mediated by PKG and attenuated by PKA. In intact muscle cells, low concentrations (10 nM) of isoproterenol and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) inhibited agonist-induced, IP(3)-dependent Ca(2+) release and muscle contraction via PKA and PKG, respectively. A combination of isoproterenol and SNP increased PKA and PKG activities: the increase in PKA activity reflected inhibition of phosphodiesterase 3 activity by cGMP, whereas the increase in PKG activity reflected activation of cGMP-primed PKG by cAMP. Inhibition of Ca(2+) release and muscle contraction by the combination of isoproterenol and SNP was preferentially mediated by PKG. In light of studies showing that PKG phosphorylates the IP(3) receptor in intact and permeabilized muscle cells, whereas PKA phosphorylates the receptor in permeabilized cells only, the results imply that inhibition of IP(3)-induced Ca(2+) release is mediated exclusively by PKG. The effect of PKA on agonist-induced Ca(2+) release probably reflects inhibition of IP(3) formation.  相似文献   

12.
In guinea pig taenia coli, the nitric oxide (NO) donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 1 microM) reduced the carbachol-stimulated increases in muscle force in parallel with a decrease in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). A decrease in the myosin light chain phosphorylation was also observed that was closely correlated with the decrease in [Ca(2+)](i). With the patch-clamp technique, 10 microM SNP decreased the peak Ba(2+) current, and this effect was blocked by an inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase. Carbachol (10 microM) induced an inward current, and this effect was markedly inhibited by SNP. SNP markedly increased the depolarization-activated outward K(+) currents, and this current was completely blocked by 0.3 micorM iberiotoxin. SNP (1 microM) significantly increased cGMP content without changing cAMP content. Decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity by SNP of contractile elements was not prominent in the permeabilized taenia, which was consistent with the [Ca(2+)](i)-force relationship in the intact tissue. These results suggest that SNP inhibits myosin light chain phosphorylation and smooth muscle contraction stimulated by carbachol, mainly by decreasing [Ca(2+)](i), which resulted from the combination of the inhibition of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels, the inhibition of nonselective cation currents, and the activation of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) currents.  相似文献   

13.
It was found that a decrease in the activating cation (Mg2+) concentration below [A]0.5 causes the disappearance of cooperativity of the fructose 1.6-bisphosphatase substrate binding sites induced by high fructose 2.6-bisphosphate concentrations without any significant alteration in the extent of the enzyme inhibition. Under these conditions, a competitive type of inhibition (with respect to the substrate) is transformed into a non-competitive type with an increase in the fructose 2.6-bisphosphate concentration. The data obtained confirm the viewpoint that fructose 2.6-bisphosphate binds to the enzyme at two distinct sites, a catalytic and an allosteric ones, differing in their affinity for the inhibitor. It is supposed that the interaction between the allosteric fructose 2.6-bisphosphate binding site and the activator site occupied by Mg2+ is necessary for the cooperative response of the enzyme to the substrate.  相似文献   

14.
The role of nitric oxide (NO) in the stimulation of soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) is well established, but the mechanism by which the enzyme is inactivated during the prolonged NO stimulation has not been characterized. In this paper we studied the interactions between NO and intracellular Ca(2+) in the control of sGC in rat anterior pituitary cells. Experiments were done in cultured cells, which expressed neuronal and endothelial NO synthases, and in cells with elevated NO levels induced by the expression of inducible NO synthase and by the addition of several NO donors. Basal sGC-dependent cGMP production was stimulated by the increase in NO levels in a time-dependent manner. In contrast, depolarization of cells by high K(+) and Bay K 8644, an L-type Ca(2+) channel agonist, inhibited sGC activity. Depolarization-induced down-regulation of sGC activity was also observed in cells with inhibited cGMP-dependent phosphodiesterases but not in cells bathed in Ca(2+)-deficient medium. This inhibition was independent from the pattern of Ca(2+) signaling (oscillatory versus nonoscillatory) and NO levels, and was determined by averaged concentration of intracellular Ca(2+). These results indicate that inactivation of sGC by intracellular Ca(2+) serves as a negative feedback to break the stimulatory action of NO on enzyme activity in intact pituitary cells.  相似文献   

15.
Cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) function is modulated by Ca(2+) and Mg(2+). To better characterize Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) binding sites involved in RyR2 regulation, the effects of cytosolic and luminal earth alkaline divalent cations (M(2+): Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Sr(2+), Ba(2+)) were studied on RyR2 from pig ventricle reconstituted in bilayers. RyR2 were activated by M(2+) binding to high affinity activating sites at the cytosolic channel surface, specific for Ca(2+) or Sr(2+). This activation was interfered by Mg(2+) and Ba(2+) acting at low affinity M(2+)-unspecific binding sites. When testing the effects of luminal M(2+) as current carriers, all M(2+) increased maximal RyR2 open probability (compared to Cs(+)), suggesting the existence of low affinity activating M(2+)-unspecific sites at the luminal surface. Responses to M(2+) vary from channel to channel (heterogeneity). However, with luminal Ba(2+)or Mg(2+), RyR2 were less sensitive to cytosolic Ca(2+) and caffeine-mediated activation, openings were shorter and voltage-dependence was more marked (compared to RyR2 with luminal Ca(2+)or Sr(2+)). Kinetics of RyR2 with mixtures of luminal Ba(2+)/Ca(2+) and additive action of luminal plus cytosolic Ba(2+) or Mg(2+) suggest luminal M(2+) differentially act on luminal sites rather than accessing cytosolic sites through the pore. This suggests the presence of additional luminal activating Ca(2+)/Sr(2+)-specific sites, which stabilize high P(o) mode (less voltage-dependent) and increase RyR2 sensitivity to cytosolic Ca(2+) activation. In summary, RyR2 luminal and cytosolic surfaces have at least two sets of M(2+) binding sites (specific for Ca(2+) and unspecific for Ca(2+)/Mg(2+)) that dynamically modulate channel activity and gating status, depending on SR voltage.  相似文献   

16.
The InsP3R Ca(2+)-release channel has biphasic dependence on cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). InsP3 activates gating primarily by reducing high [Ca2+]i inhibition. To determine whether relieving Ca2+ inhibition is sufficient for activation, we examined single-channels in low [Ca2+]i in the absence of InsP3 by patch clamping isolated Xenopus oocyte nuclei. For both endogenous Xenopus type 1 and recombinant rat type 3 InsP3R channels, spontaneous InsP3-independent activities with low open probability Po (approximately 0.03) were observed in [Ca2+]i < 5 nM, whereas none were observed in 25 nM Ca2+. These results establish the half-maximal inhibitory [Ca2+]i in the absence of InsP3 and demonstrate that the channel can be active when all of its ligand-binding sites are unoccupied. In the simplest allosteric model that fits all observations in nuclear patch-clamp studies, the tetrameric channel can adopt six conformations, the equilibria among which are controlled by two inhibitory, one activating Ca(2+)-binding, and one InsP3-binding sites in a manner similar to the Monod-Wyman-Changeux model. InsP3 binding activates gating by affecting the relative affinity for Ca2+ of one of the inhibitory sites in different channel conformations, transforming it into an activating site. Ca2+ inhibition of InsP3-liganded channels is mediated by an InsP3-independent second inhibitory site.  相似文献   

17.
Some aspects of the kinetics of rat liver pyruvate carboxylase   总被引:9,自引:9,他引:0  
1. The kinetics of rat liver pyruvate carboxylase were examined and the effect of various agents as activators or inhibitors determined. 2. Essentially similar results were obtained in comparisons of kinetics determined by a radioactivity method involving extracts of acetone-dried powders from whole livers and with a spectrophotometric assay using partially purified enzyme from the mitochondrial fraction. Activity per g of liver from fed or starved rats assayed under optimum substrate and activator conditions was 3 or 6 mumol of oxaloacetate formed/min at 30 degrees C, respectively. 3. The enzyme exhibited cold-lability and lost activity on standing, even in 1.5m-sucrose. 4. The K(m) towards pyruvate was about 0.33mm and towards bicarbonate 4.2mm. K(m) towards MgATP(2-) was 0.14mm. Mg(2+) ions activated the enzyme, in addition to their role in MgATP(2-) formation. From calculations of likely concentrations of free Mg(2+) in the assay medium a K(a) towards Mg(2+) of about 0.25mm was deduced. Mn(2+) also activated the enzyme as well as Mg(2+), but at much lower concentrations. It appeared to be inhibitory when concentrations of free Mn(2+) as low as 0.1mm were present. 5. Excess of ATP is inhibitory, and this appears at least in part independent of the trapping of Mg(2+). 6. Both Co(2+) and Zn(2+) were inhibitory; 2mol of the latter appeared to be bound even in the presence of excess of Mg(2+) and the inhibition was time-dependent. 7. Ca(2+) inhibited by competition with Mg(2+) (K(i) about 0.38mm). The inhibition due to Ca(2+) was less pronounced when activation was with Mn(2+). Inhibition by Ca(2+) and ATP appeared to be additive. 8. Hill plots suggested that no interactions occurred between ATP-binding sites. Although similar plots for total Mg(2+) gave n=3.6, no conclusions could be drawn due to the chelation of the cation with other components of the assay. Similar difficulties arose in assessing the values for Ca(2+). 9. The enzyme was inactive in the absence of acetyl-CoA and showed a sigmoidal response in its presence. K(a) was about 0.1mm with possibly up to four binding sites. Malonyl-CoA was a competitive inhibitor, with K(i) 0.01mm. 10. There was no apparent inhibition by glucose, glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate, acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, malate, aspartate, pyruvate, palmitoylcarnitine, octanoate, glutathione, butacaine, triethyltin or potassium chloride under the conditions used. Inhibition was found with citrate (possibly by chelation) and adenosine, and also by phosphoenolpyruvate, AMP, ADP and cyclic AMP, K(i) towards the last four being 0.55, 0.76, 0.25 and 1.4mm respectively.  相似文献   

18.
The C-domain of troponin C, the Ca(2+)-binding subunit of the troponin complex, has two high-affinity sites for Ca(2+) that also bind Mg(2+) (Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites), whereas the N-domain has two low-affinity sites for Ca(2+). Two more sites that bind Mg(2+) with very low affinity (K(a)<10(3)M(-1)) have been detected by several laboratories but have not been localized or studied in any detail. Here we investigated the effects of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) binding to isolated C-domain, focusing primarily on low-affinity sites. Since TnC has no Trp residues, we utilized a mutant with Phe 154 replaced by Trp (F154W/C-domain). As expected from previous reports, the changes in Trp fluorescence revealed different conformations induced by the addition of Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) (Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites). Exposure of hydrophobic surfaces of F154W/C-domain was monitored using the fluorescence intensity of bis-anilino naphthalene sulfonic acid. Unlike the changes reported by Trp, the increments in bis-ANS fluorescence were much greater (4.2-fold) when Ca(2+)+Mg(2+) were both present or when Ca(2+) was present at high concentration. Bis-ANS fluorescence increased as a function of [Ca(2+)] in two well-defined steps: one at low [Ca(2+)], consistent with the Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites (K(a) approximately 1.5 x 10(6)M(-1)), and one of much lower affinity (K(a) approximately 52.3M(-1)). Controls were performed to rule out artifacts due to aggregation, high ionic strength and formation of the bis-ANS-TnC complex itself. With a low concentration of Ca(2+) (0.6mM) to occupy the Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites, a large increase in bis-ANS binding also occurred as Mg(2+) occupied a class of low-affinity sites (K(a) approximately 59 M(-1)). In skinned fibers, a high concentration of Mg(2+) (10-44 mM) caused TnC to dissociate from the thin filament. These data provide new evidence for a class of weak binding sites for divalent cations. They are located in the C-domain, lead to exposure of a large hydrophobic surface, and destabilize the binding of TnC to the regulatory complex even when sites III and IV are occupied.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetic mechanism of yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) was examined by carrying out initial velocity studies. Ca2+ and Rh(H2O)4(methylenediphosphonate) (Rh(H2O)4PCP) were used as dead-end inhibitors to study the order of binding of Cr(H2O)4PP to the substrate site and Mg2+ to the "low affinity" activator site on the enzyme. Competitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.93 +/- 0.03 mM), for Rh(H2O)4PCP vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kis = 0.25 +/- 0.07 mM), and for RH(H2O)4PCP vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.38 +/- 0.03 mM). Uncompetitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kii = 0.49 +/- 0.01). On the basis of these results a rapid equilibrium ordered mechanism in which Cr(H2O)4PP binding precedes Mg2+ ion binding is proposed. The inert substrate analog, Mg(imidodiphosphate) (MgPNP) was shown to induce Mg2+ inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. The Mg2+ inhibition observed was competitive vs MgPP and partial. These results suggest that Mg2+/MgPNP release from the enzyme occurs in preferred rather than strict order and that the Mg2+/MgPP-binding steps are at steady state. Zn2+, Co2+, and Mn2+ (but not Mg2+) displayed activator inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of PPi (this study) and of Cr(H2O)4PP (W.B. Knight, S. Fitts, and D. Dunaway-Mariano, (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4079). These findings suggest that cofactor release from the low affinity cofactor site on the enzyme must precede product release and that Zn2+, Mn2+, and Co2+ (but not Mg2+) have high affinities for the cofactor sites on both the PPase.M.MPP and PPase.M.M(P)2 complexes. The role of the metal cofactor in determining PPase substrate specificity was briefly explored by testing the ability of the Mg2+ complex of tripolyphosphate (PPPi) (a substrate for the Zn2+-activated enzyme but not the Mg2+-activated enzyme) to induce Mg2+ inhibition of PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. MgPPP was shown to be as effective as MgPNP in inducing competitive Mg2+ inhibition (vs MgPP). This result suggests that the low affinity Mg2+ cofactor-binding site present in the enzyme-MgPP complex is maintained in the enzyme-MgPPP complex. Thus, failure of Mg2+ to bind to the enzyme-MgPPP complex was ruled out as a possible explanation for the failure of the Mg2+-activated enzyme to catalyze the hydrolysis of MgPPP.  相似文献   

20.
Loop 52-72 of porcine fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase may play a central role in the mechanism of catalysis and allosteric inhibition by AMP. The loop pivots between different conformational states about a hinge located at residues 50 and 51. The insertion of proline separately at positions 50 and 51 reduces k(cat) by up to 3-fold, with no effect on the K(m) for fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. The K(a) for Mg(2+) in the Lys(50) --> Pro mutant increases approximately 15-fold, whereas that for the Ala(51) --> Pro mutant is unchanged. Although these mutants retain wild-type binding affinity for AMP and the fluorescent AMP analog 2'(3')-O-(trinitrophenyl)adenosine 5'-monophosphate, the K(i) for AMP increases 8000- and 280-fold in the position 50 and 51 mutants, respectively. In fact, the mutation Lys(50) --> Pro changes the mechanism of AMP inhibition with respect to Mg(2+) from competitive to noncompetitive and abolishes K(+) activation. The K(i) for fructose 2,6-bisphosphate increases approximately 20- and 30-fold in the Lys(50) --> Pro and Ala(51) --> Pro mutants, respectively. Fluorescence from a tryptophan introduced by the mutation of Tyr(57) suggests an altered conformational state for Loop 52-72 due to the proline at position 50. Evidently, the Pro(50) mutant binds AMP with high affinity at the allosteric site, but the mechanism of allosteric regulation of catalysis has been disabled.  相似文献   

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