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1.
cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Model for an enzyme family   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
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2.
There are at least three isozymes (C alpha, C beta, and C gamma) of the mammalian catalytic (C) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) (Beebe, S., Oyen, O., Sandberg, M., Froysa, A., Hansson, V., and Jahnsen, T. (1990) Mol. Endocrinol. 4, 465-475). To compare the C gamma and C alpha isozymes, the respective cDNAs were expressed in permanently transformed Kin-8 PKA-deficient Y1 adrenal cells using the mouse metallothionein promoter. The recombinant C subunits were characterized as immunoreactive, zinc-inducible, cAMP-dependent kinase activities. In contrast to C alpha, histone was a better substrate than Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Leu-Gly (Kemptide) for C gamma. Furthermore, C gamma histone kinase activity was not inhibited by the protein kinase inhibitor peptide (5-24 amide), which has been widely used as a PKA-specific inhibitor. The major C gamma peak (type I) eluted from DEAE-Sepharose at a higher NaCl concentration (120 mM) than the C alpha type I eluted (70 mM). C gamma and C alpha type II eluted between 220 and 240 mM NaCl. C gamma required higher concentrations of cAMP than C alpha did for dissociation from the mutant type I holoenzyme. These differences provided a basis for the separation of the mutant RI-associated isozymes on DEAE-Sepharose. Both C alpha (41-42 kDa) and C gamma (39-40 kDa) were identified by a C subunit antibody after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis. Zinc induced the PKA-mediated rounding phenotype in C gamma and C alpha clones, thereby restoring the cells to the parent Y1 adrenal cell phenotype. Collectively, these data indicate that C gamma is an active PKA C subunit but suggest that C gamma and C alpha have different protein and peptide recognition determinants.  相似文献   

3.
Although the major form of soluble cAMP-dependent protein kinase in bovine cerebral cortex can be classified as a type II kinase, the regulatory subunit (RII) can be distinguished from RII found in other tissues such as heart. Heart and brain RII were distinguished qualitatively by autophosphorylation followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The mobility of dephosphorylated heart RII shifted from an apparent Mr of 55,000 to 57,000 following autophosphorylation. In contrast, when RII purified from brain was autophosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP, two radiolabeled bands were visualized, a minor band (less than or equal to 20%) which migrated with an Mr of 57,000 similar to the heart protein and a band with Mr = 55,000 which did not shift its mobility in response to autophosphorylation. Brain RII was further distinguished from heart RII on the basis of cAMP binding. Millipore filtration and equilibrium dialysis indicated that 2 mol of cAMP bound/mol of RII in contrast to 4 mol/mol with heart RII. Immunological differences were also apparent. Radioimmunoassays using monoclonal antibodies to RII showed that the brain protein had less than 4% of the cross-reactivity of heart RII. Both immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation using monoclonal as well as serum antibodies established that the cross-reactivity in phosphorylated brain RII was associated exclusively with the 57,000 component that behaved like heart RII. The lack of cross-reactivity of neural RII with two different monoclonal antibodies targeted the hinge region of RII as an area where structural differences might be anticipated, and comparative sequence analysis of this region definitively established that the major form of RII in brain is a unique gene product from the RII expressed in heart.  相似文献   

4.
Differentiation of human peripheral blood monocytes into macrophages was accompanied by induction of the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I as determined by photoaffinity labeling of cytosol proteins with 8-N3-[32P]cAMP and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. The appearance of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I in macrophages was not due to translocation from the particulate fraction of monocytes. The regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase II was present in both monocytes and in vitro-differentiated macrophages. Protein kinase I in macrophages demonstrated higher affinity for 8-N3-cAMP (KD = 0.7 nM) than did protein kinase II from either monocytes (KD = 14.5 nM) or macrophages (KD = 4.9 nM). These studies demonstrate induction of the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I during the differentiation of a normal human cell and support the hypothesis that cAMP may regulate some stages of differentiation.  相似文献   

5.
Several recent studies have shown that Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase I (CaMKI) is phosphorylated and activated by a protein kinase (CaMKK) that is itself subject to regulation by Ca2+/calmodulin. In the present study, we demonstrate that this enzyme cascade is regulated by cAMP-mediated activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). In vitro, CaMKK is phosphorylated by PKA and this is associated with inhibition of enzyme activity. The major site of phosphorylation is threonine 108, although additional sites are phosphorylated with lower efficiency. In vitro, CaMKK is also phosphorylated by CaMKI at the same sites as PKA, suggesting that this regulatory phosphorylation might play a role as a negative-feedback mechanism. In intact PC12 cells, activation of PKA with forskolin resulted in a rapid inhibition of both CaMKK and CaMKI activity. In hippocampal slices CaMKK was phosphorylated under basal conditions, and activation of PKA led to an increase in phosphorylation. Two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping indicated that activation of PKA led to increased phosphorylation of multiple sites including threonine 108. These results indicate that in vitro and in intact cells the CaMKK/CaMKI cascade is subject to inhibition by PKA-mediated phosphorylation of CaMKK. The phosphorylation and inhibition of CaMKK by PKA is likely to be involved in modulating the balance between cAMP- and Ca2+-dependent signal transduction pathways.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The ATP analog specificities of the homogeneous cGMP-dependent protein kinase and the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase have been compared by the ability of 27 analogs to compete with ATP in the protein kinase reaction. Although the data suggest general similarities between the ATP sites of the two homologous cyclic-nucleotide-dependent protein kinases, specific differences especially in the adenine binding pocket are indicated. These differences in affinity suggest potentially useful ATP analog inhibitors of each kinase. For example, apparent autophosphorylation of the purified regulatory subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase is blocked by nebularin triphosphate, suggesting that the phosphorylation is catalyzed by trace contamination of cGMP-dependent protein kinase. Some of the ATP analogs have also been tested using phosphorylase b kinase in order to compare this enzyme with the cyclic-nucleotide-dependent enzymes. All three protein kinases have high specificity for the purine moiety of ATP, and lower specificity for the ribose or triphosphate. The similarity between the ATP site of phosphorylase b kinase to that of the cyclic-nucleotide-dependent protein kinases suggests that it is related to them. The ATP analog specificities of enzymes examined in this study are different from those reported for several unrelated ATP-utilizing enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The unfolding of the recombinant regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I was followed by monitoring the intrinsic protein fluorescence. Unfolding proceeds in at least two stages. First, the quenching of fluorescence due to cAMP binding is abolished at relatively low levels of urea (less than 2 M) and is observed as an increase in intensity at 340 nm. The high-affinity binding of cAMP is retained in 3 M urea even though the quenching is lost. The second stage of unfolding, presumably representing unfolding of the polypeptide chain, is seen as a shift in lambda max from 340 to 353 nm. The midpoint concentration, Cm, for this process is 5.0 M. Cyclic AMP binding activity is lost at a half-maximal urea concentration of 3.5 M and precedes the shift in lambda max. Unfolding of the protein in the presence of urea was fully reversible; furthermore, the presence of excess levels of cAMP stabilized the regulatory subunit. A free energy value (delta GDH2O) of 7.1 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol was calculated for the native form of the protein when denaturation was induced with either urea or guanidine hydrochloride. Iodide quenching of tryptophan fluorescence was used to elucidate the number of tryptophan residues accessible during various stages of the unfolding process. In the native cAMP-bound form of the regulatory subunit, only one of the three tryptophans in the regulatory subunit is quenched by iodide while more than two tryptophans can be quenched with iodide in the presence of 3 M urea.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The types and subunit composition of cAMP-dependent protein kinases in soluble rat ovarian extracts were investigated. Results demonstrated that three peaks of cAMP-dependent kinase activity could be resolved using DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Based on the sedimentation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and regulatory subunits using sucrose density gradient centrifugation, identification of 8-N3[32P]cAMP labeled RI and RII in DEAE-cellulose column and sucrose gradient fractions by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and Scatchard analysis of the cAMP-stimulated activation of the eluted peaks of kinase activity, the following conclusions were drawn regarding the composition of the three peaks of cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity: peak 1, eluting with less than or equal to 0.05 M potassium phosphate, consisted of the type I form of cAMP-dependent protein kinase; peak 2, eluting with 0.065-0.11 M potassium phosphate, consisted of free RI and a type II tetrameric holoenzyme; peak 3, eluting with 0.125 M potassium phosphate, consisted of an apparent RIIC trimer, followed by the elution with 0.15 M potassium phosphate of free RII. The regulatory subunits were confirmed as authentic RI and RII based upon their molecular weights and autophosphorylation characteristics. The more basic elution of the type II holoenzyme with free RI was not attributable to the ionic properties of the regulatory subunits, based upon the isoelectric points of photolabeled RI and RII and upon the elution location from DEAE-cellulose of RI and RII on dissociation from their respective holoenzymes by cAMP. This is the first report of a type II holoenzyme eluting in low salt fractions with free RI, and of the presence of an apparent RIIC trimer in a soluble tissue extract.  相似文献   

12.
We showed previously that chitin catabolism by the marine bacterium Vibrio furnissii involves at least three signal transduction systems and many genes, several of which were molecularly cloned, and the corresponding proteins were characterized. The predicted amino acid sequences of these proteins showed a high degree of identity to the corresponding proteins from Vibrio cholerae, whose complete genomic sequence has recently been determined. We have therefore initiated studies with V. cholerae. We report here a novel ATP-dependent glucosamine kinase of V. cholerae encoded by a gene designated gspK. The protein, GspK (31.6 kDa), was purified to apparent homogeneity from recombinant Escherichia coli. The product of the reaction was shown to be GlcN-6-P by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI mass spectrometry) and NMR. The K(m) values for GlcN, ATP, and MgCl(2) were 0.45, 2.4, and 2.2 mm, respectively, and the V(max) values were in the range 180-200 nmol/microg/min (approximately 6 nmol/pmol/min). Kinase activity was not observed with any other sugar, including: galactosamine, mannosamine, Glc, GlcNAc, GalNAc, mannose, 2-deoxyglucose, and oligosaccharides of chitosan. The enzyme is also ATP-specific. The kinase can be used to specifically determine micro quantities of GlcN in acid hydrolysates of glycoconjugates. The physiological function of this enzyme remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
cAMP-dependent protein kinase from Dictyostelium discoideum   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAK) from Dictyostelium discoideum is an enzyme composed of one catalytic and one regulatory subunit. Upon binding of cAMP, the holoenzyme dissociates to liberate free active catalytic subunits. The cAK is developmentally regulated, ranging from very little activity in vegetative cells to maximal expression in postaggregative cells. Although there is no immunological cross-reaction between the subunits of cAKs from Dictyostelium and from other organisms, they share several biochemical properties. A complete cDNA for the regulatory subunit has been cloned and sequenced. Only one copy of the gene for the regulatory subunit is present per haploid genome. On the basis of the comparison of the structure of the cAK from Dictyostelium with its counterparts in yeast and higher eukaryotes, we propose a model for the evolution of cyclic-nucleotide-binding proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The protein phosphatases in rat liver cytosol, active on rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) phosphorylated by casein kinase I, casein kinase II and the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, have been partially purified by anion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The major phosphatase activities against all three substrates copurify through fractionation and appear to be identical to protein phosphatases 2A1 and 2A2. No unique protein phosphatase active on 32P-ACC phosphorylated by the casein kinases was identified.  相似文献   

15.
Nuclear translocation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A study was made of nuclear translocation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and its subunits, as well as of the binding of these proteins to metaphase chromosomes. The CHO cell cultures were treated with 3H-labelled protein kinase and its subunits. The results indicate that cAMP-dependent protein kinase became translocated into the nucleus in a dissociated state and that the subunits have specific binding sites on chromatin. Transformation of normal mouse fibroblasts by virus SV40 interferes with the nuclear translocation of the regulatory subunit. The process is restored when the level of cAMP in the system is increased. Binding of the regulatory subunit to metaphase chromosomes of cells transformed by virus SV40 does not change. In the case of spontaneous cancer (KB cells) translocation of the regulatory subunit remains unaffected, whereas acceptance of the protein by the metaphase chromosomes is impeded. The results of this work suggest that compartmentalization of cAMP-dependent protein kinase—and particularly of its regulatory subunit—in the cell is highly significant for cellular processes. Disorders arising as a result of neoplastic transformation involve changes in nuclear translocation of the regulatory subunit and in its binding to the structural elements of the genome.  相似文献   

16.
The phosphorylation of nuclear proteins of porcine brain cAMP-dependent protein kinase was studied. Some nuclear proteins after extraction from the nuclei served as substrates for protein kinase. Lysine-rich histones H1, H2a and H2b were found to accept phosphate during chromatin phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Phosphorylation of intact nuclei revealed that in such a system only histone H1 is a substrate for cAMP-dependent protein kinase. In the presence of DNA the histones are phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase in a different manner. It was concluded that DNA can determine the accessibility of protein substrates for the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphorylation of connexin 32, the major liver gap-junction protein, was studied in purified liver gap junctions and in hepatocytes. In isolated gap junctions, connexin 32 was phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAMP-PK), by protein kinase C (PKC) and by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (Ca2+/CaM-PK II). Connexin 26 was not phosphorylated by these three protein kinases. Phosphopeptide mapping of connexin 32 demonstrated that cAMP-PK and PKC primarily phosphorylated a seryl residue in a peptide termed peptide 1. PKC also phosphorylated seryl residues in additional peptides. CA2+/CaM-PK II phosphorylated serine and to a lesser extent, threonine, at sites different from those phosphorylated by the other two protein kinases. A synthetic peptide PSRKGSGFGHRL-amine (residues 228-239 based on the deduced amino acid sequence of rat connexin 32) was phosphorylated by cAMP-PK and by PKC, with kinetic properties being similar to those for other physiological substrates phosphorylated by these enzymes. Ca2+/CaM-PK II did not phosphorylate the peptide. Phosphopeptide mapping and amino acid sequencing of the phosphorylated synthetic peptide indicated that Ser233 of connexin 32 was present in peptide 1 and was phosphorylated by cAMP-PK or by PKC. In hepatocytes labeled with [32P]orthophosphoric acid, treatment with forskolin or 20-deoxy-20-oxophorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBt) resulted in increased 32P-incorporation into connexin 32. Phosphopeptide mapping and phosphoamino acid analysis showed that a seryl residue in peptide 1 was most prominently phosphorylated under basal conditions. Treatment with forskolin or PDBt stimulated the phosphorylation of peptide 1. PDBt treatment also increased the phosphorylation of seryl residues in several other peptides. PDBt did not affect the cAMP-PK activity in hepatocytes. It has previously been shown that phorbol ester reduces dye coupling in several cell types, however in rat hepatocytes, dye coupling was not reduced by treatment with PDBt. Thus, activation of PKC may have differential effects on junctional permeability in different cell types; one source of this variability may be differences in the sites of phosphorylation in different gap-junction proteins.  相似文献   

18.
The two protomers of the purified regulatory subunit from porcine cAMP-dependent protein kinase I have been shown to be covalently cross-linked by interchain disulfide bonding. Limited proteolysis which cleaves the polypeptide chain into two fragments demonstrated that the disulfide bonding was associated exclusively with the fragment that corresponded to the NH2-terminal region of the polypeptide chain. This NH2-terminal fragment accounted for approximately 15 to 20% of the molecule. The disulfide bonding was further characterized by alkylating the cysteines in the native regulatory subunit. Following oxidation with performic acid, each regulatory subunit contained 7 cysteic acid residues; however, under denaturing conditions, but without prior reduction, only 5 cysteine residues could be alkylated with iodoacetic acid. Following limited proteolysis, all five of these cysteines were associated with the larger COOH-terminal, cAMP binding domain. In contrast, if the denatured subunit was first reduced prior to alkylation, all 7 cysteine residues were alkylated. The 2 cysteines that were only accessible to alkylation after prior reduction were both associated with the NH2-terminal end of the polypeptide chain ultimately with a 5,400 peptide. Alkylation of the isolated, denatured NH2-terminal domain with iodoacetic acid resulted in no covalent modification unless the fragment was first reduced with dithiothreitol. The NH2-terminal and COOH-terminal domains were shown to be linked by a region of the polypeptide chain that is rich in both proline and arginine. It is the arginine-rich site that is readily prone to proteolytic cleavage.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CaM-kinases) I and IV are activated upon phosphorylation of their Thr(177) and Thr(196), respectively, by the upstream Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases CaM-kinase kinase alpha and beta, and deactivated upon dephosphorylation by protein phosphatases such as CaM-kinase phosphatase. Recent studies demonstrated that the activity of CaM-kinase kinase alpha is decreased upon phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), and the relationship between the inhibition and phosphorylation of CaM-kinase kinase alpha by PKA has been studied. In the present study, we demonstrate that the activity of CaM-kinase kinase alpha toward PKIV peptide, which contains the sequence surrounding Thr(196) of CaM-kinase IV, is increased by incubation with PKA in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin but decreased in its absence, while the activity toward CaM-kinase IV is decreased by incubation with PKA in both the presence and absence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin. Six phosphorylation sites on CaM-kinase kinase alpha, Ser(24) for autophosphorylation, and Ser(52), Ser(74), Thr(108), Ser(458), and Ser(475) for phosphorylation by PKA, were identified by amino acid sequence analysis of the phosphopeptides purified from the tryptic digest of the phosphorylated enzymes. The presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin suppresses phosphorylation on Ser(52), Ser(74), Thr(108), and Ser(458) by PKA, but accelerates phosphorylation on Ser(475). The changes in the activity of the enzyme upon phosphorylation appear to occur as a result of conformational changes induced by phosphorylation on several sites.  相似文献   

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