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1.
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   

2.
Some effects of salts on the adenylate cyclase of partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver have been studied. Under conditions where cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration, the enzyme was stimulated 3- to 6-fold by 10 mM NaF, 10- to 30-fold by 1 muM glucagon, 4- to 5-fold by 0.1 mM 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate, and in the presence of 3 muM GTP, 2-fold by 10 mug/ml of prostaglandin E1. Various salts were found to stimulate basal activity slightly, but enhanced the response to NaF 3- to 4-fold, to glucagon 1.5- to 2-fold, to 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate 2- to 3-fold, and to prostaglandin E1 1.5-fold. This enhancement was observed at maximally effective concentrations of each of the respective activators. Of the salts tested, NaN3 and the Na- or K-halides were most effective. Their action appeared to be due to the respective anions. Stimulation was detectable with 1.5 mM NaN3 or 3 mM NaCl and was maximal with 30 mM NaN3 or 60 mM NaCl. The stimulatory effect of NaN3 was not due to ATP-sparing, nor to an altered cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate recovery. It was independent of the chromatography and assay methods used, and was therefore not due to procedural artifact. Fluoride-stimulated cyclase activity was enhanced by salts to a greater degree than were 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate-, glucagon-, or (prostaglandin E1 + GTP)-stimulated activities. The effects of NaN3 were not the result of significant changes in the enzyme's responses to GTP, which increased basal and glucagon-stimulated activities but inhibited F--stimulated activity. The effects of NaN3 were greater when cyclase was assayed with Mn2+ than with Mg2+. The facilitatory effect of NaN3 or NaCl on fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was partially reversible as was the stimulatory effect of fluoride in the presence of NaN3. Enhancement of hormonal stimulation by NaN3 was also demonstrable with cardiac and adipose tissue adenylate cyclase. However, NaN3 did not stimulate detergent-dispersed adenylate cyclases from either liver plasma membranes or brain. The data suggest that stimulation of adenylate cyclase by salts may require the added presence of other stimulatory agents and an intact membrane structure.  相似文献   

3.
GDP regulation of basal and receptor-mediated catecholamine-sensitive human fat cell adenylate cyclase was studied using purified plasma membrane preparations and assay conditions selected to minimize conversion of GDP to GTP. Under ordinary assay conditions (low NaCl concentration) and with App(NH)p as substrate to prevent GDP conversion to GTP, basal enzyme activity was stimulated up to 2-fold by GDP (0.1 mM) while addition of epinephrine (0.1 mM) eliminated stimulation by GDP and reduced basal adenylate cyclase activity. With ATP as substrate, the enzyme was not responsive to hormone in the absence of guanyl nucleotides and GDP augmentation of basal activity was small (0-1.5-fold) while stimulatory effects of epinephrine and isoproterenol were minimally but definitely exhibited (1.5-fold over basal). Guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S), a GDP analog resistant to phosphorylation and hydrolysis and an antagonist of GTP, stimulated enzyme activity more than did GDP but did not promote epinephrine action. Rather, inhibition of GDP beta S-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was seen with both epinephrine and isoproterenol and also with GTP. In the presence of NaCl (200 mM), which alone produced 2-3-fold increase in basal enzyme activity, GDP (0.1 mM) and GDP beta S (50 microM) produced 8- and 15-fold increases of activity, respectively. Addition of UDP, to prevent possible conversion of GDP to GTP, had no effect on NaCl-enhanced activation by GDP. The results indicate that the human fat cell adenylate cyclase system is unique in responding to GDP and its analog GDP beta S by stimulation in the absence of hormone but suggest that as in other systems catecholamine-mediated stimulation is normally dependent on GTP. Salts (Na+) appear to stimulate the enzyme by facilitating the interaction of the guanyl nucleotide regulatory protein (N8) with the catalytic unit.  相似文献   

4.
In hamster adipocyte ghosts, ACTH and β-adrenergic agonists stimulate adenylate cyclase by a GTP-dependent process; in contrast, inhibition of the enzyme by hormonal factors requires both GTP and sodium ions. The interaction of various monovalent cations and guanine nucleotides was studied on basal, stimulated and inhibited adenylate cyclase activities. In the presence of GTP (0.03–10 μM), which reduced basal activity by up to 90%, monovalent cations (10–500 mM, added as chloride salts) increased the enzyme activity by up to about 8-fold. The potency order obtained was Na+>Li+>K+>choline. The stable GTP analogue, guanylyl-5′-imidodiphosphate, which like GTP was capable of decreasing basal activity, diminished the cation-induced activation. The stimulatory effects of ACTH and isoproterenol on adipocyte adenylate cyclase activity were impaired by the cations in the potency order, Na+>Li+>K+>choline. Additionally, NaCl shifted the concentration-response for ACTH to the right and caused an increase in the maximal activation by the hormone. Similar to basal activity, fluoride-stimulated activity was increased by NaCl, when GTP was present. The inhibitory effect of prostaglandin E1 on basal adipocyte adenylate cyclase activity was revealed by the cations in the above mentioned potency order by an apparent reversal of the cation-induced activation. In the presence of NaCl, the ACTH- or fluoride-stimulated activities were also reduced by prostaglandin E1, but the inhibitory hormonal factor did not reverse the NaCl-induced shift in the concentration-response curve for ACTH. Guanylyl-5′-imidodiphosphate completely prevented hormonal inhibition. The data suggest that monovalent cations interact with the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component of the adipocyte adenylate cylase system and that this interaction somehow changes the properties of this component, now revealing hormone-induced inhibition partially impairing hormone-induced stimulation.  相似文献   

5.
In cellular systems provided with activatory (Ra-site) receptors for adenosine, such as rat cerebral microvessels and rat liver plasma membranes, the adenosine-receptor antagonist 8-phenyltheophylline (10 microM) significantly decreased adenylate cyclase activity if ATP was the substrate and only if GTP was present. With dATP as substrate, adenylate cyclase activities in both preparations remained unaffected by 8-phenyltheophylline. In rat cerebral-cortical membranes, with inhibitory (Ri-site) receptors for adenosine, 8-phenyltheophylline significantly enhanced adenylate cyclase activity only in the presence of GTP and if ATP was the substrate. In rat cardiac ventricular membranes, which are devoid of any adenylate cyclase-coupled adenosine receptor, the methylxanthine had no GTP-dependent effect, irrespective of the substrate used. All assay systems contained sufficiently high amounts of adenosine deaminase (2.5 units/ml), since no endogenous adenosine, formed from ATP, was found chromatographically. In order to demonstrate a direct influence of phosphorylated adenosine derivatives on adenylate cyclase activity, we investigated AMP in a dATP assay system. AMP was verified chromatographically to remain reasonably stable under the adenylate cyclase assay conditions. In the microvessels, AMP increased enzyme activity in the range 0.03-1.0 mM, an effect competitively antagonized by 8-phenyltheophylline. In the cortical membranes, 0.1 mM-AMP inhibited adenylate cyclase, which was partially reversed by the methylxanthine. The presence of GTP was again necessary for all observations. In the ventricular membranes, AMP had no effect. Since the efficacy of adenosine-receptor agonists and, probably, that of other hormones on adenylate cyclase activity can be more efficiently measured with dATP as the enzyme substrate, this nucleotide seems preferable for adenylate cyclase measurements in systems susceptible to modulation by adenosine.  相似文献   

6.
Adenylate cyclase in particulate fractions from rat adrenal glands is subject to regulation by purine nucleotides, particularly guanine nucleotides. While GTP activates the enzyme, this effect is not evident in all particulate fractions. Following dialysis of the refractory fractions activation by GTP is observed, an indication that endogenous nucleotides may obscure the effects of added GTP. The analog, guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p gives considerable more activity than does GTP. GDP, on the other hand, is inhibitory, an effect revealed only in the absence of a nucleotide-regenerating solution. GDP blocks the action of both GTP and Gpp(NH)p. These results show that the gamma-phosphate of the nucleotide is required for but need not be metabolized in the activation process. At low substrate concentration (0.1 mM ATP or adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate) stimulation of the enzyme by ACTH occurs only in the presence of added guanine nucleotide (GTP or Gpp(NH)p); the hormone and nucleotide act synergistically. While both GTP and Gpp(NH)p inhibit fluoride-stimulated activity, the level of fluoride required to demonstrate such inhibition appears not to be related to the level of fluoride required for activation of the enzyme. In the presence of GTP, or GTP plus ACTH, the enzyme exhibits normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to substrate utilization (K-m equal to 0.16 mM). In the activated state, produced with ACTH plus GTP, the enzyme is less susceptible to inhibition by a species of ATP uncomplexed with Mg2+, but is more susceptible to inhibition by Mg2+. These results demonstrate that fundamental differences exist between different states of the adenylate cyclase. The difficulties in describing kinetically the regulation of adenylate cyclase systems in view of the multiple actions of nucleotides and magnesium are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The concentration requirements of calmodulin in altering basal, GTP-, and dopamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities in an EGTA-washed particulate fraction from bovine striatum were examined. In the bovine striatal particulate fraction, calmodulin activated basal adenylate cyclase activity 3.5-fold, with an EC50 of 110 nM. Calmodulin also potentiated the activation of adenylate cyclase by GTP by decreasing the EC50 for GTP from 303 +/- 56 nM to 60 +/- 10 nM. Calmodulin did not alter the maximal response to GTP. The EC50 for calmodulin in potentiating the GTP response was only 11 nM as compared to 110 nM for activation of basal activity. Similarly, calmodulin increased the maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase by dopamine by 50-60%. The EC50 for calmodulin in eliciting this response was 35 nM. These data demonstrate that calmodulin can both activate basal adenylate cyclase and potentiate adenylate cyclase activities that involve the activating GTP-binding protein, Ns. Mechanisms that involve potentiation of Ns-mediated effects are much more sensitive to calmodulin than is the activation of basal adenylate cyclase activity. Potentiation of GTP-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity by calmodulin was apparent at 3 and 5 mM MgCl2, but not at 1 or 10 mM MgCl2. These data further support a role for calmodulin in hormonal signalling and suggest that calmodulin can regulate cyclic AMP formation by more than one mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Human adenylate cyclase (ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1) has been studied in preparations of fat cell membranes ("ghosts"). As reported earlier, under ordinary assay conditions (1.0 mM ATP, 5 mM Mg2+, 30 degrees C, 10 min incubation) the enzyme was activated 6-fold by epinephrine in the presence of the GTP analog, 5'-guanylyl-imidodiphosphate [GMP-P(NH)P] (Cooper, B. et al. (1975) J. Clin. Invest. 56, 1350-1353). Basal activity was highest during the first 2 min of incubation then slowed and was linear for at least the next 18 min. Epinephrine, added alone, was often without effect. but sometimes maintained the initial high rate of basal activity. GMP-P(NH)P alone produced inhibition ("lag") of basal enzyme early in the incubation periods. Augmentation of epinephrine effect by GMP-P(NH)P, which also proceeded after a brief (2 min) lag period, was noted over a wide range of substrate (ATP) concentrations. GTP inhibited basal levels of the enzyme by about 50%. GTP also allowed expression of an epinephrine effect, but only in the sense that the hormone abolished the inhibition by GTP. Occasionally a slight stimulatory effect on epinephrine action was seen with GTP. At high Mg2+ concentration (greater than 10 mM) or elevated temperatures (greater than 30 degrees C) GMP-P(NH)P alone activated the enzyme. Maximal activity of human fat cell adenylate cyclase was seen at 50 mM Mg2+, 1.0 mM ATP, pH 8.2, and 37 degrees C in the presence of 10(-4) M GMP-P(NH)P; under these conditions addition of epinephrine did not further enhance activity. Human fat cell adenylate cyclase of adults was insensitive to ACTH and glucagon even in the presence of GMP-P(NH)P.  相似文献   

9.
1. The activities of the enzymes involved in the metabolism of cyclic nucleotides were studied in sarcolemma prepared front guinea-pig heart ventricle; the enzyme activities reported here were linear under the assay conditions. 2. Adenylate cyclase was maximally activated by 3mM-NaF; NaF increased the Km for ATP (from 0.042 to 0.19 mM) but decreased the Ka for Mg2+ (from 2.33 to 0.9 mM). In the presence of saturating Mg2+ (15 mM), Mn2+ enhanced adenylate cyclase, whereas Co2+ was inhibitory. beta-Adrenergic amines (10-50 muM) stimulated adenylate cyclase (38+/-2%). When added to the assay mixture, guanyl nucleotides (GTP and its analogue, guanylyl imidophosphate) stimulated basal enzyme activity and enhanced the stimulation by isoproterenol. By contrast, preincubation of sarcolemma with guanylyl imidodiphosphate stimulated the formation of an 'activated' form of the enzyme, which did not reveal increased hormonal sensitivity. 3. The guanylate cyclase present in the membranes as well as in the Triton X-100-solubilized extract of membranes exhibited a Ka for Mn 2+ of 0.3 mM; Mn2+ in excess of GTP was required for maximal activity. Solubilized guanylate cyclase was activated by Mg2+ only in the presence of low Mn2+ concentrations; Ca2+ was inhibitory both in the absence and presence of low Mn2+. Acetylcholine as well as carbamolycholine stimulated membrane-bound guanylate cyclase. 4. Cylic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activities of sarcolemma exhibited both high-and low-Km forms with cyclic AMP and with cyclic GMP as substrate. Ca2+ ions increased the Vmax. of the cyclic GMP-dependent enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of certain lipids on adenylate cyclase activity [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1] from fibroblasts in culture has been investigated. The unsaturated fatty acids, as well as lysolecithin, were found to act as potent inhibitors of fibroblast adenylate cyclase activity. Increasing the degree of unsaturation increases the extent of inhibition noted at a given fatty acid concentration. The inhibitory effect of the unsaturated fatty acids or lysolecithin is not selective for a specific function of the adenylate cyclase system since basal, and hormone- or fluoride-stimulated cyclase activities are inhibited to the same extent. The fatty acid-inactivated state of fibroblast adenylate cyclase is not readily reversed for enzyme activity is not restored when arachidonate-treated membranes are washed with Tris buffer containing 10 mm EDTA, 0.15 mm albumin, or 0.15 m KCl. Previous studies have shown that the adenylate cyclase system from Moloney sarcoma virus-transformed NRK (MNRK) cells is not stimulated by the addition of GTP or hormones. Of interest is the present finding that the addition of unsaturated fatty acids, or lysolecithin, over a narrow concentration range (0.1 – 0.2 mm) leads to partial restoration of GTP activation of MNRK cyclase activity. Hormonal responsiveness to l-epinephrine or prostaglandin E1 is not restored to the MNRK enzyme with fatty acid or lysolecithin treatment.  相似文献   

11.
1. Adenylate cyclase in plasma membranes from rat liver was stimulated by prostaglandin E1, and to a lesser extent by prostaglandin E2. Prostaglandin F1alpha and A1 did not stimulate the cyclase. The prostaglandin E1-mediated activation was found to require GTP when the substrate ATP concentration was reduced from 3 mM to 0.3 mM in the reaction mixture. Adenylate cyclase of the plasma membranes from rat ascites hepatomas AH-130 and AH-7974 was not stimulated by prostaglandin E1 in the presence or the absence of GTP, although the basal activity of adenylate cyclase as well as its stimulation by GTP alone were similar to normal liver plasma membranes. 2. Liver plasma membranes were found to have two specific binders for [3H] prostaglandin E1 with dissociation constants of 17.6-10(-9) M and 13.6-10(8) M (37 degrees C) and one specific binder for [3H]prostaglandin F2alpha with a dissociation constant of 2.31-10(8) M (37 degrees C). The specific binders for prostaglandin E1 could not be detected in the hepatoma plasma membranes. 3. Binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 to the liver plasma membranes was exchange by, GTP dGPT, GDP, ATP and GMP-P(N)P, but not by GMP, CGMP, DTTP, UTP or CTP. The increase in the binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 was found to be due to the increased affinity of the specific binders to prostaglandin F2alpha was not affected by GTP. 4. GTP alone was found to increase V of adenylate cyclase of liver plasma membranes, while GTP plus prostaglandin E1 was found to decrease Km of adenylate cyclase in addition to the increase of V to a further extent.  相似文献   

12.
Effect of prostacyclin (PGI2) on adenylate cyclase activity in human thyroid membranes was examined. PGI2 caused a dose- and time-dependent production of cyclic AMP (cAMP) with high potency. When GTP was added in concentrations up to 100 uM, the activation of adenylate cyclase by PGI2 was increased. In the assay medium containing 3 mM ATP, 10 uM GTP and nucleotide regenerating system, the replacement of Mg2+ by increasing concentrations of Mn2+ caused a progressive loss of PGI2 as well as TSH-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities, while high concentrations of Mg2+ (12 or 18 mM) slightly suppressed the activity stimulated by either PGI2 or TSH. Both agents had an additive effect on the stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in the presence of either 6 mM Mg2+ or 6 mM Mn2+. Gamma-globulin fraction containing non-stimulatory TSH receptor antibody which was prepared from a patient with chronic thyroiditis, suppressed only TSH- but not PGI2-stimulation of the adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest that PGI2 can stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity in human thyroid tissue, and that PGI2-stimulation may be mediated by the different system from TSH-dependent one.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of guanine nucleotides on the adenylate cyclase activity of thyroid plasma membranes were investigated by monitoring metabolism of the radiolabeled nucleotides by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). When ATP was used as substrate with a nucleotide-regeneratign system, TSH stimulated the adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanine nucleotide. Addition of GTP and GDP equally enhanced the TSH stimulation. Effects of GTP and GDP were indistinguishable in regard to their inhibitory effects on NaF-stimulated activities. The results from TLC suggested that GDP could be converted to GTP by a nucleotide-regenerating system. Even in the absence of nucleotide-regenerating system, addition of GDP to the adenylate cyclase assay mixture int he parallel decrease in ATP levels and formation of GTP indicating that thyroid plasma membrane preparatiosn possessed a transphosphorylating activity. When an ATP analog, App[NH]p, was used as substrate without a nucleotide-regenerating system, no conversion of GDP to GTP was observed. Under such conditions, TSH did not stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity unless exogenous GTP or Gpp[NH]p was added. GDP no longer supported TSH stimulation and caused a slight decrease in the activity. GDP was less inhibitory than Gpp(NH)p to the NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest: (1) TSH stimulation of thyroid adenylate cyclase is absolutely dependent on the regulatory nucleotides. (2) In contrst to GTP, GDP cannot support the coupling of the receptor-TSH complex to the catalytic componenet of adenylate cyclase. (3) The nucleotide regulatory site is more inhibitory to the stimulation of the enzyme by NaF when occupied by Gpp[NH]p than GDP.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of guanine nucleotides on the adenylate cyclase activity of thyroid plasma membranes were investigated by monitoring metabolism of the radiolabeled nucleotides by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). When ATP was used as substrate with a nucleotide-regenerating system, TSH stimulated the adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanine nucleotide. Addition of GTP or GDP equally enhanced the TSH stimulation. Effects of GTP and GDP were indistinguishable in regard to their inhibitory effects on NaF-stimulated activities. The results from TLC suggested that GDP could be converted to GTP by a nucleotide-regenerating system. Even in the absence of a nucleotide-regeneration system, addition of GDP to the adenylate cyclase assay mixture resulted in the parallel decrease in ATP levels and formation of GTP indicating that thyroid plasma membrane preparations possessed a transphosphorylating activity. When an ATP analog, App[NH]p, was used as substrate without a nucleotide-regenerating system, no conversion of GDP to GTP was observed. Under such conditions, TSH did not stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity unless exogenous GTP or Gpp[NH]p was added. GDP no longer supported TSH stimulation and caused a slight decrease in the activity. GDP was less inhibitory than Gpp(NH)p to the NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest: (1) TSH stimulation of thyroid adenylate cyclase is absolutely dependent on the regulatory nucleotides. (2) In contrast to GTP, GDP cannot support the coupling of the receptor-TSH complex to the catalytic component of adenylate cyclase. (3) The nucleotide regulatory site is more inhibitory to the stimulation of the enzyme by NaF when occupied by Gpp[NH]p than GDP.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were conducted to clarify the nucleotide requirements for lutropin (LH)-dependent adenylate cyclase desensitization in a cell-free membrane preparation derived from a thecal-cell-enriched component of preovulatory pig ovarian follicles. The follicular membranes were extensively washed in 2M-urea to remove endogenously bound GTP, and ATP devoid of GTP was utilized. Results conducted in the presence of 60 microM-GTP and various concentrations of ATP confirm the dependence of LH-stimulated adenylate cyclase activation and desensitization on millimolar concentrations of ATP. In experiments in which adenylate cyclase activation was supported by Mg2+, LH and adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate, GTP did not support the desensitization response. Moreover, although GTP increased both basal and LH-stimulable adenylate cyclase activities in a concentration-dependent manner, the percentage desensitization was not significantly modified by the presence of 10nM-10mM-GTP. These results demonstrate that, even in the presence of exogenous GTP and Mg2+, activation of adenylate cyclase by saturating concentrations of LH in the presence of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate is not sufficient to initiate desensitization; millimolar concentrations of ATP are also required for the adenylate cyclase desensitization response.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of molybdate on adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) in rat liver plasma membranes has been examined. The apparent K alpha for molybdate activation of the enzyme is 4.5 mM, and maximal, 7-fold stimulation is achieved at 50 mM. The observed increase in cAMP formation in the adenylate cyclase assay is not due to: (a) an inhibition of ATP hydrolysis; (b) a molybdate-catalyzed conversion of ATP to cAMP; (c) an inhibition of cAMP hydrolysis; or (d) an artifact in the isolation of cAMP formed in the reaction. Molybdate activation of adenylate cyclase is a general phenomenon exhibited by the enzyme in brain, cardiac, and renal tissue homogenates and in erythrocyte ghosts. However, like fluoride and guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), molybdate does not activate the soluble rat testicular adenylate cyclase. Molybdate is a reversible activator of adenylate cyclase. Activation is not due to an increase in ionic strength and is independent of the salt used to introduce molybdate. Molybdate does not activate adenylate cyclase previously stimulated with Gpp(NH)p or fluoride. At concentration greater than 20 mM, molybdate inhibits fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase, and at concentrations greater than 100 mM, molybdate stimulation of basal adenylate cyclase activity is diminished.  相似文献   

17.
Rat liver plasma membranes were incubated with phospholipase A2 (purified from snake venom) or with filipin, a polyene antibiotic, followed by analysis of the binding of glucagon to receptors, effects of GTP on the glucagon-receptor complex, and the activity and responses of adenylate cyclase to glucagon + GTP, GTP, Gpp(NH)p, and F-. Phospholipase A2 treatment resulted in concomitant lossess of glucagon binding and of activation of cyclase by glucagon + GTP. Greater than 85% of maximal hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids was required before significant effects of phospholipase A2 on receptor binding and activity response to glucagon were observed. The stimulatory effects of Gpp(NH)p or F- remained essentially unaffected even at maximal hydrolysis of phospholipids, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP was reduced. Detailed analysis of receptor binding indicates that phospholipase A2 treatment affected the affinity but not the number of glucagon receptors. The receptors remain sensitive to the effects of GTP on hormone binding. Filipin also caused marked reduction in activation by glucagon + GTP. However, in contrast to phospholipase A2 treatment, the binding of glucagon to receptors was unaffected. The effect of GTP on the binding process was also not affected. The most sensitive parameter of activity altered by filipin was stimulation by GTP or Gpp(NH)p; basal and fluoride-stimulated activities were least affected. It is concluded from these findings that phospholipase A2 and filipin, as was previously shown with phospholipase C, are valuable tools for differentially affecting the components involved in hormone, guanyl nucleotide, and fluoride action on hepatic adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

18.
Commercial preparations of adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate (App(NH)p) were found to be contaminated with a GTP-like substance(s) as well as a phosphate donor(s) for GDP. Thus, when these preparations were used as substrate with no purification, GDP was as effective as GTP in promoting PGE1 stimulation of human platelet adenylate cyclase. With purified App(NH)p as substrate, the effect of PGE1 with GDP was reduced but still observable, while that with GTP was unaltered. PGE1 also caused a stimulation in the presence of guanosine 5'-o-(2-thiodiphosphate)(GDP beta S) with ATP as substrate. Both of the PGE1-stimulated activities observed with GDP and its analog were completely lost by the addition of UDP, thereby, inhibiting GTP formation catalyzed by membrane-associated nucleoside diphosphate kinase. The results demonstrate that the stimulatory effects of PGE1 observed with GDP and App(NH)p, and with GDP beta S and ATP were transphosphorylation dependent and, therefore, the analogs must be used with special caution in adenylate cyclase studies.  相似文献   

19.
K.B. Seamon  J.W. Daly 《Life sciences》1982,30(17):1457-1464
Calcium stimulates adenylate cyclase activity in rat cerebral cortical membranes with either ATP or AppNHp as substrate. In contrast, isoproterenol stimulates the cerebral cortical enzyme with ATP as substrate but not with AppNHp as substrate unless exogenous GTP is added. In rat striatal membranes, calcium or dopamine stimulate adenylate cyclase activity with ATP as substrate, but not with AppNHp as substrate. GTP restores the dopamine but not the calcium response. The inhibitory guanine nucleotide GDP-βS antagonizes dopamine and GppNHp stimulation of the brain adenylate cyclases, but not stimulation by calcium of either rat cerebral cortical or striatal enzymes. Results indicate that GTP is not requisite to calcium-calmodulin activation of adenylate cyclases in brain membranes. In addition, calcium-calmodulin cannot activate striatal adenylate cyclases with a nonphosphorylating nucleotide, AppNHp, as substrate.  相似文献   

20.
1. Renal tubular membranes from rat kidneys were prepared, and adenylate cyclase activity was measured under basal conditions, after stimulation by NaF or salmon calcitonin. Apparent Km value of the enzyme for hormone-linked receptor was close to 1 x 10(-8) M. 2. The system was sensitive to temperature and pH. pH was found to act both on affinity for salmon calcitonin-linked receptor and maximum stimulation, suggesting an effect of pH on hormone-receptor binding and on a subsequent step. 3. KCl was without effect areas whereas CoCl and CaCl2 above 100 muM and MnCl2 above 1 muM inhibited F- -and salmon calcitonin-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities. The Ca2+ inhibition of the response reflected a fall in maximum stimulation and not a loss of affinity of salmon calcitonin-linked receptor for the enzyme. 4. The measurement of salmon calcitonin-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity as a function of ATP concentration showed that the hormone increases the maximum velocity of the adenylate cyclase. GTP, ITP and XTP at 200 muM did not modify basal, salmon calcitonin- and parathyroid hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities. 5. Basal, salmon calcitonin- and F- -sensitive adenylate cyclase activities decreased at Mg2+ concentrations below 10 mM. High concentrations of Mg2+ (100 mM) led to an inhibition of the F- -stimulated enzyme. 6. Salmon calcitonin-linked receptor had a greater affinity for adenylate cyclase than human or porcine calcitonin-linked receptors. There was no additive effect of these three calcitonin peptides whereas parathyroid hormone added to salmon calcitonin increased adenylate cyclase activity, thus showing that both hormones bound to different membrane receptors. Human calcitonin fragments had no effect on adenylate cyclase activity. 7. Salmon calcitonin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity decreased with the preincubation time. This was due to progressive degradation of the hormone and not to the rate of binding to membrane receptors.  相似文献   

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