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Elevation of either cAMP or cGMP causes smooth muscle relaxation. Whether these effects are mediated through cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAK), cGMP-dependent protein kinase (cGK), or both is unknown. Pig coronary arteries were treated with sodium nitroprusside (SNP) or atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), relaxants which elevate cGMP, and with isoproterenol or forskolin, relaxants which elevate cAMP. Incubation of the arteries with 10 microM SNP produced a 3.3-fold increase in cGMP without altering cAMP; the cGK activity ratio (-cGMP/+cGMP) in these extracts was increased by 2.6-fold as determined by a newly developed assay, while the cAK activity ratio (-cAMP/+cAMP) was unchanged. The increase in cGK activity ratio by SNP was concentration-dependent and was nearly maximal at 30 s. Treatment of the tissue with 10 nM ANF also increased the cGK activity ratio (2.3-fold), but not that of cAK. 100 microM isoproterenol caused a 2.9-fold elevation of cAMP with no change in cGMP, but both cAK and cGK activity ratios were increased (2.3- and 1.6-fold, respectively). The increase in the cGK activity ratio could be mimicked by cAMP addition to control tissue extracts at the concentration measured in extracts of the isoproterenol-treated tissue. Forskolin (1 and 10 microM) also increased the cGK activity ratio (1.9- and 4.9-fold). The increases in cGK activity observed in extracts suggest that moderate elevation of either cGMP or cAMP causes intracellular cGK activation, thus producing relaxation of vascular smooth muscle.  相似文献   

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Three isoforms of PDE3 (cGMP-inhibited) cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase regulate cAMP content in different intracellular compartments of cardiac myocytes in response to different signals. We characterized the catalytic activity and inhibitor sensitivity of these isoforms by using recombinant proteins. We determined their contribution to cAMP hydrolysis in cytosolic and microsomal fractions of human myocardium at 0.1 and 1.0 microm cAMP in the absence and presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin. We examined the effects of cGMP on cAMP hydrolysis in these fractions. PDE3A-136, PDE3A-118, and PDE3A-94 have similar K(m) and k(cat) values for cAMP and are equal in their sensitivities to inhibition by cGMP and cilostazol. In microsomes, PDE3A-136, PDE3A-118, and PDE3A-94 comprise the majority of cAMP hydrolytic activity under all conditions. In cytosolic fractions, PDE3A-118 and PDE3A-94 comprise >50% of the cAMP hydrolytic activity at 0.1 microm cAMP, in the absence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin. At 1.0 microm cAMP, in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin, activation of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-activated (PDE1) and other non-PDE3 phosphodiesterases reduces their contribution to <20% of cAMP hydrolytic activity. cGMP inhibits cAMP hydrolysis in microsomal fractions by inhibiting PDE3 and in cytosolic fractions by inhibiting both PDE3 and PDE1. These findings indicate that the contribution of PDE3 isoforms to the regulation of cAMP hydrolysis in intracellular compartments of human myocardium and the effects of PDE3 inhibition on cAMP hydrolysis in these compartments are highly dependent on intracellular [Ca(2+)] and [cAMP], which are lower in failing hearts than in normal hearts. cGMP may amplify cAMP-mediated signaling in intracellular compartments of human myocardium by PDE3-dependent and PDE3-independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

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Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase PDE1C1 in human cardiac myocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Isoforms in the PDE1 family of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases were recently found to comprise a significant portion of the cGMP-inhibited cAMP hydrolytic activity in human hearts. We examined the expression of PDE1 isoforms in human myocardium, characterized their catalytic activity, and quantified their contribution to cAMP hydrolytic and cGMP hydrolytic activity in subcellular fractions of this tissue. Western blotting with isoform-selective anti-PDE1 monoclonal antibodies showed PDE1C1 to be the principal isoform expressed in human myocardium. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that PDE1C1 is distributed along the Z-lines and M-lines of cardiac myocytes in a striated pattern that differs from that of the other major dual-specificity cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in human myocardium, PDE3A. Most of the PDE1C1 activity was recovered in soluble fractions of human myocardium. It binds both cAMP and cGMP with K(m) values of approximately 1 microm and hydrolyzes both substrates with similar catalytic rates. PDE1C1 activity in subcellular fractions was quantified using a new PDE1-selective inhibitor, IC295. At substrate concentrations of 0.1 microm, PDE1C1 constitutes the great majority of cAMP hydrolytic and cGMP hydrolytic activity in soluble fractions and the majority of cGMP hydrolytic activity in microsomal fractions, whereas PDE3 constitutes the majority of cAMP hydrolytic activity in microsomal fractions. These results indicate that PDE1C1 is expressed at high levels in human cardiac myocytes with an intracellular distribution distinct from that of PDE3A and that it may have a role in the integration of cGMP-, cAMP- and Ca(2+)-mediated signaling in these cells.  相似文献   

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An increase in cAMP and/or cGMP induces vasodilation which could be potentiated by endothelium or NO-donors. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDE) are differently distributed in vascular tissues. cAMP hydrolyzing PDE isozymes in endothelial cells are represented by PDE2 (cGMP stimulated-PDE) and PDE4 (cGMP insensitive-PDE), whereas in smooth muscle cells PDE3 (cGMP inhibited-PDE) and PDE4 are present. To investigate the role of NO in vasodilation induced by PDE inhibitors, we studied the effects of PDE3- or PDE4-inhibitor alone and their combination on cyclic nucleotide levels, on relaxation of precontracted aorta and on protein kinase implication. Furthermore, the direct effect of dinitrosyl iron complex (DNIC) was studied on purified recombinant PDE4B. The results show that: 1) in endothelial cells PDE4 inhibition may up-regulate basal production of NO, this effect being potentiated by PDE2 inhibition; 2) in smooth muscle cGMP produced by NO inhibits PDE3 and increases cAMP level allowing PDE4 to participate in vascular contraction; 3) protein kinase G mediates the relaxing effects of PDE3 or PDE4 inhibition. 4) DNIC inhibits non competitively PDE4B indicating a direct effect of NO on PDE4 which could explain an additive vasodilatory effect of NO. A direct and a cGMP related cross-talk between NO and cAMP-PDEs, may participate into the vasomodulation mediated by cAMP activation of protein kinase G.  相似文献   

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The structure of cyclic GMP (cGMP)-binding (cGB), cGMP specific phosphodiesterase (PDE5) comprises several domains. We have used RT-PCR methods to clone the noncatalytic cGB domains of PDE5 from human colon cancer cell RNA and constructed glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins to express and study the domains. One fragment showed 94% identity to bovine PDE5 and coded for the high affinity cGB domain of PDE5 (Val(156)-Asp(394), cGB-I). Another cloned fragment showed 92% identity to bovine PDE5 and coded for the phosphorylation site plus both high and low affinity cGB domains of PDE5 (Val(36)-Glu(529), cGB-II). Both fragments expressed as GST-cGB fusion proteins bound cGMP specifically, as determined by competitive [3H]-cGMP ligand binding. We found that cGB-I showed high affinity cGMP binding with K(d)=0.33 microM. cGB-II showed two cGMP binding sites with similar affinities and specificity to the native enzyme. cGB-II was phosphorylated by cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) as reported for bovine PDE5. These data show that recombinant regulatory regions of PDE5 form cGB sites similar to native enzyme sites and confirm proposed domain functions. These results establish that recombinant fusion proteins of PDE5 domains may be used to further characterize the structure of PDE5.  相似文献   

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Full-length cDNAs of human cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase 8B (PDE8B) were isolated. Enzymatic characteristics of a dominant variant encoding a protein of 885 residues (PDE8B1) were compared with those of PDE8A1. The recombinant PDE8A1 and PDE8B1 proteins of an entire form were produced in both cytosolic and membrane fractions of the transfected COS cells. The human PDE8B1 was a high-affinity cAMP-PDE with K(m) value of 101+/-12 nM for cAMP, which is greater than that of PDE8A1 (40+/-1 nM). Relative V(max) value of PDE8A1 was 57+/-8% compared with that of PDE8B1 (100+/-12%). Although PDE8A1 was moderately inhibited by dipyridamole with IC(50) value of 8+/-2 microM, the compound antagonized the PDE8B1 activity at three-fold higher concentration (IC(50)=23+/-2 microM). The human PDE8B gene was composed of 22 exons, spanning over 217 kb. Although overall sequence identity between PDE8A1 and PDE8B1 was 68%, positions of junctions of each exon between the PDE8A1 and PDE8B1 sequences were well matched, indicating evolutionary relatedness of both genes.  相似文献   

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Membrane-associated, Type II (cGMP-activatable) cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) from rabbit brain, representing 75% of the total homogenate Type II PDE activity, was purified to apparent homogeneity. The enzyme was released from 13,000 x g particulate fractions by limited proteolysis with trypsin and fractionated using DE-52 anion-exchange, cGMP-Sepharose affinity and hydroxylapatite chromatographies. The enzyme showed 105 kDa subunits by SDS-PAGE and had a Stokes radius of 62.70 A as determined by gel filtration chromatography. Hydrolysis of cAMP or cGMP showed positive cooperativity, with cAMP kinetic behavior linearized in the presence of 2 microM cGMP. Substrate concentrations required for half maximum velocity were 28 microM for cAMP and 16 microM for cGMP. Maximum velocities were approx. 160 mumol/min per mg for both nucleotides. The apparent Kact for cGMP stimulation of cAMP hydrolysis at 5 microM substrate was 0.35 microM and maximal stimulation (3-5-fold) was achieved with 2 microM cGMP. Cyclic nucleotide hydrolysis was not enhanced by calcium/calmodulin. The purified enzyme can be labeled by cAMP-dependent protein kinase as demonstrated by the incorporation of 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP into the 105 kDa enzyme subunit. Initial experiments showed that phosphorylation of the enzyme did not significantly alter enzyme activity measured at 5 microM [3H]cAMP in the absence or presence of 2 microM cGMP or at 40 microM [3H]cGMP. Monoclonal antibodies produced against Type II PDE immunoprecipitate enzyme activity, 105 kDa protein and 32P-labeled enzyme. The 105 kDa protein was also photoaffinity labeled with [32P]cGMP. The purified Type II PDE described here is physicochemically very similar to the isozyme purified from the cytosolic fraction of several bovine tissues with the exception that it is predominantly a particulate enzyme. This difference may reflect an important regulatory mechanism governing the metabolism of cyclic nucleotides in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

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The human PDE4A catalytic domain (PDE4A330-723) expressed in Sf9 cells was found to be heavily phosphorylated on both serines of the conserved SPS motif by mass spectrometric analysis. The purified protein exists as a tetramer at a concentration approximately 1 mg/ml from light scattering measurement and has a Km of 2 microM in hydrolyzing cAMP. In comparison, a partially purified PDE4A330-723 expressed in Escherichia coli has an apparent Km of 10 microM. The EC50 values for the Mg2+- or Co2+-mediated cAMP hydrolysis between the two enzymes differed by less than twofold. In addition, both enzymes exhibit similar sensitivities toward inhibition by a diverse set of inhibitors. Together with the fact that its adjacent peptide was covalently labeled by an electrophilic cAMP analogue, these results support that the SPS motif is not part of but is positioned near the active site. An efficient purification protocol that provides a highly purified PDE4A catalytic domain suitable for crystallization study is described.  相似文献   

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Vasodilators capable of elevating cAMP or cGMP inhibit the activation of human platelets and stimulate the phosphorylation of a 46-kDa protein (vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein, VASP) mediated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG). The availability of purified proteins and specific antisera against VASP, PKG and the catalytic subunit of PKA enabled us to measure and estimate the concentration of these regulatory proteins in intact human platelets. In addition, the rate of PKA- and PKG-mediated VASP phosphorylation in intact human platelets was estimated. For these calculations, a homogeneous population of human platelets and a homogeneous intracellular distribution of proteins and second messengers was assumed. Unstimulated washed human platelets contain 4.4 microM cAMP and 3.1 microM catalytic subunit of PKA, which is equivalent to 6.2 microM cAMP-binding sites due to PKA. Unstimulated washed human platelets also contain 0.4 microM cGMP and 7.3 microM PKG monomer, equivalent to 14.6 microM cGMP-binding sites due to the PKG. The intracellular concentration of VASP in platelets was estimated to be 25 microM. Treatment of washed human platelets with 10 microM (or 10 mM) prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) elevated the intracellular cAMP concentration to 27 microM (10 microM with 10 nM PGE1) within 30 s, accompanied by a rapid, up to 55% (35%), conversion of VASP from the dephosphorylated form (46-kDa protein) to the phosphorylated form (50-kDa protein). Treatment of washed human platelets with 100 microM (or 1 microM) sodium nitroprusside elevated the platelet cGMP level to 4 microM (0.9 microM with 1 microM sodium nitroprusside) within 2 min, accompanied by a less-rapid VASP phosphorylation of 45% (27% with 1 microM sodium nitroprusside). PGE1 and sodium nitroprusside had no significant effect on human platelet cGMP or cAMP levels, respectively. The results suggest for human platelets that relatively small increase in cAMP levels are required for activation of most of PKA, whereas even several-fold increases in platelet cGMP levels are capable of stimulating only a small fraction of total PKG. This interpretation was also supported by phosphorylation experiments with purified VASP, PKG and catalytic subunit of PKA. The results also support the hypothesis that in human platelets both cAMP/PKA- and cGMP/PKG-regulated VASP phosphorylation are components of an efficient and sensitive signal-transduction pathway, most likely involved in the inhibition of platelet activation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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The cGMP and the cAMP pathways control smooth muscle tone by regulation of BK(Ca) (BK) channel activity. BK channels show considerable diversity and plasticity in their regulation by cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases. The underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear but may involve expression of splice variants of the BK channel alpha subunit. Three isoforms, BK(A), BK(B), and BK(C), which were cloned from tracheal smooth muscle, differed only in their C terminus. When expressed in HEK293 cells, cGMP kinase (cGK) but not cAMP kinase (cAK) stimulated the activity of BK(A) and BK(B) by shifting the voltage dependence of the channel to more negative potentials. In contrast, BK(C) was exclusively stimulated by cAK. BK(C) lacks a C-terminal tandem phosphorylation motif for protein kinase C (PKC) with Ser(1151) and Ser(1154). Mutation of this motif in BK(A) switched channel regulation from cGK to cAK. Furthermore, inhibition of PKC in excised patches from cells expressing BK(A) abolished the stimulatory effect of cGK but allowed channel stimulation by cAK. cAK and cGK phosphorylated the channel at different sites. Thus, phosphorylation/dephosphorylation by PKC determines whether the BK channel is stimulated by cGK or cAK. The molecular mechanisms may be relevant for smooth muscle relaxation by cAMP and cGMP.  相似文献   

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In addition to its cGMP-selective catalytic site, cGMP-binding cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE5) contains two allosteric cGMP-binding sites and at least one phosphorylation site (Ser92) on each subunit [Thomas, M.K., Francis, S.H. & Corbin, J.D. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 14971-14978]. In the present study, prior incubation of recombinant bovine PDE5 with a phosphorylation reaction mixture [cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) or catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), MgATP, cGMP, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine], shown earlier to produce Ser92 phosphorylation, caused a 50-70% increase in enzyme activity and also increased the affinity of cGMP binding to the allosteric cGMP-binding sites. Both effects were associated with increases in its phosphate content up to 0.6 mol per PDE5 subunit. Omission of any one of the preincubation components caused loss of stimulation of catalytic activity. Addition of the phosphorylation reaction mixture to a crude bovine lung extract, which contains PDE5, also produced a significant increase in cGMP PDE catalytic activity. The increase in recombinant PDE5 catalytic activity brought about by phosphorylation was time-dependent and was obtained with 0.2-0.5 microM PKG subunit, which is approximately the cellular level of this enzyme in vascular smooth muscle. Significantly greater stimulation was observed using cGMP substrate concentrations below the Km value for PDE5, although stimulation was also seen at high cGMP concentrations. Considerably higher concentration of the catalytic subunit of PKA than of PKG was required for activation. There was no detectable difference between phosphorylated and unphosphorylated PDE5 in median inhibitory concentration for the PDE5 inhibitors, sildenafil, or zaprinast 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Phosphorylation reduced the cGMP concentration required for half-maximum binding to the allosteric cGMP-binding sites from 0.13 to 0.03 microM. The mechanism by which phosphorylation of PDE5 by PKG could be involved in physiological negative-feedback regulation of cGMP levels is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Reed ML  Lyi SM  Hanson MR 《Gene》2001,268(1-2):165-171
The dog, as a model for cardiovascular function, has been widely used in the pharmacological analysis of PDE inhibitors, particularly those thought to target the heart. However biochemical analyses of dog heart PDE have been largely performed on mixed enzyme populations, sequence information is lacking and no PDE from dog heart has been cloned. We have characterized a completely purified PDE1 enzyme from dog heart using dye-affinity, Mono-Q and calmodulin-affinity chromatography. The enzyme was stimulated 3-4-fold by calmodulin ([S]=0.5 microM) and, in the absence of calmodulin, exhibited biphasic kinetics with a low K(m) of 1.2 microM and 0.53 microM for cAMP and cGMP, with respective V(max) values of 283 and 146 nmoles min(-1) mg(-1). Internal peptides from this enzyme were used to design degenerate PCR primers. Subsequent 3'-RACE, 5'-RACE and high fidelity PCR were then used to produce a full length gene identified as PDE1A1 by sequence identity to human and bovine sequences. Northern analysis using the dog heart cDNA as a probe suggested the presence of an additional form of PDE1, in heart only, separate from the PDE1A group which was present in both heart and skeletal muscle. Multiple forms of human PDE1A are known to exist and PDE1B is present in human heart muscle. The findings here extend the PDE1 data to the dog and contribute to our understanding of the molecular biology of PDE1A in this species.  相似文献   

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