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1.
The leaf of kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) moves in response to blue light. The movement is induced by a decrease in the turgor pressure of pulvinar motor cells on the irradiated side. In this study, we investigated the initial event of the movement with respect to function of phototropin and the plasma membrane H+-ATPase in the motor cells. The results indicated that, in dark conditions, phototropin existed in a dephosphorylated state and the H+-ATPase existed in a phosphorylated state. A pulse of blue light (30 s) induced the phosphorylation of phototropin and the dephosphorylation of the H+-ATPase as determined by the binding behavior of 14-3-3 protein. Phototropin phosphorylation occurred rapidly, followed by the transient gradual dephosphorylation of the H+-ATPase. When the specific flavoprotein inhibitor diphenyleneiodonium and the protein kinase inhibitors K-252a and staurosporine were administered to pulvinar cells, both phototropin phosphorylation and H+-ATPase dephosphorylation were inhibited. The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation exhibited similar fluence rate dependencies to blue light. These results indicated that phototropin may function upstream of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and decrease the activity of H+-ATPase by dephosphorylation. We provide evidence for the existence of three kinds of phototropins in pulvinar motor cells.  相似文献   

2.
Glucose metabolism is of vital importance in normal brain function. Evidence indicates that glycolysis, in addition to production of ATP, plays an important role in maintaining normal synaptic function. In an effort to understand the potential involvement of a glycolytic intermediate(s) in synaptic function, we have prepared [3-32P]1,3-bisphosphoglycerate and [32P]3-phosphoglycerate and sought their interaction with a specific nerve-ending protein. We have found that a 29-kDa protein is the major component labeled with either [3-32P]1,3-bisphosphoglycerate or [32P]3-phosphoglycerate. The protein was identified as monophosphoglycerate mutase (PGAM). This labeling was remarkably high in the brain and synaptosomal cytosol fraction, consistent with the importance of glycolysis in synaptic function. Of interest, fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (Fru-2,6-P2) inhibited PGAM phosphorylation and enzyme activity. Moreover, Fru-2,6-P2 potently stimulated release of [32P]phosphate from the 32P-labeled PGAM (EC50 = 1 microM), suggesting that apparent reduction of PGAM phosphorylation and enzyme activity by Fru-2,6-P2 may be due to stimulation of dephosphorylation of PGAM. The significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Short-term changes in illumination elicit alterations in thylakoid protein phosphorylation and reorganization of the photosynthetic machinery. Phosphorylation of LHCII, the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II, facilitates its relocation to photosystem I and permits excitation energy redistribution between the photosystems (state transitions). The protein kinase STN7 is required for LHCII phosphorylation and state transitions in the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. LHCII phosphorylation is reversible, but extensive efforts to identify the protein phosphatase(s) that dephosphorylate LHCII have been unsuccessful. Here, we show that the thylakoid-associated phosphatase TAP38 is required for LHCII dephosphorylation and for the transition from state 2 to state 1 in A. thaliana. In tap38 mutants, thylakoid electron flow is enhanced, resulting in more rapid growth under constant low-light regimes. TAP38 gene overexpression markedly decreases LHCII phosphorylation and inhibits state 1→2 transition, thus mimicking the stn7 phenotype. Furthermore, the recombinant TAP38 protein is able, in an in vitro assay, to directly dephosphorylate LHCII. The dependence of LHCII dephosphorylation upon TAP38 dosage, together with the in vitro TAP38-mediated dephosphorylation of LHCII, suggests that TAP38 directly acts on LHCII. Although reversible phosphorylation of LHCII and state transitions are crucial for plant fitness under natural light conditions, LHCII hyperphosphorylation associated with an arrest of photosynthesis in state 2 due to inactivation of TAP38 improves photosynthetic performance and plant growth under state 2-favoring light conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Pyruvate,orthophosphate (Pi) dikinase (PPDK) is best recognized as a chloroplastic C(4) cycle enzyme. As one of the key regulatory foci for controlling flux through this photosynthetic pathway, it is strictly and reversibly regulated by light. This light/dark modulation is mediated by reversible phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue in the active-site domain by the PPDK regulatory protein (RP), a bifunctional protein kinase/phosphatase. PPDK is also present in C(3) plants, although it has no known photosynthetic function. Nevertheless, in this report we show that C(3) PPDK in leaves of several angiosperms and in isolated intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts undergoes light-/dark-induced changes in phosphorylation state in a manner similar to C(4) dikinase. In addition, the kinetics of this process closely resemble the reversible C(4) process, with light-induced dephosphorylation occurring rapidly (< or =15 min) and dark-induced phosphorylation occurring much more slowly (> or =30-60 min). In intact spinach chloroplasts, light-induced dephosphorylation of C(3) PPDK was shown to be dependent on exogenous Pi and photosystem II activity but independent of electron transfer from photosystem I. These in organello results implicate a role for stromal pools of Pi and adenylates in regulating the reversible phosphorylation of C(3)-PPDK. Last, we used an in vitro RP assay to directly demonstrate ADP-dependent PPDK phosphorylation in desalted leaf extracts of the C(3) plants Vicia faba and rice (Oryza sativa). We conclude that an RP-like activity mediates the light/dark modulation of PPDK phosphorylation state in C(3) leaves and chloroplasts and likely represents the ancestral isoform of this unusual and key C(4) pathway regulatory "converter" enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Anticancer and antiviral D- and L-nucleoside analogs are phosphorylated stepwise in the cells to the pharmacologically active triphosphate metabolites. We recently reported that in the last step, L-deoxynucleoside analog diphosphates are phosphorylated by 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK). To explain the preference of PGK for L- over D-deoxynucleoside analog diphosphates, the kinetics of their phosphorylation were compared with the dephosphorylation of the respective triphosphates using recombinant human PGK. The results attributed favorable phosphorylation of L-deoxynucleoside analog diphosphates by PGK to differences in k(cat), which were consequences of varied orientations of the sugar and diphosphates in the catalytic site of PGK. The amino acids involved in the catalytic reaction of PGK (including Glu(344), Lys(220), and Asn(337)) were therefore mutated. The impact of mutations on the phosphorylation of L- and D-deoxynucleoside analog diphosphates was different from those on dephosphorylation of the respective triphosphates. This suggested that the interactions of the nucleoside analogs with amino acids during the transition state are different in the phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions. Thus, reversible action of the enzyme may not involve the same configuration of the active site. Furthermore, the amino acid determinants of the action of PGK for L-deoxynucleotides were not the same as for the D-deoxynucleotides. This study also suggests the potential impact of nucleoside analog diphosphates and triphosphates on the multiple cellular functions of PGK, which may contribute to the action of the analogs.  相似文献   

6.
A photoregulated reversible protein phosphorylation system controlled by the halobacterial rhodopsins was recently reported. The results presented in this paper identify the initial steps in the pathway from the absorption of light to the photoregulated protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions. Action spectrum, biochemical, and genetic analyses show that the proton pump bacteriorhodopsin mediates light-induced dephosphorylation of three photoregulated phosphoproteins. Light absorbed by bacteriorhodopsin is used to establish a proton efflux from the cells. The increase in the inwardly directed protonmotive force (pmf) from this efflux induces dephosphorylation of the three phosphoproteins, as demonstrated by the effects of the protonophore CCCP and of artificially imposed transmembrane pH gradients. Upon darkening the cells, cessation of the proton efflux through bacteriorhodopsin causes a decrease in pmf, which induces rephosphorylation of the proteins. Pmf appears to function as a regulator rather than a driving force in this system. Measurements of pmf-driven ATP synthesis in our conditions indicate the regulation of protein phosphorylation by pmf is probably not a consequence of proton flux through the H+ ATPase, a known energy coupling structure in these cells. The properties of this system may indicate the existence of a pmf detector which regulates kinase or phosphatase activity; i.e., a regulatory coupling device.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) was characterized in extracts from C4 mesophyll protoplasts isolated from Digitaria sanguinalis leaves and shown to display the structural, functional, and regulatory properties typical of a C4 PEPC. In situ increases in the apparent phosphorylation state of the enzyme and the activity of its Ca2+-independent protein-serine kinase were induced by light plus NH4Cl or methylamine. The photosynthesis-related metabolite 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PGA) was used as a substitute for the weak base in these experiments. The early effects of light plus the weak base or 3-PGA treatment were alkalinization of protoplast cytosolic pH, shown by fluorescence cytometry, and calcium mobilization from vacuoles, as suggested by the use of the calcium channel blockers TMB-8 and verapamil. The increases in PEPC kinase activity and the apparent phosphorylation state of PEPC also were blocked in situ by the electron transport and ATP synthesis inhibitors DCMU and gramicidin, respectively, the calcium/calmodulin antagonists W7, W5, and compound 48/80, and the cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. These results suggest that the production of ATP and/or NADPH by the illuminated mesophyll chloroplast is required for the activation of the transduction pathway, which presumably includes an upstream Ca2+-dependent protein kinase and a cytosolic protein synthesis event. The collective data support the view that the C4 PEPC light transduction pathway is contained entirely within the mesophyll cell and imply cross-talk between the mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in the form of the photosynthetic metabolite 3-PGA.  相似文献   

8.
beta-catenin is a multifunctional protein involved in cell-cell adhesion and the Wnt signaling pathway. beta-Catenin is activated upon its dephosphorylation, an event triggered by Dishevelled (Dvl)-mediated phosphorylation and deactivation of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta (GSK-3beta). In skeletal muscle, both insulin and exercise decrease GSK-3beta activity, and we tested the hypothesis that these two stimuli regulate beta-catenin. Immunoblotting demonstrated that Dvl, Axin, GSK-3beta, and beta-catenin proteins are expressed in rat red and white gastrocnemius muscles. Treadmill running exercise in vivo significantly decreased beta-catenin phosphorylation in both muscle types, with complete dephosphorylation being elicited by maximal exercise. beta-Catenin dephosphorylation was intensity dependent, as dephosphorylation was highly correlated with muscle glycogen depletion during exercise (r(2) = 0.84, P < 0.001). beta-Catenin dephosphorylation was accompanied by increases in GSK-3beta Ser(9) phosphorylation and Dvl-GSK-3beta association. In contrast to exercise, maximal insulin treatment (1 U/kg body wt) had no effect on skeletal muscle beta-catenin phosphorylation or Dvl-GSK-3beta interaction. In conclusion, exercise in vivo, but not insulin, increases the association between Dvl and GSK-3beta in skeletal muscle, an event paralleled by beta-catenin dephosphorylation.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the role of 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1) in the Akt1 phosphorylation state, wild-type (wt) PDK1 and its kinase dead (kd) mutant were expressed using an adenovirus gene transduction system in Chinese hamster ovary cells stably expressing insulin receptor. Immunoblotting using anti-phosphorylated Akt1 antibody revealed Thr-308 already to be maximally phosphorylated at 1 min but completely dephosphorylated at 5 min, with insulin stimulation, whereas insulin-induced Akt1 activation was maintained even after dephosphorylation of Thr-308. Overexpression of wt-PDK1 further increased insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of Thr-308, also followed by rapid dephosphorylation. The insulin-stimulated Akt1 activity was also enhanced by wt-PDK1 expression but was maintained even at 15 min. Thus, phosphorylation of Thr-308 is not essential for maintaining the Akt1 activity once it has been achieved. Interestingly, the insulin-stimulated phosphorylation state of Thr-308 was maintained even at 15 min in cells expressing kd-PDK1, suggesting that kd-PDK1 has a dominant negative effect on dephosphorylation of Thr-308 of Akt1. Calyculin A, an inhibitor of PP1 and PP2A, also prolonged the insulin-stimulated phosphorylation state of Thr-308. In addition, in vitro experiments revealed PP2A, but not PP1, to dephosphorylate completely Thr-308 of Akt1. These findings suggest that a novel pathway involving dephosphorylation of Akt1 at Thr-308 by a phosphatase, possibly PP2A, originally, identified as is regulated downstream from PDK1, an Akt1 kinase.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of proteins were investigated in guard-cell protoplasts from Vicia faba L. When guard-cell protoplasts were incubated with 32Pi in the dark for 80 min, several proteins, with molecular masses of 42, 40, 34, 32, 26, and 19 kD, were phosphorylated. Illumination of the dark-adapted protoplasts with red light caused dephosphorylation of the 26-kD protein, but there was no detectable change in levels of phosphorylation in other proteins. In the dephosphorylation of the 26-kD protein, far-red light of 730 nm was most effective, but when the light was turned off, the protein was phosphorylated to the original level within 10 min. Subcellular fractionation of guard-cell protoplasts indicated that the 26-kD protein was located in the chloroplast. The migration pattern of the 26-kD protein was exactly the same as the light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complex of photosystem II (LHCPII) from Vicia mesophyll cells on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The dephosphorylated 26-kD protein was phosphorylated by adding sodium hydrosulfite, a strong reducing agent, under the far-red illumination of guard-cell protoplasts. The magnitude of dephosphorylation by red light (660 nm) was increased by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, an electron transfer inhibitor of photosystem II (PSII). Light-induced dephosphorylation was inhibited by 1 nM okadaic acid, an inhibitor of serine/threonine protein phosphatase. From these results, it is concluded that the 26-kD protein is LHCPII and that LHCPII is present mostly in the phosphorylated form in the dark and is dephosphorylated by type 2A protein phosphatase under the light absorbed by photosystem I in Vicia guard-cell protoplasts.  相似文献   

11.
A Chu  C Sumbilla  G Inesi  S D Jay  K P Campbell 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):5899-5905
A systematic study of protein kinase activity and phosphorylation of membrane proteins by ATP was carried out with vesicular fragments of longitudinal tubules (light SR) and junctional terminal cisternae (JTC) derived from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Following incubation of JTC with ATP, a 170,000-Da glycoprotein, a 97,500-Da protein (glycogen phosphorylase), and a 55,000-60,000-Da doublet (containing calmodulin-dependent protein kinase subunit) underwent phosphorylation. Addition of calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ (with no added protein kinase) produced a 10-fold increase of phosphorylation involving numerous JTC proteins, including the large (approximately 450,000 Da) ryanodine receptor protein. Calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of the ryanodine receptor protein was unambiguously demonstrated by Western blot analysis. The specificity of these findings was demonstrated by much lower levels of calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation in light SR as compared to JTC, and by much lower cyclic AMP dependent kinase activity in both JTC and light SR. These observations indicate that the purified JTC contain membrane-bound calmodulin-dependent protein kinase that undergoes autophosphorylation and catalyzes phosphorylation of various membrane proteins. Protein dephosphorylation was very slow in the absence of added phosphatases, but was accelerated by the addition of phosphatase 1 and 2A (catalytic subunit) in the absence of Ca2+, and calcineurin in the presence of Ca2+. Therefore, in the muscle fiber, dephosphorylation of SR proteins relies on cytoplasmic phosphatases. No significant effect of protein phosphorylation was detected on the Ca2(+)-induced Ca2+ release exhibited by isolated JTC vesicles. However, the selective and prominent association of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and related substrates with junctional membranes, its Ca2+ sensitivity, and its close proximity to the ryanodine and dihydropyridine receptor Ca2+ channels suggest that this phosphorylation system is involved in regulation of functions linked to these structures.  相似文献   

12.
1. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase was purified to homogeneity, in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors, from rat liver sampled without freeze-clamping. The enzyme was in a highly phosphorylated state (4.8 mol/subunit) of low specific activity, and could be dramatically reactivated by treatment with protein phosphatase-2A. Amino acid sequencing and fast-atom-bombardment mass spectrometry showed that the enzyme was phosphorylated in Ser79, Ser1200 and Ser1215, the three sites known to be phosphorylated in cell-free assays by the AMP-activated protein kinase. 2. The inactive enzyme could also be completely reactivated using a limited treatment with trypsin, which removes the N-terminal segment containing Ser79 and reduces the phosphate content to 3.5 mol/subunit. These results strengthen previous findings that it is phosphorylation at Ser79 by the AMP-activated protein kinase that is responsible for the inactivation, and not the phosphorylation of the 220-kDa core fragment (which contains Ser1200 and Ser1215). 3. Analysis of the phosphorylation state of Ser79 in acetyl-CoA carboxylase from rat liver showed that phosphorylation occurs post mortem if freeze-clamping is not used. The higher phosphorylation observed in extracts made without freeze-clamping correlates with a large increase in AMP and decrease in ATP (presumably caused by hypoxia during removal of the liver), and with increased activity of the AMP-activated protein kinase. These results provide a rational explanation for the post mortem phosphorylation events, and re-emphasize the point that rapid cooling of cells and tissues is essential when measuring the expressed activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (as well as 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase). 4. Using the freeze-clamping procedure, the ratio of 'expressed' activity (measured in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors) to 'total' activity (measured after complete dephosphorylation) of rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase showed a marked diurnal rhythm, changing from 50% in the active form in the middle of the dark period to less than 10% active in the middle of the light period. The very low activity in the light period was associated with a high level of phosphorylation in Ser79. This diurnal rhythm is very similar to that previously described for the phosphorylation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, another substrate for the AMP-activated protein kinase. Neither the activity of the AMP-activated protein kinase nor the content of AMP, ADP or ATP changed between the dark or light periods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Reversible, light-dependent protein phosphorylation was observed in isolated thylakoid membranes of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301. A polypeptide of 15 kDa in particular was phosphorylated under plastoquinone-reducing conditions and was not phosphorylated under plastoquinone-oxidising conditions. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions involving this and several other membrane polypeptides showed sensitivity to inhibitors of protein kinases and phosphatases. Changes in phosphorylation state correlated with changes in low temperature fluorescence emission characteristic of changes in excitation energy distribution between the photosystems. The 15 kDa phosphopolypeptide is likely to be involved directly in light state adaptations in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

14.
Myosin light chain phosphorylation in intact rat thoracic aorta was elevated during contraction induced by 0.3 microM norepinephrine, but was not maintained. Addition of 0.5 microM sodium nitroprusside to norepinephrine treated rat aorta strips led to elevation of cyclic GMP levels, relaxation of tension, and dephosphorylation of myosin light chain. Depletion of extracellular calcium or addition of calmodulin antagonists trifluoperazine and W7 diminished the contraction and phosphorylation of myosin light chain by norepinephrine, but did not prevent dephosphorylation by sodium nitroprusside or the elevated levels of cyclic GMP. Isoproterenol, 8-bromo cyclic GMP, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP all caused dephosphorylation of myosin light chain and induced relaxation during the period of development of tone. Eight other proteins had increased phosphorylation following norepinephrine treatment and one protein had less phosphorylation. The different proteins phosphorylated by norepinephrine showed varying degrees of sensitivity to Ca2+-free solution and to the calmodulin antagonists. The pattern of protein phosphorylation caused by sodium nitroprusside was best mimicked by 8-bromo cyclic GMP, rather than isoproterenol and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. These proteins were, generally, unaffected by Ca2+-free solution and the calmodulin antagonists. The present observations support the hypothesis that vasodilators inhibit tone development through myosin light chain dephosphorylation. Furthermore, the nitrovasodilators act through elevation of cyclic GMP and phosphorylation of proteins by cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic studies of protein dephosphorylation in photosynthetic thylakoid membranes revealed specifically accelerated dephosphorylation of photosystem II (PSII) core proteins at elevated temperatures. Raising the temperature from 22 degrees C to 42 degrees C resulted in a more than 10-fold increase in the dephosphorylation rates of the PSII reaction center proteins D1 and D2 and of the chlorophyll a binding protein CP43 in isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea) thylakoids. In contrast the dephosphorylation rates of the light harvesting protein complex and the 9-kD protein of the PSII (PsbH) were accelerated only 2- to 3-fold. The use of a phospho-threonine antibody to measure in vivo phosphorylation levels in spinach leaves revealed a more than 20-fold acceleration in D1, D2, and CP43 dephosphorylation induced by abrupt elevation of temperature, but no increase in light harvesting protein complex dephosphorylation. This rapid dephosphorylation is catalyzed by a PSII-specific, intrinsic membrane protein phosphatase. Phosphatase assays, using intact thylakoids, solubilized membranes, and the isolated enzyme, revealed that the temperature-induced lateral migration of PSII to the stroma-exposed thylakoids only partially contributed to the rapid increase in the dephosphorylation rate. Significant activation of the phosphatase coincided with the temperature-induced release of TLP40 from the membrane into thylakoid lumen. TLP40 is a peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase, which acts as a regulatory subunit of the membrane phosphatase. Thus dissociation of TLP40 caused by an abrupt elevation in temperature and activation of the membrane protein phosphatase are suggested to trigger accelerated repair of photodamaged PSII and to operate as possible early signals initiating other heat shock responses in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

16.
In frog photoreceptor membranes, light induces a dephosphorylation of two small proteins and a phosphorylation of rhodopsin. The level of phosphorylation of the two small proteins is influenced by cyclic GMP. Measurement of their phosphorylation as a function of cyclic GMP concentration shows fivefold stimulation as cyclic GMP is increased from 10(-5) to 10(-3) M. This includes the concentration range over which light activation of a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase causes cyclic GMP levels to fall in vivo. Cyclic AMP does not affect the phosphorylations. Calcium ions inhibit the phosphorylation reactions. Calcium inhibits the cyclic GMP-stimulated phosphorylation of the small proteins as its concentration is increased from 10(-6) to 10(-3) M, with maximal inhibition of 70% being observed. Rhodopsin phosphorylation is not stimulated by cyclic nucleotides, but is inhibited by calcium, with 50% inhibition being observed as the Ca++ concentration is increased from 10(-9) to 10(-3) M. A nucleotide binding site appears to regulate rhodopsin phosphorylation. Several properties of the rhodopsin phosphorylation suggest that it does not play a role in a rapid ATP-dependent regulation of the cyclic GMP pathway. Calcium inhibition of protein phosphorylation is a distinctive feature of this system, and it is suggested that Ca++ regulation of protein phosphorylation plays a role in the visual adaptation process. Furthermore, the data provide support for the idea that calcium and cyclic GMP pathways interact in regulating the light-sensitive conductance.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of insulin on the state of phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase, cellular cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity and lipolysis was investigated in isolated adipocytes. Increased phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase in response to isoproterenol stimulation was closely paralleled by increased lipolysis. Maximal phosphorylation and lipolysis was obtained when the cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratio was greater than or equal to 0.1, and this corresponded to a 50% increase in the state of phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase. Insulin (1 nM) reduced cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity and also reduced lipolysis with both cAMP-dependent and cAMP-independent antilipolytic effects up to an activity ratio of approximately 0.4, above which the antilipolytic effect was lost. Insulin caused a decrease in the state of phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase at all levels of cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Under basal conditions, with cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity at a minimum, this reflected a dephosphorylation of the basal phosphorylation site of hormone-sensitive lipase in a manner not mediated by cAMP. When the cAMP-dependent protein kinase was stimulated to phosphorylate the regulatory phosphorylation site of hormone-sensitive lipase, the insulin-induced dephosphorylation occurred both at the basal and regulatory sites. At low levels of cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratios (0.05-0.1), dephosphorylation of the regulatory site correlated with reduced cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity, but not at higher activity ratios (greater than 0.1). Stimulation of cells with isoproterenol produced a transient (1-5 min) peak of cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity and of phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase. The state of phosphorylation also showed a transient peak when the protein kinase was maximally and constantly activated. In the presence of raised levels of cellular cAMP, insulin (1 nM) caused a rapid (t1/2 approximately 1 min) dephosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase. In unstimulated cells the reduction in phosphorylation caused by insulin was distinctly slower (t1/2 approximately 5 min). These findings are interpreted to suggest that insulin affects the state of phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase and lipolysis through a cAMP-dependent pathway, involving reduction of cAMP, and through a cAMP-independent pathway, involving activation of a protein phosphatase activity that dephosphorylates both the regulatory and basal phosphorylation sites of hormone-sensitive lipase.  相似文献   

18.
The rate of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of smooth muscle myosin by myosin light chain kinase and by two myosin light chain phosphatases (gizzard phosphatase IV and aorta phosphatase) are measured in various conditions; the relationship between the rate of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of myosin and the myosin conformation is also studied. The rate of dephosphorylation of myosin was completely inhibited in the presence of 1 mM MgCl2 and ATP at low ionic strength where phosphorylated myosin forms a folded conformation. The inhibition was released when myosin formed either an extended monomer or filaments. The rate of phosphorylation of myosin was also affected by the conformation of myosin. The rate for a folded myosin was slower than those for an extended monomer and filamentous myosin. The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of heavy meromyosin, subfragment-1, and the isolated 20,000-dalton light chain are not inhibited at low ionic strength, and the rate of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation was decreased with increasing ionic strength. KCl dependence of the rate of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of myosin was normalized by using KCl dependence of subfragment-1, and it was found that the marked inhibition of the rate of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of myosin is closely related to the change from an extended to a folded conformation of myosin.  相似文献   

19.
Environmental light information such as quality, intensity, and duration in red (approximately 660 nm) and far-red (approximately 730 nm) wavelengths is perceived by phytochrome photoreceptors in plants, critically influencing almost all developmental strategies from germination to flowering. Phytochromes interconvert between red light-absorbing Pr and biologically functional far-red light-absorbing Pfr forms. To ensure optimal photoresponses in plants, the flux of light signal from Pfr-phytochromes should be tightly controlled. Phytochromes are phosphorylated at specific serine residues. We found that a type 5 protein phosphatase (PAPP5) specifically dephosphorylates biologically active Pfr-phytochromes and enhances phytochrome-mediated photoresponses. Depending on the specific serine residues dephosphorylated by PAPP5, phytochrome stability and affinity for a downstream signal transducer, NDPK2, were enhanced. Thus, phytochrome photoreceptors have developed an elaborate biochemical tuning mechanism for modulating the flux of light signal, employing variable phosphorylation states controlled by phosphorylation and PAPP5-mediated dephosphorylation as a mean to control phytochrome stability and affinity for downstream transducers.  相似文献   

20.
It is now well-established that phosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton light chain of smooth muscle myosin (LC20) is a prerequisite for muscle contraction. However, the relationship between myosin dephosphorylation and muscle relaxation remains controversial. In the present study, we utilized a highly purified catalytic subunit of a type-2, skeletal muscle phosphoprotein phosphatase (protein phosphatase 2A) and a glycerinated smooth muscle preparation to determine if myosin dephosphorylation, in the presence of saturating calcium and calmodulin, would cause relaxation of contracted uterine smooth muscle. Addition of the phosphatase catalytic subunit (0.28 microM) to the muscle bath produced complete relaxation of the muscle. The phosphatase-induced relaxation could be reversed by adding to the muscle bath either purified, thiophosphorylated, chicken gizzard 20,000-dalton myosin light chains or purified, chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase. Incubation of skinned muscles with adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) prior to the addition of phosphatase resulted in the incorporation of 0.93 mol of PO4/mol of LC20 and prevented phosphatase-induced relaxation. Under all of the above conditions, changes in steady-state isometric force were associated with parallel changes in myosin light chain phosphorylation over a range of phosphorylation extending from 0.01 to 0.97 mol of PO4/mol of LC20. We found no evidence that dephosphorylation of contracted uterine smooth muscles, in the presence of calcium and calmodulin, could produce a latch-state where isometric force was maintained in the absence of myosin light chain phosphorylation. These results show that phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton myosin light chain is adequate for the regulation of contraction or relaxation, respectively, in glycerinated uterine smooth muscle.  相似文献   

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