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1.
Calcineurin A was purified by calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography from Sf9 cells infected with recombinant baculovirus containing the cDNA of a rat calcineurin A isoform. The Sf9-expressed calcineurin A has a low basal phosphatase activity in the presence of EDTA (0.9 nmol/min/mg) which is stimulated 3-5-fold by Mn2+. Calmodulin increased the Mn2+ stimulated activity 3-5-fold. Bovine brain calcineurin B increased the A subunit activity 10-15-fold, and calmodulin further stimulated the activity of reconstituted A and B subunits 10-15-fold (644 nmol/min/mg). The Km of calcineurin A for 32P-RII pep (a peptide substrate (DLDVPIPGRFDRRVSVAAE) for CaN), was 111 microM with or without calmodulin, and calmodulin increased the Vmax about 4-fold. The Km of reconstituted calcineurin A plus B for 32P-RII pep was 20 microM, and calmodulin increased the Vmax 18-fold without affecting the Km. CaN A467-492, a synthetic autoinhibitory peptide (ITSFEEAKGLDRINERMPPRRDAMP) from calcineurin, inhibited the Mn2+/calmodulin-stimulated activities of the reconstituted enzyme and the A subunit with IC50's of 25 microM and 90 microM, respectively. The reconstitution of the phosphatase activity of an expressed isoform of calcineurin A by purified B subunit and calmodulin may facilitate comparative studies of the regulation of calcineurin A activity by the B subunit and calmodulin.  相似文献   

2.
Calcineurin was dissociated into subunits A and B by 6 M urea in the presence (method A) and absence (method B) of MnCl2 and dissociated subunits were isolated by gel filtration in urea in the absence (method B) or presence (method A) of MnCl2. Phosphatase activity was associated with the A subunit isolated by either method. The phosphatase activity (nmol/mg) of subunit A isolated by method A was greater (2-5-fold) than by method B. Mn2+ increased subunit A phosphatase and calmodulin further increased the enzyme activity. Subunit B isolated by method A or B increased Mn2+ + calmodulin stimulated subunit A phosphatase prepared by method B but interestingly and unexpectedly inhibited such stimulated activity of the subunit A prepared by method A. These results imply the tightly bound cation (in our case, most likely Mn2+) with subunit A dramatically and differentially influences the effects of two Ca2+-binding proteins, calmodulin and subunit B, on the subunit A phosphatase.  相似文献   

3.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-stimulated phosphatase from bovine brain, was hydrolyzed by calpain I from human erythrocytes. In the absence of calmodulin, calpain rapidly transformed the 60-kilodalton (kDa) catalytic subunit of calcineurin into a transient 57-kDa fragment and thereafter a 43-kDa limit fragment. In the presence of calmodulin, the 60-kDa subunit was sequentially proteolyzed to a 55-kDa fragment and then a 49-kDa fragment. Upon proteolysis in the absence or presence of calmodulin, the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity (assayed in the presence of calmodulin) was increased by 300%. The 43- and the 49-kDa fragments were found to (i) remain associated with the small subunit (17 kDa), (ii) have lost the ability to bind and to be activated by calmodulin, and (iii) have phosphatase activity that was still stimulated by Mn2+ or Ni2+. The 43- + 17-kDa form had similar Km values for various substrates, but the Vmax values were increased compared with the native enzyme. It is proposed that (i) a 43-kDa core segment of the 60-kDa subunit of calcineurin contained the catalytic domain, the small subunit-binding domain, and the metal ion (Mn2+ and (or) Ni2+) binding site; and (ii) two distinct types of inhibitory domains exist near the end(s) of the large subunit, one of which is calmodulin regulated, while the other is calmodulin independent.  相似文献   

4.
It has been suggested that calcineurin, a calmodulin-stimulated phosphatase, may exist in different metal ion-dependent conformational states (Pallen, C.J., and Wang, J. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6134-6141). Evidence in favor of this hypothesis comes from studies involving a monoclonal antibody, VA1, which is specific for the small (beta) subunit of calcineurin. This antibody inhibits Ni2+-stimulated but not Mn2+-stimulated phosphatase activity against p-nitrophenyl phosphate and phosphorylase kinase. Inhibition is not due to competition of the antibody with substrate or to interference with metal ion binding to the enzyme. Complex formation between the antibody and calcineurin can be demonstrated either in the presence of Mn2+ or Ni2+ or in the absence of metal ion activators. These results indicate that the active conformational states of calcineurin are metal ion dependent, that the monoclonal antibody VA1 affects the Ni2+-induced conformational change of the enzyme, and that the beta subunit of calcineurin plays a critical role in the expression of Ni2+-stimulated phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-regulated phosphatase, is composed of two distinct subunits (A and B) and requires certain metal ions for activity. The binding of the two most potent activators, Ni2+ and Mn2+, to calcineurin and its subunits has been studied. Incubation of the protein with 63Ni2+ (or 54Mn2+) followed by gel filtration to separate free and protein-bound ions indicated that calcineurin could maximally bind 2 mol/mol of Ni2+ or Mn2+. While isolated A subunit also bound 2 mol/mol of Ni2+, no Mn2+ binding was demonstrated for either isolated A or B subunit. When bindings were monitored by nitrocellulose filter assay, only 1 mol/mol bound Ni2+ or Mn2+ was detected, suggesting that the two Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding sites had different relative affinities and that only metal ions bound at the higher affinity sites were detected by the filter assay. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding by only 30%. Preincubation of the protein with Zn2+ decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ or Mn2+ binding by 90 or 17%, respectively. The results suggest that the higher affinity sites are a Ni2+-specific site and a distinct Mn2+-specific site. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the gel filtration-determined Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding from 2 to 1 mol/mol suggesting that calcineurin also contains a site which binds either metal ion. The time course of Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding was correlated with that of the enzyme activation, and the extent of deactivation of the Ni2+-activated calcineurin by EDTA or by incubation with Ca2+ and calmodulin (Pallen, C. J., and Wang, J. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6134-6141) was correlated with the release of the bound ions, thus suggesting that the bound ion is directly responsible for enzyme activation.  相似文献   

6.
Many functions of endothelial cells are Ca(2+)/calmodulin dependent, whereas the role of calmodulin in the regulation of cytosolic Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) remains largely unexplained. In the present study, effects of various calmodulin antagonists on [Ca(2+)](i) were investigated in cultured aortic endothelial cells loaded with the Ca(2+)-sensitive dye fura-2/AM, and were compared with those of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) inhibitors. The calmodulin antagonists W-7, calmidazolium and fendiline provoked dose-dependent increases in [Ca(2+)](i). However, the CaM kinase II inhibitors KN-93 and lavendustin C had no effect on [Ca(2+)](i). In the absence of extracellular Ca(2+), pretreatment of cells with bradykinin (BK) and thapsigargin completely prevented W-7-stimulated increase in [Ca(2+)](i). Alternatively, pretreatment with W-7 also completely blocked BK- and thapsigargin-stimulated increases in [Ca(2+)](i). The time course of the Ca(2+)-response in W-7 treated cells was identical to that in thapsigargin-treated cells, but not that in BK-stimulated cells, suggesting that calmodulin antagonists could share a common signaling pathway with thapsigargin to increase [Ca(2+)](i) in endothelial cells. These findings indicate that calmodulin is involved in the regulation of [Ca(2+)](i), and may play an important role in the uptake of Ca(2+) to intracellular stores.  相似文献   

7.
Calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase (CaM-PPase) was isolated from bovine parotid gland by sequential application of DEAE-52, Affi-gel blue and calmodulin-affinity chromatography followed by gel filtration and high performance liquid chromatography. The enzyme was activated in the simultaneous presence of Ni2+ or Mn2+ and Ca2+ plus calmodulin. Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent activation of CaM-PPase was antagonized by inhibitors of calmodulin action, such as W-7 and trifluoperazine. Tryptophan fluorescence was quenched in the presence of Ni2+. CaM-PPase was a heterodimer. The molecular weights of large subunits which bound calmodulin (CaM) were 68 kD and 58 kD - the 68 kD subunit was predominant. Polyclonal antibodies against bovine calcineurin cross-reacted with both types of larger subunits. Using polyclonal antibodies against bovine calcineurin or the monoclonal antibody against subunit B of bovine calcineurin, the smaller molecular weight subunit (19 kD) was found to be immunologically identical to subunit B of bovine calcineurin. In bovine parotid gland, CaM-PPase was found both in acinar and duct cells.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of two different classes of calmodulin antagonists on the catalytic activities of purified pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) phosphatase and PDH complex (PDC) were studied. In general, PDH phosphatase was more strongly inhibited than PDC by the calmodulin antagonists with the following potency order: fluphenazine > chlorpromazine > thioridazine > triflupromazine. Promazine and two sulfonamides (W-5 and W-7) did not suppress PDH phosphatase activity at 1 mM concentrations, while about 20% of PDC activity was inhibited by these antagonists. Fluphenazine-mediated inhibition of PDH phosphatase was observed with the purified PDC as well as intact mitochondria. Although Ca2+ stimulates PDH phosphatase activity, the addition of exogenous Ca2+ did not overcome the inhibition by calmodulin antagonists. These results suggest that the suppression of PDH phosphatase activity is dependent upon the structure of the individual calmodulin antagonist and appears to be Ca(2+)-independent. Kinetic analysis showed a noncompetitive inhibition of PDH phosphatase by fluphenazine, indicating that it binds to different site(s) from the catalytic site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
In this work we report an unusual pattern of activation by calmodulin on the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase from basolateral membranes of kidney proximal tubule cells. The activity of the ATPase depleted of calmodulin is characterized by a high Ca2+ affinity (Km = 2.2-3.4 microM) and a biphasic dependence on ATP concentration. The preparation responded to the addition of calmodulin by giving rise to a new Ca2+ site of very high affinity (Km less than 0.05 microM). Calmodulin antagonists had diverse effects on ATPase activity. Compound 48/80 inhibited calmodulin-stimulated activity by 70%, whereas calmidazolium did not modify this component. In the absence of calmodulin, 48/80 still acted as an antagonist, increasing the Km for Ca2+ to 5.7 microM and reducing enzyme turnover by competing with ATP at the low affinity regulatory site. Calmidazolium did not affect Ca2+ affinity, but it did displace ATP from the regulatory site. At fixed Ca2+ (30 microM) and ATP (5 mM) concentrations, Pi protected against 48/80 and potentiated inhibition by calmidazolium. At 25 microM ATP, Pi protected against calmidazolium inhibition. We propose that the effects of ATP and Pi arise because binding of the drugs to the ATPase occurs mainly on the E2 forms.  相似文献   

10.
Calcineurin was dissociated into subunits A and B by SDS and the dissociated subunits were separated by Sephadex G-100 column chromatography in SDS. The phosphatase activity was associated with the A subunit and was detected only in the presence of MnCl2 of the various divalent cations tested. The Mn2+-dependent phosphatase of A subunit was stimulated (4-5-fold) by calmodulin. The subunit B increased only modestly Mn2+ stimulated phosphatase activity of subunit A but markedly increased it when assay also contained calmodulin. These results support the view that subunit B plays an important role in Mn2+/calmodulin regulation of subunit A phosphatase activity. They also lend further support to our earlier postulate ([1984] FEBS Lett. 169, 251-255) that Mn2+ is a powerful regulator of calcineurin phosphatase.  相似文献   

11.
Calcineurin (CN) is a Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein serine/threonine phosphatase that contains Zn(2+) in its catalytic domain and can be stimulated by divalent ions such as Mn(2+) and Ni(2+). In this study, the role of exogenous Zn(2+) in the regulation of CN activity and its relevance to the role of Ni(2+) was investigated. Zn(2+) at a concentration range of 10nM-10 micro M inhibited Ni(2+)-stimulated CN-activity in vitro in a dose-dependent manner and approximately 50% inhibition was attained with 0.25 micro M Zn(2+). Kinetic analysis showed that Zn(2+) inhibited the activity of CN by competing with Ni(2+). Interaction of CN and CaM was not inhibited with Zn(2+) at 10 micro M. Zn(2+) never affected the activity of cAMP phosphodiesterase 1 or myosin light-chain kinase (CaM-dependent enzymes) and rather activated alkaline phosphatase. The present results indicate that Zn(2+) should be a potent inhibitor for CN activity although this ion is essential for CN.  相似文献   

12.
The treatment of H4-IIE cells (an immortalised liver cell line derived from the Reuber rat hepatoma) with thapsigargin, 2, 5-di-(tert-butyl)-1,4-benzohydroquinone, cyclopiazonic acid, or pretreatment with EGTA, stimulated Ca(2+) inflow (assayed using intracellular fluo-3 and a Ca(2+) add-back protocol). No stimulation of Mn(2+) inflow by thapsigargin was detected. Thapsigargin-stimulated Ca(2+) inflow was inhibited by Gd(3+) (maximal inhibition at 2 microM Gd(3+)), the imidazole derivative SK&F 96365, and by relatively high concentrations of the voltage-operated Ca(2+) channel antagonists, verapamil, nifedipine, nicardipine and the novel dihydropyridine analogues AN406 and AN1043. The calmodulin antagonists W7, W13 and calmidazolium also inhibited thapsigargin-induced Ca(2+) inflow and release of Ca(2+) from intracellular stores. No inhibition of either Ca(2+) inflow or Ca(2+) release was observed with calmodulin antagonist KN62. Substantial inhibition of Ca(2+) inflow by calmidazolium was only observed when the inhibitor was added before thapsigargin. Pretreatment of H4-IIE cells with pertussis toxin, or treatment with brefeldin A, did not inhibit thapsigargin-stimulated Ca(2+) inflow. Compared with freshly isolated rat hepatocytes, H4-IIE cells exhibited a more diffuse actin cytoskeleton, and a more granular arrangement of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In contrast to freshly isolated hepatocytes, the arrangement of the ER in H4-IIE cells was not affected by pertussis toxin treatment. Western blot analysis of lysates of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes revealed two forms of G(i2(alpha)) with apparent molecular weights of 41 and 43 kDa. Analysis of H4-IIE cell lysates showed only the 41 kDa form of G(i2(alpha)) and substantially less total G(i2(alpha)) than that present in rat hepatocytes. It is concluded that H4-IIE cells possess store-operated Ca(2+) channels which do not require calmodulin for activation and exhibit properties similar to those in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes, including susceptibility to inhibition by relatively high concentrations of voltage-operated Ca(2+) channel antagonists. In contrast to rat hepatocytes, SOCs in H4-IIE cells do not require G(i2(alpha)) for activation. Possible explanations for differences in the requirement for G(i2(alpha)) in the activation of Ca(2+) inflow are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Human erythrocyte Mn(2+)-dependent (C'A') and -independent (CA) protein-serine/threonine phosphatase (PP) 2A are composed of 34-kDa catalytic C' and C subunits, in which the metal dependency resides, and 63-kDa regulatory A' and A subunits, respectively. Each catalytic and regulatory subunit gave the same V8- and papain-peptide maps, respectively. Stoichiometric zinc and substoichiometric iron were detected in CA but not in C'A' [Nishito et al. (1999) FEBS Lett. 447, 29-33]. The Mn(2+)-dependent protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity of C'A' was about 70-fold higher than that of CA. Pre-incubation of CA with 25 mM NaF changed CA to a Mn(2+)-dependent form with higher PTP activity. The same NaF treatment had no effect on C'A'. Pre-incubation of C'A' with ZnCl(2), zinc-metallothionein, or FeCl(2) activated the Mn(2+)-independent PP activity, but pre-incubation with FeCl(3) did not. Ascorbate in the pre-incubation and assay mixture significantly stimulated the effect of FeCl(2). Pre-incubation of C'A' with 5 microM ZnCl(2) and 15 microM FeCl(2) in the presence of 1 mM ascorbate synergistically stimulated the Mn(2+)-independent PP activity, with concomitant suppression of the Mn(2+)-dependent PP and PTP activities. The PP and PTP activities of CA were unaffected by the same zinc and/or iron treatment. Micromolar concentrations of vanadate strongly inhibited the Mn(2+)-dependent PP activity of C'A' but only slightly inhibited the PP activity of CA. Using the distinct effect of vanadate as an indicator, the interconversion between CA and C'A' with the above mentioned treatments was proved. These results support the notion that Mn(2+)-independent CA is a Zn(2+)- and Fe(2+)-metalloenzyme, whose apoenzyme is Mn(2+)-dependent C'A'.  相似文献   

14.
Calcineurin is a Ca(2+) and calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase with diverse cellular functions. Here we examined the physical and functional interactions between calcineurin and ryanodine receptor (RyR) in a C2C12 cell line derived from mouse skeletal muscle. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed that the association between RyR and calcineurin exhibits a strong Ca(2+) dependence. This association involves a Ca(2+) dependent interaction between calcineurin and FK506-binding protein (FKBP12), an accessory subunit of RyR. Pretreatment with cyclosporin A, an inhibitor of calcineurin, enhanced the caffeine-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR) in C2C12 cells. This effect was similar to those of FK506 and rapamycin, two drugs known to cause dissociation of FKBP12 from RyR. Overexpression of a constitutively active form of calcineurin in C2C12 cells, DeltaCnA(391-521) (deletion of the last 131 amino acids from calcineurin), resulted in a decrease in CICR. This decrease in CICR activity was partially recovered by pretreatment with cyclosporin A. Furthermore, overexpression of an endogenous calcineurin inhibitor (cain) or an inactive form of calcineurin (DeltaCnA(H101Q)) in C2C12 cells resulted in up-regulation of CICR. Taken together, our data suggest that a trimeric-interaction among calcineurin, FKBP12, and RyR is important for the regulation of the RyR channel activity and may play an important role in the Ca(2+) signaling of muscle contraction and relaxation.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Calcineurin was dicovered as an inhibitor of calmodulin stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and its ability to act as a calmodulin binding protein largely explains its inhibitory action on calmodulin regulated enzymes. Recent studies establish calcineurin as the enzyme protein phosphatase whose activity is regulated by calmodulin and a variety of divalent metals. In this work, we have investigated the effects of several agents including sulfhydryl agents, trifluoperazine (a calmodulin antagonist), PPi, NaF and orthovanadate and of tryptic proteolysis on the calcineurin inhibition of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (called inhibitory activity) and on protein phosphatase activity. Inhibitors for sulfhydryl groups (pHMB, NEM) inhibited phosphatase activity without any effect on the inhibitory activity. Dithioerythritol completely reversed the inhibition by pHMB. Limited proteolysis of calcineurin caused an activation of basal phosphatase activity with a complete loss of inhibitory activity. Phosphatase activity of the proteolyzed calcineurin was not stimulated by calmodulin. The presence of calmodulin along with calcineurin during tryptic digestion appeared to preserve the stimulation of phosphatase by Ca2+-calmodulin. [3H]-Trifluoperazine (TFP) was found to be incorporated irreversibly into calcineurin in the presence of ultraviolet light. This incorporation was evident into the A and B subunits of calcineurin. TFP-caused a decrease in the phosphatase activity and an increase in its inhibitory activity. [3H]-TFP incorporation into the A subunit was drastically decreased in the proteolyzed calcineurin. This was also true when the [3H]-TFP incorporated calcineurin was subjected to tryptic proteolysis. The incorporation into the B unit was essentially unaffected in the trypsinized calcineurin. Phosphatase activity was inhibited by orthovanadate, NaF, PPi, and EDTA. Inhibitions by these compounds were more pronounced when the phosphatase was determined in the presence of Ca2+-cahnodulin than in their absence.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: The nervous tissue-specific protein B-50 (GAP-43), which has been implicated in the regulation of neurotransmitter release, is a member of a family of atypical calmodulin-binding proteins. To investigate to what extent calmodulin and the interaction between B-50 and calmodulin are involved in the mechanism of Ca2+-induced noradrenaline release, we introduced polyclonal anti-calmodulin antibodies, calmodulin, and the calmodulin antagonists trifluoperazine, W-7, calmidazolium, and polymyxin B into streptolysin-O-permeated synaptosomes prepared from rat cerebral cortex. Anti-calmodulin antibodies, which inhibited Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II autophosphorylation and calcineurin phosphatase activity, decreased Ca2+-induced noradrenaline release from permeated synaptosomes. Exogenous calmodulin failed to modulate release, indicating that if calmodulin is required for vesicle fusion it is still present in sufficient amounts in permeated synaptosomes. Although trifluoperazine, W-7, and calmidazolium inhibited Ca2+-induced release, they also strongly increased basal release. Polymyxin B potently inhibited Ca2+-induced noradrenaline release without affecting basal release. It is interesting that polymyxin B was also the only antagonist affecting the interaction between B-50 and calmodulin, thus lending further support to the hypothesis that B-50 serves as a local Ca2+-sensitive calmodulin store underneath the plasma membrane in the mechanism of neurotransmitter release. We conclude that calmodulin plays an important role in vesicular noradrenaline release, probably by activating Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzymes involved in the regulation of one or more steps in the release mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Calcineurin purified from bovine brain was found to be active towards beta-naphthyl phosphate greater than p-nitrophenyl phosphate greater than alpha-naphthyl phosphate much greater than phosphotyrosine. In its native state, calcineurin shows little activity. It requires the synergistic action of Ca2+, calmodulin, and Mg2+ for maximum activation. Ca2+ and Ca2+ X calmodulin exert their activating effects by transforming the enzyme into a potentially active form which requires Mg2+ to express the full activity. Ni2+, Mn2+, and Co2+, but not Ca2+ or Zn2+, can substitute for Mg2+. The pH optimum, and the Vm and Km values of the phosphatase reaction are characteristics of the divalent cation cofactor. Ca2+ plus calmodulin increases the Vm in the presence of a given divalent cation, but has little effect on the Km for p-nitrophenyl phosphate. The activating effects of Mg2+ are different from those of the transition metal ions in terms of effects on Km, Vm, pH optimum of the phosphatase reaction and their affinity for calcineurin. Based on the Vm values determined in their respective optimum conditions, the order of effectiveness is: Mg2+ greater than or equal to Ni2+ greater than Mn2+ much greater than Co2+. The catalytic properties of calcineurin are markedly similar to those of p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity associated with protein phosphatase 3C and with its catalytic subunit of Mr = 35,000, suggesting that there are common features in the catalytic sites of these two different classes of phosphatase.  相似文献   

18.
It has been proposed that alcohols and anesthetics selectively inhibit proteins containing easily disrupted motifs, e.g., alpha-helices. In this study, the calcineurin/calmodulin/Ca(2+) enzyme system was used to examine the effects of alcohols on calmodulin, a protein with a predominantly alpha-helical structure. Calcineurin phosphatase activity and Ca(2+) binding were monitored as indicators of calmodulin function. Alcohols inhibited enzyme activity in a concentration-dependent manner, with two-, four- and five-carbon n-alcohols exhibiting similar leftward shifts in the inhibition curves for calmodulin-dependent and -independent activities; the former was slightly more sensitive than the latter. Ca(2+) binding was measured by flow dialysis as a direct measure of calmodulin function, whereas, with the addition of a binding domain peptide, measured calmodulin-target interactions. Ethanol increased the affinity of calmodulin for Ca(2+) in the presence and absence of the peptide, indicating that ethanol stabilizes the Ca(2+) bound form of calmodulin. An increase in Ca(2+) affinity was detected in a calmodulin binding assay, but the affinity of calmodulin for calcineurin decreased at saturating Ca(2+). These data demonstrate that although specific regions within proteins may be more sensitive to alcohols and anesthetics, the presence of alpha-helices is unlikely to be a reliable indicator of alcohol or anesthetic potency.  相似文献   

19.
Excitotoxic cell death (ECD) is characteristic of mammalian brain following min of anoxia, but is not observed in the western painted turtle following days to months without oxygen. A key event in ECD is a massive increase in intracellular Ca(2+) by over-stimulation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs). The turtle's anoxia tolerance may involve the prevention of ECD by attenuating NMDAR-induced Ca(2+) influx. The goal of this study was to determine if protein phosphatases (PPs) and intracellular calcium mediate reductions in turtle cortical neuron whole-cell NMDAR currents during anoxia, thereby preventing ECD. Whole-cell NMDAR currents did not change during 80 min of normoxia, but decreased 56% during 40 min of anoxia. Okadaic acid and calyculin A, inhibitors of serine/threonine PP1 and PP2A, potentiated NMDAR currents during normoxia and prevented anoxia-mediated attenuation of NMDAR currents. Decreases in NMDAR activity during anoxia were also abolished by inclusion of the Ca(2+) chelator -- BAPTA and the calmodulin inhibitor -- calmidazolium. However, cypermethrin, an inhibitor of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent PP2B (calcineurin), abolished the anoxic decrease in NMDAR activity at 20, but not 40 min suggesting that this phosphatase might play an early role in attenuating NMDAR activity during anoxia. Our results show that PPs, Ca(2+) and calmodulin play an important role in decreasing NMDAR activity during anoxia in the turtle cortex. We offer a novel mechanism describing this attenuation in which PP1 and 2A dephosphorylate the NMDAR (NR1 subunit) followed by calmodulin binding, a subsequent dissociation of alpha-actinin-2 from the NR1 subunit, and a decrease in NMDAR activity.  相似文献   

20.
This study describes a novel mode of activation for the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase calcineurin. Using purified calcineurin from Dictyostelium discoideum we found a reversible, Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent activation by the long chain unsaturated fatty acids arachidonic acid, linoleic acid, and oleic acid, which was of the same magnitude as activation by Ca(2+)/calmodulin. Half-maximal stimulation of calcineurin occurred at fatty acid concentrations of approximately 10 microM with either p-nitrophenyl phosphate or RII phosphopeptide as substrates. The methyl ester of arachidonic acid and the saturated fatty acids palmitic acid and arachidic acid did not activate calcineurin. The activation was shown to be independent of the regulatory subunit, calcineurin B. Activation by Ca(2+)/calmodulin and fatty acids was not additive. In binding assays with immobilized calmodulin, arachidonic acid inhibited binding of calcineurin to calmodulin. Therefore fatty acids appear to mimic Ca(2+)/calmodulin action by binding to the calmodulin-binding site.  相似文献   

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