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1.
The effects of Mn2+ and calmodulin were studied on the basal and agonist-modulated adenylate cyclase activity of the guinea pig superior cervical ganglion. The divalent cation strongly stimulates the basal and agonist-modulated enzyme in a concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, in the presence of Mn2+ the inhibitory effects of high GTP concentrations and of D-Ala2-Met-enkephalinamide on adenylate cyclase are eliminated, while the stimulation exerted by prostaglandin E2 and the supra-additive activation of the enzyme by the combination of the two drugs are unaffected. In EGTA-washed, calmodulin-depleted membrane preparations, Mn2+ still activates the cyclase but the enkephalin inhibition and the superactivation of the enzyme induced by the combination of opiate and prostaglandin are lost, both in the absence and in the presence of the cation. Reconstituting the depleted membranes with exogenous Ca2+/calmodulin fully restored the enzyme responsivity to the combination and, partially, to the enkephalin. The findings suggest the existence in the guinea pig superior cervical ganglion of both the calmodulin-sensitive and differently regulated calmodulin-insensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

2.
Crude membrane fractions, obtained from superior cervical ganglia of normal and sympathectomized guinea-pigs, have been used to investigate the role of prostaglandin E2 andd-ala2-met-enkephalinamide in the modulation of ganglionic adenylate cyclase as well as their functional interrelationship. In ganglia from normal animals the enzyme activity was stimulated and inhibited, respectively, by the prostaglandin (10–4M) and by the opiate pentapeptide (10–4M), while little or no effects were observed in denervated preparations. When the two substances were tested in combination, a supra-additive stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity was obtained both in normal and denervated ganglia. In the latter preparation the opiate increased prostaglandin E2 specific binding, suggesting that the mechanism of supra-additivity could involve interactions at receptors level. Furthermore, the supra-additive stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity by the combination of the two drugs was obtained in a narrow range of concentrations since at low prostaglandin E2 doses (10–7–10–6M) or at very high doses of the opiate (10–3M), only the inhibitory effect ofd-ala2-met-enkephalinamide was evidenced.  相似文献   

3.
Agonists modulation of Mg2+-dependent adenylate cyclase activity has been studied in guinea-pig superior cervical ganglion crude membrane preparations. In the absence of receptors ligands, Mg2+ stimulates the enzyme in a concentration-dependent manner. The dose-activation curve shows heterogeneity and two components with higher and lower apparent affinity states, are extrapolated. In the presence ofD-Ala2-met-enkephalinamide only one component is present and the apparent affinity of the ganglionic adenylate cyclase system for the divalent cation as well as Vmax are inhibited. On the contrary, prostaglandin E2 increases affinity and Vmax values of the lower and, to a lesser extent, of the higher Km component. When the two drugs are tested in combination, not only the inhibitory effect of the opiate is overcome, but a large increase of the apparent affinities and Vmax values for both components is obtained, suggesting the involvement of the Mg2+-regulated subunits of the adenylate cyclase system in the supra-additive stimulation mechanism of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Regulation of adenylate cyclase by adenosine   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Summary Adenosine may well be as important in the regulation of adenylate cyclase as hormones. Sattin and Rall first demonstrated in 1970 that adenosine was a potent stimulator of adenylate cyclase in the brain. However, adenosine is an equally potent inhibitor of adenylate cyclase in other cells such as adipocytes. The concentration of adenosine required for this regulation of adenylate cyclase is in the nanomolar range (10 to 100 nm). Both the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of low concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase are antagonized by methylxanthines. This antagonism of adenosine action may account for all or part of the effects of methyl xanthines on cyclic AMP levels in many tissues. Adenosine appears to be a particularly important endogenous regulator of adenylate cyclase in brain, smooth muscle and fat cells. Under conditions in which intracellular AMP rises, adenosine formation and release is accelerated. In addition to its direct effects on adenylate cyclase, adenosine (at higher concentrations approaching millimolar) exerts multiple effects on cellular metabolism as a result of its intracellular metabolism and especially conversion to nucleotides.The effects of nanomolar concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase are mediated through an adenosine site possessing strict structural specificity for the ribose moiety of the molecule (the R adenosine site) which is presumably located on the external surface of the plasma membrane. In brain, lung, platelets, bone, lymphocytes, skin, adrenals, Leydig tumors, and coronary arteries adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase via this site. However, in rat adipocytes, brain astroblasts and ventricular myocardium adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase through the R or adenosine site. Although the R site requires an intact ribose moiety, adenosine analogs modified in the purine ring such as N6-phenylisopropyladenosine appear to be potent agonists for this site. All effects of adenosine mediated via the R site are competitively antagonized by methyl xanthines.The effects of micromolar concentrations of adenosine appear to be mediated via a site with strict structural specificity with respect to the purine moiety of the molecule (the P or adenine adenosine site). This P site is postulated to be located on the intracellular face of the plasma membrane and mediates the effects of adenosine due to conversion of adenosine to 5-AMP or perhaps other nucleotides. The effects of high concentrations of adenosine are always inhibitory to adenylate cyclase activity, are readily demonstrated in broken cell preparations, and are unaffected by methylxanthines. An intact purine ring is required for these adenosine effects but modifications of the ribose moiety of the molecule generally increases the potency of the analog. A prime example is 2,5-dideoxyadenosine, which is the most potent known R-site specific adenosine analog.We propose a unitary model which explains both the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of low concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase. In brief, adenylate cyclase is postulated to exist in three interconvertible activity states: (i) an inactive state (E0); (ii) a GTP-liganded state with high activity (EGTP); and (iii) a GDP-liganded state (EGDP) which is inactive in cells where adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase, but active in cells where adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase. We postulate that the enzyme cycles through these states in the following manner: the E0 state binds GTP and forms the EGTP state; hydrolysis of bound GTP converts the EGTP to the EGDP state; and release of bound GDP converts EGDP to the E0 state. The E0 state is the only form of the enzyme which can be stimulated by either hormones or GTP and its formation from the EGDP state is rate-limiting in this cycle. The conversion of EGDP to E0 regulates the ability of hormones and GTP to activate adenylate cyclase and is postulated to be adenosine sensitive.In cells where both EGDP and E0 states are inactive, adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase activity. In cells where E0 is inactive, but EGDP is active, adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase activity. In addition we suggest that in cells where adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase activity (cells postulated to have an EGDP state which is active) high concentrations of GTP favor accumulation of the enzyme in EGDP and thus are inhibitory to activity. Prostaglandins may also regulate adenylate cyclase in a manner similar to that described above for adenosine.We conclude that adenosine is an important regulator of adenylate cyclase whose role has only been appreciated recently. Further studies are warranted on both its binding to cells and mechanisms by which it regulates adenylate cyclase.This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Research Grant AM-10149 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolism and Digestive Diseases.  相似文献   

5.
We report that the adenylate cyclase system in human platelets is subject to multiple regulation by guanine nucleotides. Previously it has been reported that GTP is either required for or has little effect on the response of the enzyme to prostaglandin E1. We have found that when platelet lysates were prepared in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, GTP lowered the basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of Mg2+. The basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were also increased by washing, which presumably removes endogenous GTP. The analog, guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate mimics the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity but it stimulates basal enzyme activity. The onset of the inhibitory effect of GTP on the adenylate cyclase system is rapid (1 min) and is maintained at a constant rate during incubation for 10 min. GTP and guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate were noncompetitive inhibitors of prostaglandin E1. An increase in the concentration of Mg2+ gradually reduces the effect of GTP while having little influence on the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate. Neither the substrate concentration nor the pH (7.2–8.5) is related to the inhibitory effect of guanine nucleotides. The inhibition by nucleotides was found to show a specificity for purine nucleotides with the order of potency being guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate > dGTP > GTP > ITP > XTP > CTP > TTP. The inhibitory effect of GTP is reversible while the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is irreversible. The GTP inhibitory effect was abolished by preparing the lysates in the presence of Ca2+. However, the inhibitory effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate persisted. Substitution of Mn2+ for Mg2+ in the assay medium resulted in a diminution of the inhibitory effect of GTP on basal activity and converted the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated activity to a stimulatory effect. At a lower concentration of Mn2+ (less than 2 mM) guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate inhibited prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but at a higher concentration of Mn2+, it caused an increase in enzyme activity exceeding that occuring in the presence of prostaglandin E1. In the presence of Mn2+, dGTP mimics the effect of GTP and is 50% as effective as GTP. Our data suggest that the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is mainly due to its direct effect on the enzyme itself, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is due to enhancement of the coupling between the prostaglandin E1 receptor and adenylate cyclase. These studies also indicate that the method of preparation of platelet lysates can profoundly alter the nature of guanine nucleotide regulation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
Thyroid homogenates and thyroid plasma membranes were prepared from human thyroid and the effects of thyroid-stimulating hormone (thyrotropin), NaF, and prostaglandins E1 and E2 on adenyl cyclase activity in these preparations were studied. The basal level of adenyl cyclase activity in plasma membranes was 5–8 times greater than that of the original homogenates. Adenyl cyclase activity in plasma membranes was stimulated 4.7-fold by 100 munits/ml of thyrotropin and 5-fold by 10 mM of NaF, but the activity in the homogenates was only stimulated 2-fold by either thyrotropin or NaF. Prostaglandin E1 (10?6?10?3 M) and prostaglandin E2 (10?7?10?4 M) failed to stimulate adenyl cyclase activity in plasma membranes, but they did stimulate adenyl cyclase activity in the homogenates. A marked stimulatory effect of prostaglandin E2 (10?5 M) on adenyl cyclase activity in plasma membranes resumed in the presence of GTP (10?7?10?4 M), although GTP itself only slightly stimulated enzyme activity. GDP and GMP were also effective in this respect, although their potencies varied from compound to compound. GTP potentiated slightly the action of thyrotropin on adenyl cyclase in plasma membranes, but it significantly depressed an increase of enzyme activity produced by NaF. Since GTP did not affect the ATP-regenerating system, it seems that GTP, GDP or GMP was required for the manifestation of prostaglandin E2 action on adenyl cyclases of human thyroid plasma membranes.  相似文献   

9.
We have examined the effect of the Ca2+ (Mg2+)-ATPase inhibitors thapsigargin (TG) and vanadate on ATP-dependent 45Ca2+ uptake into IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pools in isolated microsomes from rat pancreatic acinar cells. The inhibitory effect of TG was biphasic. About 40–50% of total Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by TG up to 10 nm (apparent Ki4.2 nm, Ca2+ pool I). An additional increase of inhibition up to 85–90% of total Ca2+ uptake could be achieved at 15 to 20 nm of TG (apparent Ki12.1 nm, Ca2+ pool II). The rest was due to TG-insensitive contaminating plasma membranes and could be inhibited by vanadate (apparent Ki10 m). In the absence of TG, increasing concentrations of vanadate also showed two phases of inhibition of microsomal Ca2+ uptake. About 30–40% of total Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by 100 m of vanadate (apparent Ki18 m, Ca2+ pool II). The remaining 60–70% could be inhibited either by vanadate at concentrations up to 1 mm (apparent Ki300 m) or by TG up to 10 nm (Ca2+ pool I). The amount of IP3-induced Ca2+ release was constant at 25% over a wide range of Ca2+ filling. About 10–20% remained unreleasable by IP3. Reduction of IP3 releasable Ca2+ in the presence of inhibitors showed similar dose-response curves as Ca2+ uptake (apparent Ki 3.0 nm for IP3-induced Ca2+ release as compared to 4.2 nm for Ca2+ uptake at TG up to 10 nm) indicating that the highly TG-sensitive Ca2+ pump fills the IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool I. At TG concentrations >10 nm which blocked Ca2+ pool II the apparent Ki values were 11.3 and 12.1 nm, respectively. For inhibition by vanadate up to 100 m the apparent Ki values were 18 m for Ca2+ uptake and 7 m for Ca2+ release (Ca2+ pool II). At vanadate concentrations up to 1 mm the apparent Ki values were 300 and 200 m, respectively (Ca2+ pool I). Both Ca2+ pools I and II also showed different sensitivities to IP3. Dose-response curves for IP3 in the absence of inhibitors (control) showed an apparent Km value for IP3 at 0.6 m. In the presence of TG (inhibition of Ca2+ pool I) the curve was shifted to the left with an apparent Km for IP3 at 0.08 m. In the presence of vanadate (inhibition of Ca2+ pool II), the apparent Km for IP3 was 2.1 m. These data allow the conclusion that there are at least three different Ca2+ uptake mechanisms present in pancreatic acinar cells: TG- and IP3 insensitive but highly vanadate-sensitive Ca2+ uptake occurs into membrane vesicles derived from plasma membranes. Two Ca2+ pools with different TG-, vanadate- and IP3-sensitivities are most likely located in the endoplasmic reticulum at different cell sites, which could have functional implications for hormonal stimulation of pancreatic acinar cells.This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Sonderforschungsbereich 246. The authors wish to thank Dr. KlausDieter Preuß for valuable discussions and Mrs. Gabriele Mörschbächer for excellent secretarial help.  相似文献   

10.
Summary We have investigated muscarinic receptor-operated Ca2+ mobilization in a salivary epithelial cell line, HSG-PA, using an experimental approach which allows independent evaluation of intracellular Ca2+ release and extracellular Ca2+ entry. The carbachol (Cch) dose response of intracellular Ca2+ release indicates the involvement of a single, relatively low-affinity, muscarinic receptor site (K 0.510 or 30 m, depending on the method for [Ca2+] i determination). However, similar data for Ca2+ entry indicate the involvement of two Cch sites, one consistent with that associated with Ca2+ release and a second higher affinity site withK 0.52.5 m. In addition, the Ca2+ entry response observed at lower concentrations of Cch (2.5 m) was completely inhibited by membrane depolarization induced with high K+ (>55mm) or gramicidin D (1 m), while membrane depolarization had little or no effect on Ca2+ entry induced by 100 m Cch. Another muscarinic agonist, oxotremorine-M (100 m; Oxo-M), like Cch, also induced an increase in the [Ca2+] i of HSG-PA cells (from 72±2 to 104±5nm). This response was profoundly blocked (75%) by the inorganic Ca2+ channel blocker La3+ (25–50 m) suggesting that Oxo-M primarily mobilizes Ca2+ in these cells by increasing Ca2+ entry. Organic Ca2+ channel blockers (verapamil or diltiazem at 10 m, nifedipine at 1 m), had no effect on this response. The Oxo-M induced Ca2+ mobilization response, like that observed at lower doses of Cch, was markedly inhibited (70–90%) by membrane depolarization (high K+ or gramicidin D). At 100 m Cch the formation of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) was increased 55% above basal levels. A low concentration of carbachol (1 m) elicited a smaller change in IP3 formation (25%), similar to that seen with 100 m Oxo-M (20%). Taken together, these results suggest that there are two modes of muscarinic receptor-induced Ca2+ entry in HSG-PA cells. One is associated with IP3 formation and intracellular Ca2+ release and is independent of membrane potential; the other is less dependent on IP3 formation and intracellular Ca2+ release and is modulated by membrane potential. This latter pathway may exhibit voltage-dependent gating.  相似文献   

11.
The results reported here show some characteristics of adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) derived from homogenates of rat spleen, and describe the in vitro stimulation of this enzyme by prostaglandins, nucleotides, and F under conditions where cyclic nucleotide degradative pathways are effectively inhibited.Particulate fractions from rat spleen homogenates contain high adenylate cyclase activities, and the highest specific activity is recovered in a particulate fraction prepared by low speed (1200 × g) centrifugation. Activity found in all particulate fractions is stimulated by fluoride, prostaglandins E1 and E2, catecholamines, and purine nucleotides. No stimulation is caused by prostaglandins F and F. Stimulation by prostaglandin E1 or E2 is augmented by GTP and other purine nucleotides, and stimulation by the combination of GTP and prostaglandin E1 is equal to that caused by optimal fluoride concentrations. Stimulation c caused by L-isoproterenol is additive to that caused by GTP but is not increased by GTP.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The characteristics of the cholera toxin-stimulated adenylate cyclase of toad (Bufus marinus) and rat erythrocyte plasma membranes have been examined, with special emphasis on the response to purine nucleotides, fluoride, magnesium and catecholamine hormones. Toad erythrocytes briefly exposed to low concentrations of cholera toxin (40,000 to 60,000 molecules per cell) and incubated 2 to 4 hr at 30°C exhibit dramatic alterations in the kinetic and regulatory properties of adenylate cyclase. The approximateK m for ATP, Mg++ increases from about 1.8 to 3.4mm in the toxinstimulated enzyme. The stimulation by cholera toxin increases with increasing ATP, Mg++ concentrations, from 20% at low levels (0.2mm) to 500% at high concentrations (greater than 3mm). Addition of GTP, Mg++ (0.2mm) restores normal kinetic properties to the toxin-modified enzyme, such that stimulation is most simply explained by an elevation ofV max. GTP enhances the toxin-treated enzyme activity two-to fourfold at low ATP concentrations, but this effect disappears at high levels of the substrate. At 0.6mm ATP and 5mm MgCl2 the apparentK a for GTP, Mg++ is 5 to 10m. The control (unstimulated) enzyme demonstrates a very small response to the guanyl nucleotide. 5-ITP also stimulates the toxin-treated enzyme but cGMP, guanine, and the pyrimidine nucleotides have no effect. Cholera toxin also alters the activation of adenylate cyclase by free Mg++, decreasing the apparentK a from about 25 to 5mm. (–)-Epinephrine sensitizes the toad erythrocyte adenylate cyclase to GTP and also decreases the apparentK a for free metal. Sodium fluoride, which cause a 70- to 100-fold activation of enzyme activity, has little effect on sensitivity to GTP, and does not change the apparentK a for Mg++; moreover, it prevents modulation of these parameters by cholera toxin. Conversely, cholera toxin severely inhibits NaF activation, and in the presence of fluoride ion the usual three- to fivefold stimulation by toxin becomes a 30 to 60% inhibition of activity. The toxin-stimulated enzyme can be further activated by catecholamines; in the presence of GTP the (–)-epinephrine stimulation is enhanced by two- to threefold. The increased catecholamine stimulation of toad erythrocyte adenylate cyclase induced by cholera toxin is explained primarily by an increase in the maximal extent of activation by the hormones. Rat erythrocyte adenylate cyclase is also modified by cholera toxin. In the mammalian system the apparent affinity for the hormone appears to be increased. Cholera toxin thus induces profound and nearly permanent changes in adenylate cyclase by a unique process which mimics the stimulation by hormones in important ways, and which also accentuates the normal hormonal response. The relevance of these findings to the mechanism of action of cholera toxin is considered.Part of this work was reported at the 1974 meeting of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (Bennett & Cuatrecasas, 1974).  相似文献   

13.
Summary We have examined the effects of various inositol polyphosphates, alone and in combination, on the Ca2+-activated K+ current in internally perfused, single mouse lacrimal acinar cells. We used the patch-clamp technique for whole-cell current recording with a set-up allowing exchange of the pipette solution during individual experiments so that control and test periods could be directly compared in individual cells. Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (Ins 1,4,5 P3) (10–100 m) evoked a transient increase in the Ca2+-sensitive K+ current that was independent of the presence of Ca2+ in the external solution. The transient nature of the Ins 1,4,5 P3 effect was not due to rapid metabolic breakdown, as similar responses were obtained in the presence of 5mm 2,3-diphosphoglyceric acid, that blocks the hydrolysis of Ins 1,4,5 P3, as well as with the stable analoguedl-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphorothioate (Ins 1,4,5 P(S)3) (100 m). Ins 1,3,4 P3 (50 m) had no effect, whereas 50 m Ins 2,4,5 P3 evoked responses similar to those obtained by 10 m Ins 1,4,5 P3. A sustained increase in Ca2+-dependent K+ current was only observed when inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate (Ins 1,3,4,5 P4) (10 m) was added to the Ins 1,4,5 P3 (10 m)-containing solution and this effect could be terminated by removal of external Ca2+. The effect of Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 was specifically dependent on the presence of Ins 1,4,5 P3 as it was not found when 10 m concentrations of Ins 1,3,4 P3 or Ins 2,4,5 P3 were used. Ins 2,4,5 P3 (but not Ins 1,3,4 P3) at the higher concentration of 50 m did, however, support the Ins 1,3,4,5 P4-evoked sustained current activation. Ins 1,3,4 P3 could not evoke sustained responses in combination with Ins 1,4,5 P3 excluding the possibility that the action of Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 could be mediated by its breakdown product Ins 1,3,4 P3. Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 also evoked a sustained response when added to an Ins 1,4,5 P(S)3-containing solution. Ins 1,3,4,5,6 P5 (50 m) did not evoke any effect when administered on top of Ins 1,4,5 P3. In the absence of external Ca2+, addition of Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 to an Ins 1,4,5 P3-containing internal solution evoked a second transient K+ current activation. Readmitting external Ca2+ in the continued presence internally of Ins 1,4,5 P3 and Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 made the response reappear. We conclude that both Ins 1,4,5 P3 and Ins 1,3,4,5 P4 play crucial and specific roles in controlling intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The conductance of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel (g K(Ca)) of the human red cell membrane was studied as a function of membrane potential (V m ) and extracellular K+ concentration ([K+]ex). ATP-depleted cells, with fixed values of cellular K+ (145mm) and pH (7.1), and preloaded with 27 m ionized Ca were transferred, with open K+ channels, to buffer-free salt solutions with given K+ concentrations. Outward-current conductances were calculated from initial net effluxes of K+, correspondingV m , monitored by CCCP-mediated electrochemical equilibration of protons between a buffer-free extracellular and the heavily buffered cellular phases, and Nernst equilibrium potentials of K ions (E K) determined at the peak of hyperpolarization. Zero-current conductances were calculated from unidirectional effluxes of42K at (V m –E K)0, using a single-file flux ratio exponent of 2.7. Within a [K+]ex range of 5.5 to 60mm and at (V m –E K) 20 mV a basic conductance, which was independent of [K+]ex, was found. It had a small voltage dependence, varying linearly from 45 to 70 S/cm2 between 0 and –100 mV. As (V m –E K) decreased from 20 towards zero mVg K(Ca) increased hyperbolically from the basic value towards a zero-current value of 165 S/cm2. The zero-current conductance was not significantly dependent on [K+]ex (30 to 156mm) corresponding toV m (–50 mV to 0). A further increase ing K(Ca) symmetrically aroundE K is suggested as (V m –E K) becomes positive. Increasing the extracellular K+ concentration from zero and up to 3mm resulted in an increase ing K(Ca) from 50 to 70 S/cm2. Since the driving force (V m –E K) was larger than 20 mV within this range of [K+]ex this was probably a specific K+ activation ofg K(Ca). In conclusion: The Ca2+-activated K+ channel of the human red cell membrane is an inward rectifier showing the characteristic voltage dependence of this type of channel.  相似文献   

15.
In hamster adipocyte ghosts, ACTH stimulates adenylate cyclase by a GTP-dependent process, whereas prostaglandin E E1, α-adrenergic agonists and nicotinic acid inhibit the enzyme by a mechanism which is both GTP- and sodium-dependent. The influence of the divalent cations Mn2+ and Mg2+, was studied on these two different, apparently receptor-mediated effects on the adipocyte adenylate cyclase. At low Mn2+ concentrations, GTP (1 μM) decreased enzyme activity by about 80%. Under this condition, ACTH (0.1 μM) stimulated the cyclase by 6- to 8-fold, and NaCl (100 mM) caused a similar activation. In the presence of both GTP and NaCl, prostaglandin E1 (1 or 10 μM) and nicotinic acid (30 μM) inhibited the enzyme by about 70–80% and epinephrine (300 μM, added in combination with a β-adrenergic blocking agent) by 40–50%. With increasing concentrations of Mn2+, the GTP-induced decrease and the NaCl-induced increase in activity diminished, with a concomitant decrease in prostaglandin E1?, nicotinic acid- and epinephrine-induced inhibitions as well as in ACTH-induced stimulation. At 1 mM Mn2+, inhibition of the enzyme was almost abolished and stimulation by ACTH was largely reduced, whereas activation of the enzyme by KF (10 mM) was only partially impaired. The uncoupling action of Mn2+ on hormone-induced inhibition was half-maximal at 100–200 μM and appeared not to be due to increased formation of the enzyme substrate, Mn · ATP. It occurred without apparent lag phase and could not be overcome by increasing the concentration of GTP. Similar but not identical findings with regard to adenylate cyclase stimulation and inhibition by hormonal factors were obtained with Mg2+, although about 100-fold higher concentrations of Mg2+ than of Mn2+ were required. The data indicate that Mn2+at low concentrations functionally uncouples inhibitory and stimulatory hormone receptors from adenylate adenylate cyclase in membrane preparations of hamster adipocytes, and they suggest that the mechanism leading to uncoupling involves an action of Mn2+ on the functions of the guanine nucleotide site(s) in the system.  相似文献   

16.
Rabbit pancreatic acinar cells, permeabilized by saponin treatment, rapidly accumulated 3.5 nmol of Ca2+/mg protein in an energy-dependent pool when incubated at an ambient free Ca2+ concentration of 100 nm. Maximal loading of the internal stores was reached at 10 min and remained unchanged thereafter. Complete inhibition of the Ca2+ pump with thapsigargin revealed that this plateau was the result of a steady-state between slow Ca2+ efflux and ATP-driven Ca2+ uptake. Sixty percent of the pool could be released by Ins(1,4,5)P3, whereas GTP released another twenty percent. The striking finding of this study is that the energy-dependent store could also be released by ruthenium red. Uptake experiments in the presence of ruthenium red revealed that the dye, at concentrations below 100 m, selectively reduced the size of the Ins(1,4,5)P3-releasable pool. Ruthenium red had no effect on the half-maximal stimulatory concentration of Ins(1,4,5)P3. At concentrations beyond 100 m, the dye also affected the GTP-releasable pool. Comparison with thapsigargin revealed that ruthenium red released Ca2+ from stores loaded to steady-state at a rate markedly faster than can be explained by inhibition of the ATPase alone. From the data presented, we concluded that ruthenium red selectively releases Ca2+ from the Ins(1,4,5)P3-sensitive store by activating a Ca2+ release channel, whereas Ca2+ release from the GTP-sensitive store is predominantly caused by inhibition of the Ca2+ pump. The postulated ruthenium red-sensitive Ca2+ release channel might be similar to the ryanodine-receptor in muscle.The research of Dr. P.H.G.M. Willems has been made possible by a fellowship of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Basolateral plasma membranes from rat kidney cortex have been purified 40-fold by a combination of differential centrifugation, centrifugation in a discontinuous sucrose gradient followed by centrifugation in 8% percoll. The ratio of leaky membrane vesicles (L) versus right-side-out (RO) and inside-out (IO) resealed vesicles appeared to be LROIO=431. High-affinity Ca2+-ATPase, ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport and Na+/Ca2+ exchange have been studied with special emphasis on the relative transport capacities of the two Ca2+ transport systems. The kinetic parameters of Ca2+-ATPase activity in digitonin-treated membranes are:K m =0.11 m Ca2+ andV max=81±4 nmol Pi/min·mg protein at 37°C. ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport amounts to 4.3±0.2 and 7.4±0.3 nmol Ca2+/min·mg protein at 25 and 37°C, respectively, with an affinity for Ca2+ of 0.13 and 0.07 m at 25 and 37°C. After correction for the percentage of IO-resealed vesicles involved in ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport, a stoichiometry of 0.7 mol Ca2+ transported per mol ATP is found for the Ca2+-ATPase. In the presence of 75mm Na+ in the incubation medium ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake is inhibited 22%. When Na+ is present at 5mm an extra Ca2+ accumulation is observed which amounts to 15% of the ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport rate. This extra Ca2+ accumulation induced by low Na+ is fully inhibited by preincubation of the vesicles with 1mm ouabain, which indicates that (Na+–K+)-ATPase generates a Na+ gradient favorable for Ca2+ accumulation via the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. In the absence of ATP, a Na+ gradient-dependent Ca2+ uptake is measured which rate amounts to 5% of the ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport capacity. The Na+ gradient-dependent Ca2+ uptake is abolished by the ionophore monensin but not influenced by the presence of valinomycin. The affinity of the Na+/Ca2+ exchange system for Ca2+ is between 0.1 and 0.2 m Ca2+, in the presence as well as in the absence of ATP. This affinity is surprisingly close to the affinity measured for the ATP-dependent Ca2+ pump. Based on these observations it is concluded that in isolated basolateral membranes from rat kidney cortex the Ca2+-ATPase system exceeds the capacity of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger four- to fivefold and it is therefore unlikely that the latter system plays a primary role in the Ca2+ homeostasis of rat kidney cortex cells.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Summary The influence of the asymmetric addition of various divalent cations and protons on the properties of active Ca2+ transport have been examined in intact human red blood cells. Active Ca2+ efflux was determined from the initial rate of45Ca2+ loss after CoCl2 was added to block Ca2+ loading via the ionophore A23187. Ca2+-ATPase activity was measured as phosphate production over 5 min in cells equilibrated with EGTA-buffered free Ca2+ in the presence of A23187. The apparent Ca affinity of active Ca2+ efflux (K 0.5=30–40 mol/liter cells) was significantly lower than that measured by the Ca2+-ATPase assay (K 0.5=0.4 m). Possible reasons for this apparent difference are considered. Both active Ca2+ efflux and Ca2+-ATPase activity were reduced to less than 5% of maximal levels (20 mmol/liter cells · hr) in Mg2+-depleted cells, and completely restored by reintroduction of intracellular Mg2+. Active Ca2+ efflux was inhibited almost completely by raising external CaCl2 (but not MgCl2) to 20mm, probably by interaction of Ca2+ at the externally oriented E2P conformation of the pump. Cd2+ was more potent than Ca2+ in this inhibition, while Mn2+ was less potent and 10mm Ba2+ was without effect. A Ca2+: proton exchange mechanism for active Ca2+ efflux was supported by the results, as external protons (pH 6–6.5) stimulated active Ca2+ efflux at least twofold above the efflux rate at pH 7.8 Ca2+ transport was not affected by decreasing the membrane potential across the red cell.  相似文献   

20.
It is proposed that the activity of an epidermal cotransport system for Na+ and dicarboxylic amino acids accounts for the small amounts of L-glutamate and L-aspartate in the otherwise amino-acid-rich blood plasma of insects. This Na+-dependent transport system is responsible for more than 95% of the uptake of these amino acids into the larval epidermis of the beetle Tenebrio molitor. Kinetic analysis of uptake showed that the Na+-dependent co-transporter has medium affinity for L-glutamate and L-aspartate. The K m for L-glutamate uptake was 146 mol·l-1, and the maximum velocity of uptake (V max) was 12.1 pmol·mm-2 of epidermal sheet per minute. The corresponding values for L-aspartate were 191 mol·l-1 and 8.4 pmol·mm-2·min-1. The Na+/L-glutamate co-transporter has a stoichiometry of at least two Na+ ions for each L-glutamate-ion transported (n=217). The co-transporter has an affinity for Na+ equivalent to a K m of 21 mmol · l-1 Na+. Na+ is the only external ion apparently required to drive L-glutamate uptake. Li+ substitutes weakly for Na+. Removal of external K+ or addition of ouabain decreases uptake slowly over 1 h, suggesting that these treatments dissipate the Na+/K+ gradient by inhibiting epidermal Na+/K+ ATPase. Several structural analogues of L-glutamate inhibit the medium-affinity uptake of L-glutamate. The order of potency with which these competitive inhibitors block glutamate uptake is L-cysteatethreo-3-hydroxy-Dl-aspartate > D-aspartateL-aspartate> L-cysteine sulphinate > L-homocysteateD-glutamate. L-trans-Pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate, a potent inhibitor of L-glutamate uptake in mammalian synaptosomes, is a relatively weak blocker of epidermal uptake. The epidermis takes up substantially more L-glutamate by this Na+-dependent system than tissues such as skeletal muscle and ventral nerve cord. The epidermis may be a main site regulating blood L-glutamate levels in insects with high blood [Na+]. Because L-glutamate and L-aspartate stimulate skeletal muscle in insects, a likely role for epidermal L-glutamate/L-aspartate transporter is to keep the level of these excitatory amino acids in the blood below the postsynaptic activation thresholds.Abbreviation ac acetate - Ch choline - CNS central nervous system - cpm counts per minute - CDTA trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acids - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - K m Michaelis constant - n app apparent number - NMG N-methyl-D-glucamine - Pipes Piperazine-N,N-bis-[2-ethanesulfonic acid] - SD standard deviation - TEA tetraethyl-ammonium - V velocity of uptake - V max maximum velocity of uptake  相似文献   

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