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1.
Although cell membranes normally resist the hydrolytic action of secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)), they become susceptible during apoptosis or after cellular trauma. Experimentally, susceptibility to the enzyme can be induced by loading cells with calcium. In human erythrocytes, the ability of the calcium ionophore to cause susceptibility depends on temperature, occurring best above approximately 35 degrees C. Considerable evidence from experiments with artificial bilayers suggests that hydrolysis of membrane lipids requires two steps. First, the enzyme adsorbs to the membrane surface, and second, a phospholipid diffuses from the membrane into the active site of the adsorbed enzyme. Analysis of kinetic experiments suggested that this mechanism can explain the action of sPLA(2) on erythrocyte membranes and that temperature and calcium loading promote the second step. This conclusion was further supported by binding experiments and assessment of membrane lipid packing. The adsorption of fluorescent-labeled sPLA(2) was insensitive to either temperature or ionophore treatment. In contrast, the fluorescence of merocyanine 540, a probe sensitive to lipid packing, was affected by both. Lipid packing decreased modestly as temperature was raised from 20 to 60 degrees C. Calcium loading enhanced packing at temperatures in the low end of this range, but greatly reduced packing at higher temperatures. This result was corroborated by measurements of the rate of extraction of a fluorescent phosphatidylcholine analog from erythrocyte membranes. Furthermore, drugs known to inhibit susceptibility in erythrocytes also prevented the increase in phospholipid extraction rate. These results argue that the two-step model applies to biological as well as artificial membranes and that a limiting step in the hydrolysis of erythrocyte membranes is the ability of phospholipids to migrate into the active site of adsorbed enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Artificial membranes may be resistant or susceptible to catalytic attack by secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)) depending on the physical properties of the membrane. Living cells are normally resistant but become susceptible during trauma, apoptosis, and/or a significant elevation of intracellular calcium. Intact erythrocytes and ghosts were studied to determine whether the principles learned from artificial systems apply to biological membranes. Membrane properties such as phospholipid and/or protein composition, morphology, and microscopic characteristics (e.g. fluidity) were manipulated by preparing ghosts under different experimental conditions such as in the presence or absence of divalent cations with or without ATP. The properties of each membrane preparation were assessed by biochemical and physical means (fluorescence spectroscopy and electron and two-photon microscopy using the membrane probes bis-pyrene and laurdan) and compared with sPLA(2) activity. The properties that appeared most relevant were the degree of phosphatidylserine exposure on the outer face of the membrane and changes to the membrane physical state detected by bis-pyrene and laurdan. Specifically, vulnerability to hydrolysis by sPLA(2) was associated with an increase in bilayer order apparently reflective of expansion of membrane regions of diminished fluidity. These results argue that the general principles identified from studies with artificial membranes apply to biological systems.  相似文献   

3.
Best KB  Ohran AJ  Hawes AC  Hazlett TL  Gratton E  Judd AM  Bell JD 《Biochemistry》2002,41(47):13982-13988
Normally, cell membranes resist hydrolysis by secretory phospholipase A(2). However, upon elevation of intracellular calcium, the cells become susceptible. Previous investigations demonstrated a possible relationship between changes in lipid order caused by increased calcium and susceptibility to phospholipase A(2). To further explore this relationship, we used temperature as an experimental means of manipulating membrane physical properties. We then compared the response of human erythrocytes to calcium ionophore at various temperatures in the range of 20-50 degrees C using fluorescence spectroscopy and two-photon fluorescence microscopy. The steady state fluorescence emission of the environment-sensitive probe, laurdan, revealed that erythrocyte membrane order decreases systematically with temperature throughout this range, especially between 28 and 45 degrees C. Furthermore, the ability of calcium ionophore to induce increased membrane order and susceptibility to phospholipase A(2) depended similarly on temperature. Both responses to calcium influx were enhanced as membrane fluidity increased. Analysis of the spatial distribution of laurdan fluorescence at several temperatures indicated that the ordering effect of intracellular calcium on fluid membranes generates an increase in the number of fluid-solid boundaries. Hydrolysis of the membrane appeared to progress outward from these boundaries. We conclude that phospholipase A(2) prefers to hydrolyze lipids in fluid regions of human erythrocyte membranes, but primarily when those regions coexist with domains of ordered lipids.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of temperature and cholesterol on the membrane fluidity of human erythrocytes were studied using 5-nitroxide stearic acid (5NS), 12-nitroxide stearic acid (12NS), and 16-nitroxide stearic acid (16NS). Human erythrocytes and their lipid vesicles were treated in the range of 5--55 degrees C. In erythrocytes, ESR signals for 12NS and 16NS showed line broadening above 40 degrees C, whereas those for 5NS became sharper with increasing temperature as was the case with the signals of lipid vesicles for each label molecule. Lipid extraction from the heated sample caused no radical reduction. Only in 12NS-labeled erythrocytes did a weakly immobilized component and a strongly immobilized component appear. In the time course at 50 degrees C, the former decreased and the latter remained constant. From the ratio of both components, it was found that the interaction of the label molecules with the binding sites was determined by the physical state of the membrane. Furthermore, the dependence on temperature of the molecular motion of the labels in the cell membrane was irreversible above 40 degrees C. On addition of cholesterol to the membrane, the outer hyperfine splittings for 12NS and 16NS increased but that for 5NS decreased at C/P greater than 1, perhaps indicating a spread between the head groups of phospholipids by cholesterol.  相似文献   

5.
Exposure of human erythrocytes to the calcium ionophore ionomycin rendered them susceptible to the action of secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)). Analysis of erythrocyte phospholipid metabolism by thin-layer chromatography revealed significant hydrolysis of both phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine during incubation with ionomycin and sPLA(2). Several possible mechanisms for the effect of ionomycin were considered. Involvement of intracellular phospholipases A(2) was excluded since inhibitors of these enzymes had no effect. Assessment of membrane oxidation by cis-parinaric acid fluorescence and comparison to the oxidants diamide and phenylhydrazine revealed that oxidation does not participate in the effect of ionomycin. Incubation with ionomycin caused classical physical changes to the erythrocyte membrane such as morphological alterations (spherocytosis), translocation of aminophospholipids to the outer leaflet of the membrane, and release of microvesicles. Experiments with phenylhydrazine, KCl, quinine, merocyanine 540, the calpain inhibitor E-64d, and the scramblase inhibitor R5421 revealed that neither phospholipid translocation nor vesicle release was required to induce susceptibility. Results from fluorescence spectroscopy and two-photon excitation scanning microscopy using the membrane probe laurdan argued that susceptibility to sPLA(2) is a consequence of increased order of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

6.
This work examines the extent to which alterations in the composition of the phospholipid bilayer of the erythrocyte membrane influences the stability of the association of the ‘cytoskeletal network’ to the rest of the membrane. Rates of spectrin-actin dissociation at low ionic strength were used as a measure of the stability, and composition of the phospholipid bilayer was altered by the action of the enzyme phospholipase A2. Hydrolysis of all the phosphatidylcholine of the outer leaflet of the bilayer had no effect on dissociation rates, whether or not the hydrolysis products were extracted with albumin. Hydrolysis of inner leaflet phospholipids increased the rates by up to 2-fold if the hydrolysis products were not extracted; for ?50% hydrolysis, the rates were unaffected if the hydrolysis products were extracted. The moderate magnitudes of the increases in dissociation rates indicate that interactions between the ‘cytoskeletal network’ and the phospholipid bilayer are not a decisive factor in maintaining the stability of the membrane, at least under low ionic strength conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The homologous series of optically active short-chain phosphatidylethanolamines (PE) from dibutyryl-PE to dioctanoyl-PE was synthesized. In addition, two monomeric short-chain phospholipid analogues that are not degraded by phospholipase A2 (1,2-bis[(butylcarbamyl)oxy]-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and the corresponding ethanolamine derivative) were synthesized. In contrast to the short-chain phosphatidylcholines (PC), short-chain PE's have defined solubilities in water. No break below the solubility limit was found in surface tension plots, suggesting that these compounds exist as monomers in aqueous solution. Only when a significant fraction of the molecules is negatively charged can they form micelles by themselves. Cobra venom phospholipase A2 hydrolyzes monomeric short-chain PE's at about the same rate as short-chain PC's but hydrolyzes long-chain PC's much more rapidly than long-chain PE's. The hydrolysis of short-chain PE's is found to be activated by phosphocholine-containing compounds only in the presence of an interface; in its absence phosphocholine-containing compounds can act as competitive inhibitors. Possible explanations for this phenomenon are considered.  相似文献   

8.
During apoptosis, changes occur in lymphocyte membranes that render them susceptible to hydrolysis by secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)). To study the relevant mechanisms, a simplified model of apoptosis using a calcium ionophore was applied. Kinetic and flow cytometry experiments provided key observations regarding ionophore treatment: the initial rate of hydrolysis was elevated at all enzyme concentrations, the total amount of reaction product was increased fourfold, and adsorption of the enzyme to the membrane surface was unaltered. Analysis of these results suggested that susceptibility during calcium-induced apoptosis is limited by availability of substrate rather than adsorption of enzyme. Fluorescence experiments identified three membrane alterations during apoptosis that might affect substrate access to the sPLA(2) active site. First, intercalation of merocyanine 540 into the membrane was improved, suggesting an increase in lipid spacing. Second, laurdan detected increased solvation of the lower headgroup region of the membrane. Third, the rate at which fluorescent lipids could be removed from the membrane by albumin was enhanced, implying greater vertical mobility of phospholipids. Thus, it is proposed that the membranes of apoptotic cells become susceptible to sPLA(2) through a reduction in lipid-neighbor interactions that facilitates migration of phospholipids into the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

9.
During cell death, plasma membranes of cells become vulnerable to attack by extracellular secretory phospholipase A(2). The purpose of this study was to identify the timing of this phenomenon relative to other events that occur during the process of cell death. Death was induced in S49 murine lymphoma cells by treatment with dexamethasone, dibutyryl cAMP, ionomycin, thapsigargin, or heat shock (1 h at 43 degrees C). The appearance of membrane susceptibility to secretory phospholipase A(2) was compared to the following apoptotic events: loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, phosphatidylserine exposure in the outer leaflet of the cell membrane, early DNA damage assessed by the comet assay, and changes in cell size and internal complexity assessed by flow cytometry. Each inducer of death was distinct in the time course of events produced. Although dead cells were susceptible to the action of phospholipase A(2), live cells (impermeable to propidium iodide) also became vulnerable to the enzyme during characteristic time courses after exposure to each inducer. In fact, susceptibility to sPLA(2) was observed in each case prior to or concurrent with the earliest of the markers of apoptosis. These results demonstrate that the onset of susceptibility to sPLA(2) is an early event in apoptosis suggesting that changes in membrane structure may be relevant to initial aspects of the apoptotic process.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The artificial insertion of increasing amounts of unsaturated fatty acids into human erythrocyte membranes modulated ATPase activities in a biphasic manner, depending on the number and position of double bonds, their configuration, and the chain length. Uncharged long-chain fatty acid derivatives with double bonds and short-chain fatty acids were ineffective. Stearic acid stimulated Na+K+-ATPase only. Anionic and non-ionic detergents and -lysophosphatidylcholine failed to stimulate ATPase activities at low, and inhibited them at high concentrations.Mg2+-ATPase activity was maximally enhanced by a factor of 2 in the presence of monoenoic fatty acids; half-maximal stimulation was achieved at a molar ratio ofcis(trans)-configurated C18 acids/membrane phopholipid of 0.16 (0.26).Na+K+-ATPase activity was maximally augmented by 20% in the presence of monoenoic C18 fatty acids at 37°C. Half-maximal effects were attained at a molar ratio oleic (elaidic) acid/phospholipid of 0.032 (0.075). Concentrations of free fatty acids which inhibited ATPase activities at 37°C were most stimulatory at reduced temperatures. AT 10°C, oleic acid increased Na+K+-ATPase activity fivefold (molar ratio 0.22).Unsaturated fatty acids simulated the effect of calmodulin on Ca2+-ATPase of native erythrocyte membranes (i.e., increase ofV max from 1.6 to 5 mol PO 4 3– ·phospholipid–1·hr–1, decrease of K Ca from 6 m to 1.4–1.8 m). Stearic acid decreasedK Ca (2 m) only, probably due to an increase of negative surface charges.A stimulation of Mg2+-ATPase, Na+K+-ATPase, and Ca2+-ATPase could be achieved by incubation of the membranes with phospholipase A2.An electrostatic segregation of free fatty acids by ATPases with ensuing alterations of surface charge densities and disordering of the hydrophobic environment of the enzymes provides an explanation of the results.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) hydrolyzes phosphatidylcholines (PC) within lipid bilayers to produce lyso-PC and a fatty acid, which can act as signaling molecule in biological membranes. The activity of sPLA2 depends on the membrane structure. Bilayer defects, curvature, and gel-fluid micro-heterogeneity are known to activate sPLA2. Here, we investigate if liquid-liquid immiscibility within model membranes is sufficient for sPLA2 activation. The onset of the hydrolytic activity of cobra-venom sPLA2 towards mixed monolayers of dimyristoyl-PC (DMPC)/cholesterol 2:1 (mol/mol) has been determined using infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) and polarization-modulated (PM-) IRRAS. The lag phase of sPLA2 activity increases exponentially with rising surface pressures starting at 12 mN/m. This indicates that enzyme activation is hampered at higher surface pressures. Below 12 mN/m, no lag phase is observed, and sPLA2 is efficiently activated. The surface pressure that is critical for sPLA2 activation correlates with the critical miscibility pressure according to the phase diagram of DMPC and cholesterol. Thus, coexisting, liquid-phase domains provide sufficient boundaries to activate sPLA2. Moreover, liquid-liquid immiscibility is an activating mechanism for sPLA2 that also applies to biological membranes under physiological conditions because the corresponding bilayer structure is associated with that of membrane rafts.  相似文献   

13.
Hydrolysis of surfactant phospholipids (PL) by secretory phospholipases A(2) (sPLA(2)) contributes to surfactant damage in inflammatory airway diseases such as acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome. We and others have reported that each sPLA(2) exhibits specificity in hydrolyzing different PLs in pulmonary surfactant and that the presence of hydrophilic surfactant protein A (SP-A) alters sPLA(2)-mediated hydrolysis. This report tests the hypothesis that hydrophobic SP-B also inhibits sPLA(2)-mediated surfactant hydrolysis. Three surfactant preparations were used containing varied amounts of SP-B and radiolabeled tracers of phosphatidylcholine (PC) or phosphatidylglycerol (PG): 1) washed ovine surfactant (OS) (pre- and postorganic extraction) compared with Survanta (protein poor), 2) Survanta supplemented with purified bovine SP-B (1-5%, wt/wt), and 3) a mixture of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol (POPG) (DPPC:POPC:POPG, 40:40:20) prepared as vesicles and monomolecular films in the presence or absence of SP-B. Hydrolysis of PG and PC by Group IB sPLA(2) (PLA2G1A) was significantly lower in the extracted OS, which contains SP-B, compared with Survanta (P = 0.005), which is SP-B poor. Hydrolysis of PG and PC in nonextracted OS, which contains all SPs, was lower than both Survanta and extracted OS. When Survanta was supplemented with 1% SP-B, PG and PC hydrolysis by PLA2G1B was significantly lower (P < 0.001) than in Survanta alone. When supplemented into pure lipid vesicles and monomolecular films composed of PG and PC mixtures, SP-B also inhibited hydrolysis by both PLA2G1B and Group IIA sPLA2 (PLA2G2A). In films, PLA2G1B hydrolyzed surfactant PL monolayers at surface pressures ≤30 mN/m (P < 0.01), and SP-B lowered the surface pressure range at which hydrolysis can occur. These results suggest the hydrophobic SP, SP-B, protects alveolar surfactant PL from hydrolysis mediated by multiple sPLA(2) in both vesicles (alveolar subphase) and monomolecular films (air-liquid interface).  相似文献   

14.
Electrical stability of human erythrocyte membranes with different cholesterol content was studied. Breakdown in the cell membranes was generated by application of electric pulses with field strengths of 1.4-3.2 kV/cm. The share of perforated cells was registered by measuring hemolysis level. The red blood cells from patients with psoriasis and normal erythrocytes after incubation in the presence of liposomes were used as a model of cells with cholesterol-rich membranes. It was discovered that an increase of cholesterol content in the membranes moved the field-dependent curves to a higher field range. The obtained effect is attributed to the increase of the breakdown membrane potential. Application of high-pulse-electric-field technique for investigating the properties of cell membranes is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Modulation of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)) activity by sphingomyelin (SPH), ceramide (Cer), and cholesterol (Chol) was investigated in CHO-2B cells activated by the calcium ionophore A23187 and epinephrine. Chol depletion of CHO-2B cells by treatment with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (5 mm) resulted in the inhibition of the release of arachidonic acid whereas the restoration of the level by Chol-loaded cyclodextrin relieved inhibition. Conversion of CHO-2B cellular SPH to Cer by Staphylococcus aureus sphingomyelinase enhanced endogenous cPLA(2) activation as well as uptake by cells of C2- and C6-ceramide analogs. These results were confirmed in vitro with purified human recombinant cPLA(2) acting on a model phospholipid substrate. The enzyme activity was inhibited by SPH but reactivated by Cer as well as by Chol added to glycerophospholipid liposomal substrates containing SPH. The results of this study, which combine in situ and in vivo experimental approaches, indicate that membrane microdomains enriched in SPH and Chol play a role in the modulation of the activity of cPLA2 and in arachidonic acid-derived mediator production.  相似文献   

16.
Elevated concentrations of intracellular calcium in erythrocytes increase membrane order and susceptibility to secretory phospholipase A2. We hypothesize that calcium aids the formation of domains of ordered lipids within erythrocyte membranes by interacting directly with the inner leaflet of the cell membrane. The interface of these domains with regions of more fluid lipids may create an environment with weakened neighbor-neighbor interactions that would facilitate phospholipid migration into the active site of bound secretory phospholipase A2. This hypothesis was investigated by determining the effects of seven other divalent ions on erythrocyte membrane properties. Changes in membrane order were assessed with steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy and two-photon microscopy with an environment-sensitive probe, laurdan. Each ion increased apparent membrane order in model membranes and in erythrocytes when introduced with an ionophore, suggesting that direct binding to the inner face of the membrane accounts for the effects of calcium on membrane fluidity. Furthermore, the degree to which ions affected membrane properties correlated with the ionic radius and electronegativity of the ions. Lastly, erythrocytes became more susceptible to enzyme hydrolysis in the presence of elevated intracellular levels of nickel and manganese, but not magnesium. These differences appeared related to the ability of the ions to induce a transition in erythrocyte shape.  相似文献   

17.
Mammalian secretory phospholipases A(2) (sPLA(2)) have been implicated in cellular eicosanoid biosynthesis but the mechanism of their cellular action remains unknown. To elucidate the spatiotemporal dynamics of sPLA(2) mobilization and determine the site of its lipolytic action, we performed time-lapse confocal microscopic imaging of fluorescently labeled sPLA(2) acting on human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells the membranes of which are labeled with a fluorogenic phospholipid, N-((6-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)amino)hexanoyl)-1-hexadecanoyl-2-(4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine. The Western blotting analysis of HEK293 cells treated with exogenous sPLA(2)s showed that not only the affinity for heparan sulfate proteoglycan but also other factors, such as sPLA(2) hydrolysis products or cytokines, are necessary for the internalization of sPLA(2) into HEK293 cells. Live cell imaging showed that the hydrolysis of fluorogenic phospholipids incorporated into HEK293 cell membranes was synchronized with the spatiotemporal dynamics of sPLA(2) internalization, detectable initially at the plasma membrane and then at the perinuclear region. Also, immunocytostaining showed that human group V sPLA(2) induced the translocation of 5-lipoxygenase to the nuclear envelope at which they were co-localized. Together, these studies provide the first experimental evidence that the internalized sPLA(2) acts on the nuclear envelope to provide arachidonate for other enzymes involved in the eicosanoid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
The rate of phospholipid hydrolysis in rat liver microsomal and mitochondrial membranes catalyzed by phospholipase A2 was shown to decrease after ascorbate + Fe2+-induced lipid peroxidation. The degree of inhibition was linearly dependent on the amount of lipid peroxidation products (malonyl dialdehyde) accumulated in the membrane. The decreased phospholipid hydrolysis rate in membranes after lipid peroxidation was registered using phospholipases A2 from two sources: porcine pancreas and bee venom. It was established that the inhibitory action of phospholipid peroxidation products was not linked with a direct effect on the enzyme and was not caused by depletion of phospholipase reaction substrates (as a result of lipid peroxidation). A possible role of lateral separation of oxidized and non-oxidized lipid phases in the mechanisms of inhibition of phospholipid hydrolysis by phospholipase A2 is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Liu F  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):3867-3873
We have conducted a detailed study of the effect of membrane cholesterol content on the initial hydrolytic activity of Crotalus durissus terrificus venom phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) in large unilamellar vesicles of cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) at 37 degrees C. The activity was monitored by using the acrylodan-labeled intestinal fatty acid binding protein and HPLC. In contrast to conventional approaches, we have used small cholesterol concentration increments ( approximately 0.3-1.0 mol %) over a wide concentration range (e.g., 13-54 mol % cholesterol). In both membrane systems examined, the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is found to change with cholesterol content in an alternating manner. The activity reaches a local minimum when the membrane cholesterol content is at or near the critical cholesterol mole fractions (e.g., 14.3, 15.4, 20.0, 22.2, 25.0, 33.3, 40.0, and 50.0 mol % cholesterol) predicted for cholesterol regularly distributed in either hexagonal or centered rectangular superlattices. According to the sterol regular distribution model [Chong, P. L.-G. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 10069-10073; Liu et al. (1997) Biophys. J. 72, 2243-2254], the extent of lipid superlattices is maximal at the critical cholesterol mole fractions, at which the membrane free volume is minimal. Thus, our present data can be taken to indicate that the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is governed by the extent of cholesterol superlattice. These data provide the first functional evidence for the formation of cholesterol superlattices in both saturated (e.g., DMPC) and unsaturated (e.g., POPC) liquid-crystalline phospholipid bilayers. The data also illustrate the functional importance of cholesterol superlattice and demonstrate a new type of regulation of sPLA2. Furthermore, upon binding to cholesterol/POPC large unilamellar vesicles, the intrinsic fluorescence intensity of sPLA2 shows an alternating variation with cholesterol content, exhibiting a minimum at the critical cholesterol mole fractions. This result suggests that either the number of sPLA2 bound to lipid vesicles or the conformation of membrane-bound sPLA2 or both vary with the extent of the cholesterol superlattice in the plane of the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns), phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] of turkey erythrocytes were labelled by using either [32P]Pi or [3H]inositol. Although there was little basal release of inositol phosphates from membranes purified from labelled cells, in the presence of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) the rate of accumulation of inositol bis-, tris- and tetrakis-phosphate (InsP2, InsP3 and InsP4) was increased 20-50-fold. The enhanced rate of accumulation of 3H-labelled inositol phosphates was linear for up to 20 min; owing to decreases in 32P specific radioactivity of phosphoinositides during incubation of membranes with unlabelled ATP, the accumulation of 32P-labelled inositol phosphates was linear for only 5 min. In the absence of ATP and a nucleotide-regenerating system, no InsP4 was formed, and the overall inositol phosphate response to GTP[S] was decreased. Analyses of phosphoinositides during incubation with ATP indicated that interconversions of PtdIns to PtdIns4P and PtdIns4P to PtdIns(4,5)P2 occurred to maintain PtdIns(4,5)P2 concentrations; GTP[S]-induced inositol phosphate formation was accompanied by a corresponding decrease in 32P- and 3H-labelled PtdIns, PtdIns4P and PtdIns(4,5)P2. In the absence of ATP, only GTP[S]-induced decreases in PtdIns(4,5)P2 occurred. Since inositol monophosphate was not formed under any condition, PtdIns is not a substrate for the phospholipase C. The production of InsP2 was decreased markedly, but not blocked, under conditions where Ins(1,4,5)P3 5-phosphomonoesterase activity in the preparation was inhibited. Thus the predominant substrate of the GTP[S]-activated phospholipase C of turkey erythrocyte membranes is PtdIns(4,5)P2. Ins(1,4,5)P3 was the major product of this reaction; only a small amount of Ins(1:2-cyclic, 4,5)P3 was released. The effects of ATP on inositol phosphate formation apparently involve the contributions of two phenomena. First, the P2-receptor agonist 2-methylthioadenosine triphosphate (2MeSATP) greatly increased inositol phosphate formation and decreased [3H]PtdIns4P and [3H]PtdIns(4,5)P2 in the presence of a low (0.1 microM) concentration of GTP[S]. ATP over the concentration range 0-100 microM produced effects in the presence of 0.1 microM-GTP[S] essentially identical with those observed with 2MeSATP, suggesting that the effects of low concentrations of ATP are also explained by a stimulation of P2-receptors. Higher concentrations of ATP also increase inositol phosphate formation, apparently by supporting the synthesis of substrate phospholipids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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