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1.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLC-kinase) was rapidly phosphorylated in vitro by the autophosphorylated form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) to a molar stoichiometry of 2.77 +/- 0.15 associated with a threefold increase in the concentration of calmodulin (CaM) required for half-maximal activation of MLC-kinase. Binding of CaM to MLC-kinase markedly reduced the phosphorylation stoichiometry to 0.21 +/- 0.05 and almost completely inhibited phosphorylation of sites in two peptides (32P-peptides P1 and P2) with reduced phosphorylation of peptide P3. By analogy, cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated MLC-kinase to a stoichiometry of 3.0 or greater in the absence of CaM with about a threefold decrease in the apparent affinity of MLC-kinase for CaM. Binding of CaM to MLC-kinase inhibited the phosphorylation to 0.84 +/- 0.13. Complete tryptic digests contained two major 32P-peptides as reported previously. One of the peptides, whose phosphorylation was inhibited in the presence of excess calmodulin, appeared to be the same as P2. Automated Edman sequence analysis suggested that both CaM-kinase II and cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated this peptide at the second of the two adjacent serine residues located at the C-terminal boundary of the CaM-binding domain. However, the other peptide phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, regardless of whether CaM was bound, was different from P1 and P3. Thus, MLC-kinase has a regulatory phosphorylation site(s) that is phosphorylated by the autophosphorylated form of CaM-kinase II and is blocked by Ca2+/CaM-binding.  相似文献   

2.
Fodrin (nonerythroid spectrin) from porcine brain was found to be phosphorylated on tyrosine residues by the purified insulin receptor kinase. The phosphorylation occurred in an insulin-sensitive manner with a physiologically relevant km. The beta(235 K) subunit of fodrin, but not the alpha(240 K) subunit, was phosphorylated by the kinase. Neither the alpha(240 K) subunit nor the beta(220 K) subunit of erythrocyte spectrin was phosphorylated under the same conditions. Fodrin phosphorylation by the purified insulin receptor kinase was markedly inhibited by F-actin. These data raise the possibility that tyrosine phosphorylation of fodrin plays some roles in the regulation of plasma membrane-microfilament interaction.  相似文献   

3.
Dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels from skeletal muscle are multisubunit proteins and are regulated by protein phosphorylation. The purpose of this study was to determine: 1) which subunits are the preferential targets of various protein kinases when the channels are phosphorylated in vitro in their native membrane-bound state and 2) the consequences of these phosphorylations in functional assays. Using as substrates channels present in purified transverse (T) tubule membranes, cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), protein kinase C (PKC), and a multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM protein kinase) preferentially phosphorylated the 165-kDa alpha 1 subunit to an extent that was 2-5-fold greater than the 52-kDa beta subunit. A protein kinase endogenous to the skeletal muscle membranes preferentially phosphorylated the beta peptide and showed little activity toward the alpha 1 subunit; however, the extent of phosphorylation was low. Reconstitution of partially purified channels into liposomes was used to determine the functional consequences of phosphorylation by these kinases. Phosphorylation of channels by PKA or PKC resulted in an activation of the channels that was observed as increases in both the rate and extent of Ca2+ influx. However, phosphorylation of channels by either the CaM protein kinase or the endogenous kinase in T-tubule membranes was without effect. Phosphorylation did not affect the sensitivities of the channels toward the dihydropyridines. Taken together, the results demonstrate that the alpha 1 subunit is the preferred substrate of PKA, PKC, and CaM protein kinase when the channels are phosphorylated in the membrane-bound state and that phosphorylation of the channels by PKA and PKC, but not by CaM protein kinase or an endogenous T-tubule membrane protein kinase, results in activation of the dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels from skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

4.
Fluorescence labeling of spectrin subunits was performed with N-(1-anilinonaphthyl-4)maleimide (ANM) to study the interaction between alpha and beta subunits. The fluorescence anisotropy of both ANM alpha and ANM beta increased linearly with the addition of nonfluorescent beta or alpha subunit, and saturated at a protein ratio about 1, indicating that 1 mol alpha subunit binds to 1 mol beta subunit with high affinity in vitro. Furthermore, this binding seemed to be reversible, because the anisotropy value decreased when an excess fo nonfluorescent alpha was added to the ANM alpha/beta mixture. The anisotropy of ANM alpha attained a maximum level within l min after addition of the same quantity of nonfluorescent beta at 12 degrees C, and the anisotropy of this mixture decreased rapidly when an excess of nonfluorescent alpha was added. These findings suggested that both the binding process of beta to ANM alpha and the dissociation step of ANM alpha from the ANM alpha-beta complex were quite rapid. The results obtained here imply that dynamic interaction between alpha and beta subunits of spectrin should be taken into account in understanding the role of the spectrin molecule in the cytoskeletal mesh.  相似文献   

5.
1-[N,O-Bis(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-N-methyl-L-tyrosyl]-4-phenylpipera zine (KN-62), a selective inhibitor of rat brain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (Ca2+/CaM kinase II) was synthesized and its inhibitory properties in vitro and in vivo were investigated. KN-62 inhibited phosphorylation of exogenous substrate (chicken gizzard myosin 20-kDa light chain) by Ca2+/CaM kinase II with Ki value of 0.9 microM, but no significant effect up to 100 microM on activities of chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase, rabbit brain protein kinase C, and bovine heart cAMP-dependent protein kinase type II. KN-62 also inhibited the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent autophosphorylation of both alpha (50 kDa) and beta (60 kDa) subunits of Ca2+/CaM kinase II dose dependently in the presence or absence of exogenous substrate. Kinetic analysis indicated that this inhibitory effect of KN-62 was competitive with respect to calmodulin. However, KN-62 did not inhibit the activity of autophosphorylated Ca2+/CaM kinase II. Moreover, Ca2+/CaM kinase II bound to a KN-62-coupled Sepharose 4B column, but calmodulin did not. These results suggest that KN-62 affects the interaction between calmodulin and Ca2+/CaM kinase II following inhibition of this kinase activity by directly binding to the calmodulin binding site of the enzyme but does not affect the calmodulin-independent activity of already autophosphorylated (activated) enzyme. We examined the effect of KN-62 on cultured PC12 D pheochromocytoma cells. KN-62 suppressed the A23187 (0.5 microM)-induced autophosphorylation of the 53-kDa subunit of Ca2+/CaM kinase in PC12 D cells, which was immunoprecipitated with anti-rat forebrain Ca2+/CaM kinase II polypeptides antibodies coupled to Sepharose 4B, thereby suggesting that KN-62 could inhibit the Ca2+/CaM kinase II activity in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
Mouse BC3H1 myocytes were incubated with 32Pi before acetylcholine receptors were solubilized, immunoprecipitated, and subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. More than 90% of the 32P found in the receptor was bound to the delta subunit. Two phosphorylation sites in this subunit were resolved by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography after exhaustive proteolysis of the protein with trypsin. Sites 1 and 2 were phosphorylated to approximately the same level in control cells. The divalent cation ionophore, A23187, increased 32P in site 1 by 40%, but did not affect the 32P content of site 2. In contrast, isoproterenol increased 32P in site 2 by more than 60%, while increasing 32P in site 1 by only 20%. When dephosphorylated receptor was incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP and the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, the delta subunit was phosphorylated to a maximal level of 1.6 phosphates/subunit. Approximately half of the phosphate went into site 2, with the remainder going into a site not phosphorylated in cells. The alpha subunit was phosphorylated more slowly, but phosphorylation of both alpha and delta subunits was blocked by the heat-stable protein inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Phosphorylation of the receptor was also observed with preparations of phosphorylase kinase. In this case phosphorylation occurred in the beta subunit and site 1 of the delta subunit, neither of which were phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The rate of receptor phosphorylation by phosphorylase kinase was slow relative to that catalyzed by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Therefore, it can not yet be concluded that phosphorylase kinase phosphorylates the beta subunit and the delta subunit site 1 in cells. However, the results strongly support the hypothesis that phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase accounts for phosphorylation of the alpha subunit and the delta subunit site 2 in response to elevations in cAMP.  相似文献   

7.
In unfractioned reticulocyte lysate, interaction of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2) with other components regulates the accessibility of phosphatases and kinases to phosphorylation sites on its alpha and beta subunits. Upon addition of eIF-2 phosphorylated on both alpha and beta subunits (eIF-2(alpha 32P, beta 32P) to lysate, the alpha subunit is rapidly dephosphorylated, but the beta subunit is not. In contrast, both sites are rapidly dephosphorylated by the purified phosphatase. The basis of this altered specificity appears to be the association of eIF-2 with other translational components rather than an alteration of the phosphatase. Formation of an eIF-2(alpha 32P,beta 32P) Met-tRNAi X GTP ternary complex prevents dephosphorylation of the beta subunit, but has no effect on the rate of alpha dephosphorylation. eIF-2B, a 280,000-dalton polypeptide complex required for GTP:GDP exchange, also protects the beta subunit phosphorylation site from the purified phosphatase. However, the dephosphorylation of eIF-2(alpha 32P) is inhibited by 75% while complexed with eIF-2B. The altered phosphatase specificity upon association of eIF-2 with eIF-2B also affects the access of protein kinases to these phosphorylation sites. In the eIF-2B X eIF-2 complex, the alpha subunit is phosphorylated at 30% the rate of free eIF-2. Under identical conditions, phosphorylation of eIF-2 beta can not be detected. These results illustrate the importance of substrate conformation and/or functional association with other components in determining the overall phosphorylation state allowed by alterations of kinase and phosphatase activities.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The autophosphorylation of purified Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (Ca2+/CaM kinase II) on a threonine-containing phosphopeptide common to both the alpha and beta subunits was previously shown to convert this enzyme into a catalytically active Ca2+-independent species. We now have examined the phosphorylation and activation of Ca2+/CaM kinase II in synaptosomes, a Ca2+-dependent neurosecretory system consisting of isolated nerve terminals. Synaptosomes were prelabeled with 32Pi and the alpha subunit of Ca2+/CaM kinase II was immunoprecipitated. Under basal incubation conditions the alpha subunit was phosphorylated. Depolarization of synaptosomes produced a rapid (2-5 s) Ca2+-dependent increase of about 50% in the state of phosphorylation of the alpha subunit. This was followed by a slower increase in the 32P content of the alpha subunit over the next 5 min of depolarization. The enhanced phosphorylation was characterized by an initial rise (2 s) and subsequent decrease (30 s) in the phosphothreonine content of the alpha subunit. In contrast, the phosphoserine content of the alpha subunit slowly increased during the course of depolarization. Thermolytic two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps of the alpha subunit demonstrated that depolarization stimulated the labeling of a phosphopeptide associated with autoactivation. In parallel experiments, unlabeled synaptosomes were depolarized, and lysates of these synaptosomes were assayed for Ca2+/CaM kinase II activity. Depolarization produced a rapid (less than or equal to 2 s) increase in Ca2+-independent Ca2+/CaM kinase II activity. This activity returned to basal levels by 60 s. Thus, depolarization of intact synaptosomes is associated with the transient phosphorylation of Ca2+/CaM kinase II on threonine residues, presumably involving an autophosphorylation mechanism and concomitantly the transient generation of the Ca2+-independent form of Ca2+/CaM kinase II.  相似文献   

10.
W N Green  A F Ross  T Claudio 《Neuron》1991,7(4):659-666
Different combinations of Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits stably expressed in mouse fibroblasts were used to establish a role for phosphorylation in AChR biogenesis. When cell lines expressing fully functional AChR complexes (alpha 2 beta gamma delta) were labeled with 32P, only gamma and delta subunits were phosphorylated. Forskolin, which causes a 2- to 3-fold increase in AChR expression by stimulating subunit assembly, increased unassembled gamma phosphorylation, but had little effect on unassembled delta. The forskolin effect on subunit phosphorylation was rapid, significantly preceding its effect on expression. The pivotal role of the gamma subunit was established by treating alpha beta gamma and alpha beta delta cell lines with forskolin and observing increased expression of only alpha beta gamma complexes. This effect was also observed in alpha gamma, but not alpha delta cells. We conclude that the cAMP-induced increase in expression of cell surface AChRs is due to phosphorylation of unassembled gamma subunits, which leads to increased efficiency of assembly of all four subunits.  相似文献   

11.
Rat liver L-type pyruvate kinase was phosphorylated in vitro by a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase purified from rabbit liver. The calmodulin (CaM)-dependent kinase catalyzed incorporation of up to 1.7 mol of 32P/mol of pyruvate kinase subunit; maximum phosphorylation was associated with a 3.0-fold increase in the K0.5 for P-enolpyruvate. This compares to incorporation of 0.7 to 1.0 mol of 32P/mol catalyzed by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase with a 2-fold increase in K0.5 for P-enolpyruvate. When [32P]pyruvate kinase, phosphorylated by the CaM-dependent protein kinase, was subsequently incubated with 5 mM ADP and cAMP-dependent protein kinase (kinase reversal conditions), 50-60% of the 32PO4 was removed from pyruvate kinase, but the K0.5 for P-enolpyruvate decreased only 20-30%. Identification of 32P-amino acids after partial acid hydrolysis showed that the CaM-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated both threonyl and seryl residues (ratio of 1:2, respectively) whereas the cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated only seryl groups. The two phosphorylation sites were present in the same 3-4-kDa CNBr fragment located near the amino terminus of the enzyme subunit. These results indicate that the CaM-dependent protein kinase catalyzed phosphorylation of L-type pyruvate kinase at two discrete sites. One site is apparently the same serine which is phosphorylated by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The second site is a unique threonine residue whose phosphorylation also inactivates pyruvate kinase by elevating the K0.5 for P-enolpyruvate. These results may account for the Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase observed in isolated hepatocytes.  相似文献   

12.
When a partially purified insulin receptor preparation immobilized on insulin-agarose is incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP, Mn2+, and Mg2+ ions, the receptor beta subunit becomes 32P-labeled. The 32P-labeling of the insulin receptor beta subunit is increased by 2-3-fold when src kinase is included in the phosphorylation reaction. In addition, the presence of src kinase results in the phosphorylation of a Mr = 125,000 species. The Mr = 93,000 receptor beta subunit and the Mr = 125,000 32P-labeled bands are absent when an insulin receptor-deficient sample, prepared by the inclusion of excess free insulin to inhibit the adsorption of the receptor to the insulin-agarose, is phosphorylated in the presence of the src kinase. These results indicate that the insulin receptor alpha and beta subunits are phosphorylated by the src kinase. The src kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of the insulin receptor is not due to the activation of receptor autophosphorylation because a N-ethylmaleimide-treated receptor preparation devoid of receptor kinase activity is also phosphorylated by the src kinase. Conversely, the insulin receptor kinase does not catalyze phosphorylation of the active or N-ethylmaleimide-inactivated src kinase. Subsequent to src kinase-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation, the insulin receptor, either immobilized on insulin-agarose or in detergent extracts, exhibits a 2-fold increase in associated kinase activity using histone as substrate. src kinase mediates phosphorylation of predominantly tyrosine residues on both alpha and beta subunits of the insulin receptor. Tryptic peptide mapping of the 32P-labeled receptor alpha and beta subunits by high pressure liquid chromatography reveals that the src kinase-mediated phosphorylation sites on both receptor subunits exhibit elution profiles identical with those phosphorylated by the receptor kinase. Furthermore, the HPLC elution profile of the receptor auto- or src kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation sites on the receptor alpha subunit are also identical with that on the receptor beta subunit. These results indicate that: the src kinase catalyzes tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor alpha and beta subunits; and src kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of insulin receptor can mimic the action of autophosphorylation to activate the insulin receptor kinase in vitro, although whether this occurs in intact cells remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
Friend erythroleukemia cells, grown in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide for 3 d, synthesize unequal amounts of the two chains (alpha and beta) of spectrin with approximately 15-30% more beta than alpha spectrin. When cells were ruptured by nitrogen cavitation, nascent alpha and beta spectrin were found to be associated with a membranous cell fraction and were not detected in the soluble cytoplasmic cell fraction. Nascent membrane-bound spectrin appeared not to be protected by membranes, since it was susceptible to trypsin degradation in the absence of detergent. On fractionation of cells with 1% Triton X-100, more (1.75-fold) nascent spectrin was found in the Triton-soluble fraction than in the Triton-insoluble fraction (cytoskeleton). In the Triton-soluble fraction, there was 55% more nascent beta spectrin than alpha spectrin, while the cytoskeleton contained nearly equal amounts of alpha and beta spectrin. Cells were pulse-labeled with L-[35S]methionine for 2 min and chase incubated for varying periods of time from 15 to 90 min with nonradioactive L-methionine. Radioactive spectrin accumulated in the Triton-soluble fraction for the first 15 min of chase incubation and then dropped by 25% in the next hour. By contrast, the amount of radioactive spectrin in the Triton-insoluble fraction rose gradually for 1 h of the chase period. This indicates that, in Friend erythroleukemia cells, a pool of membrane-bound spectrin containing an excess of the beta polypeptide is used to form the cytoskeletal system which is composed of equal molar amounts of alpha and beta spectrin. The location of spectrin was determined by immunoelectron microscopy. Small amounts of spectrin were detected in cells not treated with dimethyl sulfoxide and in these cells it was located on the surface membrane and within the cytoplasm. On treatment with dimethyl sulfoxide, complex vacuolar structures containing viruses appeared in the cells. In cells treated with dimethyl sulfoxide for 3 d 30% of the spectrin was near the outer membrane and 25% was associated with vacuolar structures, whereas in cells treated for 5 and 7 d the majority of spectrin (57-61%) was located in the vacuolar areas.  相似文献   

14.
Skeletal muscle dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium channels are in vitro substrates for cAMP-dependent protein kinase. In the present work, alpha 1 subunits were isolated from cultured skeletal muscle cells by immunoprecipitation with a specific monoclonal antibody under conditions where proteolysis and dephosphorylation were prevented. Two forms of alpha 1 subunit, 200 and 160 kDa, were identified by back phosphorylation in vitro with cAMP-dependent protein kinase, specific immunoprecipitation, and phosphopeptide mapping. Treatment of cells with forskolin, isoproterenol, calcitonin gene-related peptide, or 8-bromo-cAMP to increase intracellular cAMP reduced 32P incorporation into all phosphopeptides in vitro by 60-80% indicating that increases in cAMP caused endogenous phosphorylation of all sites on both alpha 1(200) and alpha 1(160) to nearly maximal levels. The extents of basal and stimulated phosphorylation in vivo were estimated by back phosphorylation methods to be 35-40% and 83-86%, respectively. In muscle cells metabolically labeled with 32P, 3 mol of phosphate were incorporated into alpha 1 subunits. Forskolin stimulated 32P incorporation into alpha 1 subunits 1.6-fold. Taken together, our results show that skeletal muscle cells contain two forms of the alpha 1 subunit which both are basally phosphorylated on cAMP-dependent phosphorylation sites and are further phosphorylated in response to agents that increase intracellular cAMP.  相似文献   

15.
gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) is the primary neurotransmitter that is responsible for the fast inhibitory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. A major post-translational mechanism that can rapidly regulate GABAAR function is receptor phosphorylation. This study was designed to test the effect of endogenous calcium and calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaM kinase II) activation on both allosteric modulator binding and GABAA receptor subunit phosphorylation. Endogenous CaM kinase II activity was stimulated, and GABAA receptors were subsequently analyzed for bothallosteric modulator binding properties and immunoprecipitated and analyzed for subunit phosphorylation levels. A significant increase in allosteric-modulator binding of the GABAAR was observed under conditions maximal for CaM kinase II activation. In addition, CaM kinase II activation resulted in a direct increase in phosphorylation of the GABAA receptor alpha1 subunit. The data suggest that the CaM kinase II-dependent phosphorylation of the GABAA receptor alpha1 subunit modulated allosteric modulator binding to the GABAA receptor.  相似文献   

16.
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV (CaM-kinase IV) phosphorylated calmodulin (CaM), which is its own activator, in a poly-L-Lys [poly(Lys)]-dependent manner. Although CaM-kinase II weakly phosphorylated CaM under the same conditions, CaM-kinase I, CaM-kinase kinase alpha, and cAMP-dependent protein kinase did not phosphorylate CaM. Polycations such as poly(Lys) were required for the phosphorylation. The optimum concentration of poly(Lys) for the phosphorylation of 1 microM CaM was about 10 microg/ml, but poly(Lys) strongly inhibited CaM-kinase IV activity toward syntide-2 at this concentration, suggesting that the phosphorylation of CaM is not due to simple activation of the catalytic activity. Poly-L-Arg could partially substitute for poly(Lys), but protamine, spermine, and poly-L-Glu/Lys/Tyr (6/3/1) could not. When phosphorylation was carried out in the presence of poly(Lys) having various molecular weights, poly(Lys) with a higher molecular weight resulted in a higher degree of phosphorylation. Binding experiments using fluorescence polarization suggested that poly(Lys) mediates interaction between the CaM-kinase IV/CaM complex and another CaM. The 32P-labeled CaM was digested with BrCN and Achromobacter protease I, and the resulting peptides were purified by reversed-phase HPLC. Automated Edman sequence analysis of the peptides, together with phosphoamino acid analysis, indicated that the major phosphorylation site was Thr44. Activation of CaM-kinase II by the phosphorylated CaM was significantly lower than that by the nonphosphorylated CaM. Thus, CaM-kinase IV activated by binding Ca2+/CaM can bind and phosphorylate another CaM with the aid of poly(Lys), leading to a decrease in the activity of CaM.  相似文献   

17.
This report demonstrates that specific proteolysis of brain spectrin by a calcium-dependent protease, calpain I, abolishes association of brain spectrin with the ankyrin-independent binding site(s) in brain membranes. Calpain I cleaves the beta subunit of spectrin at the N-terminal end leaving a 218-kDa fragment and cleaves the alpha subunit in the midregion to produce 150- and 130-kDa fragments. Calpain-proteolyzed spectrin almost completely loses the capacity to displace binding of intact spectrin to membranes. Spectrin digested by calpain I under conditions that almost completely destroyed membrane-binding remained associated as a tetramer and retained about 60% of the ability to associate with actin filaments. Cleavage of spectrin occurred at sites distinct from the membrane-binding site which is located on the beta subunit since the isolated 218-kDa fragment of the beta subunit as well as a reconstituted complex of alpha and 218-kDa beta subunit fragment partially regained binding activity. Moreover, cleavage of the alpha subunit alone reduced the affinity of spectrin for membranes by 2-fold. A consequence of distinct sites for calpain I cleavage and membrane-binding is that calpain I can digest spectrin while spectrin is complexed with other proteins and therefore has the potential to mediate disassembly of a spectrin-actin network from membranes.  相似文献   

18.
A synthetic peptide of 18 amino acids corresponding to the inhibitory domain of the heat-stable protein kinase inhibitor was synthesized and shown to inhibit both the C alpha and C beta isoforms of the catalytic (C) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Extracts from cells transfected with expression vectors coding for the C alpha or the C beta isoform of the C subunit required 200 nM protein kinase inhibitor peptide for half-maximal inhibition of kinase activity in extracts from these cells. An affinity column was constructed using this synthetic peptide, and the column was incubated with protein extracts from cells overexpressing C alpha or C beta. Elution of the affinity column with arginine allowed single step isolation of purified C alpha and C beta subunits. The C alpha and C beta proteins were enriched 200-400-fold from cellular extracts by this single step of affinity chromatography. No residual inhibitory peptide activity could be detected in the purified protein. The purified C subunit isoforms were used to demonstrate preferential antibody reactivity with the C alpha isoform by Western blot analysis. Furthermore, preliminary characterization showed both isoforms have similar apparent Km values for ATP (4 microM) and for Kemptide (5.6 microM). These results demonstrate that a combination of affinity chromatography employing peptides derived from the heat-stable protein kinase inhibitor protein and the use of cells overexpressing C subunit related proteins may be an effective means for purification and characterization of the C subunit isoforms. Furthermore, this method of purification may be applicable to other kinases which are known to be specifically inhibited by small peptides.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphorylation of intracellular precursors of human IL-1   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The human IL-1 molecules (IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta) are post-translationally cleaved from 31-kDa precursor to 18-kDa biologically active molecules. During the course of studies of post-translational modifications of human IL-1, we have observed that although LPS induced the production of both intracellular IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta in human monocytes, [32P]orthophosphate labeling of these cells revealed that intracellular precursor of IL-1 alpha (pre-IL-1 alpha) to be phosphorylated at least 10-fold more than intracellular pre-IL-1 beta. However, no 32P-incorporation could be detected in the 18-kDa processed IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta. Analysis by TLC revealed that the major phosphorylation site occurred at serine residue(s). The 32P was incorporated into multiply cleaved precursors of IL-1 alpha, which appeared in the absence of protease inhibitors. Since the smallest Mr pre-IL-1 alpha that was labeled with 32P was 22 kDa, the phosphorylated serine residue is presumably located adjacent to a sequence of four basic amino acids located in the 4-kDa region at the amino terminus of the 22-kDa precursor of IL-1 alpha. This serine residue might also be a major phosphorylation site for a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. This hypothesis was substantiated by the demonstration that a synthetic peptide analogue of this region (residue 84 to 112) could be similarly phosphorylated in vitro by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Furthermore, a truncated pre-IL-1 alpha (residue 64 to 271) and a "fusion" protein containing staphylococcal protein A and an amino-terminal half-portion of pre-IL-1 alpha (residue 1 to 112), but not mature IL-1 alpha (residue 113 to 271), could also be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. There is no comparable amino acid sequence in IL-1 beta which could be expected to be phosphorylated by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The physiologic relevance of phosphorylation of pre-IL-1 alpha was investigated. The data showed that phosphorylation of truncated pre-IL-1 alpha greatly enhanced its susceptibility to digestion by trypsin and promoted the conversion of pre-IL-1 alpha to the more biologically active IL-1. Although the precise role of the rather selective phosphorylation of pre-IL-1 alpha is not known, our findings do suggest that the phosphorylation of serine close to dibasic/tetrabasic amino acid sequence functions to facilitate the processing and/or release of IL-1 alpha.  相似文献   

20.
The ability of protein 4.1 to stimulate the binding of spectrin to F-actin has been compared by cosedimentation analysis for three avian (erythrocyte, brain, and brush border) and two mammalian (erythrocyte and brain) spectrin isoforms. Human erythroid protein 4.1 stimulated actin binding of all spectrins except the brush border isoform (TW 260/240). These results suggested that the beta subunit determined the protein 4.1 sensitivity of the heterodimer, since all avian alpha subunits are encoded by a single gene. Tissue-specific posttranslational modification of the alpha subunit was excluded by examining the properties of hybrid spectrins composed of the purified alpha subunit from avian erythrocyte or brush border spectrin and the beta subunit of human erythrocyte spectrin. A hybrid composed of avian brush border alpha and human erythroid beta spectrin ran on nondenaturing gels as a discrete band, migrating near human erythroid spectrin tetramers. The actin-binding activity of this hybrid was stimulated by protein 4.1, while either chain alone was devoid of activity. Therefore, although both subunits were required for actin binding, the sensitivity of the spectrin-actin interaction to protein 4.1 is a property uniquely bestowed on the heterodimer by the beta subunit. The singular insensitivity of brush border spectrin to stimulation by erythroid protein 4.1 was also consistent with the absence of proteins in avian intestinal epithelial cells which were immunoreactive with polyclonal antisera sensitive to all of the known avian and human erythroid 4.1 isoforms.  相似文献   

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