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1.
Tubulin, the primary constituent of microtubules, is a GTP-binding proteins with structural similarities to other GTP-binding proteins. Whereas microtubules have been implicated as modulators of the adenylate cyclase system, the mechanism of this regulation has been elusive. Tubulin, polymerized with the hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog, 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p], can promote inhibition of synaptic membrane adenylate cyclase which persists subsequent to washing. Tubulin with Gpp(NH)p bound was slightly less potent than free Gpp(NH)p in the inhibition of adenylate cyclase, but tubulin without nucleotide bound had no effect on the enzyme. A GTP-binding protein from the rod outer segment (transducin), with Gpp(NH)p bound, was also without effect on adenylate cyclase. Tubulin (regardless of the nucleotide bound to it) did not alter the activity of the adenylate cyclase catalytic unit directly. When tubulin was polymerized with the hydrolysis-resistant photoaffinity GTP analog, [32P]P3(4-azidoanilido)-P1-5'-GTP ([32P]AAGTP), and this protein was added to synaptic membranes, AAGTP was transferred from tubulin to the inhibitory GTP-binding protein, Gi. This transfer was blocked by prior incubation of the membranes with Gpp(NH)p or covalent binding of AAGTP to tubulin prior to exposure of that tubulin to membranes. Incubation of membranes with Gpp(NH)p subsequent to incubation with tubulin-AAGTP results in a decrease in AAGTP bound to Gi and a compensatory increase in AAGTP bound to the stimulatory GTP-binding protein, Gs. Likewise, persistent inhibition of adenylate cyclase by tubulin-Gpp(NH)p could be overridden by the inclusion of 100 microM Gpp(NH)p in the assay inhibition. Whereas Gpp(NH)p promotes persistent inhibition of synaptic membrane adenylate cyclase without incubation at elevated temperatures, tubulin [with AAGTP or Gpp(NH)p bound] requires 30 s incubation at 23 degrees C to effect adenylate cyclase inhibition. Photoaffinity experiments yield parallel results. These data are consistent with synaptic membrane tubulin regulating neuronal adenylate cyclase by transferring GTP to Gi and, subsequently, to Gs.  相似文献   

2.
The maturing rat reticulocyte was used as a model system in which to study developmental changes in the protein components of hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase. Plasma membranes from rat erythrocytes display 10 to 20% of the adenylate cyclase activity and 30 to 50% of the beta-adrenergic receptors which are measured in membranes from rat reticulocytes, as noted by others. Reticulocyte membranes also display equal activities in response to (-)-isoproterenol in the presence of either GTP or GTP gamma S, whereas erythrocyte membrane adenylate cyclase is twice as active in the presence of isoproterenol plus GTP gamma S as in the presence of isoproterenol plus GTP. We have studied this system in greater detail by developing or applying independent assays for the catalytic protein (C) and the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein (G/F) of adenylate cyclase. C was assayed in membranes by its intrinsic Mn2+-stimulated activity. It was also measured by reconstituting membranes with saturating amounts of GTP gamma S-activated G/F, yielding an operationally defined Vmax for the catalyst. By either assay, reticulocytes display about 3-fold greater C activity than do erythrocytes. G/F was assayed by its ability to confer GTP gamma S-stimulated activity upon C (which was supplied by membranes of cyc- S49 lymphoma cells). This assay indicates that reticulocyte membranes contain about 3 times as much G/F as do erythrocyte membranes. Cholera toxin and [32P]NAD were used to [32P]ADP-ribosylate the 45,000- and 52,000-dalton subunits of G/F. Total incorporation of 32P into these subunits decreased 3- to 4-fold with reticulocyte maturation. The ratio of label in the 52,000-dalton peptide to that in the 45,000-dalton peptide decreased from 0.29 in reticulocyte membranes to 0.14 in erythrocyte membranes. The apparently coordinate decrease in the amounts of C, G/F, and beta-adrenergic receptors suggest that the stoichiometry between these components is maintained during maturation, and may account for the decrease in adenylate cyclase in the membranes. However, the qualitative changes in responsiveness to hormones in the presence of GTP or GTP gamma S may be related to loss or proteolysis of the 52,000-dalton subunit of G/F.  相似文献   

3.
Influences of alpha 2-adrenoceptor stimulation on adenylate cyclase activity were investigated in cerebral cortical membranes of rats. Pretreatment of the membranes with islet-activating protein and NAD resulted in a significant increase in basal activity as well as in GTP- or forskolin/GTP-induced elevation of adenylate cyclase activity. Strong activation of adenylate cyclase was also caused in membranes pretreated with cholera toxin together with NAD in comparison to that in control membranes, suggesting that adenylate cyclase activity is perhaps regulated by stimulatory and inhibitory GTP binding regulatory protein existing in synaptic membranes. In addition, adrenaline (with propranolol) or clonidine significantly reduced adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by pretreatment with forskolin and GTP. The inhibitory effects of adrenaline were also observed in membranes pretreated with cholera toxin and NAD. Moreover, the inhibition by adrenaline or clonidine was completely abolished by treatment with (a) yohimbine or (b) islet-activating protein and NAD. It is suggested that alpha 2-receptor stimulation causes inhibitory influences on adenylate cyclase activity mediated by the inhibitory GTP binding regulatory protein in synaptic membranes of rat cerebral cortex.  相似文献   

4.
Guanine nucleotide-dependent modulation of agonist binding to the beta-receptor reflects coupling of the receptor to the nucleotide regulatory protein. Similarly, guanine nucleotide-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase can be used as an index of coupling between the regulatory protein and the catalytic unit of the cyclase. Using both approaches we have studied coupling in the beta-adrenergic receptor-adenylate cyclase system in rabbit liver during neonatal development. With [3H]dihydroalprenolol as ligand, the Bmax was relatively unchanged (200-300 fmol/mg of protein) between birth and end of day 1 and was similar to adult values. Guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate-dependent shift in agonist (l-isoproterenol) competition curves was biphasic, decreasing from 10-fold in membranes isolated from animals at term to about 6-fold in membranes from 6-h-old neonates, and increasing progressively in older animals to a maximal measurable value of 42-fold in the adult. The ability of guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate, GTP, GTP plus isoproterenol, NaF, or forskolin to activate adenylate cyclase was also biphasic and age-dependent. With Mn2+ the measured activity was not at any time greater than the activity at term. Pretreatment of membranes with cholera toxin resulted in differential levels of enhancement of adenylate cyclase activity wherein much lower enhancement was observed in membranes from neonatal animals. With [32P]NAD as substrate, cholera toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of membranes indicated development-dependent accumulation of Ns peptides. From these results we suggest that there is a decreased efficiency in the coupling of the beta-adrenergic receptor to hepatic adenylate cyclase in early neonatal life. The molecular basis for the biphasic nature of the coupling is presently unclear.  相似文献   

5.
Choleragen and beta-adrenergic agonists, both of which activate turkey erythrocyte adenylate cyclase, have been reported to accelerate release of bound [3H]guanyl nucleotides from turkey erythrocyte membranes. We have now obtained evidence that choleragen- or isoproterenol-stimulated release reflects a change in the affinity of the regulatory subunit (G/F) of adenylate cyclase for guanyl nucleotides. Solubilized preparations of turkey erythrocytes that had bound radiolabeled GTP were chromatographed on Ultrogel AcA 34. The protein from which guanyl nucleotide was released upon incubation with choleragen or isoproterenol was co-eluted with G/F activity. Furthermore, this protein appears to be the same size as the complex containing the 42,000-dalton peptide, ADP*-ribosylated by choleragen, which is presumably a subunit of G/F. ADP ribosylation of the 42,000-dalton subunit of G/F by choleragen occurred with a half-time of about 5 min, whereas choleragen-stimulated release of guanyl nucleotides was much slower (t1/2 greater than or equal to 60 min). When membranes were treated with choleragen and NAD, the delay in activation of adenylate cyclase by guanylyl imidodiphosphate was decreased but not abolished, a finding consistent with the idea that release of endogenously bound nucleotide (and subsequent binding of the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog) occurs only slowly following ADP ribosylation. In contrast, activation of the adenylate cyclase of either toxin-treated or untreated membranes in the presence of isoproterenol and guanylyl imidodiphosphate was very rapid. These data support the hypothesis that isoproterenol and choleragen may activate adenylate cyclase, at least in part, by increasing the rate of release of guanyl nucleotides from G/F.  相似文献   

6.
1. GTP, but not p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5′-[βγ-imido]triphosphate), abolishes the sensitivity of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase to the lipid-phase separations occurring in the outer half of the bilayer in liver plasma membranes from rat. 2. When either GTP or p[NH]ppG alone stimulate adenylate cyclase, the enzyme senses only those lipid-phase separations occurring in the inner half of the bilayer. 3. Trypsin treatment of intact hepatocytes has no effect on the basal, fluoride-, GTP- or p[NH]ppG-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. However, 125I-labelled-glucagon specific binding decays with a half-life matching that of the decay of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. 4. When GTP or p[NH]ppG are added to assays of glucagon-stimulated activity, the half-life of the trypsin-mediated decay of activity is substantially increased and the decay plots are no longer first-order. 5. Trypsin treatment of purified rat liver plasma membranes abolishes basal and all ligand-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, and 125I-labelled-glucagon specific binding. 6. Benzyl alcohol activates the GTP- and p[NH]ppG-stimulated activities in an identical fashion, whereas these activities are affected differently when glucagon is present in the assays. 7. We suggest that guanine nucleotides alter the mode of coupling between the receptor and catalytic unit. In the presence of glucagon and GTP, a complex of receptor, catalytic unit and nucleotide regulatory protein occurs as a transient intermediate, releasing a free unstable active catalytic unit. In the presence of p[NH]ppG and glucagon, the transient complex yields a relatively stable complex of the catalytic unit associated with a p[NH]ppG-bound nucleotide-regulatory protein.  相似文献   

7.
It has been reported recently (Begin-Heick, N. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6187-6193) that adipocytes from the obese mouse strain (ob/ob), unlike normal mice (+/+), lack functional Gi, a GTP-regulated protein complex that mediates inhibition of adenylate cyclase. In contrast, we have found functional Gi linked to inhibition of adenylate cyclase in adipocyte membranes from both ob/ob and +/+ mice. This conclusion is based on observation of: 1) GTP-dependent inhibition of adenylate cyclase by antilipolytic agents, such as prostaglandin E2, nicotinic acid, and the adenosine receptor agonist, phenylisopropyladenosine (PIA); 2) classical biphasic GTP kinetics, with stimulation by low and inhibition by high concentrations of GTP; and 3) elimination of cyclase inhibition by antilipolytic agents upon treatment of ob/ob adipocytes with pertussis toxin. Upon treatment with pertussis toxin and [32P] NAD, purified adipocyte membranes from ob/ob mice incorporated twice as much radioactivity per unit membrane protein than those from +/+ mice in the 40,000-42,000 region. The inhibitory actions of PIA on adenylate cyclase were blocked by the adenosine receptor antagonists, theophylline and isobutylmethylxanthine. However, in contrast to other known inhibitory adenosine receptors, relatively high (100 nM) PIA concentrations were required for half-maximal inhibition of adenylate cyclases from both +/+ and ob/ob adipocytes. The adipocyte adenylate cyclase from both mouse strains were approximately equally susceptible to inhibition by nicotinic acid and prostaglandin E2. However, the ob/ob cyclase was inhibited by 47% with PIA, whereas the enzyme from the +/+ mouse was inhibited by only 27% (p less than 0.01). This greater inhibition by adenosine may contribute to abnormal fat metabolism in adipocytes from ob/ob mice.  相似文献   

8.
The guanine nucleotide regulatory protein component (N) of the frog erythrocyte membrane adenylate cyclase system appears to form a stable complex with the beta-adrenergic receptor (R) in the presence of agonist (H). This agonist-promoted ternary complex HRN can be solubilized with Lubrol. The guanine nucleotide regulatory protein associated with the solubilized complex can be adsorbed either to GTP-Sepharose directly or to wheat germ lectin-Sepharose via its interaction with the receptor which is a glycoprotein. Guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate)(GTP gamma S) can be used to elute the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein from either Sepharose derivative. The resulting N.GTP gamma S complex conveys nucleotide-dependent adenylate cyclase activity when combined with a Lubrol-solubilized extract of turkey erythrocyte membranes. The ability to observe GTP gamma S-dependent reconstitution of adenylate cyclase activity in the eluate from either resin required the formation of the HRN complex prior to solubilization. The N protein can be identified by its specific [32P]ADP ribosylation catalyzed by cholera toxin in the presence of [32P]NAD+. The existence of a stable HRN intermediate complex is supported by the observation that agonist pretreatment of frog erythrocyte membranes results in a 100% increase in the amount of 32P-labeled N protein eluted from the lectin-Sepharose in the presence of GTP gamma S compared to membranes pretreated with either antagonist or agonist plus GTP. Our results therefore provide evidence that the same guanine nucleotide-binding protein that associates with the beta-adrenergic receptor in the presence of agonist mediates adenylate cyclase activation.  相似文献   

9.
Pretreatment of rat brain membranes at pH 4.5 before assay at pH 7.4 modifies the function of GTP-binding proteins (G-proteins) by eliminating Gs-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity while increasing opiate-inhibited adenylate cyclase activity. To help characterize the molecular nature of the low pH effect, we labeled Gs and Gi alpha-subunits in both control and low pH-pretreated membranes with the GTP photoaffinity analog [32P]P3 (4-azidoanilido)-P1-5'-GTP ([32P]AAGTP). When membranes were preincubated with unlabeled AAGTP, a persistent inhibitory state of adenylate cyclase was produced, which was overcome in untreated membranes with high (greater than 1 microM) concentrations of guanylyl-5'-imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p]. In low pH-pretreated membranes, this inhibition could not be overcome, and stimulation by Gpp(NH)p was eliminated. Maximal inhibition of adenylate cyclase achieved by incubation with AAGTP was not altered by low pH pretreatment. Incorporation of [32P]AAGTP into Gs (42 kilodaltons) or Gi/o (40 kilodaltons) was unaffected by low pH pretreatment; however, transfer of 32P from Gi/o to Gs, which occurs with low (10 nM) concentrations of Gpp(NH)p in untreated membranes, was severely retarded in low pH-pretreated membranes. Both the potency and efficacy of Gpp(NH)p in producing exchange of [32P]AAGTP from Gi/o to Gs were markedly reduced by low pH pretreatment. These results correlate the loss of Gs-stimulated adenylate cyclase with a loss of transfer of nucleotide from Gi/o to Gs alpha-subunits and suggest that the nucleotide exchange participates in the modulation of neuronal adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

10.
In crude membranes from human T lymphoblasts Molt 3 cultured under standard conditions, the adenylate cyclase system was stimulated by GTP, its beta gamma-imido analogue (p[NH]ppG,) NaF and forskolin, but not by isoprenaline, prostaglandin E1 and vasoactive intestinal peptide. TPA (tumour-promoting agent phorbol ester) added at low concentration (3.2 nM) to the culture medium induced a marked increase in functional beta 2-adrenoceptors. Competition curves of [125I]cyanopindolol with the antagonist ICI 118.551 and four beta-adrenergic agonists indicated that the emergence of functional beta 2-adrenoceptors corresponded to one class of binding sites, shifting from a high-affinity state for agonists to a low-affinity state in the presence of p[NH]ppG. This expression of beta 2-adrenoceptors after a 4 h lag period depended on newly formed mRNA and protein synthesis as judged by the inhibitory effects of actinomycin D and cycloheximide. Further effects of TPA included alterations of the stimulatory G-protein Gs and/or the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

11.
In the presence of 1 microM atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and low (0.1 mM) Mg2+ concentrations, the initial rate of binding of [3H]guanosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate [( 3H]p[NH]ppG) to rat lung plasma membranes was increased twofold to threefold. ANF-dependent stimulation of the initial rate of [3H]p[NH]ppG binding was reduced at high (5 mM) Mg2+ concentrations. Preincubation of membranes with p[NH]ppG (5 min at 37 degrees C) eliminated the ANF-dependent effect on [3H]p[NH]ppG binding whereas ANF-dependent [3H]p[NH]ppG binding was unaffected by similar pretreatment with guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate (GDP[beta S]). An increase in ANF concentration from 10 pM to 1 microM caused a 40% decrease in forskolin-stimulated or isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities (IC50 5 nM) in rat lung plasma membranes. GTP (100 microM) was obligatory for the ANF-dependent inhibition of adenylate cyclase, which could be completely overcome by the presence of 100 microM GDP[beta S] or the addition of 10 mM Mn2+. Reduction of Na2+ concentration from 120 mM to 20 mM had the same effect. Pertussis toxin eliminated ANF-dependent inhibition of adenylate cyclase by catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of membrane-bound Ni protein (41-kDa alpha subunit of the inhibitory guanyl-nucleotide-binding protein of adenylate cyclase). The data support the notion that one of the ANF receptors in rat lung plasma membranes is negatively coupled to a hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase complex via the GTP-binding Ni protein.  相似文献   

12.
Both the light-stimulated cGMP phosphodiesterase of retinal rod outer segments (ROS) and hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase are regulated by guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (N). Transducin serves as the signal-carrying regulatory protein in ROS, and the N protein (also called G or G/F) performs this role in the adenylate cyclase system. The GTP form of these regulatory proteins activates the corresponding enzyme, whereas the GDP form does not. Both transducin and the N protein possess a GTPase activity that restores the regulatory protein to the unstimulated state. Cholera enterotoxin catalyzes the transfer of ADP-ribose from NAD+ to the N protein, which inhibits its GTPase activity and activates adenylate cyclase. We report here that the toxin also catalyzes ADP-ribosylation of the alpha-subunit of transducin in ROS membranes. This modification of the guanine nucleotide-binding subunit of transducin is markedly enhanced by the bleaching of rhodopsin and by the addition of guanosine-5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate. In contrast, GDP, GTP, and guanosine-5'-(3-O)thiotriphosphate inhibit the reaction, while GMP and ATP have no effect. Under optimal conditions, toxin catalyzes labeling of 0.7 mol of the alpha-subunit of transducin/mol of bound [3H]guanosine-5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate and causes 70% inhibition of the light-dependent GTPase activity of transducin in ROS. These results indicate close functional homology between transducin of ROS and the N protein of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

13.
1. Preincubation of luteal membranes with human choriogonadotropin results in the formation of an activated state of adenylate cyclase which is not reversed by washing and which is limited only by the absence of guanine nucleotides, whereas preincubation with GTP yields only a partially activated adenylate cyclase which requires the presence of both GTP and human choriogonadotropin during assay to demonstrate maximal activity. 2. Preincubation of luteal membranes with GTP and human choriogonadotropin does not lead to a synergistic increase in wash-resistant activity. 3. Luteal membranes that had been preincubated with GTP and hormone exhibited a decreasing rate of cyclic AMP synthesis during the adenylate cyclase assay incubation; addition of GTP during the assay incubation reversed the decrease. 4. Membranes that had been preincubated in the absence of guanine nucleotide and hormone showed a `burst' phase of cyclic AMP synthesis when GTP was present in the assay incubation and a `lag' phase with p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5′-[β,γ-imido]triphosphate) present in the assay. The presence of human choriogonadotropin with either nucleotide in the assay incubation eliminated the curvatures in plots observed with guanine nucleotides alone. 5. Luteal adenylate cyclase was persistently activated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG alone or in combination with human choriogonadotropin; the activation caused by p[NH]ppG alone was still increasing after 70min of preincubation, whereas that caused by p[NH]ppG in the presence of hormone was essentially complete within 10min of preincubation. 6. Luteal adenylate cyclase that had been partially preactivated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG was slightly increased in activity by the inclusion of further p[NH]ppG in the adenylate cyclase assay incubation, but more so with p[NH]ppG and hormone. Human choriogonadotropin alone caused no further increase in the activity of the partially stimulated preparation unless p[NH]ppG was also added to the assay incubation. 7. GTP decreased the activity of adenylate cyclase in membranes that had been partially preactivated in the presence of p[NH]ppG; the decrease in activity was greater when GTP and hormone were present simultaneously in the assay. 8. The results indicate that stable activation states of adenylate cyclase can be induced by preincubation of luteal membranes in vitro with human choriogonadotropin or p[NH]ppG, and that in the presence of p[NH]ppG the hormone may accelerate events subsequent to guanine nucleotide binding. Stable activation of luteal adenylate cyclase by prior exposure to GTP is not achieved. The involvement of GTPase activity and of hormone-promoted guanine nucleotide exchange in the modulation of luteal adenylate cyclase activity is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
(1) The apparent [3H]epinephrine binding parameters of plasma membranes from rat liver and ascites hepatomas such as AH-7974, AH-371A and AH-130, as measured by equilibrium dialysis and/or Millipore filtration, were almost similar to each other. The epinephrine binding sites in the plasma membranes were heterogenous (alpha, beta-receptors and non specific sites), but the pattern of these binding sites in the liver membranes appeared almost similar to that in the hepatoma membranes. 2. The beta-receptor seemed to be specifically involved in the epinephrine-mediated activation of adenylate cyclase of the liver membranes. In spite of the presence of almost similar beta-receptors and adenylate cyclase, the adenylate cyclase of hepatoma membranes was found to be less sensitive to the epinephrine-mediated activation. 3. GTP alone was found to activate adenylate cyclase of liver and hepatoma membranes to some extents when the concentration of ATP was lower (0.3 mM). When GTP was added with epinephrine, a marked, synergistic activation of adenylate cyclase was observed in liver plasma membranes, but not in hepatoma ones. 4. The synergistic activation of adenylate cyclase by epinephrine plus GTP showed a characteristic kinetic feature, reaching a maximal peak within 1 min or so after mixing. 5. Binding of [3H]epinephrine to liver membranes proceeded monophasically in the absence of GTP, while it proceeded biphasically in the presence of GTP, showing the retardation of binding at some earlier stages. GTP added at the time of binding equilibrium induced the temporary release of bound epinephrine from the beta-receptors. The GTP-induced temporary release of bound epinephrine, occurring within 4-5 min after the addition of GTP, was less marked in the hepatoma membranes as compared with the liver membranes. 6. Possible impairment of the GTP-dependent coupling mechanism in the receptor-adenylate cyclase system of hepatoma plasma membranes was suggested.  相似文献   

15.
In adipocyte membranes, cholera toxin may ADP-ribosylate the islet-activating protein (IAP) substrate, under certain conditions. Covalent modification is maximal in the absence of a guanosine triphosphate; in the presence of 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate, incorporation of [32P]ADP-ribose is markedly reduced. ADP-ribosylation by cholera toxin has similar functional consequences as does IAP-mediated modification, i.e. the biphasic response of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase to GTP and the inhibition by N6-phenylisopropyladenosine is abolished, and only the stimulatory phase remains. In contrast, membranes treated with cholera toxin in the presence of GTP display both the stimulatory and inhibitory responses to GTP. The binding of the adenosine analog [3H]N6-phenylisopropyladenosine is increased in the presence of GTP. Treatment of the membranes with IAP, but not with cholera toxin in the absence of GTP, reverses this GTP effect on [3H]N6-phenylisopropyladenosine binding. However, [3H]N6-phenylisopropyladenosine binding is still sensitive to GTP in membranes treated with cholera toxin in the presence of GTP. In adipocyte and cerebral cortical membranes, the IAP substrate appears as a 39,000/41,000-Da doublet which does not appear to reflect protease activity. On two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels, these two proteins migrate with approximate pI values 6.0 and 5.6, respectively. Although both behave similarly under all conditions explored in this study, it is unknown whether both, or only one, are involved in inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity. These results extend the already striking homology between the adenylate cyclase complex and the visual system. Ni, as well as transducin, may be ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin and by IAP, and, in all cases, there are functional consequences.  相似文献   

16.
A GTP-dependent regulatory component of adenylate cyclase was found in myelin from rat brain. The fraction solubilized from myelin contained a component that reconstituted guanine nucleotide-responsive adenylate cyclase activity when combined with the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase prepared from rat brain. Purified myelin demonstrated little adenylate cyclase activity, even in the presence of F- or Mn2+. The reconstituted activity was dependent on the amount of the solubilized myelin fraction and required the presence of 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate, a hydrolysis-resistant analog of GTP. The elution pattern of the component solubilized from myelin in gel filtration was very similar to that of a GTP-dependent regulatory component from synaptic plasma membranes. The content of the regulatory component-like activity in myelin was estimated to be 50-60% of that in synaptic plasma membranes. Cholera toxin ADP-ribosylated proteins having molecular weights of 48,000, 38,000, 23,000, 20,000, and 15,000 and other minor peptides in myelin, some of which were also present in synaptic plasma membranes. We conclude that myelin contained a GTP-dependent regulatory component of adenylate cyclase despite the apparent lack of adenylate cyclase activity in myelin.  相似文献   

17.
The guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component of adenylate cyclase (G/F) has been purified from human erythrocyte membranes. It is composed of two major polypeptides with molecular weights of 35,000 and 45,000. When cyc- S49 lymphoma cell plasma membranes are reconstituted with purified human erythrocyte G/F, stimulation of adenylate cyclase by beta-adrenergic agonists, guanine nucleotides, and fluoride is restored. Binding of GTP gamma S to human erythrocyte G/F and GTP gamma S-mediated activation of the protein are closely correlated. The agreement between the apparent dissociation constants for these two reactions suggests that the measured binding site is identical to the site responsible for activation. A 41,000-dalton protein has been identified as a contaminant of preparations of G/F that have been purified by four successive chromatographic steps. This protein serves as a specific substrate for ADP-ribosylation and labeling by islet activating protein (IAP) and [32P]NAD, and it appears to contribute an additional high-affinity guanine nucleotide binding site to such preparations.  相似文献   

18.
Functional interaction of the inhibitory GTP regulatory component (Ni) with the adenylate cyclase catalytic subunit has not previously been demonstrated after detergent solubilization. The present report describes a sodium cholate-solubilized preparation of rat cerebral cortical membrane adenylate cyclase that retains guanine nucleotide-mediated inhibition of activity. Methods of membrane preparation, cholate extraction, and assay conditions were manipulated such that guanosine-5'-(beta-gamma-imido)triphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] inhibited basal activity 40-60%. The rank order of potency among various GTP analogs was similar in cholate extracts and in membranes: guanosine-5'-0-(3-thiotriphosphate) greater than Gpp(NH)p greater than GTP. Inclusion of 0.1 mM EGTA reduced basal activity 70-90% and abolished Gpp(NH)p inhibition of basal activity in both membranes and cholate extracts. Forskolin-stimulated activity was also inhibited by Gpp(NH)p. Treatment of either membranes or cholate extracts with N-ethylmaleimide abolished Gpp(NH)p inhibition. Gel filtration of the cholate extract over a Sepharose 6B column in 0.1% Lubrol PX partially resolved the adenylate cyclase components. However, Gpp(NH)p inhibition of basal activity (60% of the control) was maintained in select column fractions. Sucrose gradient centrifugation totally resolved the catalytic subunit from both functional Ni and stimulatory GTP regulatory component (Ns) activities. The sedimentation of functional Ni activity was detected by assaying the ability of sucrose gradient fractions to confer Gpp(NH)p inhibition of the resolved catalytic activity. Labeling of gradient or column fractions with pertussis toxin and [32P]NAD revealed that both the 39,000- and 41,000-dalton substrates comigrated with the functional Ni activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
1. Adenylate cyclase in plasma membranes from rat liver was stimulated by prostaglandin E1, and to a lesser extent by prostaglandin E2. Prostaglandin F1alpha and A1 did not stimulate the cyclase. The prostaglandin E1-mediated activation was found to require GTP when the substrate ATP concentration was reduced from 3 mM to 0.3 mM in the reaction mixture. Adenylate cyclase of the plasma membranes from rat ascites hepatomas AH-130 and AH-7974 was not stimulated by prostaglandin E1 in the presence or the absence of GTP, although the basal activity of adenylate cyclase as well as its stimulation by GTP alone were similar to normal liver plasma membranes. 2. Liver plasma membranes were found to have two specific binders for [3H] prostaglandin E1 with dissociation constants of 17.6-10(-9) M and 13.6-10(8) M (37 degrees C) and one specific binder for [3H]prostaglandin F2alpha with a dissociation constant of 2.31-10(8) M (37 degrees C). The specific binders for prostaglandin E1 could not be detected in the hepatoma plasma membranes. 3. Binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 to the liver plasma membranes was exchange by, GTP dGPT, GDP, ATP and GMP-P(N)P, but not by GMP, CGMP, DTTP, UTP or CTP. The increase in the binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 was found to be due to the increased affinity of the specific binders to prostaglandin F2alpha was not affected by GTP. 4. GTP alone was found to increase V of adenylate cyclase of liver plasma membranes, while GTP plus prostaglandin E1 was found to decrease Km of adenylate cyclase in addition to the increase of V to a further extent.  相似文献   

20.
In this report, we show that fluoride activates dark-adapted rod outer segment phosphodiesterase, and that this activation is mediated, in analogy with adenylate cyclase, through a GTP binding protein. The GTP binding protein is released from dark-adapted rod outer segment membranes by exposure to fluoride and subsequent centrifugation. The 39-kilodalton subunit of the GTP binding protein, released from the membrane by this procedure, exhibits altered susceptibility to limited trypsin proteolysis, identical to that seen when hydrolysis-resistant GTP analogs are bound to that subunit. Repeated exposure of dark-adapted rod outer segment membranes to fluoride and subsequent centrifugation results in maximal activation of the membrane-bound phosphodiesterase. Thus, activation of phosphodiesterase by fluoride in the dark appears similar to fluoride activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

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