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1.
In thoroughly washed guinea pig fundic gastric mucosal membranes, NaCl markedly potentiates the maximal histamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and increases the concentration of histamine required for half-maximal effect (EC50). The apparent dissociation constants for the antagonists cimetidine and metiamide are only slightly increased in the presence of NaCl. Potassium chloride does not change the histamine EC50 but does increase the maximal histamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest that Na and K ions may play an important role in the regulation of histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase in gastric mucosa. The effect of the Na ion appears to be more specific for histamine H2 receptor agonists than for antagonists.  相似文献   

2.
Multiple-equilibrium equations were solved to investigate the individual and separate effects of Mg2+, Mn2+, Ca2+, ATP4–, and their complexes on the kinetics of brain adenylate cyclase. The effects of divalent metals and/or ATP4– (in excess of their participation in complex formation) were determined and, from the corresponding apparent affinity values, the following kinetic constants were obtained:K m(MgATP)=1.0 mM,K i(ATP4–)=0.27 mM,K m(MnATP)=0.07 mM, andK i(CaATP)=0.015 mM. MgATP, MnATP, ATP4–, and CaATP were shown to compete for the active site of the enzyme. Hence, it is proposed that endogenous metabolites with a strong ligand activity for divalent metals, such as citrate and some amino acids, become integrated into a metabolite feedback control of the enzyme through the release of ATP4– from MgATP. Ca2+ fluxes may participate in the endogenous regulation of adenylate cyclase by modifying the level of CaATP. The free divalent metals show an order of affinityK 0.5(Ca2+)=0.02 mM,K 0.5(Mn2+)=3.8 mM,K 0.5(Mg2+)=4.7 mM, and an order of activity Mn2+>Mg2+>Ca2+. The data indicate that Mn2+ and Mg2+ ions may compete for a regulatory site distinct from the active site and increaseV m without changingK m(MgATP),K m(MnATP), orK i(ATP4–). The interactions of ATP4– and CaATP, which act as competitive inhibitors of the reaction of the enzyme with the substrates MgATP and MnATP, and Mg2+ and Mn2+, which act as activators of the enzyme in the absence of hormones, are shown to follow the random rapid equilibrium BiBi group-transfer mechanism of Cleland with the stipulation that neither Mg2+ nor Mn2+, in excess of their respective participation in substrate formation, are obligatorily required for basal activity. ATP4– and CaATP are involved in dead-end inhibition. For MgCl2 saturation curves at constant total ATP concentration, the computer-generated curves based on the RARE BiBi model predict a change in the Hill cooperativityh from a basal value of 2.6, when Mg2+ is not obligatorily required, to 4.0 when the addition of hormones or neurotransmitters induces an obligatory requirement for Mg2+.Abbreviations used: Me, divalent metal; MeT (MgT or MnT), total Me (Me2+ and its complexes); ATPT, total ATP (ATP4– and its complexes).  相似文献   

3.
Transient changes in cyclic AMP levels accompany the light-growth response of the sporangiophore of Phycomyces blakesleeanus. Furthermore growth is regulated by endogenous hormones. Since adenylate cyclase may perform a role in these events, some properties of the enzyme from the sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus are reported here. The enzyme is mostly particulate and activity is dependent on a divalent cation possibly Mg2+; Mn2+ and Ca2+ are inhibitory. Its Km is 0.5 mM and the pH optimum is 7.8. Low levels of GTP markedly enhance activity. Nueleoside triphosphates, including ATP at high concentrations, are inhibitory while AMP and ADP and to a lesser extent IMP increase activity. Ouabain, NaF, and alloxan also inhibit Phycomyces cyclase. Pyruvate, imidazole, nucleoside monophosphates other than AMP and IMP, histamine, glucagon, octopamine, γ-aminobutyric acid and norepinephrine have little or no effect. However, high concentrations of epinephrine and dopamine tripled activity. The effect of dopamine was shown to be saturable. Adenylate cyclase extracted in the dark was significantly activated upon simultaneous exposure to light and substrate. An inference is made that sensory transduction in Phycomyces may involve adenylate cyclase, although the interaction may or may not be a direct one.  相似文献   

4.
A potent (Ki = 0.01 mM), competitive inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in particulate fractions of guinea pig lung by 2′O-palmitoyl cyclic AMP has been observed, in striking contrast to the inactivity of cyclic AMP and N6,2′O-dibutyryl cyclic AMP at concentrations of up to 1 mm or more. The possibility that 2′O-palmitoyl cyclic AMP or similar compounds might function as endogenous regulators of the hormonal stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity is discussed. Several 6- and 8- substituted purine 3′,5′-cyclic ribotides also inhibit, probably by direct interaction with enzymatic sulfhydryl groups. A study of the inhibition by purine bases, nucleosides, and 5′ nucleotides suggests that most of the substrate (ATP) binding determinants reside in the nucleoside. The particulate enzyme fractions were found to have lower ATPase activity relative to cyclase activity than cyclase preparations from either guinea pig heart or bronchial smooth muscle. Lung cyclase fractions were maximally stimulated by 5–15 mm Mg2+ in the presence of 1.2 mm ATP as substrate. The percentage of stimulation of cyclase activity by 0.01 mm isoproterenol is dependent on the Mg2+ concentration. Cyclase activity was significantly stimulated not only by the catecholamines (isoproterenol, epinephrine, and norepinephrine) and fluoride ion, but also by prostaglandins E1, E2, and F, histamine, and glucagon.  相似文献   

5.
In hamster adipocyte ghosts, ACTH stimulates adenylate cyclase by a GTP-dependent process, whereas prostaglandin E E1, α-adrenergic agonists and nicotinic acid inhibit the enzyme by a mechanism which is both GTP- and sodium-dependent. The influence of the divalent cations Mn2+ and Mg2+, was studied on these two different, apparently receptor-mediated effects on the adipocyte adenylate cyclase. At low Mn2+ concentrations, GTP (1 μM) decreased enzyme activity by about 80%. Under this condition, ACTH (0.1 μM) stimulated the cyclase by 6- to 8-fold, and NaCl (100 mM) caused a similar activation. In the presence of both GTP and NaCl, prostaglandin E1 (1 or 10 μM) and nicotinic acid (30 μM) inhibited the enzyme by about 70–80% and epinephrine (300 μM, added in combination with a β-adrenergic blocking agent) by 40–50%. With increasing concentrations of Mn2+, the GTP-induced decrease and the NaCl-induced increase in activity diminished, with a concomitant decrease in prostaglandin E1?, nicotinic acid- and epinephrine-induced inhibitions as well as in ACTH-induced stimulation. At 1 mM Mn2+, inhibition of the enzyme was almost abolished and stimulation by ACTH was largely reduced, whereas activation of the enzyme by KF (10 mM) was only partially impaired. The uncoupling action of Mn2+ on hormone-induced inhibition was half-maximal at 100–200 μM and appeared not to be due to increased formation of the enzyme substrate, Mn · ATP. It occurred without apparent lag phase and could not be overcome by increasing the concentration of GTP. Similar but not identical findings with regard to adenylate cyclase stimulation and inhibition by hormonal factors were obtained with Mg2+, although about 100-fold higher concentrations of Mg2+ than of Mn2+ were required. The data indicate that Mn2+at low concentrations functionally uncouples inhibitory and stimulatory hormone receptors from adenylate adenylate cyclase in membrane preparations of hamster adipocytes, and they suggest that the mechanism leading to uncoupling involves an action of Mn2+ on the functions of the guanine nucleotide site(s) in the system.  相似文献   

6.
Isolated hepatocytes converted exogenous [α-32P]ATP to cyclic [32P]AMP at high rates. This system was used for kinetic studies of the effects of glucagon, fluoride, free magnesium and free ATP4? on adenylate cyclase. In the absence or presence of glucagon, free Mg2+ activated adenylate cyclase by decreasing the Km for MgATP2? without changing V. Free ATP4? was not a potent inhibitor of adenylate cyclase and the only effect of glucagon was to increase V.Fluoride also increased the V of adenylate cyclase, but, in contrast to the results obtained with glucagon, the effect increased as the concentration of free Mg2+ increased. One explanation of the effect of fluoride, consistent with the idea that free Mg2+ activates adenylate cyclase and free ATP is not an inhibitor, is that fluoride increases the affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+. Weak inhibition of adenylate cyclase by ATP4? in the presence of fluoride cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

7.
A comparison was made between the activation of membrane-bound adenylate cyclase from rat fat cell membranes and the enzyme solubilized with digitonin. The isoprenaline stimulation of the particulate enzyme was enhanced by GTP, both in the presence of Mg2+ and Mn2+, but no effect of the metal ion nor of GTP was found on the Ka of isoprenaline. The Ka of sodium fluoride for enzyme stimulation was shifted to 3-fold higher concentrations when Mg2+ was replaced by Mn2+, whereas V decreased. GTP did not influence the Ka of sodium fluoride but reduced V, irrespective of the metal ion. After digitonin solubilization the enzyme was no longer responsive to isoprenaline or GTP; however, V of the sodium fluoride activation was higher in the presence of Mn2+ than in the presence of Mg2+, and the Ka was found at 15-fold higher concentrations. Both the solubilized and the particulate adenylate cyclase were inhibited by adenosine; this inhibition was also seen with the fluoride stimulated enzyme. We conclude that solubilization with digitonin did not result in an enzyme preparation which preferentially turns over MnATP2+, although the fat cell adenylate cyclase possesses a metal ion regulatory site with a higher affinity for Mn2+ than for Mg2+. The data suggest that the guanyl nucleotide regulatory site and the sodium fluoride-sensitive site are located on different subunits while there is an interaction between the metal ion regulatory site and the fluoride-sensitive site.  相似文献   

8.
Smooth muscle adenylate cyclase of a membrane preparation of canine gastric antrum has been characterized, and the effect of hormonal and neuronal agents examined. The enzyme is active in the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+, but is inhibited by Ca2+. The Km is 0.5 mM ATP, similar to the Km of skeletal muscle adenylate cyclase. The enzyme is activated by isoproterenol but not norepinephrine, consistent with a β2-catecholamine receptor-adenylate cyclase interaction. Secretin activates the enzyme in concentrations as low as 1 · 10?11 M, while glucagon was effective only at 1 · 10?6 M. Prostaglandin E1 and E2 have a biphasic effect with activation of adenylate cyclase at 1 · 10?5 M and a small but significant inhibition of enzyme activity at 1 · 10?11 M.  相似文献   

9.
1. The adenylate cyclase activity present in the particulate fraction of planaria homogenates has been characterized.2. The enzyme requires divalent cations (Mg2+), and a Km for ATP of 0.58 at 30°C was measured.3. GTP and Gpp(NH)p, in an optimal range of 10−4–10−5M, increase the enzymatic activity.4. In the presence of GTP, dopamine stimulates the adenylate cyclase and its action is inhibited by dopaminergic antagonist.5. Both D-1 and D-2 selective dopaminergic agonists stimulate the enzymatic activity and their action is selectively antagonized by D-1 and D-2 antagonists.6. The high concentrations required for some D-1 and D-2 agents to be effective, suggest an only partial consistency with mammalian dopaminergic receptors.  相似文献   

10.
The adenylate cyclase activity of human ejaculated spermatozoa in broken-cell preparations was investigated. In the presence of 5 mM metal cations and 0.1 mM ATP, the relative enzyme activity with Mn2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Ba2+ was 1.00, 0.28, 0.22, and 0.03, respectively. Added Ca2+ appeared to activate the enzyme in the presence of Mn2+ or Mg2+. The human sperm adenylate cyclase was stimulated by ~ 2-fold by free Ca2+ (lmM) in the presence of Mg2+ (5 mM). If the GTP analogue, 5′-guanylyl imidophosphate (Gpp(NH)p) was added to the sperm homogenate in the presence of 200 μM ethylene-glycol-bis (β-aminoethylether) N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), the adenylate cyclase activity was increased by approximately 25%, but with the addition of 280 μM Ca2+ there was a decrease in enzyme activity. A similar response to low concentrations of Ca2+ was obtained after complementation of the sperm enzyme with the guanine nucleotide regulatory component from human erythrocytes, where the addition of 40 μM Gpp(NH)p, 200 μM EGTA, and Ca2+ (≤ 160 μM) stimulated the sperm enzyme ~ 3–4-fold, but the further addition of Ca2+ (280 μM, final) neutralized the stimulatory effect. The addition of adenosine, and the nucleotides 5′-AMP and 5′-ADP inhibited the enzyme, whereas guanine and 5′-GMP had no appreciable effect. Human follicular fluid and serum also had little direct effect on the sperm adenylate cyclase. These resuls suggest that Ca2+ might be an important physiological modulator of the human sperm adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

11.
Vasopressin-sensitive pig kidney adenylate cyclase is sensitive to several effectors, such as Mg2+, other divalent cations, and guanyl nucleotides. The purpose of the present study was to compare the main characteristics of adenylate cyclase activation by vasopressin, Mg2+, and GMPPNP, respectively. Mg2+·ions were shown to exert at least three different effects on adenylate cyclase. The substrate of the adenylate cyclase reaction is the Mg-ATP complex. Mg2+ interacts with an enzyme regulatory site. Finally, Mg2+ can modulate the hormonal response, with Mg2+ions affecting the coupling function–that is, the quantitative relationship between receptor occupancy and adenylate cyclase activation. At all the magnesium concentrations tested, from 0.25 mM to 16 mM, adenylate cyclase activation was not a direct function of receptor occupancy. At low Mg2+ concentrations, adenylate cyclase activation dose-response curve to the hormone tended to be superimposable to the hormone dose-binding curve. These results suggest a role of magnesium at the coupling step between the hormone-receptor complex and adenylate cyclase response. Cobalt, but not calcium, ions could exert the same effects as Mg2+ ions on this coupling step. GMPPNP induced considerable adenylate cyclase activation (15 to 35 times the basal value). Activation by GMPPNP was highly time and temperature dependent. At 30° C, a 20 to 60 min preincubation period in the presence of GMPPNP was needed to obtain maximal activation. The higher the dose of GMPPNP in the medium, the longer it took to reach equilibrium. At 15° C, activation was still increasing with time after 3 hr preincubation in the presence of the nucleotide. GMPPNP was active in a 10?8 M to 10?5 M concentration range. Unlike the results obtained with lysine vasopressin, the kinetic characteristics of dose-dependent adenylate cyclase activation curves by GMPPNP were unaffected by varying Mg2+ concentrations except for the increase in velocity when raising Mg2+ concentration. It was not clear whether or not the activation processes by the hormone and by GMPPNP had common mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
A general feature of membrane-bound adenylate cyclase systems is the “lability” of the basal enzyme to dispersion by detergents. A stable form of the detergentsolubilized enzyme is obtained only if the membrane-bound enzyme is first pretreated with fluoride or Gpp(NH)p. However, we have found with the basal hepatic enzyme that the lability is evident primarily when MgATP is used as substrate; substitution of MnATP for MgATP reveals that substantial basal activity survives detergent treatment. This effect is independent of the detergent; it is seen with either Lubrol PX or with deoxycholate. In addition to the altered substrate requirement, the membrane-bound and solubilized forms of the basal enzyme exhibit other differences. In contrast to the membrane-bound form, the solubilized enzyme shows (1) weak stimulation by Gpp(NH)p; (2) little inhibition by adenosine, (3) strong inhibition by Pi or PPi, and (4) and apparent loss of the Me2+-reactive regulatory site. Such dissimilarities between membranebound and solubilized cyclase are not seen if the membranes are pretreated with Gpp(NH)p prior to exposure to detergents. The characteristics of the solubilized basal hepatic enzyme are similar to those of the naturally occurring soluble adenylate cyclase found in mature rat testes. It would appear that separation of adenylate cyclase from components that confer regulation by divalent cation and guanine nucleotides produces a form of the enzyme that will turnover only MnATP; this may represent the free catalytic moiety. Such preparations could be useful in reconstructing some of the regulatory functions of adenylate cyclase seen in its membrane-bound form.  相似文献   

13.
We report that the adenylate cyclase system in human platelets is subject to multiple regulation by guanine nucleotides. Previously it has been reported that GTP is either required for or has little effect on the response of the enzyme to prostaglandin E1. We have found that when platelet lysates were prepared in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, GTP lowered the basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of Mg2+. The basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were also increased by washing, which presumably removes endogenous GTP. The analog, guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate mimics the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity but it stimulates basal enzyme activity. The onset of the inhibitory effect of GTP on the adenylate cyclase system is rapid (1 min) and is maintained at a constant rate during incubation for 10 min. GTP and guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate were noncompetitive inhibitors of prostaglandin E1. An increase in the concentration of Mg2+ gradually reduces the effect of GTP while having little influence on the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate. Neither the substrate concentration nor the pH (7.2–8.5) is related to the inhibitory effect of guanine nucleotides. The inhibition by nucleotides was found to show a specificity for purine nucleotides with the order of potency being guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate > dGTP > GTP > ITP > XTP > CTP > TTP. The inhibitory effect of GTP is reversible while the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is irreversible. The GTP inhibitory effect was abolished by preparing the lysates in the presence of Ca2+. However, the inhibitory effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate persisted. Substitution of Mn2+ for Mg2+ in the assay medium resulted in a diminution of the inhibitory effect of GTP on basal activity and converted the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated activity to a stimulatory effect. At a lower concentration of Mn2+ (less than 2 mM) guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate inhibited prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but at a higher concentration of Mn2+, it caused an increase in enzyme activity exceeding that occuring in the presence of prostaglandin E1. In the presence of Mn2+, dGTP mimics the effect of GTP and is 50% as effective as GTP. Our data suggest that the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is mainly due to its direct effect on the enzyme itself, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is due to enhancement of the coupling between the prostaglandin E1 receptor and adenylate cyclase. These studies also indicate that the method of preparation of platelet lysates can profoundly alter the nature of guanine nucleotide regulation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

14.
The interdependent effects of divalent cations, pH, and various activators of adenylate cyclase were examined in partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver. This adenylate cyclase was found to exhibit largely alkaline pH optima, in the range of 8.3 to 9.3, for the expression of basal activity, and activities with GTP, GPP(NH)P, prostaglandin E1 and GTP, and N6-(phenylisopropyl)adenosine and GTP. Glucagon and GTP, while increasing activity 8- to 10-fold, shifted the optimum activity to about pH 7.5. However, stimulation of the enzyme by 10 mm NaF or 3 mm Na3VO4 was strikingly dependent on pH. In both cases activation was optimal at pH values between 6.3 and 7.3, though above about pH 8.5 fluoride was barely stimulatory and vanadate was slightly inhibitory. This effect of elevated pH to reduce fluoride- or vanadate-stimulated activity could be prevented by glucagon plus guanine nucleotide, but could not be reversed once activity was lowered during preincubation. The data suggest that this effect was not due to the formation of an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase per se, nor to an artifact of assay methods. The effect of elevated pH was more pronounced with Mn2+ as activating cation than with Mg2+. With fluoride and lower pH adenylate cyclase was essentially Mn2+ requiring, whereas with fluoride and higher pH activity was comparable with either cation. The data suggested that combinations of pH, divalent cation, and activating ligand dictate the interactions of the constitutive subunits of the adenylate cyclase and provide additional criteria with which current models for the regulation of adenylate cyclase may be tested.  相似文献   

15.
Low concentrations of Mn2+ supported the basal adenylate cyclase activity in crude and purified sarcolemmal membranes from cardiac muscle more effectively than did relatively high concentrations of Mg2+; at saturating concentrations the cyclase activities obtained with Mg2+ or Mn2+ were similar. In contrast, Mg2+ supported the basal cyclase activities of crude membrane fractions and purified sarcolemmal membranes from skeletal muscle far more effectively than did Mn2+; at saturating concentrations of either metal ion the Mg2+-supported cyclase activities were 5- to 10-fold greater than Mn2+-supported activities. Further, compared to Mg2+, Mn2+ supported the cyclase activities very poorly in all the primary subcellular fractions of skeletal muscle, whereas this cation was at least as effective as Mg2+ in all fractions of cardiac muscle. The apparent affinities of the cyclase for Mn2+ in heart as well as skeletal muscle appeared to be greater compared to those for Mg2+. The skeletal muscle cyclase displayed greater apparent affinity for MnATP2? (app. Km 0.10 mm) compared to MgATP2? (app. Km 0.32 mm) whereas the heart enzyme displayed greater apparent affinity for MgATP2? (app. Km 0.07 mm) compared to MnATP2? (app. Km 0.19 mm). Following preactivation with guanyl-5′-yl imidodiphosphate and isoproterenol, Mn2+ (0.15 to 2 mm) supported the cyclase activity of skeletal muscle even more effectively than did optimally effective concentrations of Mg2+. With the heart enzyme the relatively greater potency of Mn2+ persisted following preactivation. Significant enhancement in the Mn2+-sensitivity of skeletal muscle cyclase was also observed when assayed in the presence of GTP and isoproterenol or in the presence of NaF. Preactivation of both heart and skeletal muscle cyclases caused selective enhancement in the enzyme's apparent affinity for free Me2+ (Mg2+ or Mn2+) without influencing the apparent Km for MeATP2? (MgATP2? or MnATP2?). Evidences were obtained to show that the poor effectiveness of Mn2+ in supporting the basal activity of skeletal muscle cyclase is not related to (a) potentiation by Mn2+ of adenosine-mediated inhibition of the cyclase, (b) Mn2+-induced lability of the cyclase, (c) indirect effects of Mn2+ on ATP-regenerating system, or (d) the presence of different cation-specific molecular forms of the cyclase. It is also shown that the onset of enhanced Mn2+ sensitivity of the skeletal muscle enzyme following preactivation is not accompanied by a general loss of cation specificity of the cyclase. These results suggest that cations support the catalytic activity of adenylate cyclase by interacting with an enzymeregulatory free metal binding site and that the differential cation sensitivity of nonactivated (basal) cyclases from heart and skeletal muscle is likely due to differences in the properties of such an allosteric metal site. Furthermore, the metal site appears to undergo a conformational change following interaction of the cyclase system with the guanyl nucleotide and isoproterenol since the cation sensitivity of the cyclase and the relative potency of cations depend on the conformational status of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
TRPM7 channels are nonselective cation channels that possess a functional α-kinase domain. It has been proposed that heterologously expressed TRPM7 channels are activated (Runnels et al., 2001) or inhibited (Nadler et al., 2001) by dialyzing the cell with millimolar levels of ATP. The endogenous correlate of TRPM7 has been identified in T-lymphocytes and RBL (rat basophilic leukemia) cells and named MagNuM (for Mg2+-nucleotide-inhibited metal) or MIC (for Mg2+-inhibited cation). Here, we report that internal Mg2+ rather than MgATP inhibits this current. Cytoplasmic MgATP, supplied by dialysis at millimolar concentrations, effectively inhibits only when a weak Mg2+ chelator is present in the pipette solution. Thus, MgATP acts as a source of Mg2+ rather than a source of ATP. Using an externally accessible site within the pore of the MIC channel itself as a bioassay, we show that equimolar MgCl2 and MgATP solutions contain similar amounts of free Mg2+, explaining the fact that numeric values of Mg2+ and MgATP concentrations necessary for complete inhibition are the same. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Mg2+ is not unique in its inhibitory action, as Ba2+, Sr2+, Zn2+, and Mn2+ can substitute for Mg2+, causing complete inhibition. We conclude that MIC current inhibition occurs simply by divalent cations.  相似文献   

17.
The subcellular localization of adenylate cyclase was examined in human skeletal muscle. Three major subcellular membrane fractions, plasmalemma, sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria, were characterized by membrane-marker biochemical studies, by dodecyl sulfate polycrylamide gel electrophoresis and by electron microscopy. About 60% of the adenylate cyclase of the homogenate was found in the plasmalemmal fraction and 10–14% in the sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. When the plasmalemmal preparation was subjected to discontinuous sucrose gradients, the distribution of adenylate cyclase in different subfractions closely paralleled that of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. The highest specific activity was found in a fraction which setteled at the 0.6–0.8 M sucrose interface. The electron microscopic study of this fraction revealed the presence of flattened sacs of variable sizes and was devoid of mitochondrial and myofibrillar material. The electron microscopy of each fraction supported the biochemical studies with enzyme markers. The three major membrane fractions also contained a low Km phosphodiesterase activity, the highest specific activity being associated with sarcoplasmic reticulum.The plasmalemmal adenylate cyclase was more sensitive to catecholamine stimulation than that associated with sarcoplasmic reticulum or mitochondria. The catecholamine-sensitive, but not the basal, enzyme was further stimulated by GTP. The plasmalemmal adenylate cyclase had typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to ATP and the apparent Km for ATP was approx. 0.3. mM. The pH optimum for that enzyme was 7.5. The enzyme required Mg2+, and the concentration to achieve half-maximal stimulation was approx. 3 mM. Higher concentrations of Mg2+ (about 10 mM) were inhibitory. Solubilization of the plasmalemmal membrane fraction with Lubrol-PX resulted in preferential extraction of 106 000- and 40 000-dalton protein components. The solubilized adenylate cyclase lost its sensitivity for catecholamine stimulation, and the extent of fluoride stimulation was reduced to one-sixth of that of the intact membranes. It is concluded that the catalytically active and hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase is predominantly localized in the surface membranes of the cells within skeletal muscle. (That “plasmalemmal” fraction is considered likely to contain, in addition to plasmalemma of muscle cells, plasmalemma of bloodvessel cells (endothelium, and perhaps smooth muscle) which may be responsible for a certain amount of the adenylate cyclase activity and other propertiesobserved in that fraction.)The method of preparation used in this study provides a convenient material for evaluating the catecholamine-adenylate cyclase interactions in human skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract— Mn2+ caused an 8-to 16-fold stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in homogenates as well as synaptosomcs. isolated synaptic membranes, and slices prepared from rat brain. The stimulation occurred at low concentrations of Mn2+. with a doubling of activity at 50-60μM. and was unaffected by a 60-fold excess of Mg2+. Whether or not Mg2+ was added, inclusion of a low concentration of Mn2+ reduced, but did not prevent the stimulation of adenylate cyclase caused by dopaminc in homogenates of corpus striatum. In contrast, Ca2+. at a concentration that had little effect on basal cyclase activity, completely prevented the stimulation by dopamine. The increase of cyclase activity produced by Mn2+ in brain homogenates was potentiated by F?. Other ions, notably Hg2+. Pb2+. Cu2+ and Zn2+. in order of decreasing potency, inhibited both basal and Mn2--stimulated cyclase activity. It is proposed that the effect of Mn2+ on adenylate cyclase activity may involve only the catalytic subunit of the enzyme, and that the mechanism is different from that by which either dopamine or F? stimulates the enzyme. These results suggest that the effects of low concentrations of Mn2+ and certain other divalent metal ions on adenylate cyclase activity may be involved in their neuropsychiatrie or other toxic effects, and that such ions may also participate in normal physiological mechanisms involving cyclic nucleotides.  相似文献   

19.
Streptozotocin, 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) and N-methyl nitrosourea, compounds with both oncogenic and cytotoxic properties, increased guanylate cyclase activity in the 100 000 × g soluble fractions of rat renal cortex and liver 35- to 65-fold over basal values. Particulate enzyme activities of these tissues were increased 2- to 4-fold by a maximally effective concentration of the nitrosoureas. In the presence of the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, maximally effective concentrations of these nitrosoureas increased cyclic GMP accumulation of hepatic and renal cortical slices to peak levels 7- to 10-fold over control in 30 min. By contrast, with the structurally related carcinogen N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) peak increases occurred in 5–10 min and were 40- to 70-fold over control levels in renal cortex and liver, respectively. Unlike the Ca2+-dependent actions of cholinergic stimuli on cyclic GMP, the nitrosoureas and MNNG increased cyclic GMP in either the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. Moreover, while basal soluble guanylate cyclase of renal cortex was highly Mn2+-dependent and decreased 85% when either Mg2+ or Ca2+ was employed as sole divalent cation in reaction mixtures, the actions of nitrosoureas on enzyme activity were well expressed with either Mn2+ or Mg2+, but not with Ca2+, as sole divalent cation. Improved utilization of Mg2+ by guanylate cyclase in the presence of nitrosoureas would favor enhanced enzyme activity under cellular conditions where Mg2+ is abundant. In the presence of maximally stimulatory concentrations of streptozotocin or BCNU, high concentrations of Mg2+ or Mn2+ further increased soluble guanylate cyclase, suggesting important differences in metal and nitrosourea stimulation of enzyme activity.Preincubation of supernatant fractions with nitrosoureas plus dithiothreitol inhibited the action of the N-nitroso compounds to increase renal cortical guanylate cyclase. Glutathione and cysteine were also inhibitory, but less effective than dithiothreitol. Initial incubation of nitrosoureas with dithiothreitol in buffer alone similarly suppressed the subsequent action of the N-nitroso compounds on guanylate cyclase, and implicated direct chemical interactions. Prior incubation of renal cortical supernatant fractions with the SH blockers N-ethylmaleimide or maleimide significantly suppressed guanylate cyclase activation mediated by streptozotocin or BCNU. Direct drug interactions seemed unlikely, since effects of the inhibitors were optimally expressed by initial exposure of the supernatant fraction of tissue to the SH blockers and were not potentiated by a 30 min preincubation of the SH blockers and nitrosoureas in buffer alone.Thus, nitrosoureas activate and alter the metal requirements of soluble guanylate cyclase and increase cellular cyclic GMP in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitrosoureas may involve an interaction of these agents with tissue SH groups, and possibly SH to SS transformation. Stimulation of the guanylate cyclase system by nitrosoureas could be related to the oncogenic actions of these agents.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of Ca2+ and calmodulin on the adenylate cyclase activity of a prolactin and growth hormone-producing pituitary tumor cell strain (GH3) were examined. The adenylate cyclase activity of homogenates was stimulated approx. 60% by submicromolar free Ca2+ concentrations and inhibited by higher (μM range) concentrations of the cation. A 2–3-fold stimulation of the activity in response to Ca2+ was observed at physiologic concentrations of KCl, with both the stimulatory and inhibitory responses occurring at respectively higher free Ca2+ concentrations. Calmodulin in incubations at low KCl concentrations increased the enzyme activity at all Ca2+ concentrations tested. In incubations conducted at physiologic KCl concentrations, both the inhibitory and stimulatory responses to Ca2+ were shifted by calmodulin to lower respective concentrations of the cation, without significant change occurring in the maximal rate of enzymic activity at optimal free Ca2+. Mg2+ concentrations in the incubation also influenced the Ca2+ concentration dependence of adenylate cyclase; at high Mg2+ more Ca2+ was required to obtain maximal activity. Trifluoperazine inhibited adenylate cyclase of GH3 cells only in the presence of Ca2+; as Ca2+ concentrations in the assay were increased, higher drug concentrations were required to inhibit the enzyme. Ca2+ was also observed to reduce the extent of enzyme destabilization which occurred during pretreatments at warm temperatures. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and phorbol myristate acetate, which stimulate prolactin secretion in intact GH3 cells, enhanced enzyme activity 4- and 2.5-fold, respectively, without added Ca2+. Increasing free Ca2+ concentrations reduced the enhancement by VIP and eliminated the stimulation by PMA.  相似文献   

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