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1.
The binding parameters of 125I-labeled calmodulin to bovine cerebellar membranes have been determined and correlted with the activation of adenylate cyclase by calmodulin. In the presence of saturating levels of free Ca2+, calmodulin binds to a finite number of specific membrane sites with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 1.2 nM. Furthermore, Scatchard analysis reveals a second population of binding sites with a 100-fold lower affinity for calmodulin. The Ca2+-dependence of calmodulin binding and of adenylate cyclase activation varies with the amount of calmodulin present, as can be infered from the model of sequential equilibrium reactions which describes the activation of calmodulin-dependent enzymes. On the basis of this model, a quantitative analysis of the effect of free Ca2+ and of free calmodulin concentration on both binding and activation of adenylate cyclase was carried out. This analysis shows that both processes take place only when calmodulin is complexed with at least three Ca2+ atoms. The concentration of the active calmodulin ·Ca2+ species required for half-maximal activation of adenylate cyclase is very similar to the Kd of the high affinity binding sites on brain membranes. A Hill coefficient of approx. 1 was found for both processes indicating an absence of cooperativity. Phenothiazines and thioxanthenes antipsychotic agents inhibit calmodulin binding to membranes and calmodulin-dependent activation of adenylate cyclase with a similar order of potency. These results suggest that the Ca2+-dependent binding of calmodulin to specific high affinity sites on brain membranes regulates the activation of adenylate cyclase by calmodulin.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Abstract: Neural retina from most species contains 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) receptors coupled to stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity. It has been demonstrated that release of dopamine from its neurons and subsequent occupation of dopamine receptors is increased by light. In this study, we have shown that adenylate cyclase activity in bovine retina is highly responsive to the endogenous Ca2+-binding protein, cal-modulin, and that calmodulin can increase dopamine-sen-sitive adenylate cyclase activity in bovine retina. We further demonstrate that both dopamine- and calmodulin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities can be regulated by alterations in light. Bovine retinas were dissected from the eye under a low-intensity red safety light, defined as dark conditions, and incubated for 20 min in an oxygenated Krebs Henseleit buffer under either dark or light conditions. The retinas were then homogenized and adenylate cyclase activity measured in a paniculate fraction washed to deplete it of endogenous Ca2+ and calmodulin. Activation of adenylate cyclase activity by calmodulin, dopamine, and the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, gua-nosine-5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate (GppNHp), was significantly (60%) greater in paniculate fractions from retinas that had been incubated under dark conditions as compared to those incubated under light conditions. Basal, Mn2+-, and GTP-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were not altered by changes in lighting conditions. Calmodulin could increase the maximum stimulation of adenylate cyclase by dopamine in retinas incubated under either dark or light conditions, but the degree of its effect was greater in retinas incubated under light conditions. Activation of adenylate cyclase by calmodulin, dopamine, and GppNHp in paniculate fractions from retinas incubated under light conditions was indistinguishable from the activation obtained when retinas were incubated in the dark in the presence of exogenous dopamine. These results suggest that an increased release of dopamine occurs in light. The decreased response of adenylate cyclase to exogenous dopamine can then be explained by a subsequent down-regulation of dopamine receptor activity. The down-regulation of dopamine receptor activity can also regulate activation of adenylate cyclase by GppNHp and calmodulin. The results suggest that dopamine, calmodulin, and GppNHp are modulators of a common component of adenylate cyclase activity, and this component is regulated by light.  相似文献   

4.
Certain biochemical characteristics of an adenylate cyclase that is activated by low concentrations of histamine (Ka, 8 μm) and that is present in cell-free preparations from the dorsal hippocampus of guinea pig brain have been studied. Histamine increased the maximal reaction velocity of adenylate cyclase without altering the Km (0.18 mm) for its substrate, MgATP. Increasing concentrations of free Mg2+ stimulated enzymatic activity; the kinetic properties of this activation by Mg2+ suggest the existence of a Mg2+ allosteric site on the enzyme. Histamine increased the affinity of this apparent site for free Mg2+. Free ATP was a competitive inhibitor with respect to the MgATP substrate. The apparent potency of free ATP as an inhibitor increased in the presence of histamine. In the presence of Mg2+, low concentrations of Ca2+ markedly inhibited adenylate cyclase activity; half-maximal inhibition of both basal and histamine-stimulated enzyme activity occurred at 40 μm Ca2+. Other divalent cations, including Zn2+, Cu2+, and Cd2+, were also inhibitory. Of the divalent cations tested, only Co2+ and Mn2+ could replace Mg2+ in supporting histamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. The nucleoside triphosphates GTP and ITP increased basal adenylate cyclase activity and markedly potentiated the stimulation by histamine. Preincubation of adenylate cyclase with 5′-guanylylimidodiphosphate dramatically increased enzyme activity; in this activated state, the adenylate cyclase was relatively refractory to further stimulation by histamine or F?. The subcellular distribution of histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity was studied in subfractions from guinea pig cerebral cortex. The highest total and specific activities were observed in those fractions enriched in nerve endings, while adenylate cyclase activity was not detectable in the brain cytosol fraction. A possible physiological role for this histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase in neuronal function is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Epinephrine stimulated adenylate cyclase in turkey erythrocyte ghosts is inhibited by calcium. The inhibition of adenylate cyclase is not apparent when intact erythrocytes are incubated with calcium and epinephrine. However, in the presence of the specific cation ionophore A23187 and 5 mm Ca2+, a 90% inhibition of epinephrine stimulated 3′,5′-adenosine monophosphate formation is found. The effect of catecholamines on calcium transport in the intact turkey erythrocyte was studied. Epinephrine causes a small but significant increase in Ca2+ efflux. This effect is inhibited by propranolol. No effect of epinephrine on Ca2+ uptake was observed. However, a 22% increase in Ca2+ uptake in the presence of propranolol could be detected. The propranolol effect was found to possess high statistical significance (p < .001). The absence of an epinephrine effect on influx probably reflects the presence of endogenous catecholamines in the control samples.It is proposed that the activation of adenylate cyclase by catecholamines occurs in two phases. The first phase is the increase of net Ca2+ efflux from a crucial Ca2+ pool, thus removing Ca2+ from its inhibitory sites on the adenylate cyclase complex. The second phase is the activation of the deinhibited adenylate cyclase by the hormone.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of Mn2+ and calmodulin were studied on the basal and agonist-modulated adenylate cyclase activity of the guinea pig superior cervical ganglion. The divalent cation strongly stimulates the basal and agonist-modulated enzyme in a concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, in the presence of Mn2+ the inhibitory effects of high GTP concentrations and of D-Ala2-Met-enkephalinamide on adenylate cyclase are eliminated, while the stimulation exerted by prostaglandin E2 and the supra-additive activation of the enzyme by the combination of the two drugs are unaffected. In EGTA-washed, calmodulin-depleted membrane preparations, Mn2+ still activates the cyclase but the enkephalin inhibition and the superactivation of the enzyme induced by the combination of opiate and prostaglandin are lost, both in the absence and in the presence of the cation. Reconstituting the depleted membranes with exogenous Ca2+/calmodulin fully restored the enzyme responsivity to the combination and, partially, to the enkephalin. The findings suggest the existence in the guinea pig superior cervical ganglion of both the calmodulin-sensitive and differently regulated calmodulin-insensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

7.
—Some basic kinetic properties of adenylate cyclase in cell free preparations of mouse neuroblastoma were investigated. Production of cAMP from ATP by the enzyme requires the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+ in addition to ATP. In the presence of Mg2+, the Km for ATP is 120 ± 15 μM and the interaction of ATP and adenylate cyclase appears to be non-cooperative (Hill coefficient of 1). Magnesium ion concentrations in excess of the ATP concentration cause stimulation although similar excess concentrations of Mn2+ cause inhibition. Prostaglandin E1 and 2-chloroadenosine activate the enzyme. The Km of the cyclase for 2-chloroadenosine is 6 μm . Activation by 2-chloroadenosine leads to an increase in Vmax but does not effect the Km for ATP. At a fixed ATP concentration, the extent of activation caused by prostaglandin E1 and 2-chloroadenosine is inversely related to the Mg2+ concentration. Calcium ion causes inhibition of adenylate cyclase from 0.1 to 4mM with a Ki of 5 ± 10?4m . Ca2+ interaction with the enzyme in the absence or presence of either 2-chloroadenosine or prostaglandin E1 appears cooperative (i.e. Hill coefficients of ?2). Ca2+ inhibition is non-competitive with respect to either ATP or 2-chloroadenosine but is progressively diminished by increasing Mn2+ concentrations. Divalent cation effects and activation by 2-chloroadenosine and prostaglandin E1 of the neuroblastoma adenylate cyclase are compared with ion effects and hormone activation of the enzyme obtained from non-neuronal tissue.  相似文献   

8.
Sheep olfactory epithelium contains an adenylyl cyclase which is stimulated by many but not all odorants. Here we report that this enzyme is activated by calmodulin in a dose-dependent manner, and that calcium ions are required for this response. Odorant stimulation of adenylyl cyclase is unaffected by the complex Ca2+/calmodulin, as suggested by the results obtained both in Ca2+/calmodulin-depleted membranes and under calmodulin antagonist treatment; this confirms the prediction that the Ca2+ binding protein and odorants stimulate the olfactory adenylyl cyclase through parallel mechanisms. The persistent activation of the regulatory component of adenylyl cyclase by GppNHp does not alter the response of the enzyme to either odorant or Ca2+/calmodulin. In sheep olfactory epithelium a cAMP-phosphodiesterase activity is also present, which is highly inhibited by IBMX and aminophylline, searcely by RO 20-1724, and unaffected by Ca2+/calmodulin. The modulatory role exerted by calcium on cAMP system in sheep olfactory signal transduction is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Kauss H 《Plant physiology》1983,71(1):169-172
In Poterioochromonas malhamensis Peterfi (syn. Ochromonas malhamensis Pringsheim) osmotically induced shrinkage is reversed by an accumulation of isofloridoside. Addition of Ca2+ ions to homogenates from standard volume cells initiates an enzyme system for the activation of isofloridoside-phosphate synthase. This process is stimulated in the presence of Ca2+ by calmodulin, isolated from the same alga or from bovine brain, and requires the presence of membranes. The stimulation observed when Ca2+ is added without exogenous calmodulin is inhibited by the calmodulin-binding substance R 24571. These results show that the effect of Ca2+ is mediated by calmodulin. The Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent activation is enhanced when fluoride or molybdate ions are present in the homogenization buffer. This might indicate the involvement of a phosphorylated compound in the activation mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Pretreatment of isolated rat liver plasma membranes by washing with NaHCO3 buffer or by exposure to the chelator ethyleneglycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) with or without the ionophore A23187, produced a decrease in the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase (ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing) EC 4.6.1.1) to subsequent stimulation by NaF or guanosine 5′-(β-γ-imino)triphosphate (GPP(NH)P). Sensitivity to activation by the nucleotide could be restored by addition of the lyophilized and ashed wash or by addition of Ca2+, Mg2+ or Mn2+. The factor extracted from the membranes by these various treatments which was responsible for loss of stimulation was identified as Ca2+. Determination of the metal ion content of isolated membranes by atomic absorption spectrometry indicated that Ca2+ was the only divalent cation present in sufficient concentration to support persistent activation by either NaF or GPP(NH)P.Pretreatment of liver plasma membranes with trifluoperazine, which inhibits the action of Ca2+-dependent regulator protein in other enzyme systems, reduced GPP(NH)P activation of adenylate cyclase and caused marked depletion of membrane Ca2+. The effects of low concentrations (less than 100 μM) of the phenothiazine could be reversed totally by Ca2+ and partly by regulator protein. At higher concentrations of trifluoperazine, slight restoration of enzyme activation was seen with either agent. The hypothesis is presented that Ca+ interacts with the nucleotide (GTP or GDP) regulatory site(s) of the adenylate cyclase. This interaction may be regulator-protein-dependent and may be important in determining the sensitivity of the enzyme to nucleotide activation in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Inhibition of a Low Km GTPase Activity in Rat Striatum by Calmodulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In rat striatum, the activation of adenylate cyclase by the endogenous Ca2+-binding protein, calmodulin, is additive with that of GTP but is not additive with that of the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, guanosine-5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate (GppNHp). One possible mechanism for this difference could be an effect of calmodulin on GTPase activity which has been demonstrated to "turn-off" adenylate cyclase activity. We examined the effects of Ca2+ and calmodulin on GTPase activity in EGTA-washed rat striatal particulate fractions depleted of Ca2+ and calmodulin. Calmodulin inhibited GTP hydrolysis at concentrations of 10(-9)-10(-6) M but had no effect on the hydrolysis of 10(-5) and 10(-6) M GTP, suggesting that calmodulin inhibited a low Km GTPase activity. The inhibition of GTPase activity by calmodulin was Ca2+-dependent and was maximal at 0.12 microM free Ca2+. Maximal inhibition by calmodulin was 40% in the presence of 10(-7) M GTP. The IC50 for calmodulin was 100 nM. In five tissues tested, calmodulin inhibited GTP hydrolysis only in those tissues where it could also activate adenylate cyclase. Calmodulin could affect the activation of adenylate cyclase by GTP in the presence of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (DA, dopamine). Calmodulin decreased by nearly 10-fold the concentration of GTP required to provide maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity by DA in the striatal membranes. The characteristics of the effect of calmodulin on GTPase activity with respect to Ca2+ and calmodulin dependence and tissue specificity parallel those of the activation of adenylate cyclase by calmodulin, suggesting that the two activities are closely related.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Ligand binding and pharmacological studies have indicated that alpha-adrenergic receptors can be divided into alpha1 and alpha2. We suggest that alpha1 receptors mediate those metabolic effects of alpha catecholamines which involve phosphatidylinositol turnover and the release of bound intracellular Ca2+ as well as the entry of extracellular Ca2+. In contrast, alpha effects of catecholamines are due to non-specific inhibition of adenylate cyclase through a mechanism independent of Ca2+. A similar classification for the effects of both histamine and serotonin suggests that they have separate type 1 or alpha receptors for Ca2+ dynamics which are different from type 2 or beta receptors which regulate adenylate cyclase.There is a significant correlation between hormone effects on phosphatidylinositol turnover and elevation of intracellular Ca2+. The available data suggest that the turnover of membrane-bound phosphatidylinositol is involved in Ca2+ gating in rat hepatocytes, rat and hamster adipocytes and blowfly salivary glands. In hamster adipocytes adenylate cyclase activity is also inhibited by alpha2 catecholamines through a Ca2+ independent mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
The relationship between calmodulin-dependent and β-adrenergic-sensitive adenylate cyclase activities was examined in membrane preparations from bovine cerebellum. Although stimulation by β-adrenergic agonists or calmodulin can occur independently, it is shown that their simultaneous presence has a strong synergistic effect on enzyme activity. Calmodulin did not influence the regulatory components of the neurotransmitter-dependent pathway as shown by the lack of effect on (1) receptor affinity, (2) GTP requirement for receptor-mediated activation, (3) rate of activation by guanyl 5′-yl imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p]. Conversely, isoproterenol and guanine nucleotides did not modify to a significant extent the characteristics of enzyme stimulation by Ca2+ and calmodulin. Furthermore, calmodulin and Gpp(NH)p-dependent activities displayed different sensitivities to thermal inactivation.Our results indicate that β-adrenergic agonists and calmodulin interact with the same catalytic activity in cerebellar membranes, but presumably via two independent pathways.  相似文献   

15.
Calmodulin and the regulation of smooth muscle contraction   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Calmodulin, the ubiquitous and multifunctional Ca2+-binding protein, mediates many of the regulatory effects of Ca2+, including the contractile state of smooth muscle. The principal function of calmodulin in smooth muscle is to activate crossbridge cycling and the development of force in response to a [Ca2+]i transientvia the activation of myosin light-chain kinase and phosphorylation of myosin. A distinct calmodulin-dependent kinase, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, has been implicated in modulation of smooth-muscle contraction. This kinase phosphorylates myosin light-chain kinase, resulting in an increase in the calmodulin concentration required for half-maximal activation of myosin light-chain kinase, and may account for desensitization of the contractile response to Ca2+. In addition, the thin filament-associated proteins, caldesmon and calponin, which inhibit the actin-activated MgATPase activity of smooth-muscle myosin (the cross-bridge cycling rate), appear to be regulated by calmodulin, either by the direct binding of Ca2+/calmodulin or indirectly by phosphorylation catalysed by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Another level at which calmodulin can regulate smooth-muscle contraction involves proteins which control the movement of Ca2+ across the sarcolemmal and sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes and which are regulated by Ca2+/calmodulin, e.g. the sarcolemmal Ca2+ pump and the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel, and other proteins which indirectly regulate [Ca2+]i via cyclic nucleotide synthesis and breakdown, e.g. NO synthase and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. The interplay of such regulatory mechanisms provides the flexibility and adaptability required for the normal functioning of smooth-muscle tissues.  相似文献   

16.
Soluble guanylate cyclase activity of brain is stimulated by Ca2+ in the presence of low concentrations of Mn2+. Unlike Ca2+ stimulation of adenylate cyclase, the effect does not depend upon interaction of guanylate cyclase with a specific high-affinity Ca2+-binding protein. In the presence of Mg2+, Ca2+ inhibits soluble guanylate cyclase as well as the particulate enzyme. The concept that stimulation of brain cells results in increased cyclic GMP concentration secondary to Ca2+ influx merits additional critical study.  相似文献   

17.
《Phytochemistry》1987,26(5):1289-1291
Nitrate reductase prepared from the leaves of Amranthus is activated by calcium and a small M, protein factor prepared from spinach by the procedures used for calmodulin preparation. The activation is considerably enhanced if both Ca2+ and the protein factor are present. This activation is inhibited by EGTA, a Ca2+ specific chelator and by anticalmodulin compounds like chlorpromazine. The effect of EGTA is reversed by C2+. The protein factor was identified as calmodulin. The enzyme is also activated by commercially available calmodulin. Calmodulin activation seems to be manifested in the FMNH2-NR moiety of the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

18.
(1) Depending on the assay conditions, the ability of the Ca2+-ATPase from intact human red cell membranes to catalyze the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylphosphate is elicited by either calmodulin or ATP. The response of the phosphatase activity to p-nitrophenylphosphate, ATP, Mg2+ and K+ is the same for the activities elicited by ATP or by calmodulin, suggesting that a single process is responsible for both activities. (2) In media with calmodulin, high-affinity activation is followed by high-affinity inhibition of the phosphatase by Ca2+ so that the activity becomes negligible above 30 μM Ca2+. Under these conditions, addition of ATP leads to a large decrease in the apparent affinity for inhibition by Ca2+. (3) In membranes submitted to partial proteolysis with trypsin, neither calmodulin nor Ca2+ are needed and phosphatase activity is maximal in media without Ca2+. This is the first report of an activity sustained by the Ca2+-ATPase of red cell membranes in the absence of Ca2+. Under these conditions, however, ATP still protects against high-affinity inhibition by Ca2+. These results strongly suggest that during activation by calmodulin, Ca2+ is needed only to form the calmodulin-Ca2+ complex which is the effective cofactor. (4) Protection by ATP of the inhibitory effects of Ca2+ and the induction of phosphatase activity by ATP + Ca2+ suggests that activation of the phosphatase by Ca2+ in media with ATP requires the combination of the cation at sites in the ATPase. (5) Results can be rationalized assuming that E2, the conformer of the Ca2+-ATPase, is endowed with phosphatase activity. Under this assumption, either the calmodulin-Ca2+ complex or partial proteolysis would elicit phosphatase activity by displacing the equilibrium between E1 and E2 towards E2. On the other hand, ATP + Ca2+ would elicit the activity by establishing through a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle a steady-state in which E2 predominates over other conformers of the ATPase.  相似文献   

19.
Phenothiazine antagonism of calmodulin: a structurally-nonspecific interaction   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Phenothiazine antagonism of calmodulin-stimulated (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-ATPase activity in erythrocyte ghosts was examined to determine the structural specificity of the interaction. Four analogs of chlorpromazine, differing in the position of the chlorine substitution of the aromatic ring, were about equally potent in antagonizing calmodulin activation, while only the 2-chloro analog (chlorpromazine) has tranquilizer activity and antagonizes dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase. As all four analogs have similar hydrophobicity and surface activity, the results indicate that the antagonism of calmodulin by phenothiazines is unrelated to their pharmacological specificity and occurs at a structurally-nonspecific hydrophobic site on the protein.  相似文献   

20.
The spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase is regulated by calmodulin (3-fold stimulation) and limited proteolysis (trypsin; 4-fold stimulation). The plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase was identified as a 120-kDa polypeptide on western immunoblots using two different antibodies. During trypsin treatment the 120-kDa band diminished and a new band appeared at 109 kDa. The appearance of the 109-kDa band correlated with the increase in enzyme activity following trypsin treatment. The stimulations by calmodulin and trypsin were not additive, suggesting that the 109-kDa polypeptide represents a Ca2+-ATPase lackin a terminal fragment involved in calmodulin regulation. This was confirmed by 125I-calmodulin overlay studies where calmodulin labeled the 120-kDa band in the presence of Ca2+, while the 109-kDa band did not bind calmodulin. The effects of calmodulin and limited proteolysis on ATP-dependent accumulation of 45Ca2+ in isolated inside-out plasma membrane vesicles were studied, and kinetical analyses performed with respect to Ca2+ and ATP. Calmodulin increased the Vmax. for Ca2+ pumping 3-fold, and reduced Km for Ca2+ from 1.6 to 0.9 µM. The Km for ATP (11 µM) was not affected by calmodulin. The effects of limited proteolysis on the affinities for Ca2+ and ATP were similar to those obtained with calmodulin. Notably, however, limited proteolysis increased the Vmax. for Ca2+ pumping to a higher extent than calmodulin, indicating incomplete calmodulin activation, or removal of an additional inhibitory site by trypsin.  相似文献   

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