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1.
1. In the presence of Ca2+, a 5.3-S 3':5'-cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) from bovine ventricle was isolated and purified by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation and DEAE-cellulose and Affi-Gel Blue chromatography. The enzyme activity was enriched 800-fold by these procedures. 2. Sucrose-density gradient centrifugation, gel filtration and non-denaturing polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis resolved a single enzyme species with an Mr of 89 000. 3. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme demonstrated a prominent protein band at Mr 59000 and a minor band of Mr 28000. Calmodulin was not detected. 4. The hydrolysis of micromolar concentrations of 3':5'-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cyclic GMP) but not 3':5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cyclic AMP) was stimulated by calmodulin. 5. Anomalous biphasic kinetics plots were observed for both the catalysis of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP hydrolysis. Kinetic plots became linear in the presence of calmodulin. 6. After several months of storage at -20 degrees C, the 5.3-S enzyme was transformed into a 6.2-S cyclic GMP-specific enzyme and a 4.4-S non-specific form.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract— Guanylate cyclase activity of dark-adapted bovine rod outer segments demonstrates a biphasic pattern upon exposure to light. By 10 s of illumination, activity is 20% lower than that observed in dark-adapted outer segments. Activity subsequently increases and then slowly declines to two-thirds of the original activity after 10 min of illumination. In the presence of GTP or ATP, hydrolysis of cyclic GMP is rapidly enhanced by exposure of outer segments to light; the magnitude of this effect is dependent on the amount of substrate present. The rapid effects of light on synthesis and degradation of cyclic GMP indicate that these reactions may be involved in the visual process. The concentration of guanosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) is extraordinarily high in dark-adapted bovine rod outer segments and is at least 100-fold that of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP). No significant decrease in the level of cyclic GMP or cyclic AMP was observed however upon exposure of dark-adapted outer segments to light.  相似文献   

3.
Separation of multiple forms of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from the soluble supernatant fraction of rat neostriatum by isoelectric focusing yielded five separate peaks of cyclic nucleotide hydrolysing activity. Each separated enzyme form displayed a complex kinetic pattern for the hydrolysis of both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP, and there were two apparent Km's for each nucleotide. At 1 microM substrate concentration, four enzyme forms exhibited higher activity with cyclic AMP than with cyclic GMP, while one form yielded higher activity with cyclic GMP than with cyclic AMP. Cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP were both capable of almost complete inhibition of the hydrolysis of the other nucleotide in all the peaks separated by isoelectric focusing; the IC50's for this interaction correlated well with the relative rates of hydrolysis of each nucleotide in each peak. The ratio of activity at 1 microM substrate concentration for the five enzyme forms separated by isoelectric focusing was 10:10:5:15:1 for cyclic AMP hydrolysis; and 6:6:4:8:2 for cyclic GMP hydrolysis; and the isoelectric points of the five peaks were 4.3, 4.45, 4.7, 4.85, and 5.5, respectively. Known phosphodiesterase inhibitors did not preferentially inhibit any of the separated forms of activity for either cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP hydrolysis, at either high (100 microM) or low (1 microM) substrate concentrations. Preliminary examination of the subcellular distribution of the different forms of enzyme activity indicated a different degree of attachment of the various forms to particulate tissue components. Isoelectric focusing of the soluble supernatant of rat cerebellum gave rise to a slightly different pattern of isoelectric forms from the neostriatum, indicating a different cellular distribution of the isoelectric forms of PDE in rat brain. Polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis of the soluble supernatant of rat neostriatum also generated a characteristic pattern of five separate peaks of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity, each of which hydrolysed both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of single enzyme forms previously separated by isoelectric focusing gave single peaks, with a marked correspondence between the enzyme forms produced by isoelectric focusing and those produced by gel electrophoresis, suggesting that both protein separation procedures were isolating the same enzyme forms. The results indicate the existence of multiple isoelectric forms of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in the soluble supernatant fraction of rat neostriatum, all of which exhibit similar properties. In this tissue a single kinetic form of this enzyme appears to exist displaying complex kinetic behaviour indicative of negative cooperativity and hydrolysing both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP, with varying affinities.  相似文献   

4.
Tissue extracts from human heart, lung, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle and cerebrum displayed at least 3 distinct cyclic 3':5'-nucleotide phosphodieterase (EC 3.1.4.17) activity peaks (FI, FII, FIII) on DEAE-cellulose chromatography and various properties of these forms were compared in each tissue. FI eluted at about 0.08 M sodium acetate, hydrolyzed cyclic GMP more rapidly than it did cyclic AMP, and cyclic GMP hydrolysis by FI in most tissues was enhanced by a protein activator in the presence of CaCl2. As only high concentrations of cyclic AMP inhibited cyclic GMP hydrolytic activity of FI, the enzyme probably has a low affinity for cyclic AMP. FII eluted at about 0.2 M sodium acetate, hydrolyzed both nucleotides at equal rates, and substrate affinities were relatively low. Cyclic GMP hydrolysis by FII was also stimulated by addition of a protein activator in the presence of CaCl2 and cyclic AMP hydrolysis in this fraction was accelerated by a micromolar fraction of cyclic GMP. FII eluted at about 0.35 M hydrolyzed cyclic AMP preferentially and was insensitive to protein activator. These two cyclic nucleotides act as mutual inhibitors of the hydrolysis in this fraction. Ratio of the cyclic GMP to cyclic AMP hydrolysis was in the order FI, FII, FIII. Four activity peaks were eluted from the cerebral extract and enzymes from this tissue exhibited much the same properties as observed in the other tissues examined herein.  相似文献   

5.
Fat cells particulate phosphodiesterase activity can be solubilized in high yield (80--100%) in a buffer system (30 mM Tris - HCl, pH 8.0) containing non-ionic detergents (0.1% Brij 30, 1.0% Triton X-100), salt (3.0 mM MgSO4, 5.0 mM NaBr) and dithiothreitol (5.0 mM). Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilized enzyme activity indicated the presence of two bands of activities of different electrophoretic mobilities, both of which hydrolyzed cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP. The solubilized activity eluted from DEAE Bio-Gel columns as a somewhat broad profile with at least two peaks of activity. Activity against both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP eluted in similar but not identical patterns. The solubilized enzyme and DEAE column eluates wxhibited low (less than 1 micronM) Michaelis constants for cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP. In addition, the increases in phosphodiesterase activity induced by incubation of intact fat cells with insulin or adrenocorticotropic hormone are maintained in the solubilized state.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract— High phosphodiesterase activity for cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP was found in subcellular fractions of the bovine retina with more rapid hydrolysis of cyclic GMP than cyclic AMP in each fraction. Rod outer segments (ROS) and the supernatant fraction had highest activity. High enzyme activity remained associated with ROS membranes through several steps of purification by gradient centrifugation. A complex kinetic pattern was observed for cyclic AMP hydrolysis by the supernatant fraction yielding two values for K m; a simple kinetic pattern was observed with cyclic GMP hydrolysis in supernatant and for both cyclic nucleotides in preparations of purified outer segments. Phosphodiesterase activity of outer segments was enhanced by Mg2+. Mn2+ and inhibited by EDTA. Cyclic AMP had relatively little effect on the hydrolysis of cyclic GMP in supernatant or ROS while cyclic GMP inhibited hydrolysis of cyclic AMP in both fractions.  相似文献   

7.
Two enzymes displaying cyclic GMP-stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity were purified from rat liver to apparent homogeneity: a 'particulate enzyme' found as an integral membrane protein associated with the plasma membrane, and a 'soluble' enzyme found in the cytosol. The physical properties of these enzymes were very similar, being dimers of Mr 134,000, composed in each instance of two subunits of Mr = 66,000-67,000. Both enzymes showed similar kinetics for cyclic AMP hydrolysis. They are both high-affinity enzymes, with kinetic constants for the particulate enzyme of Km = 34 microM and Vmax. = 4.0 units/mg of protein and for the cytosolic enzyme Km = 40 microM and Vmax. = 4.8 units/mg of protein. In both instances hydrolysis of cyclic AMP appeared to show apparent positive co-operativity, with Hill coefficients (happ.) of 1.5 and 1.6 for the particulate and cytosolic enzymes respectively. However, in the presence of 2 microM-cyclic GMP, the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP obeyed Michaelis kinetics (happ. = 1) for both enzymes. The addition of micromolar concentrations of cyclic GMP had little effect on the Vmax. for cyclic AMP hydrolysis, but lowered the Km for cyclic AMP hydrolysis to around 20 microM in both cases. However, at low cyclic AMP substrate concentrations, cyclic GMP was a more potent activator of the particulate enzyme than was the soluble enzyme. The activity of these enzymes could be selectively inhibited by cis-16-palmitoleic acid and by arachidonic acid. In each instance, however, the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP became markedly more sensitive to such inhibition when low concentrations of cyclic GMP were present. Tryptic peptide maps of iodinated preparations of these two purified enzyme species showed that there was considerable homology between these two enzyme forms.  相似文献   

8.
G Swarup  D L Garbers 《Biochemistry》1983,22(5):1102-1106
Porcine rod outer segment (ROS) proteins were phosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+, separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and detected by autoradiography. The phosphorylation of rhodopsin, the major protein-staining band (Mr approximately 34 000-38 000), was markedly and specifically increased by exposure of rod outer segments to light; various guanine nucleotides (10 microM) including GMP, GDP, and GTP also specifically increased rhodopsin phosphorylation (up to 5-fold). Adenine nucleotides (cyclic AMP, AMP, and ADP at 10 microM) and 8-bromo-GMP (10 microM) or cyclic 8-bromo-GMP (10 microM) had no detectable stimulatory effect on rhodopsin phosphorylation. GTP increased the phosphorylation of rhodopsin at concentrations as low as 100 nM, and guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate), a relatively stable analogue of GTP, was nearly as effective as GTP. Maximal stimulation of rhodopsin phosphorylation by GTP was observed at 2 microM. GMP and GDP were less potent than GTP. Both cyclic GMP and GMP were converted to GTP during the time period of the protein phosphorylation reaction, suggestive of a GTP-specific effect. Transphosphorylation of guanine nucleotides by [32P]ATP and subsequent utilization of [32P]GTP as a more effective substrate were ruled out as an explanation for the guanine nucleotide stimulation. With increasing concentrations of ROS proteins, the phosphorylation of rhodopsin was nonlinear, whereas in the presence of GTP (2 microM) linear increases in rhodopsin phosphorylation as a function of added ROS protein were observed. These results suggest that GTP stimulates the phosphorylation of rhodopsin by ATP and that a GTP-sensitive inhibitor (or regulator) of rhodopsin phosphorylation may be present in ROS.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclic 3',5'-mononucleotide phosphodiesterase (cyclic nucleotide PDEase) activity was studied histo- and cytochemically in the retinal rod photoreceptor cells of the rat by means of a newly developed technique utilizing the intrinsic 5' nucleotidase activity instead of an exogenous 5' nucleotidase source (snake venom). Cyclic GMP and was used as a substrate, the intense activity of phosphodiesterase (PDEase) was distributed over the entire rod outer segments; reaction product was observed on the plasmalemma and on the disk membranes of the outer segments. A slight reaction was also observed on the plasmalemma of the inner segments. However, no precipitate was found in the perinuclear and synaptic regions of the rod photoreceptors. In contrast, when cyclic AMP was utilized as a substrate, a moderate reaction was seen in the synaptic region of the plexiform layer. The intensity of the reaction in the outer segments was much reduced in comparison to the results with cyclic GMP. The enzyme activity was almost completely inhibited by 2 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) or 2 mM theophylline, which were potent inhibitors of PDEase. To confirm the propriety of our new cytochemical method, the localization of 5' nucleotidase was also studied utilizing 5' AMP or 5' GMP as substrates. In contrast to the activity of cyclic nucleotide PDEase, the activity of 5' nucleotidase was distributed on all membranes of the photoreceptors from the synaptic outer plexiform layer to the tip of outer segments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Part of the soluble cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity of crude human lung tissue can be attributed to a thermosensitive (37 degrees) enzyme with a high apparent affinity for both adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) and guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic GMP). The enzyme can be partially purified by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography. In the presence of 0.1 mM EDTA or ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), it is eluted from the column immediately before a cyclic GMP-specific phosphodiesterase, but in the presence of 0.2 mM Ca2+, the elution follows that of the cyclic GMP-specific enzyme. The two forms of the nonspecific phosphodiesterase activity are referred to as DEAD-Sephadex Fractions Ia and Ic, respectively. Their apparent molecular weights, recorded at gel filtration, vary with different preparations from 230,000 to 150,000. Occasionally, corresponding recordings for main peaks of activity also cluster round the values 120,000, 105,000, and 78,000. The enzymatic properties of Fractions Ia and Ic closely resemble each other. The enzyme activity is blocked by EDTA, partially inhibited in the presence of 1,10-phenanthroline, but only slightly affected by EGTA. The inhibitory effect of EDTA can be overcome by Mg2+ and Mn2+ and that of 1,10-phenanthroline, in part, by Zn2+; this cation in itself is inhibitory at millimolar concentrations. With submicromolar substrate concentrations, the activity of either fraction obeys linear kinetics displaying an apparent Km of approximately 0.4 micron for both substrates. Reciprocal inhibition experiments suggest that hydrolysis of both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP is performed by the same active site. Examination of the activity using extended substrate concentration ranges indicates nonlinear kinetics; Hill plots of such data also show nonlinear curvature. The activity is inhibited by micromolar concentrations of inosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic IMP), 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, papervine, and some antiallergic agents. Theophylline and disodium cromoglycate are less potent inhibitors. Inhibition of activity by Lubrol PX follows a biphasic dose response curve. The activity of Fraction Ia can be enhanced 2- to 3-fold by a Ca2+-dependent activator prepared from lung tissue, whose action is counteracted by chlorpromazine, and by lysophosphatidylcholine. It is initially enhanced but subsequently decreased at exposure to trypsin. Fraction Ic is less prone to activation by these agents. The results indicate that the present activity represents an enzyme form that differs from three previously described phosphodiesterases of human lung tissue. It is apparently related to, but also shows distinct differences from the Ca2+-dependent enzyme(s) of brain and heart tissue.  相似文献   

11.
1. Two cyclic AMP independent protein kinases phosphorylating preferentially acidic substrates have been identified in soluble extract from human, rat and pig thyroid glands. Both enzymes were retained on DEAE-cellulose. The first enzyme activity eluted between 60 and 100 mM phosphate (depending on the species), phosphorylated both casein and phosvitin and was retained on phosphocellulose; this enzyme likely corresponds to a casein kinase already described in many tissues. The second enzyme activity eluted from DEAE-cellulose at phosphate concentrations higher than 300 mM, phosphorylated only phosvitin and was not retained on phosphocellulose. These enzymes were neither stimulated by cyclic AMP, cyclic GMP and calcium, nor inhibited by the inhibitor of the cyclic AMP dependent protein kinases. 2. The second enzyme activity was purified from pig thyroid gland by the association of affinity chromatography on insolubilized phosvitin and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Its specific activity was increased by 8400. 3. The purified enzyme (phosvitin kinase) was analyzed for biochemical and enzymatic properties. Phosvitin kinase phosphorylated phosvitin with an apparent Km of 100 micrograms/ml; casein, histone, protamine and bovine serum albumin were not phosphorylated. The enzyme utilized ATP as well as GTP as phosphate donor with an apparent Km of 25 and 28 microM, respectively. It had an absolute requirement for Mg2+ with a maximal activity at 4 mM and exhibited an optimal activity at pH 7.0. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was 110 000 as determined by Sephacryl S300 gel filtration. The analysis by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a major band with a molecular weight of 35000 suggesting a polymeric structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Low- and high-affinity binding sites for cyclic GMP were found to be associated with the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (ATP: protein phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.37) from human tonsillar lymphocytes, but neither of them was identical with the cyclic AMP binding site. The enzyme activated by cyclic GMP phosphorylated the same site of calf thymus H2b histone as the cyclic AMP activated enzyme; however, more complex kinetics of activation were found with cyclic GMP. Two classes of cyclic GMP binding site were demonstrated by kinetic analysis of cyclic [3H]GMP binding in the enzyme preparations eluted by 0.1 M potassium phosphate (pH 7.0) from DEAE cellulose. The high-affinity cyclic GMP binding site (Kd about 4 . 10(-8) M) belonged to some complex form of the protein kinase, as evidenced by the mutual inhibition of cyclic AMP binding and high affinity cyclic GMP binding. However, the high-affinity cyclic GMP binding site disappeared on Sephadex G-100 gel chromatography of the enzyme preparation, whereas the cyclic AMP binding activity was recovered quantitively as separate fractions. The low-affinity cyclic GMP binding site (Kd 2--5 . 10(-6) M) was demonstrated by the inhibitory effect of 10(-5) M cyclic GMP on cyclic AMP binding in each cyclic AMP binding fraction obtained by gel chromatography. However, cyclic AMP did not inhibit the binding of cyclic GMP to the low-affinity binding site.  相似文献   

13.
Cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activities (3' : 5'-cyclic AMP 5'-nucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.17) were demonstrated in the isolated intima, media, and adventitia of rabbit aorta. The activity for cyclic AMP hydrolysis in the intima was 2.7-fold higher than that for cyclic GMP hydrolysis. The activity for cyclic AMP hydrolysis in the media was approximately equal to that for cyclic GMP hydrolysis, but in the adventitia, cyclic GMP hydrolytic activity was 2.1-fold higher than cyclic AMP hydrolytic activity. Distribution of the activator of the phosphodiesterase was studied in the three layers. Each layer contained the activator. The activator was predominantly localized in the smooth muscle layer (the media). The effect of the activator and Ca2+ on the media cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase was also briefly studied. The activity of the cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase was stimulated by micromolar concentration of Ca2+ in the presence of the activator. However, the activity of the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase was not significantly stimulated by Ca2+ up to 100 muM in the presence of the activator. Above 90% of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity in the whole aorta was found to be derived from the media. A major portion (60-70%) of the media enzyme was found in 105 000 times g supernatant. Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in the supernatant was partially purified through Sepharose 6B column chromatography and partially separated from cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase. Using a partially purified preparation from the 105 000 times g supernatant the main kinetic parameters were specified as follows: 1) The pH optimum was found to be about 9.0 using Tris-maleate buffer. The maximum stimulation of the enzyme by Mg2+ was achieved at 4mM of MgC12. 2) High concentration of cyclic GMP (0.1 mM) inhibited noncompetitively the enzyme activity, and the activity was not stimulated at any tested concentration of cyclic GMP. 3) Activity-substrate concentration relationship revealed a high affinity (Km equals 1.0 muM) and low affinity (Km equals 45 muM) for cyclic AMP. The homogenate and 105 000 times g supernatant of the media also showed non-linear kinetics similar to the Sepharose 6B preparation and their apparent Km values for cyclic AMP hydrolysis were 1.2 muM and 36-40 muM and an enzyme extracted by sonication from 105 000 times g precipitate also exhibited non-linear kinetics (Km equals 5.1 muM and 70 muM). 4) Papaverine exhibited much stronger inhibition on the aorta cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (50% inhibition of the intima enzyme, I5 o at 0.62 muM, I5 o of the media at 0.62 muM and I5 o of the adventitia at 1.0 muM) than on the brain (I5 o at 8.5 muM) and serum (I5 o at 20 muM) cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, while theophylline inhibited these enzymes similarly. However, cyclic GMP phosphodiesterases in all tissues examined were inhibited similarly, not only by theophylline but also by papaverine.  相似文献   

14.
Chromatography on hexyl-agarose resolved a partially purified cyclic GMP-activated phosphodiesterase from rat liver into two peaks of activity: the first was eluted with 0.5 M-KCl and was cyclic AMP-specific. The second was tightly bound to hexyl-agarose and was not eluted with KCl (0--2.0 M), which enhanced the hydrophobic interactions of this form with the matrix. It was eluted with 0.5 M-Tris, hydrolysed cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP and was specifically activated by cyclic GMP. The cyclic GMP-activated phosphodiesterase was immobilized on hexyl-agarose. Enzyme activity, quantitatively bound to hexyl-agarose, was not released from the hydrophobic matrix in the presence of cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP, under our assay conditions. The immobilized form of the enzyme retained catalytic activity, was inhibited by 0.1 mM-cyclic AMP and was activated by micromolar concentrations of cyclic GMP to a lesser extent (7-fold) than the control, i.e. the enzyme mixed with unsubstituted agarose (15-fold). When the enzyme was immobilized, inhibition of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity was only observed in the presence of cyclic GMP (at 3 microM); in its absence, activity remained unchanged. The kinetic behaviour of the immobilized enzyme is consistent with the hypothesis of a binding site distinct from the hydrolytic and activating sites.  相似文献   

15.
A cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase form of rat brain cytosol was purified by means of affinity chromatography on an immobilized analog of the specific inhibitor rolipram, followed by an exclusion chromatography step. The resulting preparation presented two protein bands in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, both with phosphodiesterase activity. Kinetics of cyclic AMP hydrolysis by the purified enzyme proved of the Michaelis type, with a Km of 3 microM, while hydrolysis of cyclic GMP displayed anomalous negatively cooperative kinetics. At micromolar concentrations, this enzyme from hydrolyzed highly specifically cyclic AMP (50-fold faster than cyclic GMP). Cyclic GMP proved a poor competitor of cyclic AMP hydrolysis (Ki 1.04 mM). The neurotropic compound, rolipram, strongly inhibited the enzyme, in a competitive manner (Ki 0.9 microM). This enzyme displayed a molecular mass of around 44 kDa as determined by exclusion chromatography, but two molecular masses of 42 kDa and 89 kDa were observable by electrophoresis on a polyacrylamide gradient gel, compatible with an equilibrium between dimeric and monomeric forms. Isoelectric focusing of the preparation gave rise to two activity peaks of pI 4.8 and 6.7, with identical properties, probably representing two charge isomers of the same protein. An enzyme prepared from rat heart cytosol by the same techniques as for brain phosphodiesterase isolation shared numerous characteristics with the enzyme of cerebral origin, suggesting identity of the rolipram-sensitive form between the two tissues. Since the rolipram-sensitive form detected in crude brain preparations markedly differs from the above-described isolated enzyme, both by its molecular mass in exclusion chromatography and by its pI, it is suggested that an alteration of the native protein, due to dissociation of putative subunits, occurs during the purification procedure.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphodiesterase activities of horse (and dog) thyroid soluble fraction were compared with either cyclic AMP (adenosine 3':3'-monophosphate) or cyclic GMP (guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate) as substrate. Optimal activity for cyclic AMP hydrolysis was observed at pH 8, and at pH 7.6 for cyclic GMP. Increasing concentrations of ethyleneglycol bis(2-aminoethyl)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid inhibited both phosphodiesterase activities; in the presence of exogenous Ca2+, this effect was shifted to higher concentrations of the chelator. In a dialysed supernatant preparation, Ca2+ had no significant stimulatory effect, but both Mg2+ and Mn2+ increased cyclic nucleotides breakdown. Mn2+ promoted the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP more effectively than that of cyclic GMP. For both substrates, substrate velocity curves exhibited a two-slope pattern in a Hofstee plot. Cyclic GMP stimulated cyclic AMP hydrolysis, both nucleotides being at micromolar concentrations. Conversely, at no concentration had cyclic AMP any stimulatory effect on cyclic GMP hydrolysis. 1-Methyl-3-isobutylxanthine and theophylline blocked the activation by cyclic GMP of cyclic GMP of cyclic AMP hydrolysis, whereas Ro 20-1724 (4-(3-butoxy-4-methoxybenzyl)-2-imidazolidinone), a non-methylxanthine inhibitor of phosphodiesterases, did not alter this effect. In dog thyroid slices, carbamoylcholine, which promotes an accumulation of cyclic GMP, inhibits the thyrotropin-induced increase in cyclic AMP. This inhibitory effect of carbamoylcholine was blocked by theophylline and 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine, but not by Ro 20-1724. It is suggested that the cholinergic inhibitory effect on cyclic AMP accumulation is mediated by cyclic GMP, through a direct activation of phosphodiesterase activity.  相似文献   

17.
In vertebrate retina, rod outer segment is the site of visual transduction. The inward cationic current in the dark-adapted outer segment is regulated by cyclic GMP. A light flash on the outer segment activates a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase resulting in rapid hydrolysis of the cyclic nucleotide which in turn causes a decrease in the dark current. Restoration of the dark current requires inactivation of the phosphodiesterase and synthesis of cyclic GMP. The latter is accomplished by the enzyme guanylate cyclase which catalyzes the formation of cyclic GMP from GTP. Therefore, factors regulating the cyclase activity play a critcal role in visual transduction. But regulation of the cyclase by some of these factors — phosphodiesterase, ATP, the soluble proteins and metal cofactors (Mg and Mn) — is controversial. The availability of different types of cyclase preparations, dark-adapted rod outer segments with fully inhibited phosphodiesterase activity, partially purified cyclase without PDE contamination, cloned rod outer segment cyclase free of other rod outer segment proteins, permitted us to address these controversial issues. The results show that ATP inhibits the basal cyclase activity but enhances the stimulation of the enzyme by soluble activator, that cyclase can be activated in the dark at low calcium concentrations under conditions where phosphodiesterase activity is fully suppressed, and that greater activity is observed with manganese as cofactor than magnesium. These results provide a better understanding of the controls on cyclase activity in rod outer segments and suggest how regulation of this cyclase by ATP differs from that of other known membrane guanylate cyclases.This work was supported by the grants from the National Institutes of Health (EY07158, EY 05230, EY 10828, NS 23744) and the equipment grant from Pennsylvania Lions Eye Research Foundation.  相似文献   

18.
1. Supernatant fluids from rat cerebral cortex, cerebellum, kidney, heart and liver contained more phosphodiesterase activity hydrolysing cyclic GMP than that hydrolysing cyclic AMP when assayed with sub-saturating concentrations of substrate. 2. These activities were resolved into several fractions by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration; no two tissues had similar activity profiles. 3. With every tissue examined, a fraction (fraction II) with a molecular weight of about 150,000 was obtained which hydrolysed cyclic GMP preferentially at sub-saturating substrate concentrations in the presence of micromolar concentration of Ca2+, millimolar concentration of Mg2+ and a protein activator. 4. The activity of fraction II accounted for about 60 percent in liver, more than 80 percent in heart and cerebellum, and almost 100 percent in cerebral cortex of the total activity for cyclic GMP hydrolysis, calculated from the activity profiles. 5. Km values of fraction II samples from kidney, heart and liver for cyclic GMP were 1.3, 1.7 and 5 muM respectively. 6. 3-Isobutyl-1-methylxanthine inhibited hydrolysis of cyclic GMP by fraction II with an I50 value of 3muM for heart and liver and 50 muM for cerebrum. 7. The activator protein, with an estimated molecular weight of about 30,000 was isolated from all the tissues listed in 1.8. The concentrations of activator protein and of the isolated enzyme, fraction II, did not correspond exactly.  相似文献   

19.
Author index     
Fat cell particulate phosphodiesterase activity can be solubilized in high yield (80–100%) in a buffer system (30 mM Tris · HCl, pH 8.0) containing non-ionic detergents (0.1% Brij 30, 1.0% Triton X-100), salt (3.0 mM MgSO4, 5.0 mM NaBr) and dithiothreitol (5.0 mM). Polycrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilized enzyme activity indicated the presence of two bands of activities of different electrophoretic mobilities, both of which hydrolyzed cylic AMP and cyclic GMP. The solubilized activity eluted from DEAE Bio-Gel columns as a somewhat broad profile with at least two peaks of activity. Activity against both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP eluted in similar but not identical patterns. The solubilized enzyme and DEAE column eluates exhibited low (<1 μM) Michaelis constants for cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP. In addition, the increase in phosphodiesterase activity induced by incubation of intact fat cells with insulin or adrenocorticotropic hormone are maintained in the solubilized state.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphodiesterase activities for adenosine and guanosine 3':5'-monophosphates (cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP) were demonstrated in particulate and soluble fractions of rat anterior pituitary gland. Both fractions contained higher activity for cyclic GMP hydrolysis than that for cyclic AMP hydrolysis when these activities were assayed at subsaturating substrate concentrations. Addition of protein activator and CaCl2 to either whole homogenate, particulate or supernatant fraction stimulated both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP phosphadiesterase activities. Almost 80% of cyclic AMP and 90% of cyclic GMP hydrolyzing activities were localized in soluble fraction. Particulate-bound cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity was completely solubilized with 1% Triton X-100. Detergent-dispersed particulate and soluble enzymes were compared with respect to Ca2+ and activator requirements and gel filtration profiles. Particulate, soluble and partially purified phosphodiesterase activities were also characterized in relation to divalent cation requirements, kinetic behavior and effects of Ca2+, activator and ethyleneglycol-bis-(2-aminoethyl)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid. Gel filtration of either sonicated whole homogenate or the 10500 X g supernatant fraction showed a single peak of activity, which hydrolyzed both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP and was dependent upon Ca2+ and activator for maximum activity. Partially purified enzyme was inhibited by 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine and papaverine with the concentration of inhibitor giving 50% inhibition at 0.4 muM substrate being 20 muM and 24 muM for cyclic AMP and 7 muM and 10 muM for cyclic GMP, respectively. Theophylline, caffeine and theobromine were less effective. The rat anterior pituitary also contained a protein activator which stimulated both pituitary cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase(s) as well as activator-deficient brain cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases. Chromatography of the sonicated pituitary extract on DEAE-cellulose column chromatography resolved the phosphodiesterase into two fractions. Both enzyme fractions hydrolyzed cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP and had comparable apparent Km values for the two nucleotides. Hydrolysis of cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP by fraction II enzyme was stimulated 6--7-fold by both pituitary and brain activator in the presence of micromolar concentrations of Ca2+.  相似文献   

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