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1.
Synthase phosphatase, phosphorylase phosphatase and histone phosphatase in rat liver were measured using as substrates purified liver synthase D, phosphorylase alpha and 32P-labelled phosphorylated f1 histone, respectively. The three phosphatase enzymes had different sedimentation characteristics. Both synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase were found to sediment with the microsomal fraction under our experimental conditions. Only 10% of histone phosphatase was in this fraction; the majority was in the cytosol. No change in histone phosphatase was observed in the adrenalectomized fasted rat whereas synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities were decreased 5-10 fold. Fractionation of liver extract with ethanol produced a dissociation of the three phosphatase activities. When a partially purified fraction was put on a DEAE-cellulose column, synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase both exhibited broad elution profiles but their activity peaks did not coincide. Histone phosphatase eluted as a single discrete peak. When the supernatant of CaCl2-treated microsomal fraction was put on a Sepharose 4B column, the majority of synthase phosphatase was found to elute with the larger molecular weight proteins whereas the majority of phosphorylase phosphatase eluted with the smaller species. Histone phosphatase migrated as a single peak and was of intermediate size. Synthase phosphorylase phosphatase by synthase D (Ki approximately 2 units/ml). The inhibition of synthase phosphatase by phosphorylase alpha was kinetically non-competitive with substrate. Histone phosphatase activity was not inhibited by synthase D or by phosphorylase alpha. The above results suggest that different proteins are involved in the dephosphorylation of synthase D, phosphorylase alpha and histone in the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Synthase phosphatase, phosphorylase phosphatase and histone phosphatase activity in a leukocyte homogenate were found to have different sedimentation charcteristics: both synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activity are associated with the microsomal fraction, while the majority of histone phosphatase activity (75–85%) was found in the cytosol. Synthase phosphatase, phosphorylase phosphatase and histone phosphatase activities accompanying the microsomal fraction are readily solubilized by 0.3% Triton X-100.When the solubilized microsomal enzymes were chromatographed on Sephadex G-200, the majority of synthase phosphatase, phosphorylase phosphatase and histone phosphatase activity migrated in single peaks corresponding to apparent molecular weights of 380 000, 250 000 and 68 000, respectively. A minor peak of 30 000, which had phosphatase activity against all three substrates was also obtained.Ethanol treatment resulted in solubilization and dissociation of the three phosphatase activities. It was found that although ethanol treatment resulted in a 4-fold increase of phosphorylase phosphatase activity, histone phosphatase activity was decreased (by 60%), while synthase phosphatase activity remained stable. Similar results were obtained when ethanol treatment was performed on the 17 000 × g supernatant.Chromatography of the ethanol-treated microsomes (or homogenate) on Sephadex G-200 showed that the phosphatase activity towards synthase D, phosphorylase a and phosphohistone coincided a Mr 30 000 species. Heat treatment of the Mr 30 000 peak resulted in dissociation of synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activity.Synthase phosphatase was inhibited by phosphorylase a in a kinetically non-competitive manner while histone phosphatase activity was notinhibited by synthase D (8.5 unit/ ml) orby phosphorylase a(12 unit/ ml).  相似文献   

3.
The smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and cytosol fractions of liver homogenates exhibit phosphoprotein phosphatase activity towards glycogen synthase D and phosphorylase a. The following observations suggest that liver contains multiple forms of these phosphatases. Synthase phosphatase activity in either fraction was more readily inactivated by heating than phosphorylase phosphatase activity. Both synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities in smooth ER were non-competitively inhibited by Mg2+, but were activated by this ion in the cytosol. Synthase phosphatase activities in cytosol and smooth ER were stimulated by a number of sugar phosphates, particularly glucose-1-phosphate, galactose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate. Erythrose-4-phosphate stimulated synthase phosphatase activity in the cytosol, but inhibited the microsomal enzyme. Phosphorylase phosphatase activities in either fraction were inhibited by most sugar phosphates. Adenosine mono-, di- and tri-phosphates inhibited phosphatase activities in both fractions. Low concentrations of AMP and ADP inhibited phosphorylase phosphatase activities to a greater extent than synthase phosphatase activities. Chromatography of the smooth ER fraction on DEAE-cellulose resulted in the separation of synthase phosphatase from phosphorylase phosphatase, as soluble proteins. The elution profile for the microsomal phosphatase was different from that for the cytosol enzymes. It is concluded that: both synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase in liver have at least two isoenzyme forms; synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase are separate enzymes; the different behaviour of microsomal and cytosol phosphatases towards divalent cations and sugar phosphates provides a potential mechanism for the differential regulation of these activities in liver.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylase phosphatase was purified to homogeneity from bovine myocardium by the procedure of Brandt et al. (Brandt, H., Capulong, Z. L., and Lee, E. Y. C., (1975) J. Biol. Chem.250, 8038–8044). The purified enzyme consists of a single polypeptide chain of Mr, 34,800 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The Km for phosphorylase a was 2.9 μm and at Vmax, the enzyme had a turnover number of 11.7 mol phosphorylase a (dimer) converted/mol phosphatase/s. Phosphorylated histone and protamine were also substrates for this phosphatase. The Km for histone was 46 μm (based on incorporated 32Pi and at Vmax a turnover number of 3.3 mol phosphate released/mol phosphatase/s was found. In general, the properties of the bovine phosphorylase phosphatase closely resemble those found for the rabbit liver enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Glycogen synthase phosphatase has been purified from bovine heart. This preparation catalyzes conversion of synthase D into I and phosphorylase a into b and is able to dephosphorylate synthase D, phosphorylase a, active phosphorylase kinase, and phosphorylated histone and casein. The activity of phosphatase was assayed with synthase D, phosphorylase a, and histone as substrates after chromatography on Sephadex G-100, after sucrose gradient centrifugation, and after isoelectric focusing in a sucrose gradient. In all cases no separation of enzyme activity was observed with the above substrates. The phosphatase activity on all substrates was lost at the same rate by heat denaturation. These results indicate that this enzyme preparation contains a single phosphoprotein phosphatase which is responsible for the activity observed on the above substrates.  相似文献   

6.
A detailed investigation was conducted to determine the precise subcellular localization of the rate-limiting enzymes of hepatic glycogen metabolism (glycogen synthase and phosphorylase) and their regulatory enzymes (synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase). Rat liver was homogenized and fractionated to produce soluble, rough and smooth microsomal fractions. Enzyme assays of the fractions were performed, and the results showed that glycogen synthase and phosphorylase were located in the soluble fraction of the livers. Synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities were also present in soluble fractions, but were clearly identified in both rough and smooth microsomal fractions. It is suggested that the location of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) within the cytosome forms a microenvironment within hepatocytes that establishes conditions necessary for glycogen synthesis (and degradation). Thus the location of SER in the cell determines regions of the hepatocyte that are rich in glycogen particles. Furthermore, the demonstration of the association of synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase with membranes of SER may account for the close morphological association of SER with glycogen particles (i.e., disposition of SER membranes brings the membrane-bound regulatory enzymes in close contact with their substrates).  相似文献   

7.
Correlation of the changes in phosphorylase a concentration with the synthase phosphatase velocity in a glycogen particle preparation in the presence of EDTA revealed that the initial synthase phosphatase rate was greatest in extracts from glucose-treated rats and least in extracts from glucagon-treated rats. In all cases the velocity increased with time and with a decrease in phosphorylase a. However, a threshold release of phosphatase activity when phosphorylase a reached a critical level was not observed. The data are compatible with either an independent regulation of synthase phosphatase by glucose and glucagon or regulation of the activity by phosphorylase over a range of phosphorylase a concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
Caffeine stimulates synthase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities by independent mechanisms. Both effects of caffeine are concentration-dependent with different apparent A0.5 for each reaction. Stimulation of the synthase phosphatase reaction was independent of the initial phosphorylase a concentration, was immediate, and did not follow in sequence the depletion of phosphorylase a. Glucose 6-phosphate also was stimulatory to the synthase phosphatase reaction (A0.5 = 0.14 mM) with little effect on phosphorylase phosphatase. In combination glucose 6-phosphate and caffeine effects were additive suggesting the existence of separate binding sites. The synthase phosphatase reaction also was stimulated by AMP (binding affinity 2.3 mm) but with no effect on phosphorylase phosphatase activity. Together caffeine and AMP effects were not additive suggesting that they share a common binding site or closely interrelated sites. The location of the AMP and caffeine site(s) has not yet been determined.  相似文献   

9.
An Mn2+-activated phosphoprotein phosphatase of Mr = 80,000 from rabbit muscle catalyzes the dephosphorylation of skeletal muscle proteins that are phosphorylated by either phosphorylase kinase or cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Phosphorylase or glycogen synthase labeled by phosphorylase kinase at seryl residues 14 or 7, respectively, are both dephosphorylated by the phosphatase. Phosphorylase a and glycogen synthase compete with one another for the phosphatase. The phosphatase discriminates between different sites labeled by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase: glycogen synthase phosphorylated either to 1.0 or 1.8 mol phosphate/mol, or phosphorylase kinase phosphorylated on its β-subunit serve as substrates for the phosphatase, but the phosphorylase kinase α-subunit, the phosphorylated phosphatase inhibitor 1, or casein do not. Histone fraction IIA, phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit, was a poor substrate even at a concentration of 100 μm. Phosphorylation of the α-subunit of phosphorylase kinase had no influence on the kinetics of dephosphorylation of the β-subunit. Thus, the Mr = 80,000 phosphatase meets the functional definition of a protein phosphatase 1 [Cohen, P. (1978) Curr. Top. Cell. Regul.14, 117–196]. Furthermore, from a comparison of the known phosphorylated sites of these proteins, it appears that the phosphatase discriminates between different sites present in the phosphoproteins tested on the basis of the Km values for the reactions. It displays a preferential activity toward proteins with a primary structure wherein basic residues are two positions amino-terminal from the phosphoserine, AgrLysX-YSer(P) or LysArgX-YSer(P), rather and one residue away, ArgArgX-Ser(P).  相似文献   

10.
Upon fractionation of a postmitochondrial supernatant from rat liver, the synthase phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.42) activity (assayed at high tissue concentrations) was largely recovered in the glycogen fraction and to a minor extent in the cytosol. In contrast, the phosphorylase phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.17) activity was approximately equally distributed between these two fractions, a lesser amount being recovered in the microsomal fraction. The phosphatase activities in the microsomal and glycogen fractions were almost completely inhibited by a preincubation with the modulator protein, a specific inhibitor of type-1 (ATP,Mg-dependent) protein phosphatases. In the cytosolic fraction, however, type-2A (polycation-stimulated) phosphatase(s) contributed significantly to the dephosphorylation of phosphorylase and of in vitro phosphorylated muscular synthase. Liver synthase b, used as substrate for the measurement of synthase phosphatase throughout this work, was only activated by modulator-sensitive phosphatases. Trypsin treatment of the subcellular fractions resulted in a dramatically increased (up to 1000-fold) sensitivity to modulator, a several-fold increase in phosphorylase phosphatase activity and a complete loss of synthase phosphatase activity. Similar changes occurred during dilution of the glycogen-bound enzyme. A preincubation with the deinhibitor protein, which is known to counteract the effects of inhibitor-1 and modulator, increased several-fold the phosphorylase phosphatase activity, but exclusively in the cytosolic and microsomal fractions. It did not affect the synthase phosphatase activity. Taken together, the results indicate the existence of distinct, multi-subunit type-1 phosphatases in the cytosolic, microsomal and glycogen fractions.  相似文献   

11.
Using substrates purified from liver, the apparent Km values of synthase phosphatase ([UDPglucose--glycogen glucosyltransferase-D]phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.42) and phosphorylase phosphatase (phosphorylase a phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.17) were found to be 0.7 and 60 units/ml respectively. The maximal velocity of phosphorylase phosphatase was more than a 100 times that of synthase phosphatase. In adrenalectomized, fasted animals there was a complete loss of synthase phosphatase but only a slight decrease in phosphorylase phosphatase when activity was measured using endogenous substrates in a concentrated liver extract. When assayed under optimal conditions with purified substrates, both activities were present but had decreased to very low levels. Mixing experiments indicated that synthase D present in the extract of adrenalectomized fasted animals was altered such that it was no longer a substrate for synthase phosphatase from normal rats. Phosphorylase a substrate on the other hand was unaltered and readily converted. When glucose was given in vivo, no change in percent of synthase in the I form was seen in adrenalectomized rats but the percent of phosphorylase in the a form was reduced. Precipitation of protein from an extract of normal fed rats with ethanol produced a large activation of phosphorylase phosphatase activity with no corresponding increase in synthase phosphatase activity. Despite the low phosphorylase phosphatase present in extracts of adrenalectomized fasted animals, ethanol precipitation increased activity to the same high level as obtained in the normal fed rats. Synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities were also decreased in normal fasted, diabetic fed and fasted, and adrenalectomized fed rats. Both enzymes recovered in the same manner temporally after oral glucose administration to adrenalectomized, fasted rats. These results suggest an integrated regulatory mechanism for the two phosphatase.  相似文献   

12.
Hormonal regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Perfusion of livers from fed rats with medium containing glucagon (2 x 10(-10) or 1 x 10(-8) M) resulted in both time- and concentration-dependent inactivation of glycogen synthase phosphatase. Expected changes occurred in cAMP, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, glycogen synthase, and glycogen phosphorylase. The effect of glucagon on synthase phosphatase was partially reversed by simultaneous addition of insulin (4 x 10(-8) M), an effect paralleled by a decrease in cAMP. Addition of arginine vasopressin (10 milliunits/ml) resulted in a similar inactivation of synthase phosphatase and activation of phosphorylase, but independent of any changes in cAMP or its kinase. Phosphorylase phosphatase activity was unaffected by any of these hormones. Synthase phosphatase activity, measured as the ability of a crude homogenate to catalyze the conversion of purified rat liver synthase D to the I form, was no longer inhibited by glucagon or vasopressin when phosphorylase antiserum was added to the phosphatase assay mixture in sufficient quantity to inhibit 90-95% of the phosphorylase a activity. These data support the following conclusions: 1) hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase activity is acutely modulated by hormones, 2) hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase are regulated differently, 3) the hormone-mediated changes in synthase phosphatase cannot be explained by an alteration of the synthase D molecule affecting its behavior as a substrate, and 4) glycogen synthase phosphatase activity is at least partially controlled by the level of phosphorylase a.  相似文献   

13.
The activity of glycogen synthase phosphatase in rat liver stems from the co-operation of two proteins, a cytosolic S-component and a glycogen-bound G-component. It is shown that both components possess synthase phosphatase activity. The G-component was partially purified from the enzyme-glycogen complex. Dissociative treatments, which increase the activity of phosphorylase phosphatase manyfold, substantially decrease the synthase phosphatase activity of the purified G-component. The specific inhibition of glycogen synthase phosphatase by phosphorylase a, originally observed in crude liver extracts, was investigated with purified liver synthase b and purified phosphorylase a. Synthase phosphatase is strongly inhibited, whether present in a dilute liver extract, in an isolated enzyme-glycogen complex, or as G-component purified therefrom. In contrast, the cytosolic S-component is insensitive to phosphorylase a. The activation of glycogen synthase in crude extracts of skeletal muscle is not affected by phosphorylase a from muscle or liver. Consequently we have studied the dephosphorylation of purified muscle glycogen synthase, previously phosphorylated with any of three protein kinases. Phosphorylase a strongly inhibits the dephosphorylation by the hepatic G-component, but not by the hepatic S-component or by a muscle extract. These observations show that the inhibitory effect of phosphorylase a on the activation of glycogen synthase depends on the type of synthase phosphatase.  相似文献   

14.
Soluble preparations from mycelium of the dimorphic fungus Mucor rouxii contained detectable amounts of phosphoprotein phosphatase activity. This cytosolic phosphatase activity exhibited a molecular weight below 80,000 and could be resolved into two different forms (enzymes I and II) by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose followed by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300. Enzyme I (Mr 64,000) was mainly a histone phosphatase activity, absolutely dependent on divalent cations, with a K0.5 for MnCl2 of 2 mm. Enzyme II (Mr 40,000) was active with histone and phosphorylase. Its activity was independent or slightly inhibited by Mn2+. This enzyme was strongly inhibited by 50 mm NaF or 1 mm ATP. When partially purified enzymes I and II were separately treated with ethanol, the catalytic properties of enzyme II were apparently not affected while those of enzyme I were drastically changed. The activity with histone, which was originally dependent on Mn2+, became independent or slightly inhibited by the cation. The treatment was accompanied by a notable increase in phosphorylase phosphatase activity which was strongly inhibited by Mn2+. Treated enzyme I eluted from DEAE-cellulose and Sephacryl S-300 columns at a position similar to that of enzyme II.  相似文献   

15.
The work of Gilboe and Nuttall on the inhibition of liver synthase phosphatase activity by EDTA (J. Biol. Chem., 253, 4078–4081, 1978) and by ATP (Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 338, 57–67, 1974) has been confirmed and extended. It appears that these inhibitory effects are not specific since they can be elicited by other polyvalent anions and that they are transient since they last only as long as phosphorylase a is present. The duration of these inhibitory effects can be shortened by the addition of glucose or caffeine which stimulate phosphorylase phosphatase activity. It is concluded that the inhibitory effects of EDTA and ATP are mediated by phosphorylase a.  相似文献   

16.
A phosphoprotein phosphatase preparation which showed activity towards glycogen synthase, phosphorylase, phosphorylase kinase, and phosphohistones was reversibly inhibited (70–90%) by preincubation with free ATP (apparent Ki about 0.3 mM). Other nucleotides (ADP2 (apparent Ka 3μM) prior to assay. Other divalent metals (Co++ > Zn++ > Mg++) were partially effective in reversing the inhibition. It is concluded that ATP by virtue of its special structure and metal binding capacity possibly removes a catalytically important metal ion from the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Glycogen synthase D was prepared from rat liver by chromatographing the glycogen pellet on DE-52 columns. It was free of glycogen and phosphorylase and converted readily into synthase I upon incubation with glycogen synthase phosphatase. With this synthase D as substrate, the identity of rat liver glycogen synthase phosphatase was studied by means of DE-52 column chromatography. Under the conditions developed, synthase phosphatase emerged from the columns as a sharp, single peak, and phosphorylase phosphatase came off later. The two phosphatases were also different from each other in stability, synthase phosphatase being less stable than phosphorylase phosphatase.  相似文献   

18.
The phosphoprotein phosphatase(s) acting on muscle phosphorylase a was purified from rabbit liver by acid precipitation, high speed centrifugation, chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-50, Sephadex G-75, and Sepharose-histone. Enzyme activity was recovered in the final step as two distinct peaks tentatively referred to as phosphoprotein phosphatases I and II. Each phosphatase showed a single broad band when examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis; the molecular weights derived by this method were approximately 30,500 for phosphoprotein phosphatase I and 34,000 for phosphoprotein phosphatase II. The s20, w value for each enzyme was 3.40. Using this value and values for the Stokes radii, the molecular weight for each enzyme was calculated to be 34,500. Both phosphatases, in addition to catalyzing the conversion of phosphorylase a to b, also catalyzed the dephosphorylation of glycogen synthase D, activated phosphorylase kinase, phosphorylated histone, phosphorylated casein, and the phosphorylated inhibitory component of troponin (TN-I). The relative activities of the phosphatases with respect to phosphorylase a, glycogen synthase D, histone, and casein remained essentially constant throughout the purification. The activities of both phosphatases with different substrates decreased in parallel when they were denatured by incubation at 55 degrees and 65 degrees. The Km values of phosphoprotein phosphatase I for phosphorylase a, histone, and casein were lower than the values obtained for phosphoprotein phosphatase II. With glycogen synthase D as substrate, each enzyme gave essentially the same Km value. Utilizing either enzyme, it was found that activity toward a given substrate was inhibited competitively by each of the alternative substrates. The results suggest that phosphoprotein phosphatases I and II are each active toward all of the substrates tested.  相似文献   

19.
Protein phosphatase activities in developing Dictyostelium discoideum cells were investigated. Substrates were prepared by phosphorylation of histone H2b and kemptide (Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Leu-Gly) using cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Two histone phosphatase activities (Mr 170 000 and 520 000) and one kemptide phosphatase activity (Mr 230 000) were found in the cytosolic cell fraction. Histone phosphatase was also present in the particulate fraction, kemptide phosphatase was not. All phosphatase activities were present throughout development. No differences in protein phosphatase activities were found in prespore and prestalk cells. A heat-stable factor which inhibits the particulate and both soluble histone phosphatase activities was isolated.  相似文献   

20.
Hepatocytes from adrenalectomized 48 h-starved rats responded to increasing glucose concentrations with a progressively more complete inactivation of phosphorylase. Yet no activation of glycogen synthase occurred, even in a K+-rich medium. Protein phosphatase activities in crude liver preparations were assayed with purified substrates. Adrenalectomy plus starvation decreased synthase phosphatase activity by about 90%, but hardly affected phosphorylase phosphatase activity. Synthase b present in liver extracts from adrenalectomized starved rats was rapidly and completely converted into the a form on addition of liver extract from a normal fed rat. Glycogen synthesis can be slowly re-induced by administration of either glucose or cortisol to the deficient rats. In these conditions there was a close correspondence between the initial recovery of synthase phosphatase activity and the amount of synthase a present in the liver. The latter parameter was strictly correlated with the measured rate of glycogen synthesis in vivo. The decreased activity of synthase phosphatase emerges thus as the single factor that limits hepatic glycogen deposition in the adrenalectomized starved rat.  相似文献   

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