首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Incubation of homogenates of rat renal cortex at 4 degrees resulted in increased cAMP phosphodiesterase activity; the increase was much more rapid in hypotonic medium than in one of physiological tonicity. cAMP phosphodiesterase activity did not increase with incubation of supernatant fractions (48,000 x g, 20 min) prepared from isotonic homogenates. Extraction of the isotonic particulate fraction with hypotonic buffer released an activator which increased cAMP phosphodiesterase activity of the supernatant fraction. The kidney phosphodiesterase activator differed from a heat-stable, calcium-dependent protein activator of phosphodiesterase in that it was destroyed by heating (90 degrees for 10 min) and was not inhibited by EGTA. The phosphodiesterases of rat renal cortex were partially resolved by chromatography on DEAE-Bio-Gel, and a cAMP phosphodiesterase that is sensitive to the kidney activator was identified. This phosphodiesterase was separable from that affected by a calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase activator from bovine brain and from cGMP-stimulated cAMP phosphodiesterase. As determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, after incubation with the kidney activator, the activated form of phosphodiesterase had a lower sedimentation velocity than did the unactivated form.  相似文献   

2.
The subcellular distribution of the endogenous phosphodiesterase activator and its release from membranes by a cyclic AMP-dependent ATP:protein phosphotransferase was studied in fractions and subfractions of rat brain homogenate. These fractions were obtained by differential centrifugation and sucrose density gradient; their identity was ascertained by electron microscopy and specific enzyme markers. In the subcellular particulate fractions, the concentration of activator is highest in the microsomal fraction, followed by the mitochondrial and nuclear fractions. Gradient centrifugation of the main mitochondrial subfraction revealed that activator was concentrated in those fractions containing mainly synaptic membranes. Activator was releasted from membranes by a cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation of membrane protein. The release of activator occurred mainly from the mitochondrial subfractions containing synaptic membranes and synaptic vesicles. The data support the view that a release of activator from membranes may be important in normalizing the elevated concentration of cyclic AMP following persistent transsynaptic activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Cyclic GMP phosphodiesterases from 100 00 × g rat liver supernatant were partially resolved by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. Multiple forms of cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase(s) that were activated to different degrees by calcium plus a low molecular weight protein from rat liver and bovine brain supernantants, or by limited exposure to chymotrypsin, were identified. The cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase in some column fractions was activated over 10-fold by calcium plus activator or chymotrypsin. Activation by chymotrypsin was dependent both on the time of incubation with protease and its concentration. Prolonged exposure to chymotrypsin resulted in a decrease in s20,w by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The chymotrypsin-treated enzyme was no longer activated by exposure to calcium plus activator. The calcium- and protein activator-stimulated enzyme was inactivated by ethyleneglycol-bis-(β-aminoethylether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Exposure of this activated enzyme to chymotrypsin did not result in further activation, but the chymotrypsin-treated enzyme was no longer inhibited by EGTA. The apparently irreversible effects of chymotrypsin and the reversible effects of calcium plus activator on cyclic GMP hydrolysis by the phosphodiesterase over a wide range of cyclic GMP concentrations appeared to be identical.  相似文献   

5.
The subcellular distribution of the endogenous phosphodiesterase activator and its release from membranes by a cyclic AMP-dependent ATP:protein phosphotransferase was studied in fractions and subfractions of rat brain homogenate. These fractions were obtained by differential centrifugation and sucrose density gradient; their identity was ascertained by electron microscopy and specific enzyme markers.In the subcellular particulate fractions, the concentration of activator is highest in the microsomal fraction, followed by the mictochondrial and nuclear fractions. Gradient centrifugation of the main mitochondrial subfraction revealed that activator was concentrated in those fractions containing mainly synaptic membranes.Activator was released from membranes by a cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation of membrane protein. The release of activator occurred mainly from the mitochondrial subfractions containing synaptic membranes and synaptic vesicles.The data support the view that a release of activator from membranes may be important in normalizing the elevated concentration of cyclic AMP following persistent transsynaptic activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine or rat brain adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) solubilized by Lubrol PX contained an activator which was separated from the enzyme by an anionic exchange resin column. Dissociation of the activator from adenylate cyclase rendered the enzyme less active, and reconstituting with an exogenous activator restored full enzyme activity. A pure protein activator of cyclic 3′:5′-nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) isolated from bovine brain also stimulated this adenylate cyclase. Stimulation of adenylate cyclase by the activator required Ca++, the effect being immediate and reversible. Although the activator was specific, it lacked tissue specificity; an activator isolated from bovine brain cross-activated effectively adenylate cyclase from rat, and vice versa. These findings indicate that brain adenylate cyclase required an activator for activity and that this activator is functionally identical to the protein activator of phosphodiesterase (J.B.C. 249: 4943–4954, 1974).  相似文献   

7.
3',5'-CAMP phosphodiesterase was partially purified from bovine cerebral cortex. A heat-stable activating factor was separated from the enzyme by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The enzyme in crude ammonium sulfate fractions was stimulated by 5 mM CaCl2. This stimulation was reversed by the calcium chelator EGTA. The main phosphodiesterase peak obtained by DEAE-cellulose chromatography was not stimulated by Ca2+. Upon addition of column effluent containing a heat stable factor, Ca2+ activation was restored. Protein activator was inactive when endogenous contaminating Ca2+ was complexed with EGTA. It was concluded that activation of phosphodiesterase requires the presence of both activator and Ca1+. From an analysis of activation of cGMP hydrolysis a kinetic model for the interaction of Ca2+ and protein activator with the phosphodiesterase was developed. Heterotropic cooperativity between the binding of Ca2+ and protein activator to the phosphodiesterase was observed, i.e., Ca1+ decreased the apparent dissociation constant for protein activator and protein activator decreased the apparent dissociation constant for Ca2+.  相似文献   

8.
A calcium-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from rat cerebrum was, in the absence of activator protein, inhibited by various monovalent cations. The inhibition was rapid, readily reversible, and concentration-dependent, with 100 mM cesium, rubidium, or potassium ion inhibiting essentially all basal enzyme activity, while 100 mM sodium or lithium ions produced only moderate inhibition. The potency of the cations in inhibiting the enzyme was Cs greater than or equal to Rb greater than K greater than Na greater than or equal to Li. Potassium ions increased the apparent Km for cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP by 3- and 5-fold, respectively. At 100 mM, the monovalent cations inhibited enzyme activated by the calcium-dependent activator by only 15 to 30%, while at 55 mM no inhibition pertained. Potassium and sodium ions at 55 mM had no effect on the calcium-independent phosphodiesterase from rat cerebrum. The results indicate that at normal intracellular concentrations of potassium ions the activity of the calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase is virtually completely dependent on the presence of calcium plus activator protein.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract— The activity of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of rat cerebral homogenates increased several-fold between 1 and 60 days of age. Enzyme activity in the cerebellum, on the other hand, did not increase during this period. A kinetic analysis of the phosphodiesterase activity revealed evidence for multiple forms of the enzyme and indicated that the postnatal increase in phosphodiesterase activity of rat cerebrum was due almost exclusively to the high Km enzyme. In cerebellum, the ratio of the high and low Km enzyme remained fairly constant during ontogenetic development. Physical separation of the phosphodiesterases contained in 100,000 g soluble supernatant fractions of sonicated brain homogenates by polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis confirmed the presence of multiple enzyme forms. In adult rats we found six distinct peaks of phosphodiesterase activity (designated I to VI according to the order in which they were eluted from the column) in cerebellum and 4 forms of the enzyme (Peaks I through IV) in cerebrum. Brains of newborn rats had a different pattern and ratio of phosphodiesterase activities. For example, Peak I phosphodiesterase was undetectable in cerebrum or cerebellum of newborn rats. Moreover, in the cerebellum of newborn rats Peak II was the dominant peak whereas in the cerebellum of adult rats Peak III was the largest peak. A comparison of the multiple forms of phosphodiesterase from the cerebrum of newborn and adult animals suggested that the postnatal increase in phosphodiesterase activity previously seen in crude homogenates was due largely to an increase in a high K, Peak II phosphodiesterase. The ratios of activities of the other peaks and their sensitivities to an activator of phosphodiesterase were similar in newborn and adult rats. An endogenous heat-stable activator of phosphodiesterase was found in cerebrum, cerebellum and brain stem. In newborn rats, the cerebellum contained several-fold less activity of this activator than did cerebrum or brain stem. However, the activity of this activator increased with age in the cerebellum and would appear to have decreased postnatally in cerebrum and brain stem. These results suggest that some multiple forms of phosphodiesterase can develop independently and that changes in activities of these phosphodiesterases may occur by increases in the quantity of enzyme or by changes in the quantity of an endogenous activator of phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of the endogenous protein activator on the kinetic characteristics of a highly purified, activator-deficient rat brain phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.-) of a highly purified, activator-deficient rat brain phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4-) was studied. This enzyme preparation has only a high Km for cyclic AMP and a low Km for cyclic GMP. In the presence of 20 muM Ca2+, saturating concentrations of the activator decreased the Km of this enzyme for cyclic AMP from 350 muM to about 80 muM, without changing the V. The phosphodiesterase activator did not change the Km of phosphodiesterase for cyclic GMP; however, amoderate increase of V was seen. The activator lacks species specificity; the activator isolated from the bullfrog sympathetic chain produced the same qualitative and comparable quantitative changes in the kinetic properties of the purified rat brain phosphodiesterase. Cyclic GMP is a potent competitive inhibitor of the phosphodiesterase activation by the activator (Ki=1.8 muM), using cyclic AMP as a substrate. Cyclic AMP inhibits slightly the hydrolysis of cyclic GMP by phosphodiesterase in the presence of activator (Ki=155 muM) only.  相似文献   

11.
Experimental diabetes induced by streptozotocin has been shown to decrease the level of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in rat adipose tissue. This reduced activity was restored with insulin. Protein activator, a small molecular weight substance, is essential for full activity of some component phosphodiesterases. Herein we demonstrate a significant decrease in protein activator level in the 13,000 X g boiled supernatant from streptozotocin-diabetic rat adipose tissue. However, although a decrease in protein activator level is consistent with diabetic inactivation of phosphodiesterase activity, additional studies presented here suggest that a defect in the diabetic phosphodiesterase enzyme itself also contributed to the decrease of total phosphodiesterase activity.  相似文献   

12.
C B Klee  M H Krinks 《Biochemistry》1978,17(1):120-126
The Ca2+-dependent, reversible, interaction of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) phosphodiesterase with its activator has been used to purify the enzyme by affinity chromatography. Activator-dependent cAMP phosphodiesterase is only a minor component of the proteins specifically adsorbed in the presence of Ca2+ by the Ca2+-dependent activator protein coupled to Sepharose and subsequently released by [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. The major protein component can be partially resolved from the enzyme by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. This protein has been purified to apparent homogeneity and shown to be composed of two polypeptide chains with molecular weights of 61,000 and 15,000 respectively. This protein is, by itself, devoid of phosphodiesterase activity and inhibits the activation of cAMP phosphodiesterase by its activator without affecting the basal activity. Thus, activation of cAMP phosphodiesteriase by the Ca2+-dependent activator protein may be controlled by interactions with yet a third component of the enzyme complex.  相似文献   

13.
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase was examined in canine and bovine superior cervical ganglia. Activity in crude supernatant fractions was only slightly stimulated by Ca++ despite the presence of protein activating factor. Three forms of phosphodiesterase were resolved from bovine ganglia supernatant extracts by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The first enzyme eluted, (DI), was almost completely specific for cyclic GMP, while the other two (DII and DIII), hydrolyzed both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP; all were free of heat-stable protein activator. Each enzyme was inhibited by low concentrations of Ca++ in the assay medium. Inhibition by Ca++ was reversed by addition of protein activator, but activity did not increase above the control level. Cyclic AMP hydrolysis by enzyme DII was stimulated by micromolar concentrations of cyclic GMP. This stimulation was reduced by Ca++ unless protein activator was present.  相似文献   

14.
The cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.4.16) activities of a rat liver particulate fraction were analyzed after solubilization by detergent or by freeze-thawing. Analysis of the two extracts by DEAE-cellulose chromatography revealed that they contain different complements of phosphodiesterase activities. The detergent-solubilized extract contained a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase, a low affinity cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase whose hydrolysis of cyclic AMP was activated by cyclic GMP and a high affinity cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. The freeze-thaw extract contained a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase and two high affinity cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, but no low affinity cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. The cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities from the freeze-thaw extract and from the detergent extract all had negatively cooperative kinetics. One of the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases from the freeze-thaw extract (form A) was insensitive to inhibition by cyclic GMP; the other freeze-thaw solubilized cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (form B) and the detergent-solubilized cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase were strongly inhibited by cyclic GMP. The B enzyme appeared to be converted into the A enzyme when the particulate fraction was stored for prolonged periods at -20 degrees C. The B form was purified extensively, using DEAE-cellulose, a guanine-Sepharose column and gel filtration. The enzyme retained its negatively cooperative kinetics and high affinity for both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP throughout the purification, although catalytic activity was always much greater for cyclic AMP. Rabbit antiserum was raised against the purified B enzyme and tested via a precipitin reaction against other forms of phosphodiesterase. The antiserum cross-reacted with the A enzyme and the detergent-solubilized cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase from rat liver. It did not react with the calmodulin-activated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase of rat brain, the soluble low affinity cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase of rat liver or a commercial phosphodiesterase preparation from bovine heart. These results suggest a possible interrelationship between the high affinity cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase of rat liver.  相似文献   

15.
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity (EC 3.1.4.17) was studied in fetal and newborn rabbit brain, heart, liver, kidney, and lung. Kinetic analysis of phosphodiesterase activity from homogenates of organs from the 25-day embryo suggested the presence of a high Km and a low Km activity for both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP hydrolysis. The addition of 1 μm cyclic GMP to the assay stimulated the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP by whole homogenates of liver, brain, lung, and kidney, but not heart, at all of the ages studied. The addition of micromolar levels of calcium ion stimulated cyclic GMP hydrolysis by homogenates of fetal brain, heart, and kidney, with or without added protein activator. Cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activity was not stimulated by the addition of calcium ion in homogenates of early fetal rabbit liver and lung, but stimulation was detected in the late embryo and newborn. The presence of the heat-stable protein activator was demonstrated in brain, heart, kidney, liver, and lung tissue at all of the fetal ages studied, and in the newborn rabbit. DEAE-cellulose chromatography demonstrated the presence of three separable enzymes in brain and liver at 15 days, heart at 19 days, and lung and kidney at 25 days of gestation, with no changes in the kinetic properties of the isolated enzymes during development. These experiments suggest that all of the organs studied have the mature array of phosphodiesterases early in development, but an enzyme from liver and lung becomes sensitive to regulatory control by calcium only late in gestation.  相似文献   

16.
SYNOPSIS. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase [EC 3.1.4.17] was examined in Tetrahymena pyriformis strain NT-1. Enzymic activity was associated with the soluble and the particulate fractions, whereas most of the cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activity was localized in the soluble fraction: the activities were optimal at pH 8.0–9.0. Although very low activities were detected in the absence of divalent cations, they were significantly increased by the addition of either Mg2+ or Mn2-. A kinetic analysis of the properties of the enzymes yielded 2 apparent KIII values ranging in concentration from 0.5 to 50 μM and from 0.1 to 62 μ M for cyclic AMP and GMP. respectively. A Ca2+-dependent activating factor for cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase was extracted from Tetrahymena cells, but this factor did not stimulate guanylate cyclase [EC 4.6.1.2] activity in this organism. On the other hand, Tetrahymena also contained a protein activator which stimulated guanylate cyclase in the presence of Ca2+, although this activator did not stimulate the phosphodiesterase. the results suggested that Tetrahymena might contain 2 types of Ca2+-dependent activators, one specific for phosphodiesterase and the other for guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

17.
A cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase sensitive to the calcium-dependent endogenous protein activator has been identified in rat and beef adrenal medulla. In this tissue the ratio between the activity of this enzyme and that of the low Km enzyme is smaller than the corresponding ratio in rat brain. The activator-sensitive phosphodiesterase, isolated from beef adrenal medulla has a high Km for cyclic 3,5-AMP. Saturating concentrations of the calcium dependent protein activator decreased significantly the apparent Km of this enzyme using cAMP as a substrate.  相似文献   

18.
A "low Km" cAMP phosphodiesterase with properties of a peripheral membrane protein accounts for approximately 90% of total cAMP phosphodiesterase activity in particulate (100,000 X g) fractions from rat fat cells. Incubation of fat cells with insulin for 10 min increased particulate (but not soluble) cAMP phosphodiesterase activity, with a maximum increase (approximately 100%) at 1 nM insulin. Most of the increase in activity was retained after solubilization (with non-ionic detergent and NaBr) and partial purification (approximately 20-fold) on DEAE-Sephacel. The solubilized enzyme from adipose tissue was purified approximately 65,000-fold to apparent homogeneity (yield approximately 20%) by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and Sephadex G-200 and affinity chromatography on aminoethyl agarose conjugated with the N-(2-isothiocyanato)ethyl derivative of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor cilostamide (OPC 3689). A 63,800 +/- 200-Da polypeptide (accounting for greater than 90% of the protein eluted from the affinity column) was identified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate (with or without reduction). Enzyme activity was associated with the single protein band after electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions. On gel permeation, Mr(app) was 100,000-110,000, suggesting that the holoenzyme is a dimer. A pI of 4.9-5.0 was estimated by isoelectric focusing. At 30 degrees C, the purified enzyme hydrolyzed both cAMP and cGMP with normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics; the pH optimum was 7.5. The Km(app) for cAMP was 0.38 microM and Vmax, 8.5 mumol/min/mg; for cGMP, Km(app) was 0.28 microM and Vmax, 2.0 mumol/min/mg. cGMP competitively inhibited cAMP hydrolysis with a Ki of approximately 0.15 microM. The enzyme was also inhibited by several OPC derivatives and "cardiotonic" drugs, but not by RO 20-1724. It was very sensitive to inhibition by agents which covalently modify protein sulfhydryls, but not by diisopropyl fluorophosphate. The activation by insulin and other findings indicate that the purified enzyme, which seems to belong to a subtype of low Km cAMP phosphodiesterases that is specifically and potently inhibited by cGMP, cilostamide, other OPC derivatives, and certain cardiotonic drugs, is likely to account for the hormone-sensitive particulate low Km cAMP phosphodiesterase activity of rat adipocytes.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Bovine or rat brain adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) solubilized by Lubrol-PX, a nonionic detergent, requires a Ca2+-binding protein activator for full activity (Cheung et al., 1975, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.66, 1055–1062). We now show that particulate rat brain adenylate cyclase also required the activator for maximum activity. A brain particulate fraction was extracted with a hypertonic NaCl solution containing [ethyl-enebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)] tetraacetic acid. This procedure removed preferentially the activator, making adenylate Cyclase activator deficient and, consequently, dependent on an exogenous activator for maximum activity. The activator increased the V of adenylate cyclase without affecting its apparent Km for ATP. In the presence of the activator, the enzyme was more stable against thermal inactivation, suggesting that the activator probably induced a conformational change to the enzyme. F? and 5′-guanylylimidodi-phosphate [GMP-p(NH)p] greatly stimulated brain adenylate cyclase. Adenylate cyclase activity obtained in the presence of the activator and F? was comparable to the summed activities of the two agents assayed separately, indicating that their effects were additive. Similarly, the effects of the activator and GMP-p(NH)p were additive. These results suggest that the action of the activator is independent of the other two ligands. Since the activator is present in excess over adenylate cyclase, the cellular flux of Ca2+ is believed to be important in modulating the enzyme activity. The role of the Ca2+/ activator is discussed with respect to cyclic AMP metabolism in brain.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号