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1.
A calcium-unresponsive, phorbol ester/phospholipid-activated protein kinase was purified to apparent homogeneity from a Triton X-100 extract of an EGTA/EDTA-preextracted particulate fraction of porcine spleen by chromatography on S-Sepharose Fast Flow, phenyl-Sepharose Fast Flow, protamine-agarose, and Superdex 200. The enzyme had a Mr of 76,000, as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (p76-kinase). A similar value (78,000) was obtained by gel filtration. The purified p76-kinase proved to be much more stable than the enzyme in crude preparations. Storage in a buffer containing 50 mM mercaptoethanol and 20% glycerol at -20 degrees C for at least 4 months caused less than 20% loss in enzyme activity. The enzyme exhibited a pH optimum of 8.3. The affinity of the novel enzyme for substrates and cofactors differed to some extent from that of conventional alpha, beta, gamma protein kinase C (PKC). p76-kinase did not respond to calcium, had a lower requirement for magnesium, and a higher affinity for histone III-S than PKC. Both the p76-kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of histone III-S and the autophosphorylation of the enzyme could be activated by the phorbol ester TPA (or diacylglycerol) plus phosphatidyl serine, but not by calcium plus phosphatidyl serine. The stoichiometry of autophosphorylation suggested that fully phosphorylated p76-kinase contained two phosphoserine residues and one phosphothreonine residue. Like PKC, p76-kinase bound TPA with high affinity (KD = 9.6 nM). In the absence of TPA, various unsaturated fatty acids, particularly arachidonic acid, were more potent as activators of the enzyme than phosphatidyl serine. The p76-kinase was recognized by an antiserum raised against a delta PKC-specific peptide, but not by an alpha, beta, gamma PKC-specific antiserum. The previously described p82-kinase of mouse epidermis and spleen exhibiting the same properties as the p76-kinase did also react with the p76-kinase-specific antiserum.  相似文献   

2.
The phosphorylation of an Mr 82,000 protein (p82) in the Triton X-100 extract of the particulate fraction of mouse epidermis is dependent on the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) or diacylglycerol and phospholipid and, contrary to protein kinase C (PKC)-catalyzed phosphorylation, cannot be activated by calcium plus phospholipid. The novel p82 kinase differs also from PKC in many other respects, such as substrate specificity, turnover rate, and sensitivity to inhibitors. The p82 kinase can be separated from PKC by chromatography on phenyl sepharose and does not react with a polyclonal PKC antiserum. Like PKC, the novel kinase phosphorylates its substrate on threonine and serine, but not on tyrosine. Similar to PKC, the epidermal p82-kinase system is down-modulated after TPA treatment of mouse skin, with a half-life of around 5 h. Down-modulation is also accomplished by the phorbol ester RPA, but not by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187, and it is inhibited by the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporin A. In addition to down-modulation, TPA treatment of the animals activates a phosphatase that dephosphorylates phosphorylated p82 in the extract of the particulate fraction.  相似文献   

3.
Protein kinase C (PKC) exhibits both negative and positive cross-talk with multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) in PC12 cells. PKC effects negative cross-talk by inhibiting the mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores and by inhibiting Ca2+ influx through voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. In the absence of cross-talk, Ca2+ influx induced by depolarization with 56 mM K+ stimulates CaM kinase and its autophosphorylation and converts up to 50% of the enzyme to a Ca(2+)-independent or autonomous species. Acute treatment with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) elicits a parallel reduction in depolarization-induced Ca2+ influx and in generation of autonomous CaM kinase. Negative cross-talk also occurs during stimulation of the phosphatidylinositol signaling system with bradykinin, which activates both PKC and CaM kinase. The extent of CaM kinase activation is attenuated by the simultaneous activation of PKC; it is enhanced by prior down-regulation of PKC. PKC also exhibits positive cross-talk with CaM kinase. Submaximal activation of CaM kinase by ionomycin is potentiated by concurrent activation of PKC with PMA. Such PMA treatment is found to increase the level of cytosolic calmodulin. Enhanced activation of CaM kinase by PKC may result from PKC-mediated phosphorylation of calmodulin-binding proteins, such as neuromodulin and MARCKS, and the subsequent increase in the availability of previously bound calmodulin for activation of CaM kinase.  相似文献   

4.
The phorbol ester TPA induces down-regulation of protein kinase C (PKC) in Swiss-3T3 fibroblasts, as determined by the use of an alpha, beta, gamma PKC-specific antiserum. PKC is almost completely degraded 10 hours after TPA treatment of the cells and recovers within 72 hours. The staurosporine derivative K252a, known to inhibit PKC activity, causes strong suppression of TPA-induced (PKC-catalyzed) protein phosphorylation in Swiss-3T3 cells. Inhibition of protein phosphorylation by K252a is still effective when the process of down-regulation is completed. However, K252a does not influence TPA-induced down-regulation of PKC at all. Thus, down-regulation of PKC is not dependent on the enzyme's phosphorylating activity and, therefore, most likely not on its autophosphorylation as has been suggested by Ohno et al. [J. Biol. Chem. 265, 6296-6300 (1990)].  相似文献   

5.
To clarify the requirement of the association of substrate proteins with phospholipid membranes for phosphorylation by protein kinase C (PKC), we studied the relationship between membrane association of PKC-substrate proteins and their phosphorylation by PKC. In the presence of phosphatidylserine, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate induced PKC autophosphorylation in either the presence or the absence of Ca2+, and this phosphorylation was not inhibited by increasing salt concentration (up to 200 mM NaCl). Thus, Ca2+ and ionic strength did not markedly affect the enzymatic activity of PKC. Annexin I required Ca2+ for both its association with phospholipid membranes and phosphorylation by PKC, whereas histone and monomyristilated lysozyme (C14:0-lysozyme) did not. This result indicates that the membrane association of substrates closely correlates with their phosphorylation by PKC. Similar correlation was also observed in the effects of ionic strength on the membrane association of the substrates and their phosphorylation by PKC; increased ionic strength (200 mM NaCl) remarkably inhibited both the membrane association and the phosphorylation of histone and annexin I by PKC but C14:0-lysozyme was not markedly affected. These results suggest that the membrane association of PKC-substrate proteins is a prerequisite for their phosphorylation by PKC. This concept further conforms to the mechanisms of PKC inhibitors; some types of PKC inhibitors are mediated all or in part through inhibition of the substrate-membrane interaction.  相似文献   

6.
Protein kinase C (PKC), a protein phosphorylating enzyme, is characterized by its need for an acidic phospholipid and for activators such as Ca2+ and diacylglycerol. The substrate commonly used in experiments with PKC is a basic protein, histone III-S, which needs the activators mentioned. However, protamine, a natural basic substrate for PKC, does not require the presence of cofactor/activator. We report here that protamine can induce the autophosphorylation of PKC in the absence of any PKC-cofactor or activator; this may represent a possible mechanism of cofactor-independent phosphorylation of this protein. It was investigated if protamine itself can act as a PKC-activator and stimulate histone phosphorylation in the manner of Ca2+ and phospholipids. Experiments however showed that protamine is not a general effector of PKC. On the contrary, histone stimulated PKC-mediated protamine phosphorylation and protamine-induced PKC-autophosphorylation. Histone alone did not induce PKC-autophosphorylation. Kinetic studies suggest that histone increases the maximal velocity (Vmax) of protamine kinase activity of PKC without affecting the affinity (Km). Other polycationic proteins such as polyarginine serine and polyarginine tyrosine were not found to influence PKC-mediated protamine phosphorylation, indicating that the observed effects are specific to histone, and are not general for all polycationic proteins. These results suggest that histone can modulate the protamine kinase activity of PKC by stimulating protamine-induced PKC-autophosphorylation.  相似文献   

7.
We examined whether protein kinase C activation plays a modulatory or an obligatory role in exocytosis of catecholamines from chromaffin cells by using PKC(19-31) (a protein kinase C pseudosubstrate inhibitory peptide), Ca/CaM kinase II(291-317) (a calmodulin-binding peptide), and staurosporine. In permeabilized cells, PKC (19-31) inhibited the phorbol ester-mediated enhancement of Ca2(+)-dependent secretion as much as 90% but had no effect on Ca2(+)-dependent secretion in the absence of phorbol ester. The inhibition of the phorbol ester-induced enhancement of secretion by PKC (19-31) was correlated closely with the ability of the peptide to inhibit in situ phorbol ester-stimulated protein kinase C activity. PKC(19-31) also blocked 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced phosphorylation of numerous endogenous proteins in permeabilized cells but had no effect on Ca2(+)-stimulated phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase. Ca/CaM kinase II(291-317), derived from the calmodulin binding region of Ca/calmodulin kinase II, had no effect on Ca2(+)-dependent secretion in the presence or absence of phorbol ester. The peptide completely blocked the Ca2(+)-dependent increase in tyrosine hydroxylase phosphorylation but had no effect on TPA-induced phosphorylation of endogenous proteins in permeabilized cells. To determine whether a long-lived protein kinase C substrate might be required for secretion, the lipophilic protein kinase inhibitor, staurosporine, was added to intact cells for 30 min before permeabilizing and measuring secretion. Staurosporine strongly inhibited the phorbol ester-mediated enhancement of Ca2(+)-dependent secretion. It caused a small inhibition of Ca2(+)-dependent secretion in the absence of phorbol ester which could not be readily attributed to inhibition of protein kinase C. Staurosporine also inhibited the phorbol ester-mediated enhancement of elevated K(+)-induced secretion from intact cells while it enhanced 45Ca2+ uptake. Staurosporine inhibited to a small extent secretion stimulated by elevated K+ in the absence of TPA. The data indicate that activation of protein kinase C is modulatory but not obligatory in the exocytotoxic pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Cross-linking of receptor bound IgE antibodies by multivalent antigen (DNP8-BSA) on PB-3c cells leads to an increase of cytosolic calcium ((Ca2+)i). Active tumor promoting phorbol esters and teleocidin which specifically activate the phospholipid Ca2+-sensitive protein kinase (PKC), inhibited the antigen-mediated rise in (Ca2+)i and induced a time and dose-dependent translocation of cytosolic PKC to membranes of the PB-3c cells as determined by enzyme activity or immunoblotting using a polyclonal anti-PKC antibody. This TPA concentration did not affect the subcellular distribution of PKC, although 1 nM of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) inhibited to 50% the antigen-mediated increase in (Ca2+)i. The concentration of TPA required to induce a half-maximal subcellular redistribution of immunodetectable PKC activity was an order of magnitude greater than the half-maximal dose required to inhibit the antigen-mediated increase in (Ca2+)i. These data demonstrate that the TPA-dependent activation of PKC is not directly coupled to its translocation to membranes.  相似文献   

9.
S100B(betabeta) is a dimeric Ca2+-binding protein that is known to inhibit the protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent phosphorylation of several proteins. To further characterize this inhibition, we synthesized peptides based on the PKC phosphorylation domains of p53 (residues 367-388), neuromodulin (residues 37-53), and the regulatory domain of PKC (residues 19-31), and tested them as substrates for PKC. All three peptides were shown to be good substrates for the catalytic domain of PKC. As for full-length p53 (Baudier J, Delphin C, Grunwald D, Khochbin S, Lawrence JJ. 1992. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89:11627-11631), S100B(betabeta) binds the p53 peptide and inhibits its PKC-dependent phosphorylation (IC50 = 10 +/- 7 microM) in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Similarly, phosphorylation of the neuromodulin peptide and the PKC regulatory domain peptide were inhibited by S100B(betabeta) in the presence of Ca2+ (IC50 = 17 +/- 5 microM; IC50 = 1 +/- 0.5 microM, respectively). At a minimum, the C-terminal EF-hand Ca2+-binding domain (residues 61-72) of each S100beta subunit must be saturated to inhibit phosphorylation of the p53 peptide as determined by comparing the Ca2+ dependence of inhibition ([Ca]IC50 = 29.3 +/- 17.6 microM) to the dissociation of Ca2+ from the C-terminal EF-hand Ca2+-binding domain of S100B(betabeta).  相似文献   

10.
Suramin inhibited protein kinase C (PKC) type I-III activity in a concentration-dependent manner. Similar inhibitory effects were observed with M-kinase, the constitutively active catalytic fragment of PKC, and autophosphorylation of PKC types I-III. Kinetic experiments indicated that suramin competitively inhibits activity with respect to ATP (Ki = 17, 27, and 31 microM, respectively) and that it can also inhibit by interaction with the substrate histone III-S. With protamine as the Pi acceptor, suramin inhibition was dependent on lipid, being approximately 4-fold less sensitive to inhibition in the absence of phosphatidylserine and diacylglycerol than in their presence. Suramin at low concentrations (10-40 microM), in the presence of Ca2+ and absence of lipid, was able to stimulate kinase activity (approximately 200-400%) in a type-dependent manner and at higher concentrations inhibited activity with histone III-S as substrate. These results indicate that suramin, a hexa-anionic hydrophobic compound, can act as a negatively charged phospholipid analog in activating PKC in the presence of Ca2+ and absence of lipid and can inhibit Ca2+/phosphatidylserine/diacylglycerol-stimulated kinase activity at higher concentrations by competing with ATP or by interaction with the exogenous substrate. Suramin inhibited cAMP-dependent protein kinase much less potently (IC50 = 656 microM) than PKC. The ability of suramin to inhibit PKC-mediated processes in intact cells was tested using the phorbol ester-stimulated respiratory burst of neutrophils as a model system. The respiratory burst of human neutrophils, when preincubated with suramin and then stimulated with phorbol ester, was inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner, suggesting that suramin may also be able to inhibit PKC-mediated processes in intact cells.  相似文献   

11.
K252a isolated from microbial origin was found to potently inhibit protein kinase C in vitro (1). This agent inhibits phosphorylation of 40,000 dalton protein (40K protein) induced by 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate(TPA) in intact rabbit platelets. This indicates that K252a exhibits the inhibition of protein kinase C in intact cells. The serotonin secretion induced by TPA was inhibited by K252a at nearly equal concentrations required to inhibit the phosphorylation of 40K protein. This provides the evidence to support the cause-effect relationship between the protein phosphorylation and the secretion in TPA-stimulated platelets.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of protein kinase C (PKC) activation on the insulin-secretory process were investigated, by using beta-cell-rich suspensions obtained from pancreatic islets of obese-hyperglycaemic mice. The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), which is known to activate PKC directly, the muscarinic-receptor agonist carbamoylcholine and high glucose concentration enhanced the phosphorylation of a specific 80 kDa PKC substrate in the beta-cells. At a non-stimulatory glucose concentration, 10 nM-TPA increased insulin release, although there were no changes in either the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) or membrane potential, as measured with the fluorescent indicators quin-2 and bisoxonol respectively. At a stimulatory glucose concentration TPA caused a lowering in [Ca2+]i, whereas membrane potential was unaffected. Despite the decrease in [Ca2+]i, there was a large stimulation of insulin release. Addition of TPA lowered [Ca2+]i also in beta-cells stimulated by tolbutamide or high K+, although to a lesser extent than in those stimulated by glucose. There was no effect of TPA on either Ca2+ buffering or the ability of Ins(1,4,5)P3 to release Ca2+ in permeabilized beta-cells. However, the phorbol ester inhibited the rise in [Ca2+]i in response to carbamoylcholine, which stimulates the formation of InsP3, in intact beta-cells. Down-regulation of PKC influenced neither glucose-induced insulin release nor the increase in [Ca2+]i. Hence, although PKC activation is of no major importance in glucose-stimulated insulin release, this enzyme can serve as a modulator of the glucose-induced insulin-secretory response. Such a modulation involves mechanisms promoting both amplification of the secretory response and lowering of [Ca2+]i.  相似文献   

13.
Prothrombin is a major constituent of the blood coagulation cascade and requires phospholipid and Ca2+ for its activation. We have found that phospholipid/Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinase (Protein kinase C) phosphorylates prothrombin and the associated apparent Km value for prothrombin (0.86 microM) is comparable to the Km value reported for most known substrates of protein kinase C. A 2-dimension separation analysis revealed that serine residue was apparently phosphorylated by PKC. The phosphorylation was inhibited by such phosphatidylserine- and/or Ca2+ competitive protein kinase C inhibitors as trifluoperazine, palmitoylcarnitine and gossypol. These results suggest that protein kinase C phosphorylation was involved in the regulation of blood coagulation.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work (Gandino, L., Di Renzo, M. F., Giordano, S., Bussolino, F., and Comoglio, P.M. (1990) Oncogene 5, 721-725) has shown that the tyrosine kinase activity of the receptor encoded by the MET protooncogene is negatively modulated by protein kinase C (PKC). We now show that an increase of intracellular Ca2+ has a similar inhibitory effect in vivo, via a PKC-independent mechanism. In GTL-16 cells the p145MET kinase is overexpressed and constitutively phosphorylated on tyrosine. A rapid and reversible decrease of p145MET tyrosine phosphorylation was induced by treatment with the calcium ionophores A23187 or ionomycin. Experiments performed with the ionophores in absence of extracellular calcium showed that a rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration to 450 nM (due to release from intracellular stores) resulted in a similar effect. These Ca2+ concentrations had no effect on p145MET autophosphorylation in an in vitro kinase assay. This suggests that the effect of Ca2+ on p145MET tyrosine phosphorylation is not direct but may be mediated by Ca(2+)-activated proteins(s). Involvement of Ca(2+)-dependent tyrosine phosphatases was ruled out by experiments carried out in presence of Na2VO4. In vivo labeling with [32P]orthophosphate showed that the rise of intracellular Ca2+ induces serine phosphorylation of p145MET on a specific phosphopeptide. This suggests that Ca2+ negatively modulates p145MET kinase through the phosphorylation of a critical serine residue by a Ca(2+)-activated serine kinase distinct from PKC.  相似文献   

15.
We obtained a Ca(2+)-independent but 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol ester (TPA).phospholipid-activated protein kinase from rat embryo fibroblast 3Y1 cells by succeeding steps of DEAE-cellulose, H-9 affinity, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. This kinase was separated chromatography. This kinase was separated from a conventional PKC (Type III), by H-9 affinity column chromatography. The major peak from H-9 affinity column was eluted at 0.4 M of arginine and on the following step of hydroxylapatite column chromatography, at the KPO4 concentration of 0.1 M. The enzyme could be stimulated by phospholipids and by the tumor promoter TPA, but did not respond to calcium. The Ca(2+)-independent, phospholipid-activated protein kinase activity was susceptible to the protein kinase C inhibitors H-7 and K252a, but showed a phospholipid dependency and substrate specificity distinct from the conventional types of PKC. This protein kinase did not react with monoclonal antibodies against Types I, II, and III PKC. The activity of this enzyme was specifically reduced by immunoprecipitation, depending on the concentration of the polyclonal antibody, PC-delta, which was raised against a peptide synthesized according to a sequence of rat brain nPKC delta. The enzyme had a Mr of 76,000 as estimated by Western blotting. These results provide evidence for a unique type of Ca(2+)-independent, phospholipid-activated kinase, as expressed in 3Y1 cells.  相似文献   

16.
The activation of protein kinase C (PKC) usually displays cofactor requirements that include phosphatidylserine (PS), diacylglycerol, and calcium. A complicating factor is that good exogenous substrates of PKC are polycationic proteins or peptides that form aggregates with PS in the assay. This study examined the autophosphorylation of PKC using assays with phospholipid provided in the form of vesicles or phospholipid-Triton mixed micelles. The results showed a close correlation between PKC autophosphorylation and the formation of aggregated assay components. Aggregation occurred primarily by the action of Mg2+ on phospholipids and appeared to underlie a number of major features of PKC autophosphorylation. For example, autophosphorylation required higher concentrations of PS than phosphorylation of exogenous substrates. This appeared to be the result of the different PS requirements of aggregation by divalent metal ions and cationic substrates. An unanticipated result was that aggregation of mixed micelles showed specificity for PS, high cooperativity with respect to several agents, and a requirement for calcium. These parameters were remarkably similar to those describing PKC autophosphorylation. Several major implications are evident in this study. Since the autophosphorylation assay is not a well defined system of monodisperse materials, autophosphorylation of PKC may proceed by intra- or interpeptide mechanism. The uniform correlation between aggregation and production of PKC activity suggested that kinetic parameters may represent interactions of assay components other than the enzyme. Aggregation, which appeared necessary for in vitro activation of PKC, may represent the expression of important but undefined in vivo requirements for this enzyme's function.  相似文献   

17.
Protein kinase C(PKC) is a Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase which can be activated by diacylglycerol, a product of polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis. In this report, we show that the polyphosphoinositides L-alpha-phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate (PI 4P) and L-alpha-phosphatidylinositol 4,5-diphosphate (PI 4.5DP) can serve as phospholipid cofactors of isolated rat brain PKC. The order of potency of the phosphoinositides in the activation of PKC, PI greater than PI 4P greater than PI 4,5DP, shows a negative correlation with the degree of acidity of the phospholipid head group, whether 1 mM Ca2+ or 200 nM TPA is present in the reaction assay mixture. Although the polyphosphoinositides are by themselves weaker activators of PKC than PI, small amounts of PI 4,5DP cause a two-fold enhancement of PKC in the presence of Ca2+ and PI. While the endogenous phospholipid cofactors of PKC remain to be identified, these results suggest that the small amounts of polyphosphoinositides which are present in cell membranes may play a direct role in the activation of PKC in vivo, by serving as phospholipid cofactors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
We examined the effect of protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent phosphorylation on Ca2+ uptake and ATP hydrolysis by microsomal as well as purified sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase preparations isolated from bovine aortic smooth muscle. The phosphorylation was performed by treating these preparations with PKC and saturating concentrations of ATP (or ATP-gamma S), Ca2+, and 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) at 37 degrees C for 10 min. In microsomes, treatment with PKC enhanced a portion of the Ca2+ uptake activity inhibitable by 10 microM vanadate, by up to about 30%. On the other hand, Ca2(+)-dependent ATPase activity in the purified Ca2(+)-ATPase preparation was stimulated by up to twofold. Up to twofold stimulation by PKC was also observed for the Ca2+ uptake by proteoliposomes reconstituted from purified sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase and phospholipids. Since these effects were evident only at Ca2+ concentrations between 0.1 to 1.0 microM, we concluded that it was the affinity of the Ca2(+)-ATPase for Ca2+ that was increased by the PKC treatment. Under conditions in which PKC increased Ca2+ pump activity, the sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase was phosphorylated to a level of about 1 mol per mol of the enzyme. There was good parallelism between the ATPase phosphorylation and the extent of enzyme activation. These results strongly suggest that the activity of the sarcolemmal Ca2+ pump in vascular smooth muscle is regulated through its direct phosphorylation by PKC.  相似文献   

19.
We have used a digitonin-permeabilized cell system to study the signal transduction pathways responsible for stimulus-secretion coupling in the rat peritoneal mast cell. Conditions were established for permeabilizing the mast cell plasma membrane without disrupting secretory vesicles. Exocytotic release of histamine from digitonin-permeabilized cells required a combination of micromolar concentrations of Ca2+ and the stable guanine nucleotide analogue guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]), but was independent of exogenous ATP. In the presence of 40 microM-GTP[S], exocytosis was half-maximal at 1.3 microM-Ca2+ and maximal at 10 microM-Ca2+; GTP[S] alone (100 microM) had no effect on histamine release in the absence of added Ca2+. In the presence of 10 microM free Ca2+, 5 microM-GTP[S] was required for half-maximal exocytosis. To examine the possible role of protein kinase C (PKC) in exocytosis, we utilized 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) to activate PKC and studied its effect on histamine release from permeabilized mast cells. Cells that had been incubated with TPA (25 nM for 5 min) exhibited increased sensitivity to both GTP[S] and Ca2+. The PKC inhibitor staurosporine blocked the effect of TPA without inhibiting normal exocytosis in response to the combination of GTP[S] and Ca2+. In addition, down-regulation of mast-cell PKC by long-term TPA treatment (25 nM for 20 h) blocked the ability of the cells to respond to TPA and inhibited exocytosis in response to Ca2+ and GTP[S] by 40-50%. These results suggest that the sensitivity of the exocytotic machinery of the mast cell can be altered by PKC-catalysed phosphorylation events, but that activation of PKC is not required for exocytosis to occur.  相似文献   

20.
Activation of protein kinase C in lipid monolayers   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The potential of lipid monolayers spread at an air-water interface was investigated as a well defined membrane model able to support protein kinase C (PKC) association and activation. PKC association to a mixed phospholipid film (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine) could be detected by an increase of the monolayer surface pressure. This association was strikingly dependent upon the presence of submicromolar concentrations of Ca2+. The effect of Ca2+ resulted in an increase of the PKC penetration into the lipid core at a given permissive surface pressure as well as in a marked increase of the critical surface pressure (29-38 dynes/cm) above which the enzyme was excluded from the membrane. Inclusion of diacylglycerol or tetradecanoate phorbol acetate (TPA) did not modify the PKC-monolayer association in a detectable manner. PKC associated to the lipid layer exhibited the expected catalytic property and was fully activated when diacylglycerol or TPA was included in the membrane. PKC activity was highly dependent upon the surface pressure of the lipid monolayer, being optimal between 30 and 35 dynes/cm. Study of the compression isotherm of various diacylglycerol structures revealed that all potent PKC agonists exhibited an expanded liquid phase behavior with collapse pressure below 40 dynes/cm, in contrast to weak activators which showed condensed isotherms with high collapse pressure (approximately equal to 60 dynes/cm). These observations showed that the lipid monolayer system is well adapted to the study of the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of PKC activity at a model membrane interface. They are in line with the suggestion of a major role of Ca2+ in the association (translocation) of PKC to membrane in living cell and suggest that diacylglycerol (and TPA) might activate membrane-associated PKC through local change in the surrounding lipid phase organization.  相似文献   

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