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1.
The Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent interaction of phosphodiesterase with phenyl-Sepharose was demonstrated. BSA caused incomplete competitive inhibition of phosphodiesterase activation by calmodulin. The 17-fold increase of the constant for phosphodiesterase activation by calmodulin was accompanied by an insignificant rise in the maximum rate of cAMP hydrolysis; in this case the value of the inhibition constant amounted to Ki approximately 6 microM. In the absence of calmodulin saturating concentrations of BSA reduced the enzyme activity nearly 3-4-fold. The effect of BSA on phosphodiesterase was incompetitive with respect to cAMP (Ki approximately 1.4 microM). Both phenomena are characteristic of incompetitive binding of BSA to the enzyme with respect to cAMP and calmodulin. Gel filtration data reflect the changes in the enzyme molecular weight during its interaction with BSA. All the above reactions of the enzyme are reversible.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
R K Sharma 《Biochemistry》1991,30(24):5963-5968
Calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase was purified to apparent homogeneity from the total calmodulin-binding fraction of bovine heart in a single step by immunoaffinity chromatography. The isolated enzyme had significantly higher affinity for calmodulin than the bovine brain 60-kDa phosphodiesterase isozyme. The cAMP-dependent protein kinase was found to catalyze the phosphorylation of the purified cardiac calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase with the incorporation of 1 mol of phosphate/mol of subunit. The phosphodiesterase phosphorylation rate was increased severalfold by histidine without affecting phosphate incorporation into the enzyme. Phosphorylation of phosphodiesterase lowered its affinity for calmodulin and Ca2+. At constant saturating concentrations of calmodulin (650 nM), the phosphorylated calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase required a higher concentration of Ca2+ (20 microM) than the nonphosphorylated phosphodiesterase (0.8 microM) for 50% activity. Phosphorylation could be reversed by the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase (calcineurin), and dephosphorylation was accompanied by an increase in the affinity of phosphodiesterase for calmodulin.  相似文献   

4.
An anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibody having an absolute requirement for Ca2+ has been produced from mice immunized with a mixture of calmodulin and calmodulin-binding proteins. Radioimmune assays were developed for the determination of its specificity. the epitope for this antibody resides on the COOH-terminal half of the mammalian protein. Plant calmodulin or troponin C had little reactivity. The apparent affinity of the antibody for calmodulin was increased approximately 60-fold in the presence of heart calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase. The presence of heart phosphodiesterase in the radioimmune assay greatly enhanced the sensitivity for calmodulin. The intrinsic calmodulin subunit of phosphorylase kinase and calmodulin which was bound to brain phosphodiesterases was also recognized with high affinity by the antibody. The antibody reacted poorly with calmodulin which was bound to heart or brain calcineurin, skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase, or other calmodulin-binding proteins. In direct binding experiments, most of the calmodulin-binding proteins studied were unreactive with the antibody. This selectivity allowed purification of heart and two brain calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isozymes on immobilized antibody affinity columns. Phosphodiesterase activity was adsorbed directly from crude samples and specifically eluted with EGTA. Isozyme separation was accomplished using a previously described anti-heart phosphodiesterase monoclonal antibody affinity support. The brain isozymes differed not only in reactivity with the anti-phosphodiesterase antibody, but also in apparent subunit molecular weight, and relative specificity for cAMP and cGMP as substrates. The calmodulin activation constants for the brain enzymes were 10-20-fold greater than for the heart enzyme. The data suggest that the binding of ligands to Ca2+/calmodulin induce conformation changes in calmodulin which alter reactivity with the anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibody. The differential antibody reactivity toward calmodulin-enzyme complexes indicates that target proteins either induce very different conformations in calmodulin and/or interact with different geometries relative to the antibody binding site. The anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibody should be useful for the purification of other calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterases as well as isozymes of phosphorylase kinase.  相似文献   

5.
Bovine brain contains two major calmodulin (CaM) dependent phosphodiesterase isozymes which are homodimeric proteins with subunit molecular masses of 60 and 63 kilodaltons (kDa), respectively. The 60-kDa subunit isozyme can be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, resulting in a decrease in the enzyme affinity towards CaM. The phosphorylation is blocked by Ca2+ and CaM and reversed by the CaM-stimulated phosphatase (calcineurin). The 63-kDa subunit isozymes can also be phosphorylated, but in this case by a CaM-dependent protein kinase(s). This phosphorylation is also accompanied by a decrease in the isozyme affinity towards CaM and can be reversed by the CaM-dependent phosphatase. Analysis of the complex regulatory properties of the phosphodiesterase isozymes has led to the suggestion that fluxes of cAMP and Ca2+ during cell activations are closely coupled and that the CaM-dependent phosphodiesterase isozymes play key roles in this signal coupling phenomenon.  相似文献   

6.
Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in the plasma membranes of bovine epididymal spermatozoa was stimulated by added Ca2+ and calmodulin. The rate of hydrolysis and responsiveness toward calmodulin was greater for cAMP than for cGMP. The kinetic analysis of the activity revealed two forms of phosphodiesterase with apparent Km values of 7.5 and 95 microM for cAMP. Calmodulin stimulated both of the activities by increasing the Vmax without affecting the Km's. The activity response with respect to Ca2+ concentration appears to be biphasic in both the absence and presence of added calmodulin. Trifluoperazine inhibited the Ca2+- and calmodulin-sensitive enzyme activity in a dose-dependent manner. The calmodulin-stimulated phosphodiesterase activity in the sperm plasma membranes can be solubilized and absorbed to a Calmodulin-Sepharose affinity column in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
Calmodulin tryptic fragments 78-148, 107-148, and 1-77 coupled to Sepharose 4B were used to test the ability of different calmodulin-regulated enzymes to recognize different domains of calmodulin. Fragment 107-148, which contains a single Ca2+-binding domain, does not interact with any of the calmodulin binding proteins. Fragments 1-77 and 78-148, each of which contains two Ca2+-binding domains, have preserved their ability to interact with several calmodulin-dependent enzymes. Most of the calmodulin-regulated enzymes in brain extracts, such as cAMP phosphodiesterase, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and the calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase (calcineurin) interact with fragment 78-148 in a Ca2+-dependent fashion. An ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid-sensitive, calmodulin-independent, p-nitrophenyl phosphatase does not bind to the affinity column and is resolved from calcineurin at this step. Although calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase(s) can interact with fragment 78-148, their interaction is prevented by increased ionic strength even in the presence of Ca2+. Fragment 1-77 exhibits a higher degree of selectivity than fragment 78-148. Only cAMP-dependent protein kinase and cAMP phosphodiesterase bind to fragment 1-77. These results confirm the multiple modes of interaction of calmodulin with its target proteins and provide the basis for a selective purification of calmodulin-regulated enzymes by affinity chromatography on specific calmodulin fragments coupled to Sepharose.  相似文献   

8.
Calcineurin was isolated from bovine cerebrum extracts by sequential chromatography on Affi-Gel blue and calmodulin affinity columns. Calcineurin so isolated was approximately 90% pure and was composed of equimolar amounts of subunit A (Mr = 61 000-63 000) and subunit B (Mr = 15 000-17 000) when examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. A polypeptide (less than 10%) with Mr = 71 000 whose function and role remains to be investigated, was routinely detected in the calcineurin preparation. Both inhibitory activity (towards calmodulin-dependent cAMP phosphodiesterase) and phosphatase activity (with 32P-labelled myelin basic protein as substrate) were associated with calcineurin as evidenced by (i) coelution from Affi-Gel blue, Affi-Gel calmodulin, diethythaminoethyl-Sepharose, and Sephacryl S-200 chromatography columns; (ii) association with the same protein band on nondenaturing gels; (iii) similar stability upon storage at 4 degrees C and with repeated freezing and thawing; and (iv) parallel heat inactivation. Phosphatase activity of calcineurin was maximal with 32P-labelled myelin basic protein as the substrate. Using this substrate, enzyme activity was generally stimulated 5- to 10-fold in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin; half-maximal activation (A0.5) was observed with 25 nM calmodulin. Calmodulin increased the Vmax of the reaction without affecting the Km for the substrate. Optimum temperature and pH for the reaction were 45 degrees C and 7, respectively, in both the absence and presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Functional domain structure of calcineurin A: mapping by limited proteolysis   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
M J Hubbard  C B Klee 《Biochemistry》1989,28(4):1868-1874
Limited proteolysis of calcineurin, the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase, with clostripain is sequential and defines four functional domains in calcineurin A (61 kDa). In the presence of calmodulin, an inhibitory domain located at the carboxyl terminus is rapidly degraded, yielding an Mr 57,000 fragment which retains the ability to bind calmodulin but whose p-nitrophenylphosphatase is fully active in the absence of Ca2+ and no longer stimulated by calmodulin. Subsequent cleavage(s), near the amino terminus, yield(s) an Mr 55,000 fragment which has lost more than 80% of the enzymatic activity. A third, slower, proteolytic cleavage in the carboxyl-terminal half of the protein converts the Mr 55,000 fragment to an Mr 42,000 polypeptide which contains the calcineurin B binding domain and an Mr 14,000 fragment which binds calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner with high affinity. In the absence of calmodulin, clostripain rapidly severs both the calmodulin-binding and the inhibitory domains. The catalytic domain is preserved, and the activity of the proteolyzed 43-kDa enzyme is increased 10-fold in the absence of Ca2+ and 40-fold in its presence. The calcineurin B binding domain and calcineurin B appear unaffected by proteolysis both in the presence and in the absence of calmodulin. Thus, calcineurin A is organized into functionally distinct domains connected by proteolytically sensitive hinge regions. The catalytic, inhibitory, and calmodulin-binding domains are readily removed from the protease-resistant core, which contains the calcineurin B binding domain. Calmodulin stimulation of calcineurin is dependent on intact inhibitory and calmodulin-binding domains, but the degraded enzyme lacking these domains is still regulated by Ca2+.  相似文献   

10.
Crude extracts of human lung tissue were examined for cyclic adenosine- and guanosine-3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP and cGMP) phosphodiesterase activities. Nonlinear reciprocal plots were observed for each substrate. DEAE-Sephadex chromatography of the extracts revealed four main fractions of activity, which were further purified by Sephadex gel filtration. The phosphodiesterase activity of the resulting individual fractions was partially characterized with respect to substrate specificity, kinetic parameters, apparent molecular weight (gel filtration), thermal stability at 30 and 37 degrees C, effect of the cyclic nucleotide not utilized as substrate, and the possible influence of Ca2+-dependent protein activator. The results indicate that the tissue contains phosphodiesterases with strict specificity and a high apparent affinity for each of the two cyclic nucleotides (the Km values determined were approximately 0.3-0.4 muM). The high affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase activity was enriched in two of the purified fractions; both activities probably represent fragments of the native high affinity cAMP specific enzyme. A third purified phosphodiesterase showed mixed substrate specificity. The Km value recorded for hydrolysis of either substrate with this enzyme was approximately 25 muM. A fourth, irregularly occurring, phosphodiesterase activity also showed mixed substrate specificity. The Km value registered for hydrolysis of either substrate with this fraction was approximately 0.4 muM. There was no evidence for a Ca2+-dependent specific activation by a boiled lung tissue supernatant of any of the purified enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Calcineurin was dicovered as an inhibitor of calmodulin stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and its ability to act as a calmodulin binding protein largely explains its inhibitory action on calmodulin regulated enzymes. Recent studies establish calcineurin as the enzyme protein phosphatase whose activity is regulated by calmodulin and a variety of divalent metals. In this work, we have investigated the effects of several agents including sulfhydryl agents, trifluoperazine (a calmodulin antagonist), PPi, NaF and orthovanadate and of tryptic proteolysis on the calcineurin inhibition of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (called inhibitory activity) and on protein phosphatase activity. Inhibitors for sulfhydryl groups (pHMB, NEM) inhibited phosphatase activity without any effect on the inhibitory activity. Dithioerythritol completely reversed the inhibition by pHMB. Limited proteolysis of calcineurin caused an activation of basal phosphatase activity with a complete loss of inhibitory activity. Phosphatase activity of the proteolyzed calcineurin was not stimulated by calmodulin. The presence of calmodulin along with calcineurin during tryptic digestion appeared to preserve the stimulation of phosphatase by Ca2+-calmodulin. [3H]-Trifluoperazine (TFP) was found to be incorporated irreversibly into calcineurin in the presence of ultraviolet light. This incorporation was evident into the A and B subunits of calcineurin. TFP-caused a decrease in the phosphatase activity and an increase in its inhibitory activity. [3H]-TFP incorporation into the A subunit was drastically decreased in the proteolyzed calcineurin. This was also true when the [3H]-TFP incorporated calcineurin was subjected to tryptic proteolysis. The incorporation into the B unit was essentially unaffected in the trypsinized calcineurin. Phosphatase activity was inhibited by orthovanadate, NaF, PPi, and EDTA. Inhibitions by these compounds were more pronounced when the phosphatase was determined in the presence of Ca2+-cahnodulin than in their absence.  相似文献   

12.
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography is employed to determine if calmodulin might associate with its target enzymes such as cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and calcineurin through its Ca2+-induced hydrophobic binding region. The majority of protein in a bovine brain extract that binds to a calmodulin-Sepharose affinity column also is observed to bind in a metal ion-independent manner to phenyl-Sepharose through hydrophobic interactions. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity that is bound to phenyl-Sepharose can be resolved into two activity peaks; one peak of activity is eluted with low ionic strength buffer, while the second peak eluted with an ethylene glycol gradient. Calcineurin bound tightly to the phenyl-Sepharose column and could only be eluted with 8 M urea. Increasing ethylene glycol concentrations in the reaction mixture selectively inhibited the ability of calmodulin to stimulate phosphodiesterase activity, suggesting that hydrophobic interaction is required for activation. Comparison of the proteins which are bound to and eluted from phenyl- and calmodulin-Sepharose affinity columns indicates that chromatography involving calmodulin-Sepharose resembles hydrophobic interaction chromatography with charged ligands. In this type of interaction, hydrophobic binding either is reinforced by electrostatic attractions or opposed by electrostatic repulsions to create a degree of specificity in the binding of calmodulin to certain proteins with accessible hydrophobic regions.  相似文献   

13.
In the preceding paper (Kawai, H. et al. (1992) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1133, 172-178), we reported that in mastocytoma P-815 cells dexamethasone and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) synergistically enhanced the de novo synthesis of L-histidine decarboxylase (HDC). Here we found that Ca2+ acted synergistically with cAMP in the induction of HDC mRNA and HDC activity in mastocytoma P-815 cells, and that the mechanism underlying the enzyme induction by Ca2+ plus cAMP was distinguishable from that by dexamethasone plus TPA. Ca2+ ionophore A23187, itself having no significant activity, markedly enhanced the induction of HDC activity by N6,O2'-dibutyryl cAMP (db cAMP) or cAMP-inducible prostaglandins such as PGE1, PGE2 and PGI2 in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor, Ro201724. However, A23187 had little effect on increases in HDC activity induced by other known stimulants, such as TPA, dexamethasone and sodium butyrate. These results suggest that A23187 has a specific effect on the induction of HDC activity due to an increased level of cAMP. The finding that both A23187 and cAMP enhanced HDC activity suggests that both Ca2+/calmodulin and cyclic nucleotide dependent protein kinase play essential roles in the process of enhancement of HDC activity. To examine this possibility, we studied the effects of W-7, an inhibitor of calmodulin, removal of extracellular Ca2+, and H-8, an inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, on the enhancing activity of A23187 plus db cAMP. The enhancement of HDC activity by A23187 plus db cAMP was inhibited by W-7, removal of extracellular Ca2+, and H-8. The increase in HDC activity was due to the de novo synthesis of the enzyme, since it was suppressed by the addition of cycloheximide or actinomycin D, and was well correlated with the marked accumulation of a 2.7 kilobase HDC mRNA. Furthermore, the mechanism underlying the induction of HDC by db cAMP plus A23187 is distinguishable from that in the case of dexamethasone plus TPA, since preexposure to dexamethasone plus TPA for 12 h, for a plateau level to be reached, did not affect the subsequent increase in HDC activity due to db cAMP plus A23187.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine brain contains calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isozymes which are composed of two distinct subunits: Mr 60,000 and 63,000. The 60-kDa but not the 63-kDa subunit-containing isozyme can be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase resulting in decreased affinity of this subunit toward calmodulin (Sharma, R. K., and Wang, J. H. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 82, 2603-2607). In contrast, purified 63-kDa subunit-containing isozyme has been found to be phosphorylated by a preparation of bovine brain calmodulin-binding proteins in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin. The phosphorylation resulted in the maximal incorporation of 2 mol of phosphate/mol of the phosphodiesterase subunit with a 50% decrease in the enzyme affinity toward calmodulin. At a constant calmodulin concentration of 6 nM, the phosphorylated isozyme required a higher concentration of Ca2+ for activation than the nonphosphorylated phosphodiesterase. The Ca2+ concentrations at 50% activation by calmodulin of the nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated isozymes were 1.1 and 1.9 microM, respectively. Phosphorylation can be reversed by the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase, calcineurin, but not by phosphoprotein phosphatase 1. The results suggest that the Ca2+ sensitivities of brain calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isozymes can be modulated by protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation mechanisms in response to different second messengers.  相似文献   

15.
Divalent metals used to support phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.-) activity have been found to influence the substrate and enzyme specificity of many phosphodiesterase inhibitors in studies of the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP by the calmodulin-dependent and cyclic AMP-specific phosphodiesterases from bovine heart. Many compounds displayed marked differences in substrate specificity and inhibitory potency in the presence of Mg2+, as compared with Mn2+, when studied with the unactivated form of calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, while few compounds displayed differences in the presence of calmodulin. With a single divalent metal, marked differences in inhibitory potency and substrate specificity were also observed in the absence or presence of calmodulin suggesting that alterations in calmodulin and/or Ca2+ levels may greatly affect the response to phosphodiesterase inhibitors. Divalent metals did not alter the effects of inhibitors on the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP by the cyclic AMP-specific phosphodiesterase, however divalent metals would probably indirectly influence the relative cellular level of cyclic AMP hydrolyzed by this enzyme, and therefore the effects of inhibitors, through metal effects on the calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase. No correlation was found between the inhibitory activity of the compounds, many of which were cyclic nucleotide analogs, and their ability to activate cyclic AMP-dependent or cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinases or to affect cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity by displacing bound cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

16.
Incubation of human erythrocyte ghosts with an equal volume of 0.2 mM EDTA in isotonic KCl decreased both the activity and Ca2+ sensitivity of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase remaining associated with the membrane. Readdition of the EDTA-extract activated the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity. The activator activity was trypsin sensitive, heat stable and retained by a phenothiazine affinity column, consistent with properties expected of calmodulin. However, unlike calmodulin, the activity was not retained by DEAE Sephadex A-50 and it eluted from Sephacryl S-200 as heterogeneous peaks of activator activity of apparent molecular weight between 107,000 and 178,000. Nevertheless, the activator in the EDTA extract both before and after gel filtration contained calmodulin, as determined by radioimmunoassay and by its activation of calmodulin - deficient phosphodiesterase. SDS-gel electrophoresis of the activator isolated by gel filtration showed a protein of Mr 56,000 in addition to a low molecular weight protein corresponding to calmodulin. It is suggested that the red cell membrane contains a calmodulin binding protein which tightly binds calmodulin as a polymeric complex in a Ca2+-independent manner.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of various lipids on calmodulin interaction with Ca-dependent phosphodiesterase were investigated. Palmitic, myristic and stearic acids increased the enzyme activity; the degree of the enzyme activation by calmodulin was decreased thereby. Oleic acid produced a weak activating effect on phosphodiesterase but completely blocked calmodulin action. The effects of the fatty acids under study were reversible, the activation constant was equal to 10(-4)-5 X 10(-4) M. In the presence of Ca2+ phosphoinositides and fatty acids changed the fluorescence intensity of dansyl-labelled calmodulin; in the absence of Ca2+ the lipids did not affect protein fluorescence. The lipids had no influence on the protein affinity for Ca2+. During chromatography of phosphodiesterase on calmodulin-Sepharose the enzyme was eluted from the column both in the presence of EGTA and palmitic acid. It was concluded that fatty acids prevent the formation of the calmodulin - phosphodiesterase complex. This effects may both be due to the lipid binding to the enzyme and to calmodulin.  相似文献   

18.
A Ca2+-activated cycl AMP phosphodiesterase from Drosophila melanogaster heads was studied. The enzyme accounted for approx. 40% of the total, soluble cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in heads. After gel filtration, Ca2+ stimulation of the enzyme was no longer apparent, but Ca2+ activation could be restored by the addition of boiled Drosophila extract to the column-fractionated phosphodiesterase. The protein responsible for restoring Ca2+ activation was purified and shown to have some characteristics of calmodulin. In addition, porcine calmodulin was able to activate the Drosophila phosphodiesterase. Thus, the phosphodiesterase-calmodulin system in Drosophila appears analogous to similar systems in mammals.  相似文献   

19.
Fragments of sarcoplasmic reticulum from rabbit sceletal muscles sedimented within the range from 2000 g to 8000 g (heavy fraction) and 8000 g to 40000 g (light fraction) and washed with 0.6 M KCl, were practically free of adenylatecyclase activity. Phosphodiesterase cAMP was not found in the light fraction, while its activity in the heavy fraction was 500 pmol of cAMP/min per mg of protein. Both fractions contain bound cAMP (1-2 pmol/mg of protein) and specific sites of cAMP binding, the binding constant being approximately 10(6)M-1. The number of binding sites is 60 pmol/mg of protein for the heavy and 30 pmol/mg of protein for the light fractions. The level of phosphodiesterase activity in the heavy fraction correlates with its sensitivity to imidazole, anserine and caffeine. Imidazole and anserine increase in 1.5-1.8 times the value of Ca2+/ATP in the heavy fraction and produce no effect on Ca2+ transport by the light fraction. Caffeine decreases almost twice the Ca2+/ATP value in the heavy fraction and has practically no effect on Ca2+ absorption by enzymes of the light reticulum fraction. Imidazole and anserine activate membrane-bound phosphodiesterase, while caffeine inhibits it. It is suggested that structural rearrangements of membrane-bound phosphodiesterase under the effect of caffeine, imidazole and anserine are responsible for changes in the efficiency of Ca2+ transport by fragments of the heavy reticulum fractions.  相似文献   

20.
Calmodulin, a heat-stable Ca2+-binding protein (Mr = 16,700) found in all eukaryotes, is a multifunctional modulator, mediating many of the effects of Ca2+ in cellular functions. The protein was derivatized with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (DNB) to give 3 mol of DNB/mol of calmodulin (DNB3-calmodulin). The dinitrophenylated protein was almost as active as native calmodulin in stimulating bovine brain Ca2+-dependent phosphodiesterase. Incorporation of the dinitrophenyl groups renders calmodulin highly antigenic in the rabbit; native calmodulin is a weak antigen. Rabbits immunized with DNB3-calmodulin produced specific antibody against both DNB3-calmodulin and calmodulin. Using the immunized serum, a radioimmunoassay was developed for calmodulin, the sensitivity for DNB3-calmodulin and calmodulin being approximately 0.2 and 2 pmol, respectively. Although the sensitivity of the radioimmunoassay for calmodulin is comparable to the enzyme assay of calmodulin with Ca2+-dependent phosphodiesterase, the radioimmunoassay affords the detection of calmodulin on the basis of antigenic determinants, and thus measures calmodulin in terms of polypeptide structure instead of its ability to stimulate an enzyme. Further, the accuracy of the radioimmunoassay is not affected by the presence of a heat-labile inhibitor protein, which affects the enzyme assay to give an apparent underestimation.  相似文献   

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