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1.
The gel-overlay technique with 125I-labelled calmodulin allowed the detection of several calmodulin-binding proteins of Mr 280 000, 150 000, 97 000, 56 000, 35 000 and 24 000 in canine cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. Only two calmodulin-binding proteins could be identified unambiguously. Among them, the 97 000-Mr protein that undergoes phosphorylation in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, is likely to be glycogen phosphorylase. In contrast, the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase did not appear to bind calmodulin under our experimental conditions. The second known calmodulin target is dephosphophospholamban, which migrates with an apparent Mr of 24 000. The dimeric as well as the monomeric form of phospholamban was found to bind calmodulin. Phospholamban shifts the apparent Kd of erythrocyte (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase for calmodulin, suggesting thus a tight binding of calmodulin to the proteolipid. Interestingly enough, phospholamban phosphorylation by either the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase or the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phospholamban kinase was found to inhibit calmodulin binding.  相似文献   

2.
A Molla  J G Demaille 《Biochemistry》1986,25(11):3415-3424
Phospholamban, the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum proteolipid, is phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, by Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase, and by an endogenous Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, the identity of which remains to be defined. The aim of this study was therefore to characterize the latter kinase, called phospholamban kinase. Phospholamban kinase was purified approximately 42-fold with a yield of 11%. The purified fraction exhibits a specific activity of 6.5 nmol of phosphate incorporated into exogenous phospholamban per minute per milligram of protein. Phospholamban kinase appears to be a high molecular weight enzyme and presents a broad substrate specificity, synapsin-1, glycogen synthase, and smooth muscle myosin regulatory light chain being the best substrates. Phospholamban kinase phosphorylates synapsin-1 on a Mr 30 000 peptide. The enzyme exhibits an optimum pH of 8.6, a Km for ATP of 9 microM, and a requirement for Mg2+ ions. These data suggest that phospholamban kinase might be an isoenzyme of the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. Consequently we have searched for Mr 50 000-60 000 phosphorylatable subunits among cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum proteins. A Mr 56 000 protein was found to be phosphorylated in the presence of Ca2+/calmodulin. Such phosphorylation alters the electrophoretic migration velocity of the protein. In addition, this protein that binds calmodulin was always found to be present in fractions containing phospholamban kinase activity. This Mr 56 000 protein is therefore a good candidate for being a subunit of phospholamban kinase. However, the Mr 56 000 calmodulin-binding protein and the Mr 53 000 intrinsic glycoprotein which binds ATP are two distinct entities.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphorylation of brain synaptic and coated vesicle proteins was stimulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin. As determined by 5-15% sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), molecular weights (Mr) of the major phosphorylated proteins were 55,000 and 53,000 in synaptic vesicles and 175,000 and 55,000 in coated vesicles. In synaptic vesicles, phosphorylation was inhibited by affinity-purified antibodies raised against a 30,000 Mr protein doublet endogenous to synaptic and coated vesicles. When this doublet, along with clathrin, was extracted from coated vesicles, phosphorylation did not take place, implying that the protein doublet may be closely associated with Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. Affinity-purified antibodies, raised against clathrin used as a control antibody, failed to inhibit Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation in either synaptic or coated vesicles. Immunoelectron cytochemistry revealed that this protein doublet was present in axon terminal synaptic and coated vesicles. Synaptic vesicles also displayed cAMP-dependent kinase activity; coated vesicles did not. The molecular weights of phosphorylated synaptic vesicle proteins in the presence of Mg2+ and cAMP were: 175,000, 100,000, 80,000, 57,000, 55,000, 53,000, 40,000, and 30,000. Based on the different phosphorylation patterns observed in synaptic and coated vesicles, we propose that brain vesicle protein kinase activities may be involved in the regulation of exocytosis and in retrieval of synaptic membrane in presynaptic axon terminals.  相似文献   

4.
Calmodulin was isolated and purified to homogeneity from dog pancreas. Highly purified subcellular fractions were prepared from dog pancreas by zonal sucrose-density ultracentrifugation and assayed for their ability to bind 125I-calmodulin in vitro. Proteins contained in these fractions were also examined for binding of 125I-calmodulin after their separation by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in SDS. Calmodulin-binding proteins were detected in all subcellular fractions except the zymogen granule and zymogen-granule membrane fractions. One calmodulin-binding protein (Mr 240,000), observed in a washed smooth-microsomal fraction, has properties similar to those of alpha-fodrin. The postribosomal-supernatant fraction contained three prominent calmodulin-binding proteins, with apparent Mr values of 62,000, 50,000 and 40,000. Calmodulin-binding proteins, prepared from a postmicrosomal-supernatant fraction by Ca2+-dependent affinity chromatography on immobilized calmodulin, exhibited calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, protein phosphatase and protein kinase activities. In the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, phosphorylation of smooth-muscle myosin light chain and brain synapsin and autophosphorylation of a Mr-50,000 protein were observed. Analysis of the protein composition of the preparation by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis revealed a major protein of Mr 50,000 which bound 125I-calmodulin. This protein shares characteristics with the calmodulin-dependent multifunctional protein kinase (kinase II) recently observed to have a widespread distribution. The possible role of calmodulin-binding proteins and calmodulin-regulated enzymes in the regulation of exocrine pancreatic protein synthesis and secretion is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Endogenous phosphorylation of the crude membrane fraction of cultured 3Y1 fibroblast cells was enhanced by the addition of Ca2+/calmodulin. Both Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity and its substrate were present in a cytoskeletal fraction, obtained as a pellet after washing of the membrane fraction with 2 mM EGTA, 0.6 M NaCl, and 1% Triton X-100. The phosphorylatable protein in the Triton X-insoluble fraction was identified by immunoblotting as vimentin. This endogenous phosphorylation induced by calmodulin was inhibited by the addition of KN-62, a specific Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II inhibitor, in a dose-dependent manner. However, phosphorylation of the 59 kDa protein (vimentin) in this fraction was not stimulated by adding both phosphatidyl serine and cAMP, thereby suggesting the absence of protein kinase C or of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in this fraction. The protein kinase associated with the Triton X-insoluble fraction phosphorylated the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II-specific site of synapsin I from the bovine cortex. Two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps of vimentin indicated that a major phosphopeptide phosphorylated by the endogenous calmodulin-dependent kinase also appears to be the same as a major phosphopeptide phosphorylated by the exogenous Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Our results suggest that cytoskeleton-associated Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II regulates dynamic cellular functions through the phosphorylation of cytoskeletal elements in non-neural cells.  相似文献   

6.
The 63-kDa subunit, but not the 60-kDa subunit, of brain calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase was phosphorylated in vitro by the autophosphorylated form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. When calmodulin was bound to the phosphodiesterase, 1.33 +/- 0.20 mol of phosphate was incorporated per mol of the 63-kDa subunit within 5 min with no significant effect on enzyme activity. Phosphorylation in the presence of low concentrations of calmodulin resulted in a phosphorylation stoichiometry of 2.11 +/- 0.21 and increased about 6-fold the concentration of calmodulin necessary for half-maximal activation of the phosphodiesterase. Peptide mapping analyses of complete tryptic digests of the 63-kDa subunit revealed two major (P1, P4) and two minor (P2, P3) 32P-peptides. Calmodulin-binding to the phosphodiesterase almost completely inhibited phosphorylation of P1 and P2 with reduced phosphorylation rates of P3 and P4, suggesting the affinity change of the enzyme for calmodulin may be caused by phosphorylation of P1 and/or P2. When Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II was added without prior autophosphorylation, there was no phosphorylation of the 63-kDa phosphodiesterase subunit or of the kinase itself in the presence of a low concentration of calmodulin, and with excess calmodulin the phosphodiesterase subunit was phosphorylated only at P3 and P4. Thus the 63-kDa subunit of phosphodiesterase has a regulatory phosphorylation site(s) that is phosphorylated by the autophosphorylated form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II and blocked by Ca2+/calmodulin binding to the subunit.  相似文献   

7.
A simple and rapid procedure for the purification of the native form of chicken gizzard myosin light-chain kinase (Mr 136000) is described which eliminates problems of proteolysis previously encountered. During this procedure, a calmodulin-binding protein of Mr 141000, which previously co-purified with the myosin light-chain kinase, is removed and shown to be a distinct protein on the basis of lack of kinase activity, different chymotryptic peptide maps, lack of cross-reactivity with a monoclonal antibody to turkey gizzard myosin light-chain kinase, and lack of phosphorylation by the purified catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. This Mr-141000 calmodulin-binding protein is identified as caldesmon on the basis of Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, subunit Mr, Ca2+-independent interaction with skeletal-muscle F-actin, Ca2+-dependent competition between calmodulin and F-actin for caldesmon, and tissue content.  相似文献   

8.
A Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase has been purified which catalyzed the phosphorylation and concomitant inactivation of both the microsomal native (100,000 Da) and protease-cleaved purified 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase (HMG-CoA reductase) (53,000 Da) fragments. This low molecular weight brain cytosolic Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase phosphorylates histone H1, synapsin I, and purified HMG-CoA reductase as major substrates. The kinase, purified by sequential chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, calmodulin affinity resin, and high performance liquid chromatography (TSKG 3000 SW) is an electrophoretically homogeneous protein of approximately 110,000 Da. The molecular weight of the holoenzyme, substrate specificity, subunit protein composition, subunit autophosphorylation, subunit isoelectric points, and subunit phosphopeptide analysis suggest that this kinase of Mr 110,000 may be different from other previously reported Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinases. Maximal phosphorylation by the low molecular form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase of purified HMG-CoA reductase revealed a stoichiometry of approximately 0.5 mol of phosphate/mol of 53,000-Da enzyme. Dephosphorylation of phosphorylated and inactivated native and purified HMG-CoA reductase revealed a time-dependent loss of 32P-bound radioactivity and reactivation of enzyme activity. Based on the results reported here, we propose that HMG-CoA reductase activity may be modulated by yet another kinase system involving covalent phosphorylation. The elucidation of a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent HMG-CoA reductase kinase-mediated modulation of HMG-CoA reductase activity involving reversible phosphorylation may provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of cholesterol biosynthesis.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Properties of caldesmon isolated from chicken gizzard.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Chicken gizzard smooth muscle contains two major calmodulin-binding proteins: caldesmon (11.1 microM; Mr 141 000) and myosin light-chain kinase (4.6 microM; Mr 136 000), both of which are associated with the contractile apparatus. The amino acid composition of caldesmon is distinct from that of myosin light-chain kinase and is characterized by a very high glutamic acid content (25.5%), high contents of lysine (13.6%) and arginine (10.3%), and a low aromatic amino acid content (2.4%). Caldesmon lacked myosin light-chain kinase and phosphatase activities and did not compete with either myosin light-chain kinase or cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (both calmodulin-dependent enzymes) for available calmodulin, suggesting that calmodulin may have distinct binding sites for caldesmon on the one hand and myosin light-chain kinase and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase on the other. Consistent with the lack of effect of caldesmon on myosin phosphorylation, caldesmon did not affect the assembly or disassembly of myosin filaments in vitro. As previously shown [Ngai & Walsh (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 13656-13659], caldesmon can be reversibly phosphorylated. The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of caldesmon were further characterized and the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent caldesmon kinase was purified; kinase activity correlated with a protein of subunit Mr 93 000. Caldesmon was not a substrate of myosin light-chain kinase or phosphorylase kinase, both calmodulin-activated protein kinases.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The major postsynaptic density protein (mPSDp), comprising greater than 50% of postsynaptic density (PSD) protein, is an endogenous substrate for calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation as well as a calmodulin-binding protein in PSD preparations. The results in this investigation indicate that mPSDp is highly homologous with the major calmodulin-binding subunit (p) of tubulin-associated calmodulin-dependent kinase (TACK), and that PSD fractions also contain a protein homologous with the sigma-subunit of TACK. Homologies between mPSDp and a 63,000 dalton PSD protein and the rho- and sigma-subunits of TACK were established by the following criteria: (1) identical apparent molecular weights; (2) identical calmodulin-binding properties; (3) manifestation of Ca2+-calmodulin-stimulated autophosphorylation; (4) identical isoelectric points; (5) identical calmodulin binding and autophosphorylation patterns on two-dimensional gels; (6) homologous two-dimensional tryptic peptide maps; and (7) similar phosphoamino acid-specific phosphorylation of tubulin. The results suggest that mPSDp is a calmodulin-binding protein involved in modulating protein kinase activity in the postsynaptic density and that a tubulin kinase system homologous with TACK exists in a membrane-bound form in the PSD.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Sphingosine inhibits calmodulin-dependent enzymes   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Sphingosine is a potent inhibitor of several calmodulin-dependent enzymes. The multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, and smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase are inhibited in vitro at concentrations previously shown to inhibit protein kinase C. Inhibition of each of the enzymes is competitive with calmodulin, suggesting that sphingosine may be a calmodulin antagonist. In the pituitary cell line GH3, sphingosine inhibits the phosphorylation of microtubule-associated protein 2 by the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and the phosphorylation of elongation factor 2 by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase III. These findings suggest that sphingosine, in blocking the effects of both the Ca2+.calmodulin complex and of diacylglycerol, may be a very effective inhibitor of both branches of the phosphatidylinositol signaling pathway. By extension, caution should be exercised in the use of sphingosine as a diagnostic test for the involvement of protein kinase C in biological processes.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Recent molecular cloning experiments have identified a 25 amino-acid region as the calmodulin-binding domain of the alpha-subunit of rat brain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent multifunctional protein kinase II (CaM-K II). Synthetic peptides, derived from the deduced amino-acid sequence encompassing this region, were examined for their ability to bind calmodulin in a calcium dependent manner and to inhibit the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent autophosphorylation of CaM-K II. Comparison of these structure-function relationships highlighted a region of 5 amino-acids, which was essential for calmodulin interaction and inhibition of kinase activity. This region demonstrated some homology with other calmodulin-binding peptides, and may represent a key site of interaction of the kinase with calmodulin. These analyses provide additional insight into the molecular mechanism underlying the Ca2+ regulation of CaM-K II.  相似文献   

17.
We have evaluated the possibility that a major, abundant cellular substrate for protein kinase C might be a calmodulin-binding protein. We have recently labeled this protein, which migrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis with an apparent Mr of 60,000 from chicken and 80,000-87,000 from bovine cells and tissues, the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS). The MARCKS proteins from both species could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of either protein by protein kinase C prevented 125I-calmodulin binding and cross-linking, suggesting that the calmodulin-binding domain might be located at or near the sites of protein kinase C phosphorylation. Both bovine and chicken MARCKS proteins contain an identical 25-amino acid domain that contains all 4 of the serine residues phosphorylated by protein kinase C in vitro. In addition, this domain is similar in sequence and structure to previously described calmodulin-binding domains. A synthetic peptide corresponding to this domain inhibited calmodulin binding to the MARCKS protein and also could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. In addition, protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of the synthetic peptide inhibited its binding and cross-linking to 125I-calmodulin. The peptide bound to fluorescently labeled 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-calmodulin with a dissociation constant of 2.8 nM, and inhibited the calmodulin-dependent activation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase with an IC50 of 4.8 nM. Thus, the peptide mimics the calmodulin-binding properties of the MARCKS protein and probably represents its calmodulin-binding domain. Phosphorylation of these abundant, high affinity calmodulin-binding proteins by protein kinase C in intact cells could cause displacement of bound calmodulin, perhaps leading to activation of Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent processes.  相似文献   

18.
Calcium-accumulating vesicles were isolated by differential centrifugation of sonicated platelets. Such vesicles exhibit a (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity of about 10 nmol (min . mg)-1 and an ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake of about 10 nmol (min . mg)-1. When incubated in the presence of Mg[gamma-32P]ATP, the pump is phosphorylated and the acyl phosphate bond is sensitive to hydroxylamine. The [32P]phosphate-labeled Ca2+ pump exhibits a subunit molecular weight of 120 000 when analyzed by lithium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Platelet calcium-accumulating vesicles contain a 23 kDa membrane protein that is phosphorylatable by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase but not by protein kinase C. This phosphate acceptor is not phosphorylated when the vesicles are incubated in the presence of either Ca2+ or Ca2+ plus calmodulin. The latter protein is bound to the vesicles and represents 0.5% of the proteins present in the membrane fraction. Binding of 125I-labeled calmodulin to this membrane fraction was of high affinity (16 nM), and the use of an overlay technique revealed four major calmodulin-binding proteins in the platelet cytosol (Mr = 94 000, 87 000, 60 000 and 43 000). Some minor calmodulin-binding proteins were enriched in the membrane fractions (Mr = 69 000, 57 000, 39 000 and 37 000). When the vesicles are phosphorylated in the presence of MgATP and of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, the rate of Ca2+ uptake is essentially unaltered, while the Ca2+ capacity is diminished as a consequence of a doubling in the rate of Ca2+ efflux. Therefore, the inhibitory effect of cAMP on platelet function cannot be explained in such simple terms as an increased rate of Ca2+ removal from the cytosol. Calmodulin, on the other hand, was observed to have no effect on the initial rate of calcium efflux when added either in the absence or in the presence of the catalytic subunit of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, nor did the addition of 0.5 microM calmodulin result in increased levels of vesicle phosphorylation.  相似文献   

19.
Regulatory domains of the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II were investigated utilizing synthetic peptides. These peptides were derived from the sequence between positions 281 and 319 as translated from the cDNA sequence of the rat brain 50-kDa subunit (Lin, C. R., Kapiloff, M. S., Durgerian, S., Tatemoto, K., Russo, A. F., Hanson, P., Schulman, H., and Rosenfeld, M. G. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 84, 5962-5966), which contain the putative calmodulin-binding region as well as potential autophosphorylation sites. Peptide 290 to 309 was found to be a potent calmodulin antagonist with an IC50 of 52 nM for inhibition of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Neither truncation from the amino terminus (peptide 296-309) nor extension in the carboxyl-terminal direction (peptide 294-319) markedly affected calmodulin binding, whereas shortening the peptide from the carboxyl terminus (peptide 290-302) or from both ends (peptide 295-304) resulted in the elimination of this activity. Peptide 281-290 did not bind calmodulin, but was a good substrate for the enzyme, being phosphorylated at Thr-286. Several of the peptides inhibited the kinase in a partially competitive, substrate-directed manner, but were not themselves phosphorylated. These studies identify domains within Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II which may be involved in 1) inhibition of the kinase in the absence of calmodulin, 2) binding of calmodulin, and 3) the resulting activation. Additionally, it is suggested that phosphorylation of residues flanking these domains may be responsible for the known regulatory effects of autophosphorylation on the properties of the kinase.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this study was to investigate (a) whether Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) participates in the regulation of plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase and (b) its possible cross-talk with other kinase-mediated modulatory pathways of the pump. Using isolated innervated membranes of the electrocytes from Electrophorus electricus L., we found that stimulation of endogenous protein kinase A (PKA) strongly phosphorylated membrane-bound CaM kinase II with simultaneous substantial activation of the Ca2+ pump (approximately 2-fold). The addition of cAMP (5-50 pM), forskolin (10 nM), or cholera toxin (10 or 100 nM) stimulated both CaM kinase II phosphorylation and Ca2+-ATPase activity, whereas these activation processes were cancelled by an inhibitor of the PKA alpha-catalytic subunit. When CaM kinase II was blocked by its specific inhibitor KN-93, the Ca2+-ATPase activity decreased to the levels measured in the absence of calmodulin; the unusually high Ca2+ affinity dropped 2-fold; and the PKA-mediated stimulation of Ca2+-ATPase was no longer seen. Hydroxylamine-resistant phosphorylation of the Ca2+-ATPase strongly increased when the PKA pathway was activated, and this phosphorylation was suppressed by inhibition of CaM kinase II. We conclude that CaM kinase II is an intermediate in a complex regulatory network of the electrocyte Ca2+ pump, which also involves calmodulin and PKA.  相似文献   

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