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1.
Inorganic pyrophosphatase from bovine retinal rod outer segments.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rod outer segments from bovine retina contain a higher level of intracellular inorganic pyrophosphatase (EC 3.6.1.1) activity than has been found in any other mammalian tissue; the specific activity in extracts of soluble outer segment proteins is more than 6-fold higher than in extracts from bovine liver and more than 24-fold higher than in skeletal muscle extracts. This high activity may be necessary to keep inorganic pyrophosphate concentrations low in the face of the high rates of pyrophosphate production that accompany the cGMP flux driving phototransduction. We have begun to explore the role of inorganic pyrophosphatase in photoreceptor cGMP metabolism by 1) studying the kinetic properties of this enzyme and its interactions with divalent metal ions and anionic inhibitors, 2) purifying it and studying its size and subunit composition, and 3) examining the effects of pyrophosphate on rod outer segment guanylyl cyclase. Km for magnesium pyrophosphate was 0.9-1.5 microM, and the purified enzyme hydrolyzed > 885 mumol of PPi min-1 mg-1. The enzyme appears to be a homodimer of 36-kilodalton subunits when analyzed by gel electrophoresis and density gradient centrifugation, implying that kcat = 10(3) s-1, and kcat/Km = 0.7-1 x 10(9) M-1 s-1. The enzyme was inhibited by Ca2+ at submicromolar levels: 28% inhibition was observed at 138 nM [Ca2+], and 53% inhibition at 700 nM [Ca2+]. Imidodiphosphate acted as a competitive inhibitor, with Ki = 1.2 microM, and fluoride inhibited half-maximally approximately 20 microM. Inhibition studies on rod outer segment guanylyl cyclase confirmed previous reports that pyrophosphate inhibits guanylyl cyclase, suggesting an essential role for inorganic pyrophosphatase in maintaining cGMP metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Guanylyl cyclase from bovine rod outer segments was solubilized using Triton X-100 and a high concentration of KCl, and its regulation was studied. The efficiency of solubilization was about 50-90% of total activity. When the Ca2+ content was lowered (less than 80 nM), guanylyl cyclase was activated about 2-fold. In the presence of higher concentrations of Ca2+ (greater than 140 nM), the activity was decreased. The regulation by Ca2+ was also demonstrated with solubilized preparations. In the presence of 186 nM Ca2+ which inhibited guanylyl cyclase, La3+ activated the enzyme about 2-fold, suggesting that the Ca2(+)-binding protein similar to other Ca2(+)-binding proteins associates with guanylyl cyclase regulation. Sodium nitroprusside and nitric oxide which are activators of soluble guanylyl cyclase in other tissues also activated the retinal guanylyl cyclase. Maximum activation by sodium nitroprusside was 20-fold using Mg2+ as a cofactor. Activation by nitric oxide and related compounds suggests that retinal guanylyl cyclase contains a heme prosthetic group that may participate in a novel regulatory mechanism for this enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The resynthesis of cGMP in vertebrate photoreceptors by guanylate cyclase is one of the key events leading to the reopening of cGMP-gated channels after photoexcitation. Guanylate cyclase activity in vertebrate rod outer segments is dependent on the free calcium concentration. The basal activity of the enzyme observed at high concentrations of free calcium (greater than 0.5 microM) increases when the free calcium concentration is lowered into the nanomolar range (less than 0.1 microM). This effect of calcium is known to be mediated by a soluble calcium-sensitive protein in a highly cooperative way. We here show that this soluble protein, i.e. the modulator of photoreceptor guanylate cyclase, is a 26 kd protein. Reconstitution of the purified 26 kd protein with washed rod outer segment membranes containing guanylate cyclase revealed a 3- to 4-fold increase of cyclase activity when the free calcium concentration was lowered in the physiological range from 0.5 microM to 4 nM. Guanylate cyclase in whole rod outer segments was stimulated 10-fold in the same calcium range. The activation process in the reconstituted system was similar to the one in the native rod outer segment preparation, it showed a high cooperativity with a Hill coefficient n between 1.4 and 3.5. The half-maximal activation occurred between 110 and 220 nM free calcium. The molar ratio of the modulator to rhodopsin is 1:76 +/- 32. The protein is a calcium binding protein as detected with 45Ca autoradiography. Partial amino acid sequence analysis revealed a 60% homology to visinin from chicken cones.  相似文献   

4.
In the presence of porcine aortic endothelial cytosol, soluble guanylyl cyclase purified from bovine lung was activated by L-arginine up to 2.5-fold, with an EC50 of about 6 microM. This activation was dependent on NADPH and Ca2+. The EC50 for Ca2+ was about 60 nM. No effect of L-arginine on guanylyl cyclase was observed when the cytosolic proteins were heat-denaturated. The effect of L-arginine was inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and hemoglobin. These results indicate that endothelial cells contain a cytosolic enzyme which is directly or indirectly regulated by Ca2+ and converts L-arginine into a compound which in stimulating soluble guanylyl cyclase behaves similar to endothelium-derived relaxing factor.  相似文献   

5.
In vertebrate retina, rod outer segment is the site of visual transduction. The inward cationic current in the dark-adapted outer segment is regulated by cyclic GMP. A light flash on the outer segment activates a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase resulting in rapid hydrolysis of the cyclic nucleotide which in turn causes a decrease in the dark current. Restoration of the dark current requires inactivation of the phosphodiesterase and synthesis of cyclic GMP. The latter is accomplished by the enzyme guanylate cyclase which catalyzes the formation of cyclic GMP from GTP. Therefore, factors regulating the cyclase activity play a critcal role in visual transduction. But regulation of the cyclase by some of these factors — phosphodiesterase, ATP, the soluble proteins and metal cofactors (Mg and Mn) — is controversial. The availability of different types of cyclase preparations, dark-adapted rod outer segments with fully inhibited phosphodiesterase activity, partially purified cyclase without PDE contamination, cloned rod outer segment cyclase free of other rod outer segment proteins, permitted us to address these controversial issues. The results show that ATP inhibits the basal cyclase activity but enhances the stimulation of the enzyme by soluble activator, that cyclase can be activated in the dark at low calcium concentrations under conditions where phosphodiesterase activity is fully suppressed, and that greater activity is observed with manganese as cofactor than magnesium. These results provide a better understanding of the controls on cyclase activity in rod outer segments and suggest how regulation of this cyclase by ATP differs from that of other known membrane guanylate cyclases.This work was supported by the grants from the National Institutes of Health (EY07158, EY 05230, EY 10828, NS 23744) and the equipment grant from Pennsylvania Lions Eye Research Foundation.  相似文献   

6.
Mouse photoreceptor function and survival critically depend on Ca(2+)-regulated retinal membrane guanylyl cyclase (RetGC), comprised of two isozymes, RetGC1 and RetGC2. We characterized the content, catalytic constants, and regulation of native RetGC1 and RetGC2 isozymes using mice lacking guanylyl cyclase activating proteins GCAP1 and GCAP2 and deficient for either GUCY2F or GUCY2E genes, respectively. We found that the characteristics of both native RetGC isozymes were considerably different from other reported estimates made for mammalian RetGCs: the content of RetGC1 per mouse rod outer segments (ROS) was at least 3-fold lower, the molar ratio (RetGC2:RetGC1) 6-fold higher, and the catalytic constants of both GCAP-activated isozymes between 12- and 19-fold higher than previously measured in bovine ROS. The native RetGC isozymes had different basal activity and were accelerated 5-28-fold at physiological concentrations of GCAPs. RetGC2 alone was capable of contributing as much as 135-165 μM cGMP s(-1) or almost 23-28% to the maximal cGMP synthesis rate in mouse ROS. At the maximal level of activation by GCAP, this isozyme alone could provide a significantly high rate of cGMP synthesis compared to what is expected for normal recovery of a mouse rod, and this can help explain some of the unresolved paradoxes of rod physiology. GCAP-activated native RetGC1 and RetGC2 were less sensitive to inhibition by Ca(2+) in the presence of GCAP1 (EC(50Ca) ~132-139 nM) than GCAP2 (EC(50Ca) ~50-59 nM), thus arguing that Ca(2+) sensor properties of GCAP in a functional RetGC/GCAP complex are defined not by a particular target isozyme but the intrinsic properties of GCAPs themselves.  相似文献   

7.
The membrane-bound guanylyl cyclase in rod photoreceptors is activated by guanylyl cyclase-activating protein 1 (GCAP-1) at low free [Ca2+]. GCAP-1 is a Ca2+-binding protein and belongs to the superfamily of EF-hand proteins. We created an oligopeptide library of overlapping peptides that encompass the entire amino acid sequence of GCAP-1. Peptides were used in competitive screening assays to identify interaction regions in GCAP-1 that directly bind the guanylyl cyclase in bovine photoreceptor cells. We found four regions in GCAP-1 that participate in regulating guanylyl cyclase. A 15-amino acid peptide located adjacent to the second EF-hand motif (Phe73-Lys87) was identified as the main interaction domain. Inhibition of GCAP-1-stimulated guanylyl cyclase activity by the peptide Phe73-Lys87 was completely relieved when an excess amount of GCAP-1 was added. An affinity column made from this peptide was able to bind a complex of photoreceptor guanylyl cyclase and tubulin. Using an anti-GCAP-1 antibody, we coimmunoprecipitated GCAP-1 with guanylyl cyclase and tubulin. Complex formation between GCAP-1 and guanylyl cyclase was observed independent of [Ca2+]. Our experiments suggest that there exists a tight association of guanylyl cyclase and tubulin in rod outer segments.  相似文献   

8.
Photoreceptor guanylate cyclase was solubilized and purified from bovine rod outer segments with 50-150-fold increase in specific activity using the nonionic detergent n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside. Guanylate cyclase activities correlated with the enrichment of a protein with an apparent Mr = 112,000. The purified enzyme showed specific activities of 100-700 nmol of cGMP produced/min/mg protein and exhibited positive cooperativity with respect to MnGTP (Hill coefficient n = 1.6 +/- 0.1). The apparent Km was 274 +/- 67 microM, and the turnover number was determined to be 0.2-1.3 cGMP produced/s. The molar ratio of the 112-kDa protein to rhodopsin corresponds to 1:104. This indicates that the amount of guanylate cyclase in rod photoreceptors is nearly equimolar to the amount of the phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

9.
Electrophysiological recordings on retinal rod cells, horizontal cells and on-bipolar cells indicate that exogenous nitric oxide (NO) has neuromodulatory effects in the vertebrate retina. We report here endogenous NO formation in mammalian photoreceptor cells. Photoreceptor NO synthase resembled the neuronal NOS type I from mammalian brain. NOS activity utilized the substrate L-arginine (Km = 4 microM) and the cofactors NADPH, FAD, FMN and tetrahydrobiopterin. The activity showed a complete dependence on the free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]) and was mediated by calmodulin. NO synthase activity was sufficient to activate an endogenous soluble guanylyl cyclase that copurified in photoreceptor preparations. This functional coupling was strictly controlled by the free [Ca2+] (EC50 = 0.84 microM). Activation of the soluble guanylyl cyclase by endogenous NO was up to 100% of the maximal activation of this enzyme observed with the exogenous NO donor compound sodium nitroprusside. This NO/cGMP pathway was predominantly localized in inner and not in outer segments of photoreceptors. Immunocytochemically, we localized NO synthase type I mainly in the ellipsoid region of the inner segments and a soluble guanylyl cyclase in cell bodies of cone photoreceptor cells. We conclude that in photoreceptors endogenous NO is functionally coupled to a soluble guanylyl cyclase and suggest that it has a neuromodulatory role in visual transduction and in synaptic transmission in the outer retina.  相似文献   

10.
Frog (Rana catesbiana) rod outer segment disc membranes contain a cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) which is activated by light in the presence of ATP. This enzyme is firmly bound to the disc membrane, but can be eluted from the membrane with 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4 and 2 mM EDTA. The eluted phosphodiesterase has reduced activity, but can be activated approximately 10-fold by polycations such as protamine and polylysine. The eluted phosphodiesterase can no longer be activated by light in the presence of ATP, that is, activation by light apparently depends on the native orientation of phosphodiesterase in relationship to other disc membrane components. The eluted phosphodiesterase was purified to homogeneity as judged by analytical polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and polyacrylamide gel isoelectric focusing. The over-all purification from intact retina was approximately 925-fold. The purification of phosphodiesterase from the isolated rod outer segment preparation was about 185-fold with a 28% yield. Phosphodiesterase accounts for approximately 0.5% of the disc membrane protein. The eluted phosphodiesterase (inactive form) has a sedimentation coefficient of 12.4 S corresponding to an approximate molecular weight of 240,000. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separates the purified phosphodiesterase into two subunits of 120,000 and 110,000 daltons. With cyclic 3':5'-GMP (cGMP) as substrate the Km for the purified phosphodiesterase is 70 muM. Protamine increases the Vmax without changing the Km for cGMP. The isoelectric point (pI) of the native dimer is 5.7. Limited exposure of the eluted phosphodiesterase (inactive form) to trypsin produces a somewhat greater activation than is obtained with 0.5 mg/ml of protamine. The trypsin-activated phosphodiesterase has a sedimentation coefficient of 7.8 S corresponding to an approximate molecular weight of 170,000. The 110,000-dalton subunit is much less sensitive to trypsin hydrolysis and the 120,000-dalton subunit is rapidly replaced by smaller fragments. On the basis of the molecular weight of the purified phosphodiesterase (240,000) and the concentrations of phosphodiesterase and rhodopsin in the rod outer segment, it is estimated that the molar ratio ophosphodiesterase to rhodopsin in the rod outer segment is approximately 1:900. Since all of the disc phosphodiesterase molecules are activated when 0.1% of the rhodopsins are bleached, we conclude that in the presence of ATP 1 molecule of bleached rhodopsin can activate 1 molecule of phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

11.
B Mayer  E B?hme 《FEBS letters》1989,256(1-2):211-214
In a fraction of cytosolic proteins from bovine lung, soluble guanylyl cyclase was concentration-dependently stimulated by L-arginine but not by D-arginine. Stimulation was up to 20-fold with an EC50 of about 3 x 10(-5) M. Activation of guanylyl cyclase by L-arginine was dependent on NADPH (EC50 about 5 x 10(-7) M) and Ca2+ (EC50 about 1.4 x 10(-6) M). The activation by L-arginine was inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and hemoglobin. The effect of L-arginine was dependent on the protein concentration and was not observed in preparations of purified gyanylyl cyclase. These results suggest that bovine lung contains a Ca2+-regulated enzyme or enzyme system which converts L-arginine into an activator of soluble guanylyl cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
The Ca(2+)-dependent activation of retina-specific guanylyl cyclase (retGC) is mediated by guanylyl cyclase-activating proteins (GCAPs). Here we report for the first time detection of a 19 kDa protein (p19) with GCAP properties in extracts of rat retina and pineal gland. Both extracts stimulate synthesis of cGMP in rod outer segment (ROS) membranes at low (30 nM) but not at high (1 microM) concentrations of Ca(2+). At low Ca(2+), immunoaffinity purified p19 activates guanylyl cyclase(s) in bovine ROS and rat retinal membranes. Moreover, p19 is recognized by antibodies against bovine GCAP1 and, similarly to other GCAPs, exhibits a Ca(2+)-dependent electrophoretic mobility shift.  相似文献   

13.
Cyclic GMP serves as the second messenger in visual transduction, linking photon absorption by rhodopsin to the activity of ion channels. Synthesis of cGMP in photoreceptors is supported by a pair of retina-specific guanylyl cyclases, retGC1 and -2. Two neuronal calcium sensors, GCAP1 and GCAP2, confer Ca(2+) sensitivity to guanylyl cyclase activity, but the importance and the contribution of each GCAP is controversial. To explore this issue, the gene GUCA1B, coding for GCAP2, was disrupted in mice, and the capacity for knock-out rods to regulate retGC and generate photoresponses was tested. The knock-out did not compromise rod viability or alter outer segment ultrastructure. Levels of retGC1, retGC2, and GCAP-1 expression did not undergo compensatory changes, but the absence of GCAP2 affected guanylyl cyclase activity in two ways; (a) the maximal rate of cGMP synthesis at low [Ca(2+)] dropped 2-fold and (b) the half-maximal rate of cGMP synthesis was attained at a higher than normal [Ca(2+)]. The addition of an antibody raised against mouse GCAP2 produced similar effects on the guanylyl cyclase activity in wild type retinas. Flash responses of GCAP2 knock-out rods recovered more slowly than normal. Knock-out rods became more sensitive to flashes and to steps of illumination but tended to saturate at lower intensities, as compared with wild type rods. Therefore, GCAP2 regulation of guanylyl cyclase activity quickens the recovery of flash and step responses and adjusts the operating range of rods to higher intensities of ambient illumination.  相似文献   

14.
Many of the physiological effects of the signaling molecule nitric oxide are mediated by the stimulation of the NO-sensitive guanylyl cyclase. Activation of the enzyme is achieved by binding of NO to the prosthetic heme group of the enzyme and the initiation of conformational changes. So far, the rate of NO dissociation of the purified enzyme has only been determined spectrophotometrically, whereas the respective deactivation, i.e. the decline in enzymatic activity, has only been determined in cytosolic fractions and intact cells. Here, we report on the deactivation of purified NO-sensitive guanylyl cyclase determined after addition of the NO scavenger oxyhemoglobin or dilution. The deactivation rate corresponded to a half-life of the NO/guanylyl cyclase complex of approximately 4 s, which is in good agreement with the spectrophotometrically measured NO dissociation rate of the enzyme. The deactivation rate of the enzyme determined in platelets yielded a much shorter half-life indicating either partial damage of the enzyme during the purification procedure or the existence of endogenous deactivation accelerating factors. YC-1, a component causing sensitization of guanylyl cyclase toward NO, inhibited deactivation of guanylyl cyclase, resulting in an extremely prolonged half-life of the NO/guanylyl cyclase complex of more than 10 min. The deactivation of an ATP-utilizing guanylyl cyclase mutant was almost unaffected by YC-1, indicating the existence of a special structure within the catalytic domain required for YC-1 binding or for the transduction of the YC-1 effect. In contrast to the wild type enzyme, YC-1 did not increase NO sensitivity of this mutant, clearly establishing inhibition of deactivation as the underlying mechanism of the NO sensitizer YC-1.  相似文献   

15.
1. Plasma membranes have been purified 17-fold from mouse parotid gland homogenates prepared in hypertonic sucrose media using differential centrifugation. The method is fast and simple. The membranes were characterised by electron microscopy, enzyme composition and chemical composition. Further purification was achieved by isopycnic centrifugation in discontinuous sucrose gradients. 2. The purified membranes contain an adenylate cyclase activity which is stimulated by isoproterenol and fluoride. Only 50% of the total adenylate cyclase activity sedimented in the plasma membrane fraction. The rest of the activity resided in the crude nuclear and mitochondrial pellets. However, this adenylate cyclase activity was not associated with these organelles but with membrane fragments in the pellets. Purified nuclei did not contain adenylate cyclase activity. 3. Adenylate cyclase activity was also localised by electron microscopic cytochemistry. Besides being found at the plasma membrane, large amounts of adenylate cyclase were found in a small proportion of the vesicles within the acinar cells, which appeared to be secondary lysosomes. 4. Adenylate cyclase activities, under standard assay conditions, are proportional to the time of incubation and the concentration of enzyme. The enzyme requires both Mg-2+ and CA-2+ for activity. Isoproterenol increased activity 2-fold and this increase is abolished by beta-adrenergic blocking agents.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of magnesium and sodium ions on adenylate cyclase activity in plasma membranes from chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa were studied. It was found that the increase in magnesium chloride concentration from 5 to 40 mM results in the stimulation (4.1-fold) of the adenylate cyclase activity. The increase in sodium chloride concentration up to 150 mM stimulated the enzyme activity 2-fold. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by magnesium and sodium ions was less pronounced in the eggshell gland. GTP did not activate adenylate cyclase. The activating effect of magnesium and sodium ions was accompanied by the attenuation of the enzyme sensitivity to NaF, guanylyl imidodiphosphate and isoproterenol. Activation by guanylyl imidodiphosphate was completely abolished in the presence of 40 mM magnesium chloride. It is assumed that high concentrations of the salt promote subunit dissociation of the adenylate cyclase regulatory protein and its interaction with the catalytic subunit in the presence of endogenous nucleotides. The differences in the adenylate cyclase sensitivity to cations in chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa correlate with the amount of pertussis toxin substrate.  相似文献   

17.
Protein-protein interactions mediated by the Src homology 3 (SH3) domain have been implicated in the regulation of receptor functions for subcellular localization of proteins and the reorganization of cytoskeleton. The experiments described in this article begin to identify the interaction of the SH3 domain of Src tyrosine kinase with the guanylyl cyclase C receptor after activation with Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin (ST). Only one of two post-translationally modified forms of guanylyl cyclase C from T84 colonic carcinoma cells bind to GST-SH3 fusion protein of Src and Hck tyrosine kinases. Interestingly, the GST-Src-SH3 fusion protein showed 2-fold more affinity to native guanylyl cyclase C in solution than the GST-Hck-SH3 fusion protein. The affinity of the GST-Src-SH3 fusion protein to guanylyl cyclase C increased on desensitization of receptor in vivo. An in vitro cyclase assay in the presence of GST-Src-SH3 fusion protein indicated inhibition of the catalytic activity of guanylyl cyclase C. The catalytic domain recombinant protein (GST-GCD) of guanylyl cyclase C could pull-down a 60-kDa protein that reacted with Src tyrosine antibody and also showed autophosphorylation. These data suggest that SH3 domain-mediated protein-protein interaction with the catalytic domain of guanylyl cyclase C inhibited the cyclase activity and that such an interaction, possibly mediated by Src tyrosine kinase or additional proteins, might be pivotal for the desensitization phenomenon of the guanylyl cyclase C receptor.  相似文献   

18.
19.
An elicitor-inducible sesquiterpene cyclase, which catalyzes the conversion of farnesyl diphosphate to 5-epi-aristolochene (IM Whitehead, DR Threlfall, DF Ewing [1989] Phytochemistry 28:775-779) and representing a committed step in the phytoalexin biosynthetic pathway in tobacco, was purified by a combination of hydrophobic interaction, anion exchange, hydroxylapatite, and chromatofocusing chromatography. From 2 kilograms of elicited tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cells, approximately 500 micrograms of cyclase protein was purified, representing greater than a 130-fold increase in the specific activity of the enzyme and a 4% recovery of the starting activity. The purified enzyme resolved as two major polypeptides of 60 and 62 kilodaltons by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Biochemical characterization of the enzyme activity included an absolute requirement for magnesium, an isoelectric point of 4.5 to 4.9, and a Km for farnesyl diphosphate of 2 to 5 micromolar. The purified cyclase protein was used to generate mouse polyclonal antibodies which efficiently inhibited cyclase activity in an in vitro assay. Electrophoresis of extracts from elicitor-treated cells or purified cyclase enzyme on native polyacrylamide gels separated the cyclase enzyme into four polypeptides as shown by immunoblot analysis using poly- and monoclonal antibodies. Proportionate cyclase enzyme activity comigrated with those polypeptides. No cyclase polypeptides were detectable in extracts of control cells by immunoblot analysis. However, immunoblot analysis of proteins from elicitor-treated cells using four independent monoclonal antibody lines and the polyclonal antibodies detected the same polypeptides, regardless of whether the proteins were separated by native or SDS-PAGE. The results suggest an induction of multiple cyclase polypeptides in elicitor-treated cells resulting from either the expression of multiple genes or multiple post-translational processing events.  相似文献   

20.
Association of guanylate cyclase with the axoneme of retinal rods   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Axonemes were isolated from purified bovine retinal rod outer segments by dissolving the outer segment membranes in detergent and separating the axonemes by centrifugation on a linear detergent-containing sucrose density gradient. Guanylate cyclase (GTP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.61.2) activity was concentrated in the axoneme fraction. Guanylate cyclase eluted in the void volume when detergent-solubilized rod outer segments were subjected to exclusion chromatography on Sepharose 4B. Attempts to extract guanylate cyclase from isolated axonemes with salt, EDTA, base and other reagents were successful.  相似文献   

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