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1.
Adenylate cyclase in particulate fractions from rat adrenal glands is subject to regulation by purine nucleotides, particularly guanine nucleotides. While GTP activates the enzyme, this effect is not evident in all particulate fractions. Following dialysis of the refractory fractions activation by GTP is observed, an indication that endogenous nucleotides may obscure the effects of added GTP. The analog, guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p gives considerable more activity than does GTP. GDP, on the other hand, is inhibitory, an effect revealed only in the absence of a nucleotide-regenerating solution. GDP blocks the action of both GTP and Gpp(NH)p. These results show that the gamma-phosphate of the nucleotide is required for but need not be metabolized in the activation process. At low substrate concentration (0.1 mM ATP or adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate) stimulation of the enzyme by ACTH occurs only in the presence of added guanine nucleotide (GTP or Gpp(NH)p); the hormone and nucleotide act synergistically. While both GTP and Gpp(NH)p inhibit fluoride-stimulated activity, the level of fluoride required to demonstrate such inhibition appears not to be related to the level of fluoride required for activation of the enzyme. In the presence of GTP, or GTP plus ACTH, the enzyme exhibits normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to substrate utilization (K-m equal to 0.16 mM). In the activated state, produced with ACTH plus GTP, the enzyme is less susceptible to inhibition by a species of ATP uncomplexed with Mg2+, but is more susceptible to inhibition by Mg2+. These results demonstrate that fundamental differences exist between different states of the adenylate cyclase. The difficulties in describing kinetically the regulation of adenylate cyclase systems in view of the multiple actions of nucleotides and magnesium are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Na+ has been implicated as a requirement for the inhibition of adenylate cyclase by hormones and neurotransmitters. This study examines effects of salt concentration on neuroblastoma plasma membranes that occur in the absence of an inhibitory hormone. The adenylate cyclase response to stimulatory agonists (GTP plus PGE1 (3), PGI2 or PGE2) was influenced by NaCl. As the [NaCl] increased to 150 mM, an increase in maximal activity and a decrease in apparent affinity was observed. At concentrations above 150 mM, NaCl decreased prostaglandin affinity and progressively decreased maximal activation. The GTP requirement was not altered by 30 or 150 mM NaCl in the presence of PGE1 or PGI2. The rate of Gpp(NH)p stimulated activity increased as the [NaCl] was increased in the assay. This increased rate was conserved when membranes activated in the presence of Gpp(NH)p and NaCl were reassayed in the absence of guanine nucleotide or salt. The salt evoked rate increase was proportionally greater at submaximal MgCl2 concentrations. The concentration requirement for Mg2+ was reduced by salt for adenylate cyclase in the presence of GTP or Gpp(NH)p. However, the enzyme stimulated by hormone exhibited a Mg2+ requirement that was low in the absence of salt and could not be further reduced by increased [NaCl]. Alternative monovalent cations (150 mM Li+, K+, Cs+, but not choline or tetramethylammonium) and anions (SO4=) substituted for NaCl. The observed effects were reversible upon washing the membranes and neither ouabain nor tetrodotoxin altered the response. These effects may result from a conformational alteration of a protein particularly sensitive to neutral salts in the assay.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) to stimulate irreversibly the adenylate cyclease activity of fat cell membranes has been studied by preincubating the membranes with this or related analogs followed by assaying after thoroughly washing the membranes. Activation can occur in a simple Tris-HCl buffer, in the absence of added divalent cations and in the presence of EDTA. Dithiothreitol enhances the apparent degree of activation, perhaps by stabilization. The importance of utilizing optimal conditions for stabilizing enzyme activity, and of measuring the simultaneous changes in the control enzyme, is illustrated. The organomercurial, p-aminophenylmercuric acetate, inhibits profoundly the activity of the native as well as the Gpp(NH)p-stimulated adenylate cyclase, but in both cases subsequent exposure to dithiothreitol restores fully the original enzyme activity. However, the mercurial-inactivated enzyme does not react with Gpp(NP)p, as evidenced by the subsequent restoration of only the control enzyme activity upon exposure to dithiothreitol. Thus, reaction with Gpp(NH)p requires intact sulfhydryl groups, but the activated state is not irreversibly destroyed by the inactivation caused by sulfhydryl blockade. GTP and, less effectively, GDP and ATP inhibit activation by Gpp(NH)p, but interpretations are complicated by the facts that this inhibition is overcome with time and that GTP and ATP can protect potently from spontaneous inactivation. These two nucleotides can be used in the Gpp(NH)p preincubation to stabilize the enzyme. The Gpp(NH)p-activated enzyme cannot be reversed spontaneously during prolonged incubation at 30 degrees C in the absence or presence of GTP, ATP, MgCl2, glycine, dithiothreitol, NaF or EDTA. The strong nucleophile, neutral hydroxylamine, decreases the Gpp(NH)p-activated enzyme activity and no subsequent activation is detected upon re-exposure to the nucleotide.  相似文献   

4.
Forskolin activated adenylate cyclase of purified rat adipocyte membranes in the absence of exogenous guanine nucleotides. Guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) inhibited the forskolin-activated cyclase immediately upon addition of the nucleotide at concentrations too low to activate adenylate cyclase (10(-9) to 10(-7) M). Inhibition seen with a very high concentration of Gpp(NH)p (10(-4) M) lasted for 3-4 min and was followed by an increase in the synthetic rate which remained constant for at least 15 min. The length of the transient inhibition did not vary with forskolin concentrations above 0.05 microM but low Gpp(NH)p (10(-8) M) exhibited a lengthened (6-7 min) inhibitory phase. The transient inhibitory effects of Gpp(NH)p were eliminated by 10(-7) M isoproterenol, high (40 mM) Mg2+, or preincubation with Gpp(NH)p in the absence of forskolin. While forskolin stimulated fat cell cyclase in the presence of Mn2+, this ion blocked the inhibitory effects of Gpp(NH)p. The well documented inhibitory effects of GTP on the fat cell adenylate cyclase system were also observed in the presence of forskolin. However, the inhibition by GTP is not transitory. These findings indicate that Gpp(NH)p regulation of forskolin-stimulated cyclase has at least two components: 1) an inhibitory component which acts through an undetermined mechanism and which acts immediately to decrease cyclase activity; and 2) an activating component which modulates the inhibited cyclase activity through the guanine nucleotide regulatory protein.  相似文献   

5.
The adenylate cyclase activity of a participate preparation of rat cerebral cortex is composed of at least two contributing components, one of which requires a Ca2+-dependent regulator protein (CDR) for activity (Brostrom, C. O., Brostrom, M. A., and Wolff, D. J. (1977) J. Biol. Chem.252, 5677–5685). Each of these components of the activity was activated by GTP and its synthetic analog, 5-guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p). The component of the adenylate cyclase activity which did not respond to CDR (CDR-independent activity) was stimulated approximately 60% by 100 μm GTP and 3.5-fold by 100 μm Gpp(NH)p. Concentrations of GTP required for maximal activation of the CDR-dependent adenylate cyclase component decreased as CDR concentrations in the assay were increased. Similarly, GTP pr Gpp(NH)p lowered the concentration of CDR required to produce half-maximal activation of this enzyme form. At saturating CDR concentrations, however, increases in activity were not observed with the addition of these nucleotides. The CDR-dependent component responded biphasically (activation followed by inhibition) to increasing free Ca2+ concentrations; both phases of this response occurred at lower free Ca2+ concentrations with GTP present in the assay. The concentration of chlorpromazine which inhibited activation of adenylate cyclase by CDR was elevated when GTP was present. The CDR-dependent form of activity, which is stabilized by CDR to thermal inactivation, was also stabilized by Gpp(NH)p. The increase in stability produced by Gpp(NH)p did not require the presence of CDR, and stabilization with both Gpp(NH)p and CDR was greater than that obtained with either Gpp(NH)p or CDR alone.  相似文献   

6.
A method for preparing human platelet membranes with high adenylate cyclase activity is described. Using these membranes, epinephrine and GTP individually are noted to inhibit adenylate cyclase slightly. When present together, epinephrine and GTP act synergistically to cause a 50% inhibition of basal activity. The epinephrine effect is an alpha-adrenergic process as it is reversed by phentolamine but not propranolol. The quasi-irreversible activation of adenylate cyclase by Gpp(NH)p is time, concentration, and Mg2+-dependent but is not altered by the presence of epinephrine. Adenylate cyclase activated by Gpp(NH)p, and extensively washed to remove unbound Gpp(NH)p, is inhibited by the subsequent addition of Gpp(NH)p, GTP, and epinephrine. This effect of epinephrine is also an alpha-adrenergic phenomenon. In contrast to epinephrine which inhibits the cyclase, PGE1 addition results in enzyme stimulation. PGE1 stimulation does not require GTP addition. PGE1 accelerates the rate of Gpp(NH)p-induced activation. Low GTP concentrations (less than 1 x 10(-6) M) enhance PGE1 stimulation while higher GTP concentrations cause inhibition. These observations suggest that human platelet adenylate cyclase possesses at least two guanine nucleotide sites, one which interacts with the alpha-receptor to result in enzyme inhibition and a second guanine nucleotide site which interacts with the PGE1 receptor and causes enzyme stimulation.  相似文献   

7.
We have compared the effects of Gpp[NH]p on adenylate cyclase activity of platelet membranes in SHR and WKY rats. In the presence of 50 microM forskolin, low concentrations of Gpp[NH]p (0.01 to 0.3 microM) inhibited the enzyme activity in both strains, but the maximal level of inhibition was significantly lower in SHR (- 20%). In the absence of forskolin, 0.1 microM Gpp[NH]p was inhibitory only in WKY and the adenylate cyclase activity was greater in hypertensive rats at this nucleotide concentration. Increasing Gpp[NH]p from 0.1 to 3 microM induced the same increase of enzyme activity in both strains. In SHR, GTP itself induced a lower inhibition of the enzyme stimulated by 50 microM forskolin or 0.1 microM prostaglandin E1. These results suggest that the modulatory effect of the guanine nucleotide inhibitory protein on adenylate cyclase may be reduced in platelets from SHR.  相似文献   

8.
Effects of guanine nucleotides on the adenylate cyclase activity of thyroid plasma membranes were investigated by monitoring metabolism of the radiolabeled nucleotides by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). When ATP was used as substrate with a nucleotide-regeneratign system, TSH stimulated the adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanine nucleotide. Addition of GTP and GDP equally enhanced the TSH stimulation. Effects of GTP and GDP were indistinguishable in regard to their inhibitory effects on NaF-stimulated activities. The results from TLC suggested that GDP could be converted to GTP by a nucleotide-regenerating system. Even in the absence of nucleotide-regenerating system, addition of GDP to the adenylate cyclase assay mixture int he parallel decrease in ATP levels and formation of GTP indicating that thyroid plasma membrane preparatiosn possessed a transphosphorylating activity. When an ATP analog, App[NH]p, was used as substrate without a nucleotide-regenerating system, no conversion of GDP to GTP was observed. Under such conditions, TSH did not stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity unless exogenous GTP or Gpp[NH]p was added. GDP no longer supported TSH stimulation and caused a slight decrease in the activity. GDP was less inhibitory than Gpp(NH)p to the NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest: (1) TSH stimulation of thyroid adenylate cyclase is absolutely dependent on the regulatory nucleotides. (2) In contrst to GTP, GDP cannot support the coupling of the receptor-TSH complex to the catalytic componenet of adenylate cyclase. (3) The nucleotide regulatory site is more inhibitory to the stimulation of the enzyme by NaF when occupied by Gpp[NH]p than GDP.  相似文献   

9.
Effects of guanine nucleotides on the adenylate cyclase activity of thyroid plasma membranes were investigated by monitoring metabolism of the radiolabeled nucleotides by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). When ATP was used as substrate with a nucleotide-regenerating system, TSH stimulated the adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanine nucleotide. Addition of GTP or GDP equally enhanced the TSH stimulation. Effects of GTP and GDP were indistinguishable in regard to their inhibitory effects on NaF-stimulated activities. The results from TLC suggested that GDP could be converted to GTP by a nucleotide-regenerating system. Even in the absence of a nucleotide-regeneration system, addition of GDP to the adenylate cyclase assay mixture resulted in the parallel decrease in ATP levels and formation of GTP indicating that thyroid plasma membrane preparations possessed a transphosphorylating activity. When an ATP analog, App[NH]p, was used as substrate without a nucleotide-regenerating system, no conversion of GDP to GTP was observed. Under such conditions, TSH did not stimulate the adenylate cyclase activity unless exogenous GTP or Gpp[NH]p was added. GDP no longer supported TSH stimulation and caused a slight decrease in the activity. GDP was less inhibitory than Gpp(NH)p to the NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. These results suggest: (1) TSH stimulation of thyroid adenylate cyclase is absolutely dependent on the regulatory nucleotides. (2) In contrast to GTP, GDP cannot support the coupling of the receptor-TSH complex to the catalytic component of adenylate cyclase. (3) The nucleotide regulatory site is more inhibitory to the stimulation of the enzyme by NaF when occupied by Gpp[NH]p than GDP.  相似文献   

10.
Binding and degradation of GTP and guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate (Gpp(NH)p by plasma membranes from rat liver and fat cells were investigated. Gpp(NH)p is hydrolyzed predominantly by nucleotide pyrophosphohydrolases in the membranes, whereas GTP is hydrolyzed primarily by nucleotide phosphohydrolases. These enzymes are not specific for the guanine nucleotides since co-addition of the analogous adenine nucleotides spares their hydrolysis. Both Gpp(NH)p and GTP are taken up by the membranes at sites which, to the extent that high concentrations of the corresponding adenine nucleotides fail to inhibit uptake, appear to be specific for guanine nucleotides. Gpp(NH)p taken up at these sites remains essentially intact irrespective of the degree of hydrolysis of unbound Gpp(NH)p by nucleotide pyrophosphohydrolases, indicating that the binding siteis incapable of degrading Gpp(NH)p. GTP and GDP inhibit competitively the binding of Gpp(NH)p; the binding constants for the three nucleotides are similar (0.1 to 0.4 muM) and are in the same range required for their effects on adenylate cyclase activity. Binding of the nucleotides is inhibited by sulfhydryl agents, suggesting that a sulfhydryl group is involved in the binding process. In contrast to binding of Gpp(NH)p, uptake of GTP is accompanied by substantial hydrolysis, primarily to GDP, under incubation conditions (high [ATP] plus ATP regenerating system) in which [GTP] in the medium remains essentially constant. GDP bound to the membranes is progressively hydrolyzed to 5'-GMP. Thus, GTP and Gpp(NH)p, although binding to the same specific sites, are differentially susceptible to hydrolysis at their terminal phosphates when bound to these sites. These findings are discussed in terms of the markedly different potencies of GTP and Gpp(NH)p as activators of adenylate cyclase systems.  相似文献   

11.
We have studied the effects of guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), an analogue of GTP, on the stimulation of renal cortical adenylyl cyclase by bovine parathyroid hormone (bPTH, or bPTH-(1-84)). Incubation of canine renal membranes with bPTH-(3-34), a specific antagonist of parathyroid hormone, in either the presence or absence of Gpp(NH)p, prevented subsequently added bPTH-(1-84) from stimulating adenylyl cyclase. The addition of the antagonist to a cyclase system previously activated by both bPTH-(1-84) and Gpp(NH)p, however, produced no inhibition of enzyme activity. Removal of bPTH by washing the membranes virtually abolished activity, but washing after addition of bPTH plus Gpp(NH)p did not prevent continued accumulation of cAMP. The persistence of the activity of the enzyme brought about by the addition of Gpp(NH)p plus bPTH, despite washing or addition of specific inhibitor of bPTH action, indicates that the activity of the hormone-specific adenylyl cyclase in membrane suspensions is independent of cintinuous occupancy of the peptide-hormone receptor by bPTH in the presence of the guanyl-nucleotide analogue.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The irreversible activation of adenylate cyclase by 5 guanylylimidodiphosphate, a phosphoramidate analog of 5GTP, has been examined in toad (Bufus marinus) plasma membranes using the technique of preincubating the membranes with the nucleotide under various controlled conditions followed by washing and subsequent assay of enzyme activity. Activation of adenylate cyclase by Gpp(NH)p, but not GTP, is essentially permanent and persists following extensive washing, prolonged incubation at 30°C in the absence of the nucleotide, and after dissolution of the membranes with Lubrol PX. (–)-Isoproterenol increases the activation observed with maximal concentrations of Gpp(NH)p from eight- to 10-fold (in the absence of hormone) to 50- to 100-fold; final activities as high as 10–15 nmoles of cyclic AMP per min per mg protein are achieved. The activated state obtained with isoproterenol and Gpp(NH)p is also permanent and is not inhibited by propranolol. The synergism between Gpp(NH)p and hormone requires the simultaneous presence of these compounds, and the time-dependent enhancement of activation with (–)-isoproterenol may be interrupted by addition of propranolol.The stimulation is slow, and may proceed for as long as 45 min at 30°C in the presence of maximal concentrations of Gpp(NH)p and (–)-isoproterenol. Very little activation occurs at 0°C. The time course of activation at 30°C exhibits an accelerating phase lasting from 5 to 30 min when Gpp(NH)p is added directly during assay of cyclase activity or when the membranes are preincubated for various times and washed prior to assay for a fixed time. The lag period occurs in the presence and absence of (–)-isoproterenol, although the rate of increase in velocity is greater with hormone. The length of the accelerating phase decreases with increasing concentrations of Gpp(NH)p, although it is still evident with maximal levels of Gpp(NH)p and hormone. However, prewarming the membranes at 30°C for 10 min in the absence of Gpp(NH)p or (–)-isoproterenol results in an immediate onset of linear activation at a rate which is achieved in untreated membranes only after about 10 min. The events occurring during prewarming at 30°C are readily reversible since chilling the warmed membranes to 0°C results in a time course of activation identical to that of membranes maintained at 0°C until addition of Gpp(NH)p.Activation is proportional to the concentration of Gpp(NH)p within the range of 10–8 to 10–4 mm. The apparent affinity for Gpp(NH)p increases with increasing time of incubation. The primary effect of increasing the concentration of Gpp(NH)p is to decrease the time required to obtain a maximal rate of activation.The possible relevance of these findings to the mechanism of action of Gpp(NH)p, adenylate cyclase and hormones is discussed within the context of current views of biological membranes which recognize the lateral mobility of membrane molecules.  相似文献   

13.
Binding of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) to specific receptors on membranes isolated from GH4C1 pituitary cells was inhibited by monovalent cations and guanyl nucleotides. NaCl and LiCl inhibited TRH binding by 70%, with half-maximal inhibition at 30 mM; RbCl and KCl inhibited only 10% at concentrations up to 150 mM. NaCl decreased both the apparent number and the affinity of TRH receptors and increased the rate of dissociation of TRH from both membrane and Triton X-100-solubilized receptors. Guanyl nucleotides inhibited TRH binding up to 80%, with guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) approximately GTP much greater than GDP approximately ATP greater than GMP. GTP and Gpp(NH)p exerted half-maximal effects at 0.3 microM and decreased receptor affinity to one-third of control but did not change receptor number. Gpp(NH)p accelerated the dissociation of TRH from membranes but not from solubilized receptors. The effects of NaCl were independent of temperature, while GTP and Gpp(NH)p were much more inhibitory at 22 degrees C (70%) than at 0 degrees C (10%). Inhibition by NaCl could be reversed by washing the membranes, and inhibition by GTP was reversed if membranes were chilled to 0 degrees C. The inhibitory effects of low concentrations of NaCl and Gpp(NH)p were additive. Neither monovalent cations nor GTP prevented the TRH-receptor complex from undergoing transformation from a state with rapid dissociation kinetics to a slower dissociating form. The results suggest that sodium ion regulates TRH binding by interacting with a site on the receptor, while guanyl nucleotides regulate TRH binding indirectly.  相似文献   

14.
The rate of cyclic AMP formation by rabbit heart membrane particles decreased at assay temperatures greater than 30 °C. Adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1] activity (assayed at 24 °C) decreased exponentially with time of preincubation at 30 or 37 °C, providing evidence for the instability of this enzyme. The half-life, t1/2, of the enzyme at 37 °C was 9.9 min in the absence and 4.4 min in the presence of MgCl2. The activity was most labile in the presence of 50 m m Mg2+ and 1 m m ATP, having t1/2 = 1.3min. Prior incubation of membranes with the GTP analog, guanyl-5′-yl imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p], 0.1 m m, for 30 min at 37 °C produced maximal activation of adenylate cyclase; the rate of activation was temperature dependent and was increased in the presence of isoproterenol. The Gpp(NH)p-activated enzyme had increased thermal stability, t1/2 = 170 min, and was also markedly more stable in the presence of Mg-ATP, t1/2 = 72min, than nonactivated enzyme. Preactivation with F? (30 min at 24 °C) also stabilized the activity; t1/2 > 70 min in the absence or presence of Mg-ATP. The Mg2+ concentration required for maximal activity was reduced from approximately 60 m m for nonactivated enzyme to 10 m m for the Gpp(NH)p- and F?activated enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Isoproterenol plus guanylyl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) activate frog erythrocyte adenylate cyclase to a level much higher than the sum of the activities produced by the catecholamine and the synthetic nucleotide tested separately. Propranolol, the beta-receptor blocking agent, failed to inhibit activity when added after the enzyme system had been preincubated with both isoproterenol and Gpp(NH)p. However, if propranolol was added after only one of the two components had been added, it inhibited the effect of isoproterenol. Production of the propranolol-resistant state by treatment with isoproterenol and Gpp(NH)p did not require the presence of the productive substrate (MgATP). The activated propranolol-resistant state persisted following various treatments of the enzyme preparation including extensive washings of the membranes; considerable activity was retained even after sonication or treatment with the detergent Lubrol-PX, treatments which caused inactivation of the native enzyme. Extensive dilution of the membranes following pretreatment with isoproterenol and Gpp(NH)p did not significantly reduce to the activity of the enzyme. Readdition of isoproterenol after dilution caused some inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity, indicating apparently that the beta-receptor has not become inaccessible. In contrast, preincubation with isoproterenol alone failed to render the enzyme system refractive to propranolol, and dilution readily reduced the activity to negligibly low values. Preincubation with Gpp(NH)p alone also produced a persistent active state but the activity was much lower than that obtained throught the combined action of isoproterenol and Gpp(NH)p. The findings suggest that the hormone may be required only to facilitate the initial interaction of the enzyme with Gpp(NH)p. The differences, in this respect, between Gpp(NH)p and the more labile natural nucleotide, GTP, are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Tubulin, the primary constituent of microtubules, is a GTP-binding proteins with structural similarities to other GTP-binding proteins. Whereas microtubules have been implicated as modulators of the adenylate cyclase system, the mechanism of this regulation has been elusive. Tubulin, polymerized with the hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog, 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p], can promote inhibition of synaptic membrane adenylate cyclase which persists subsequent to washing. Tubulin with Gpp(NH)p bound was slightly less potent than free Gpp(NH)p in the inhibition of adenylate cyclase, but tubulin without nucleotide bound had no effect on the enzyme. A GTP-binding protein from the rod outer segment (transducin), with Gpp(NH)p bound, was also without effect on adenylate cyclase. Tubulin (regardless of the nucleotide bound to it) did not alter the activity of the adenylate cyclase catalytic unit directly. When tubulin was polymerized with the hydrolysis-resistant photoaffinity GTP analog, [32P]P3(4-azidoanilido)-P1-5'-GTP ([32P]AAGTP), and this protein was added to synaptic membranes, AAGTP was transferred from tubulin to the inhibitory GTP-binding protein, Gi. This transfer was blocked by prior incubation of the membranes with Gpp(NH)p or covalent binding of AAGTP to tubulin prior to exposure of that tubulin to membranes. Incubation of membranes with Gpp(NH)p subsequent to incubation with tubulin-AAGTP results in a decrease in AAGTP bound to Gi and a compensatory increase in AAGTP bound to the stimulatory GTP-binding protein, Gs. Likewise, persistent inhibition of adenylate cyclase by tubulin-Gpp(NH)p could be overridden by the inclusion of 100 microM Gpp(NH)p in the assay inhibition. Whereas Gpp(NH)p promotes persistent inhibition of synaptic membrane adenylate cyclase without incubation at elevated temperatures, tubulin [with AAGTP or Gpp(NH)p bound] requires 30 s incubation at 23 degrees C to effect adenylate cyclase inhibition. Photoaffinity experiments yield parallel results. These data are consistent with synaptic membrane tubulin regulating neuronal adenylate cyclase by transferring GTP to Gi and, subsequently, to Gs.  相似文献   

17.
The GTP analog 5′-quanylyl-imidodiphosphate Gpp(NH) p potentiated the action of VIP on adenylate cyclase from intestinal epithelial cell membranes. The other nucleotides tested were also active on adenylate cyclase with the following order of potency GTP>GDP>GMP>ITP>UTP=CTP. Guanine nucleotides act by increasing the Vmax of the enzyme activity and by decreasing the Km of enzyme activation by VIP. Activation of the peptide-induced adenylate cyclase activity by Gpp (NH) p was inhibited by GTP and the other nucleotides with the same order and range of potency than those observed for their intrinsic stimulatory effect on adenylate cyclase. These data demonstrate the potent and specific action of quanine nucleotides on the VIP-sensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

18.
The possible roles of adenosine and the GTP analogue Gpp(NH)p in regulating mouse sperm adenylate cyclase activity were investigated during incubation in vitro under conditions in which after 30 min the spermatozoa are essentially uncapacitated and poorly fertile, whereas after 120 min they are capacitated and highly fertile. Adenylate cyclase activity, assayed in the presence of 1 mM ATP and 2 mM Mn2+, was determined by monitoring cAMP production. When adenosine deaminase (1 U/ml) was included in the assay to deplete endogenous adenosine, enzyme activity was decreased in the 30-min suspensions but increased in the 120-min samples (P < 0.02). This suggests that endogenous adenosine has a stimulatory effect on adenylate cyclase in uncapacitated spermatozoa but is inhibitory in capacitated cells. Since the expression of adenosine effects at low nucleoside concentrations usually requires guanine nucleotides, the effect of adding adenosine in the presence of 5 x 10–5 M Gpp(NH)p was examined. While either endogenous adenosine or adenosine deaminase may have masked low concentration (10?9?10?7 M) effects of exogenous adenosine, a marked inhibition (P < 0.001) of adenylate cyclase activity in both uncapacitated and capacitated suspensions was observed with higher concentrations (>10?5 M) of adenosine. Similar inhibition was also observed in the absence of Gpp(NH)p, suggesting the presence of an inhibitory P site on the enzyme. In further experiments, the effects of Gpp(NH)p in the presence and absence of adenosine deaminase were examined. Activity in 30-min suspensions was stimulated by the guanine nucleotide and in the presence of adenosine deaminase this stimulation was marked, reversing the inhibition seen with adenosine deaminase alone. In capacitated suspensions the opposite profile was observed, with Gpp(NH)p plus adenosine deaminase being inhibitory; again, this was a reversal of the effects obtained in the presence of adenosine deaminase alone, which had stimulated enzyme activity. These results suggest the existence of a stimulatory adenosine receptor site (Ra) on mouse sperm adenylate cyclase that is expressed in uncapacitated spermatozoa and an inhibitory receptor site (Ri) that is expressed in capacitated cells, with guanine nucleotides modifying the final response to adenosine. It is concluded that adenosine and guanine nucleotides may regulate mouse sperm adenylate cyclase activity during capacitation.  相似文献   

19.
1. Preincubation of luteal membranes with human choriogonadotropin results in the formation of an activated state of adenylate cyclase which is not reversed by washing and which is limited only by the absence of guanine nucleotides, whereas preincubation with GTP yields only a partially activated adenylate cyclase which requires the presence of both GTP and human choriogonadotropin during assay to demonstrate maximal activity. 2. Preincubation of luteal membranes with GTP and human choriogonadotropin does not lead to a synergistic increase in wash-resistant activity. 3. Luteal membranes that had been preincubated with GTP and hormone exhibited a decreasing rate of cyclic AMP synthesis during the adenylate cyclase assay incubation; addition of GTP during the assay incubation reversed the decrease. 4. Membranes that had been preincubated in the absence of guanine nucleotide and hormone showed a `burst' phase of cyclic AMP synthesis when GTP was present in the assay incubation and a `lag' phase with p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5′-[β,γ-imido]triphosphate) present in the assay. The presence of human choriogonadotropin with either nucleotide in the assay incubation eliminated the curvatures in plots observed with guanine nucleotides alone. 5. Luteal adenylate cyclase was persistently activated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG alone or in combination with human choriogonadotropin; the activation caused by p[NH]ppG alone was still increasing after 70min of preincubation, whereas that caused by p[NH]ppG in the presence of hormone was essentially complete within 10min of preincubation. 6. Luteal adenylate cyclase that had been partially preactivated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG was slightly increased in activity by the inclusion of further p[NH]ppG in the adenylate cyclase assay incubation, but more so with p[NH]ppG and hormone. Human choriogonadotropin alone caused no further increase in the activity of the partially stimulated preparation unless p[NH]ppG was also added to the assay incubation. 7. GTP decreased the activity of adenylate cyclase in membranes that had been partially preactivated in the presence of p[NH]ppG; the decrease in activity was greater when GTP and hormone were present simultaneously in the assay. 8. The results indicate that stable activation states of adenylate cyclase can be induced by preincubation of luteal membranes in vitro with human choriogonadotropin or p[NH]ppG, and that in the presence of p[NH]ppG the hormone may accelerate events subsequent to guanine nucleotide binding. Stable activation of luteal adenylate cyclase by prior exposure to GTP is not achieved. The involvement of GTPase activity and of hormone-promoted guanine nucleotide exchange in the modulation of luteal adenylate cyclase activity is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The guanine nucleotides guanosine 5'[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate (Gpp[NH]p), guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]-triphosphate (GTP gamma S), GMP, GDP and GTP stimulated the hydrolysis of inositol phospholipids by a phosphodiesterase in rat cerebral cortical membranes. Addition of 100 microM-Gpp[NH]p to prelabelled membranes caused a rapid accumulation of [3H )inositol phosphates (less than 30 s) for up to 2 min. GTP gamma S and Gpp [NH]p caused a concentration-dependent stimulation of phosphoinositide phosphodiesterase with a maximal stimulation of 2.5-3-fold over control at concentrations of 100 microM. GMP was as effective as the nonhydrolysable analogues, but much less potent (EC50 380 microM). GTP and GDP caused a 50% stimulation of the phospholipase C at 100 microM and at higher concentrations were inhibitory. The adenine nucleotides App[NH]p and ATP also caused small stimulatory effects (64% and 29%). The guanine nucleotide stimulation of inositide hydrolysis in cortical membranes was selective for inositol phospholipids over choline-containing phospholipids. Gpp[NH]p stimulated the production of inositol trisphosphate and inositol bisphosphate as well as inositol monophosphate, indicating that phosphoinositides are substrates for the phosphodiesterase. EGTA (33 microM) did not prevent the guanine nucleotide stimulation of inositide hydrolysis. Calcium addition by itself caused inositide phosphodiesterase activation from 3 to 100 microM which was additive with the Gpp[NH]p stimulation. These data suggest that guanine nucleotides may play a regulatory role in the modulation of the activity of phosphoinositide phosphodiesterase in rat cortical membranes.  相似文献   

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