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1.
Abstract: The effect of protein kinase A on the catalytic activity and phosphorylation of brain tryptophan hydroxylase was examined. Stimulation of endogenous protein kinase A by cyclic AMP or its analogues, dibutyryl-cyclic AMP and 8-thiomethyl-cyclic AMP, failed to activate tryptophan hydroxylase. The activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by calcium/calmodulin-phosphorylating conditions was not modified by cyclic AMP. Endogenous protein kinase A phosphorylated a large number of proteins and tryptophan hydroxylase could be identified as one substrate by sucrose gradient centrifugation, immunoprecipitation, and immunoblotting. These results indicate that tryptophan hydroxylase is phosphorylated by protein kinase A in brain and question whether this protein kinase exerts direct regulatory influence over tryptophan hydroxylase activity via phosphorylation.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract— The incubation of brain stem slices from adult rats in a K+-enriched medium containing a 5-HT uptake inhibitor (fluoxetine) significantly increased their capacity to synthesize 5-HT from tryptophan. The K+-induced stimulation of 5-HT synthesis was at least partly dependent on the depletion of the indoleamine in tissues since: (1) a good correlation was found between the respective changes in 5-HT release and synthesis evoked by high K+ concentrations in the presence of various 5-HT uptake inhibitors; (2) the modifications in endogenous 5-HT levels produced by in vim treatments with drugs (reserpine, pargyline) or by incubating slices with 5-HT altered the stimulating effect of high K+ concentrations and fluoxetine on 5-HT synthesis; (3) the replacement of Ca2+ by Co2+ (4 mM) or EGTA (0.1 mM) in the incubating medium completely prevented the increased 5-HT release and synthesis evoked by high K+ concentrations and fluoxetine. The extraction of tryptophan hydroxylase from incubated tissues revealed that the increased 5-HT synthesis occurring in K+-enriched medium was associated with an activation of this enzyme. Kinetic analyses indicated that this activation resulted from an increase in the Vmax of tryptophan hydroxylase, its apparent affinities for both tryptophan and 6-MPH4 being not significantly affected. In contrast to the tryptophan hydroxylase from tissues incubated in normal physiological medium, the activated enzyme from tissues depolarized by K+ was hardly stimulated by Ca2+-mediated phosphorylating conditions. This led to the proposition of a hypothetical model by which the Ca2+ influx produced by the neuronal depolarization would trigger the activity of a Ca2+-dependent protein kinase capable of activating tryptophan hydroxylase. Although this sequence is still largely speculative it must be emphasized that, as expected from such a model, the regional differences in the K+-evoked activation of tryptophan hydroxylase in slices (cerebral cortex > brain stem > spinal cord) were parallel to those of the Ca2+-dependent protein phosphorylation (r= 0.92) and those of the activating effect of phosphorylating conditions on soluble tryptophan hydroxylase (r= 0.96).  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: Tryptophan hydroxylase, the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter serotonin, is activated by protein kinase A and calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. One important aspect of the regulation of any enzyme by a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cascade, and one that is lacking for tryptophan hydroxylase, lies in the identification of its site of phosphorylation by protein kinases. Recombinant forms of brain tryptophan hydroxylase were expressed as glutathione S -transferase fusion proteins and exposed to protein kinase A. This protein kinase phosphorylates and activates full-length tryptophan hydroxylase. The inactive regulatory domain of the enzyme (corresponding to amino acids 1–98) was also phosphorylated by protein kinase A. The catalytic core of the hydroxylase (amino acids 99–444), which expresses high levels of enzyme activity, was neither phosphorylated nor activated by protein kinase A. Conversion of serine-58 to arginine resulted in the expression of a full-length tryptophan hydroxylase mutant that, although remaining catalytically active, was neither phosphorylated nor activated by protein kinase A. These results indicate that the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by protein kinase A is mediated by the phosphorylation of serine-58 within the regulatory domain of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium-dependent activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by ATP and magnesium   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Tryptophan hydroxylase [EC 1.14.16.4; L-tryptophan, tetrahydropteridine: oxygen oxidoreductase (5-hydroxylating)] in rat brainstem extracts is activated 2 to 2.5-fold by ATP and Mg++ in the presence of subsaturating concentrations of the cofactor 6-methyltetrahydropterin (6MPH4). The activation of tryptophan hydroxylase under these conditions results from a reduction in the apparent Km for 6MPH4 from 0.21 mM to 0.09 mM. The activation requires Mg++ and ATP but is not dependent on either cAMP or cGMP. The effect of ATP and Mg++ on enzyme activity was enhanced by μM concentrations of Ca++ and totally blocked by EGTA. These data suggest that tryptophan hydroxylase can be activated by a cyclic nucleotide independent protein kinase which requires low calcium concentrations for the expression of its activity.  相似文献   

5.
Role of calmodulin in the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Tryptophan hydroxylase can be activated 2.0- to 2.5-fold in vitro by ATPa dn Mg2+. This apparent phosphorylation effect is not dependent on cyclic nucleotides but is dependent on the presence of calcium. The activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by ATP-Mg2+ reduces the apparent Km of the enzyme for its cofactor, 6-methyltetrahydropterin, from 0.21 to 0.09 mM. The addition of certain antipsychotic drugs known to bind to calmodulin in a phosphorylation reaction mixture prevents the activation to tryptophan hydroxylase by ATP-Mg2+ in the concentration-dependent fashion. External addition of purified calmodulin protects the enzyme from the drug-induced effects. Preparation of calmodulin-free tryptophan hydroxylase by affinity chromatography on fluphenazine-Sepharose 4B yields an enzyme that is no longer activated by ATP-Mg2+, whereas the readdition of calmodulin to a calmodulin-free enzyme restores the responsiveness of tryptophan hydroxylase to ATP-Mg2+. This restoration is dependent on Ca2+. Taken together, these results indicate that the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by phosphorylating conditions is dependent on both calcium and calmodulin.  相似文献   

6.
Tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine biosynthesis, is activated following phosphorylation by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (largely by decreasing the Km of the enzyme for its pterin co-substrate). Following its phosphorylation activation in rat striatal homogenates, we find that tyrosine hydroxylase is inactivated by two distinct processes. Because cAMP is hydrolyzed in crude extracts by a phospho-diesterase, cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity declines following a single addition of cAMP. When tyrosine hydroxylase is activated under these transient phosphorylation conditions, inactivation is accompanied by a reversion of the activated kinetic form (low apparent Km for pterin co-substrate, ≤0.2 mM) to the kinetic form characteristic of the untreated enzyme (high apparent Km, ≥1.0 mM). This inactivation is readily reversed by the subsequent addition of cAMP. When striatal tyrosine hydroxylase is activated under constant phosphorylation conditions (incubated with purified cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit), however, it is also inactivated. This second inactivation process is irreversible and is characterized kinetically by a decreasing apparent Vmax with no change in the low apparent Km for pterin co-substrate (0.2 mM). The latter inactivation process is greatly attenuated by gel filtration which resolves a low-molecular-weight inactivating factor(s) from the tyrosine hydroxylase. These results are consistent with a regulatory mechanism for tyrosine hydroxylase involving two processes: in the first case, reversible phosphorylaton and dephos-phorylation and, in the second case, an irreversible loss of activity of the phosphorylated form of tyrosine hydroxylase.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Incubation of rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells with 4β-phorbol-12β-myristate-13α-acetate (PMA), an activator of Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C), or forskolin, an activator of adenylate cyclase, is associated with increased activity and enhanced phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase. Neither the activation nor increased phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase produced by PMA is dependent on extracellular Ca2+. Both activation and phosphorylation of the enzyme by PMA are inhibited by pretreatment of the cells with trifluo-perazine (TFP). Treatment of PC 12 cells with l-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol also leads to increases in the phosphorylation and enzymatic activity of tyrosine hydroxylase; 1, 2-diolein and 1, 3-diolein are ineffective. The effects of forskolin on the activation and phosphorylation of the enzyme are independent of Ca2+ and are not inhibited by TIT5. Forskolin elicits an increase in cyclic AMP levels in PC 12 cells. The increases in both cyclic AMP content and the enzymatic activity and phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase following exposure of PC 12 cells to different concentrations of forskolin are closely correlated. In contrast, cyclic AMP levels do not increase in cells treated with PMA. Tryptic digestion of the phosphorylated enzyme isolated from untreated cells yields four phosphopeptides separable by HPLC. Incubation of the cells in the presence of the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin increases the phosphorylation of three of these tryptic peptides. However, in cells treated with either PMA or forskolin, there is an increase in the phosphorylation of only one of these peptides derived from tyrosine hydroxylase. The peptide phosphorylated in PMA-treated cells is different from that phosphorylated in forskolin-treated cells. The latter peptide is identical to the peptide phosphorylated in dibutyryl cyclic AMP-treated cells. These results indicate that tyrosine hydroxylase is activated and phosphorylated on different sites in PC 12 cells exposed to PMA and forskolin and that phosphorylation of either of these sites is associated with activation of tyrosine hydroxylase. The results further suggest that cyclic AMP-dependent and Ca2+/ phospholipid-dependent protein kinases may play a role in the regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase in PC 12 cells.  相似文献   

8.
The incubation of the 35,000 g supernatant of a rat brain stem homogenate in the presence of 7.5 mM-CaC12 for 10 min at 25°C resulted in a more than 2-fold increase in its tryptophan hydroxylase activity. This activation was irreversible and involved a reduction in the molecular weight of the enzyme, from 220,000 to 160,000. The partially proteolysed tryptophan hydroxylase, in contrast to the native enzyme, could not be activated by trypsin, sodium dodecyl sulphate, phosphatidylserine or phosphorylating conditions; dithiothreitol and Fe2+ were the only compounds whose stimulating effect on the enzymatic activity was not prevented by the Ca2+ -induced proteolysis of tryptophan hydroxylase. These findings suggest that the mol. wt. 60,000 fragment removed by the Ca2+ dependent neutral proteinase plays a critical role in the regulatory properties of tryptophan hydroxylase.  相似文献   

9.
Light‐harvesting complex II (LHCII) protein phosphorylation inplant chloroplasts is under complex regulation. Combination of the invivo monitoring of LHCII protein phosphorylation (by immunoblotting)with the in vitro[γ32P]ATPphosphorylation assays revealed that the basic activation/deactivationmodel of the LHCII kinase, regulated by reversible occupation/releaseof plastoquinol at the plastoquinol oxidation (Qo) siteof the cytochrome b6f (cyt b6f) complex, isconsistent with, but not sufficient to explain the data obtainedwith isolated chloroplasts, leaf discs or intact leaves. Not onlythe light conditions but also the metabolic state of the entireplant, particularly the sugar metabolism, exerted a control overLHCII protein phosphorylation. Feeding of leaves with glucose (alsowith glutathione) activated the LHCII kinase in darkness. On the otherhand, independently of the basic activation/deactivationmechanism of the kinase, a strong inhibition of LHCII protein phosphorylationoccurred in vivo at increasing irradiances and even at lowlight conditions, depending on the metabolic state of the plant.Both the experiments with intact chloroplasts and the reconstitutionexperiments with isolated thylakoids to mimic LHCII kinase inhibition,disclosed that the kinase in its activated state (plastoquinol at theQo site of cyt b6f complex) is protected againstinhibition by thiol reductants. However, directly upon deactivationof the kinase (release of plastoquinol from the Qo site) itbecomes a target for inhibition by thiol reductants. Thus the twointerdependent regulatory systems of the LHCII kinase, the constantlyoccurring activation and deactivation on the one hand and the inhibitionby thiol reductants on the other, are strongly dependent on theconcentration of reducing equivalents in the chloroplast stroma.A scheme demonstrating the interconversion of activated, deactivated andinhibited states of the LHCII kinase in the chloroplast environmentof intact leaves is presented.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract— The activity of tryptophan hydroxylase was measured in whole homogenates of midbrain and forebrain areas of the rat brain. A significant elevation of tryptophan hydroxylase in midbrain and forebrain was found within 1 h after injection of corticosterone hemisuccinate Na salt (10mg/kg) into normal rats. A further elevation of tryptophan hydroxylase at 4 h after injection occurred only in the midbrain region. A rapid alteration of tryptophan hydroxylase was also observed following intracistemal injection of a protein synthesis inhibitor, cydoheximide. A significant depression of 50% of normal levels occurred both in midbrain and forebrain regions within 1 h. However. 4 h after injection only the midbrain tryptophan hydroxylase level was depressed, and this depression was 16% of normal levels. This temporal and spatial pattern following cydoheximide injection was not the result of changes in the ability of cydoheximide to inhibit in vivo protein synthesis since [3H]valine incorporation into protein was shown to be equally depressed at both 1 and 5 h in both the midbrain and forebrain. Puromycin blocked [3H]valine incorporation into proteins in the midbrain and forebrain. but only caused a depression of 16% of tryptophan hydroxylase in the midbrain at 4 h. The aminonucleoside derivative of puromycin has no effect on protein synthesis or on tryptophan hydroxylase. Cydoheximide had no effect on tryptophan hydroxylase in vitro. The data suggest that cydoheximide and corticosterone produce an early (1 h) effect on tryptophan hydroxylase unrelated to de novo protein synthesis in regions known to contain perikaryon (midbrain) and axon terminals (forebrain) of 5-HT-containing neurons. The later (4h) effects of these two compounds and puromycin on tryptophan hydroxylase in the perikaryon (midbrain) region of 5-HT-containing neurons probably result from alteration in de novo protein synthesis. The half time of tryptophan hydroxylase in midbrain region is calculated to be 12 h.  相似文献   

11.
S Knapp  A J Mandell  W P Bullard 《Life sciences》1975,16(10):1583-1593
Using both radioisotopic and fluorometric techniques to measure the activity of midbrain soluble enzyme, we have demonstrated that calcium activates tryptophan hydroxylase. The observed activation apparently results from an increased affinity of the enzyme for both its substrate, tryptophan, and the cofactor 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropteridine (6-MPH4). The calcium activation of tryptophan hydroxylase appears to be specific for both enzyme and effector: other brain neurotransmitter biosynthetic enzymes, such as aromatic amino acid decarboxylase(s) and tyrosine hydroxylase, are not affected by calcium (at concentrations ranging from 0.01 mM to 2.0 mM); other divalent cations, such as Ba++, Mg++, and Mn++, have no activating effect on tryptophan hydroxylase. This work suggests that increases in brain serotonin biosynthesis induced by neural activation may be due to influx of Ca++ associated with membrane depolarization and resulting activation of nerve ending tryptophan hydroxylase.  相似文献   

12.
Tryptophan hydroxylase is activated in a crude extract by addition of ATP and Mg2+. This activation is reversible and requires in addition both Ca2+ and calmodulin. Thus, phosphorylation by an endogenous calmodulin-dependent protein kinase has long been suspected. Now that we have prepared a specific polyclonal antibody to rat brain tryptophan hydroxylase, we have been able to prove that this hypothesis is correct. After incubation of purified tryptophan hydroxylase with Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase together with [gamma-32P]ATP, Mg2+, Ca2+, and calmodulin, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and blotting of the enzymes onto nitrocellulose sheets, we could label the band of tryptophan hydroxylase by the antiserum and the peroxidase technique and show by autoradiography that 32P was incorporated into this band. By measuring the radioactivity, we calculated that about 1 mol of phosphate was incorporated per 8 mol of subunits of the enzyme (2 mol of native enzyme). Because the concentration of ATP which we employed (50 microM) gives about half-maximal activation in crude extract compared to saturating ATP conditions (about 1 mM), this result indicates that the incorporation of at least 1 mol of phosphate/mol of tetramer of native tryptophan hydroxylase is required for maximal activation.  相似文献   

13.
The mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade is an important contributor to synaptic plasticity and learning in both vertebrates and invertebrates. In the nudibranch mollusk Hermissenda, phosphorylation and activation of the extracellular signal‐regulated protein kinase (ERK), a key member of a MAPK cascade, is produced by one‐trial and multitrial Pavlovian conditioning. Several signal transduction pathways that are activated by 5‐hydroxytryptamine (5‐HT) and may contribute to conditioning have been identified in type B photoreceptors. However, the regulation of ERK activity by ‘upstream’ signaling molecules has not been previously investigated in Hermissenda. In the present study we examined the role of protein kinase C (PKC) in the serotonin (5‐HT) activation of the ERK pathway. The phorbol ester TPA produced an increase in ERK phosphorylation that was blocked by the PKC inhibitors GF109203X or Gö6976. TPA‐dependent ERK phosphorylation was also blocked by the MEK1 inhibitors PD098059 or U0126. The increased phosphorylation of ERK by 5‐HT was reduced but not blocked by pretreatment with the calcium chelator BAPTA‐AM or pretreatment with Gö6976 or GF109203X. These results indicate that Ca2+‐dependent PKC activation contributes to ERK phosphorylation, although a PKC‐independent pathway is also involved in 5‐HT‐dependent ERK phosphorylation and activation.  相似文献   

14.
In the present study, we investigated the tyrosine phosphorylation of Bombyx mori prothoracic glands using phosphotyrosine‐specific antibodies and Western blot analysis. Results showed that prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) stimulates a rapid increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of at least 2 proteins in prothoracic glands, one of which was identified as extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK). The phosphorylation of another 120‐kDa protein showed dose‐ and time‐dependent stimulation by PTTH in vitro. In vitro activation of tyrosine phosphorylation was also verified by in vivo experiments: injection of PTTH into day‐6 last‐instar larvae greatly increased tyrosine phosphorylation. Treatment of prothoracic glands with the protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, sodium orthovanadate, also resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of several proteins and increased ecdysteroidogenesis. The PTTH‐stimulated phosphorylation of the 120‐kDa protein was markedly attenuated by genistein, a broad‐spectrum tyrosine kinase inhibitor, but not by HNMPA‐(AM)3, a specific inhibitor of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase. PP2, a more‐selective inhibitor of the Src‐family tyrosine kinases, partially inhibited PTTH‐stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation, but not ecdysteroidogenesis. This result implies the possibility that in addition to ERK, the phosphorylation of the 120‐kDa protein, which is not Src‐family tyrosine kinase, is likely also involved in PTTH‐stimulated ecdysteroidogenesis in B. mori. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Tubulin was shown to be an endogenous substrate of the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (kinase II), which is involved in the activation of tryptophan 5-monooxygenase [T. Yamauchi and H. Fujisawa (1983) Eur. J. Biochem.132, 15–21]. Serine and threonine were identified as the phosphate acceptor amino acids of tubulin. The Vmax of the phosphorylation of tubulin and the apparent Km value for tubulin of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II were 89 nmol phosphate transferred min?1 mg kinase II?1 and 1.7 μm, respectively. The maximum 32P incorporation into tubulin was 0.18 mol Pi/mol α-tubulin and 0.13 mol Pi/mol β-tubulin. The phosphorylation of tubulin was decreased by the denaturation of tubulin. The phosphorylation of tubulin by kinase II did not affect the assembly of microtubules.  相似文献   

16.
Many protein kinases are activated by phosphorylation in a highly conserved region of their catalytic subunit, termed activation loop. Phosphorylase kinase is constitutively active without the requirement for phosphorylation of residues in the activation loop. The residue which plays an analogous role to the phosphorylatable residues in other protein kinases is Glu182, which makes contacts to a highly conserved Arg148. In turn, Arg148 adjacent to the catalytic Asp149, enabling information to be transmitted from the activation loop to the catalytic machinery. The double mutant R148A/E182S has been kinetically characterized. The mutation resulted in an approximate 16- to 22-fold decrease in the k cat/K m value of the enzyme. The kinetic data, discussed in the light of the structural data from previously determined complexes of the enzyme, lead to the suggestion that the activation loop has a major role in substrate binding but also in correct orientation of the groups participating in catalysis.  相似文献   

17.
Ezrin is a membrane-cytoskeleton linker protein that can bind F-actin in its active conformation. Several means of regulation of ezrin's activity have been described including phosphorylation of Thr-567 and binding of L-α-phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). However, the relative contributions of these events toward activation of the protein and their potential interdependence are not known. We developed an assay based on solid-supported membranes, to which different ezrin mutants (ezrin T567A (inactive mutant), wild-type, and T567D (active pseudophosphorylated mutant)) were bound, that enabled us to analyze the influence of phosphorylation and PIP2 binding on ezrin's activation state in vitro. The lipid bilayers employed contained either DOGS-NTA-Ni to bind the proteins via an N-terminal His-tag, or PIP2, to which ezrin binds via specific binding sites located in the N-terminal region of the protein. Quantitative analysis of the binding behavior of all three proteins to the two different receptor lipids revealed that all three bind with high affinity and specificity to the two receptor lipids. Fluorescence microscopy on ezrin-decorated solid-supported membranes showed that, dependent on the mode of binding and the phosphorylation state, ezrin is capable of binding actin filaments. A clear synergism between phosphorylation and the receptor lipid PIP2 was observed, suggesting a conformational switch from the dormant to the active, F-actin binding state by recognition of PIP2, which is enhanced by the phosphorylation.  相似文献   

18.
The GA-signal transduction pathways downstream to the Gα protein in rice seedling root were investigated using in-gel kinase assay and in vitro protein phosphorylation techniques with a Gα protein defective mutant, d1. A 50-kDa protein kinase was detected downstream to Gα protein in the membrane fraction of rice seedling roots using an in-gel kinase assay with histone III-S as a substrate. The activity of a 50-kDa protein kinase increased in the wild-type rice by gibberellin (GA3) treatment, but did not change in the d1 mutant. This protein kinase activity was inhibited by the Ca2+ chelator ethyleneglycol-bis-(beta-aminoethylether)-N,N,N 1,N 1-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), protein kinase inhibitors, staurosporine and H7, and calmodulin antagonist, trifluoperazine, suggesting that the 50-kDa protein kinase is a putative plant Ca2+-dependent protein kinase (CDPK). The activity of the 50-kDa putative CDPK reached its highest level at 3 h after GA3 treatment and then gradually declined with time. In order to identify the endogenous substrate for 50-kDa putative CDPK, two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by in vitro protein phosphorylation was carried out. The phosphorylation activity of an endogenous protein PP30, identified as an unknown protein having molecular weight 30 kDa and isoelectric point 5.8 was increased in the wild-type rice by GA3 treatment, compared with the d1 mutant. The addition of GA3 treated membrane fraction, which predominantly represent a 50-kDa putative CDPK further increased the phosphorylation of PP30. Almost similar to GA3 treatment, phosphorylation activity of PP30 was also increased by the treatment with cholera toxin in the wild-type rice but not in d1 mutant. These results suggest that the 50-kDa putative CDPK and an unknown protein, PP30 promoted by GA3 treatment are G-protein mediated in rice seedling roots.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of common intracellular signals (Ca2+ and cAMP) on the activity of protein phosphorylation in mitochondria was investigated in coleoptiles of maize (Zea mays L.). Treatment of isolated mitochondria with 2 mM CaCl2 brought about an increase in the level of phosphorylation of proteins with mol ws of 74, 60, and 33 kD but considerably reduced phosphorylation of the protein with a mol wt of 51.5 kD. In the presence of Ca2+, phosphorylation of polypeptides with mol wts of 59 and 66 kD was also detected. cAMP considerably reduced phosphorylation of essentially all the investigated proteins in isolated mitochondria, which could be explained by activation of their dephosphorylation. Phosphorylation of mitochondrial proteins involves a polypeptide of about 94 kD showing kinase activity, which may be proper protein kinase or one of the subunits of a compound structure. In maize mitochondria, PP1A phosphatases were found. A hypothesis was advanced that redox-dependent phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of mitochondrial proteins plays an important role in mitochondrial signaling in higher plants.  相似文献   

20.
Protein phosphorylation may be required for plant cell response to phytohormones and other extracellular signals. Protein phosphorylation and protein kinase activity in the culm of heading time of rice (Oryza sativa L.) were studied. Before heading, protein kinase activity was increased by Ca2+ in the membrane fraction of the panicle and culm. The protein kinases with Mr of 51,900, 49,200, and 45,500 isolated from the membrane fraction of culm increased the protein phosphorylation of Mr and pI of 40,000/7.5 and 40,000/7.6 in the culm extract. The activation of protein kinases, associated with membrane and subsequent protein phosphorylation, thus appears to be involved in the regulation of heading time in rice.  相似文献   

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