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1.
Cholera toxin, through adenylate cyclase activation reproduced cyclic AMP-mediated effects of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in dog thyroid slices, i.e protein iodination, [1-14C]glucose-oxidation and hormone secretion. Iodide and carbamylcholine decreased the cyclic AMP accumulation induced by cholera toxin as well as by TSH, which supports the hypothesis of an action of these agents beyond the steps of hormone-receptor and receptor-adenylate cyclase interaction. Cooling to 20°C did not impair the TSH induced cyclic AMP accumulation in thyroid slices, but completely suppressed the cholera toxin effect.This observation has been extended to other hormones and target tissues, such as the parathyroid hormone (PTH) (kidney cortex), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) (adrenal cortex)_and luteinizing hormone (LH) (ovary systems). As in thyroid, cooling dissociated the cholera toxin and hormonal effects on cyclic AMP accumulation. In homogenate, cooling decreased cyclic AMP generation in the presence of cholera toxin but at 20°C and 16°C a cholera toxin stimulation was still observed. These results bear strongly against the hypothesis that the glycoprotein hormones TSH and LH activate adenylate cyclase by a mechanism identical to cholera toxin.  相似文献   

2.
ADP-ribosylation of membrane proteins from rabbit small intestinal epithelium was investigated following incubation of membranes with [32P]NAD and cholera toxin. Cholera toxin catalyzes incorporation of 32P into three proteins of 40 kDA, 45 kDa and 47 kDa located in the brush-border membrane. In contrast, basal lateral membranes do not contain any protein which becomes labeled in a toxin-dependent manner when incubated with cholera toxin and [32P]NAD. The modification of membrane proteins from brush border occurred in spite of the virtual absence in these membranes of adenylate cyclase activatable either by cholera toxin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) or fluoride. The three agents activated adenylate cyclase when crude plasma membrane were used. Cholera toxin activated fivefold at 10 micrograms/ml. Vasoactive intestinal peptide activated at concentrations from 10-300 nM, the maximal stimulation being sixfold. Fluoride activated 10-fold at 10 mM. When basal lateral membranes were assayed for adenylate cyclase it was found that, with respect to the crude membranes, the specific activity of fluoride-activated enzyme was 3.3-fold higher, VIP stimulated enzyme was maintained while cholera-toxin-stimulated enzyme showed half specific activity. Moreover, while fluoride stimulated ninefold and VIP stimulated fivefold, cholera toxin only stimulated twofold at the highest concentration. The results suggest that the activation by cholera toxin of adenylate cyclase located at the basal lateral membrane requires ADPribosylation of proteins in the brush border membrane.  相似文献   

3.
The activation of adenylate cyclase in lysed pigeon erythrocytes requires, among several cofactors, a nucleotide which may be ATP, GTP, or many other triphosphates. However, after removal of endogenous nucleotides by gel filtration or by adsorption onto charcoal the requirement can be met only by GTP, or an analog of GTP. The GTP is required during the activation of the cyclase by toxin even if GTP is also included during the subsequent adenylate cyclase assay, conducted without toxin. In the presence of GTP it is possible to assay for the cytosolic protein that is also required for the action of cholera toxin. By gel filtration, its apparent molecular weight is 15,000–20,000.  相似文献   

4.
Cholera toxin, or peptide A1 from the toxin, activates adenylate cyclase solubilized from rat liver with Lubrol PX, provided that cell sap, NAD+, ATP and thiol-group-containing compounds are present. The activation is abolished by antisera to whole toxin, but not to subunit B.  相似文献   

5.
The stimulation of intestinal adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin (CT) was studied in normal and malnourished rats 4 to 24 hr after a 30-min incubation of intestinal loops with the toxin. Whereas in control rats the enzyme activity returned to basal levels after 12 hr of incubation, in malnourished rats the activity of the enzyme remained significantly elevated even after 24 hr of the initial incubation. Malnourished animals had a reduced turnover rate of intestinal cells as determined by thymidine kinase activity. The delayed turnover of intoxicated cells may account for continuous activation of mucosal adenylate cyclase and possibly for prolongation of diarrhea in malnutrition.  相似文献   

6.
Reaction of cholera toxin with NN'-bis(carboximidomethyl)tartaramide dimethyl ester produced several cross-linked species that had subunit B (which binds to the cell surface) and peptides A1 (which activates adenylate cyclase) and A2 all covalently joined together. This cross-linded material had activity with pigeon erythrocytes that was comparable in all respects with that of native toxin. It activated the adenylate cyclase of whole cells, showing a characteristic lag phase, and this activation was increased if the cells had been preincubated with ganglioside GM1, but abolished if the protein had been preincubated with the ganglioside. It activated the enzyme in lysed cells more strongly and without the lag phase. These results show that the toxin is active even when peptide A1 cannot be released from the rest of the molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Influence of cholera toxin on the regulation of adenylate cyclase by GTP.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In the presence of NAD+, cholera toxin activates adenylate cyclase in membranes of S49 mouse lymphoma cells. The following evidence supports the hypothesis that the toxin acts by inhibiting a specific GTPase associated with a guanyl nucleotide regulatory component of hormone-responsive cyclase: 1. GTP alone markedly stimulates cyclase activity in toxin-treated, but not in untreated membranes; 2. The poorly hydrolyzable GTP analog, guanosine 5′-(β,γ-imino) triphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), stimulates cyclase equally well in toxin-treated and untreated membranes; 3. Cyclase activation by isoproterenol plus GTP persists in toxin-treated membranes, but not in controls, after addition of propranolol; 4. GTP is a more potent competitive inhibitor of the irreversible activation of cyclase by Gpp(NH)p in toxin-treated than in untreated membranes.  相似文献   

8.
It has been suggested that ras proteins are involved in the transmembrane signaling mechanism and they share structural features with GTP-binding proteins. To identify the role of ras oncogene and it's products in the coupling mechanisms of GTP-binding proteins to adenylate cyclase, we examined effect of NaF, cholera toxin and forskolin in normal and v-Ki-ras transformed NIH/3T3 fibroblast cells. In transformants, adenylate cyclase activity was markedly enhanced by NaF and cholera toxin, in contrast to normal cells. It is suggested that ras oncogene proteins plays enhancing role in coupling of GTP-binding proteins to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

9.
Incubation at 41 degrees C stops the proliferation of tsK-NRK rat kidney cells in serum-deficient medium by inactivating the mitogenic/oncogenic thermolabile viral K-RAS protein that is produced in these cells. Dropping the temperature to 36 degrees C reactivates the viral K-RAS protein which stimulates the serum-starved quiescent cells to resume proliferating without added serum factors. Here it is shown that while the reactivated viral protein does not by itself significantly stimulate adenylate cyclase, it greatly increases the stimulability of adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin. The data suggest that the viral K-RAS protein directly or indirectly affects adenylate cyclase by inactivating the Gi inhibitory component of the membrane associated enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Involvement of acidic cell compartments in processing and action of cholera toxin (CT) in rat liver has been examined using subcellular fractionation. Liver cell fractions prepared various times after CT injection display, after a lag phase, a progressive increase in adenylate cyclase activity, detectable earlier in Golgi-endosomal fractions (20 min) than in plasma membrane fractions (30 min), with a maximum (3-fold basal activity) achieved by 60-90 min. Endosomes containing in vivo internalized CT display a time-dependent increase in their ability to bind anti-A-subunit antibodies and to stimulate exogenous adenylate cyclase, which kinetically parallels the generation of A1 peptide, suggesting a translocation of A-subunit (or A1 peptide) across the endosomal membrane. In vivo chloroquine treatment inhibits endocytosis of CT taken up into the liver, lengthens the lag phase for adenylate cyclase activation by CT, and reduces by 3- to 10-fold the apparent affinity of the toxin for the enzyme. Incubation of endosomes containing internalized toxin at 37 degrees C under isotonic conditions results in a pH-dependent increase in generation of A1 peptide, membrane translocation of A-subunit (or A1 peptide), and degradation of toxin, with a maximum at pH 5. Addition of ATP, by decreasing the internal endosomal pH, stimulates both generation of the A1 peptide and degradation of toxin at pH 6-8. It is concluded that activation of adenylate cyclase by CT in intact liver requires association and subsequent processing of toxin in an acidic cell compartment, presumably endosomal.  相似文献   

11.
Cholera toxin stimulates adenylate cyclase in rat liver after intravenous injection. The stimulation follows a short latent period of 10min, and maximum stimulation was attained at 120min. Half-maximal stimulation was achieved at 35min. In contrast with this lengthy time course in the intact cell, adenylate cyclase in broken-cell preparations of rat liver in vitro were maximally stimulated by cholera toxin (in the presence of NAD+) in 20min with half-maximal stimulation in 8min. Binding of cholera toxin to cell membranes by the B subunits is followed by translocation of the A subunit into the cell or cell membrane, and separation of the A1 polypeptide chain from the A2 chain by disulphide-bond reduction, and finally activation of adenylate cyclase by the A1 chain and NAD+. As the binding of cholera toxin is rapid, two possible rate-limiting steps could be the determinants of the long time course of action. These are translocation of the A1 chain from the outside of the cell membrane to its site of action (this includes the time required for separation from the whole toxin) or the availability of NAD+ for activation. When NAD+ concentrations in rat liver were elevated 4-fold, by the administration of nicotinamide, no change in the rate of activation of adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin was observed. Thus the intracellular concentration of NAD+ is not rate-limiting and the major rate-limiting determinant in intact cells must be between the time of toxin binding to the cell membrane and the appearance of subunit A1 at the enzyme site.  相似文献   

12.
There are two functionally and physically distinct types of guanyl nucleotide site associated with the adenylate cyclase system of pigeon erythrocytes. One is on the well known regulatory protein, N, that mediates the adenylate cyclase response to hormones, guanyl nucleotides and fluoride, and is the substrate for ADP-ribosylation by cholera toxin. We now describe a second site that must be occupied by GTP or an analog of GTP before N can be ADP-ribosylated. We call this second site S. It differs from the site on N in many respects. GTP appears to be rapidly hydrolyzed when it is bound to N but not when bound at S. GTP analogs such as guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) bind stably to both sites but the binding of GTP gamma S to N is more sensitive to EDTA and is more easily prevented by guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate). The nucleotide binding only to S is promoted by the cytosolic protein required by cholera toxin. Isoproterenol decreases GTP gamma S binding to S while indirectly increasing GTP gamma S binding to N. By adjusting the binding conditions, the nucleotides bound functionally to N and S can be varied independently and then the effect of ADP-ribosylation upon the adenylate cyclase activity can be seen to depend on the type of nucleotide bound to N. This activity rises, falls slightly, or remains at zero, if N is occupied by GTP, GTP gamma S, or guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Incubation of fat cell ghosts with activated cholera toxin, nucleoside triphosphate, cytosol, and NAD results in increased adenylate cyclase activity and the transfer of ADP-ribose to membrane proteins. The major ADP-ribose protein comigrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels with the putative GTP-binding protein of pigeon erythrocyte membranes (Mr 42 000), which is also ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin. The treatment with cholera toxin enhances the stimulation of the fat cell membrane adenylate cyclase by GTP, but the stimulation by guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate is unaltered. Subsequent stimulation of fat cell adenylate cyclase by 10 micrometers epinephrine is not particularly affected. These changes were qualititatively the same for membranes isolated from fat cells of hypothyroid rats. Although the cyclase of these membranes has a reduced response to epinephrine, guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate or GTP, as compared to euthyroid rat fat cell membranes, the defect is not rectified by toxin treatment and cannot be explained by a deficiency in the cholera toxin target.  相似文献   

14.
The ability of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and cholera toxin to increase cyclic AMP levels is potentiated 6-fold when normal rat kidney (NRK) cells are treated with picolinic acid or histidinol, or grown in isoleucine-deficient medium. The response to (-)-isoproterenol is increased 2-fold in NRK cells treated with picolinic acid but not in cells subjected to isoleucine deprivation. The increase in agonist responsiveness is time-dependent, reaches its maximum at 40 h, and is quickly reversed following removal of picolinic acid or addition of medium with normal amounts of isoleucine. The cholera toxin response is also increased about 7-fold in simian virus 40-transformed NRK cells and Moloney sarcoma virus-transformed NRK cells treated with picolinic acid. GTP-stimulated, but not fluoride-stimulated, adenylate cyclase activities are increased in membranes from NRK cells treated with picolinic acid or starved for isoleucine, indicating that the increased response is due, at least in part, to a specific potentiation of GTP-dependent functions of the adenylate cyclase system. The results demonstrate that GTP-dependent events in hormonal stimulation of adenylate cyclase can be altered in intact cells to modulate hormonal enhancement of cyclic AMP production.  相似文献   

15.
Cholera toxin, using [32P]NAD+ as substrate, specifically radiolabels at least two proteins in plasma membranes of wild type S49 mouse lymphoma cells. The toxin-specific substrates are detectable by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as bands corresponding to molecular weights of 45,000 and a doublet of 52,000 to 53,000. Membranes of two other cell types exhibit similar patterns of radiolabeled bands specifically produced by incubation with cholera toxin: the "uncoupled" variant S49 cell, which possesses adenylate cyclase activity unresponsive to hormones, and the HTC4 rat hepatoma cell, which lacks detectable catalytic adenylate cyclase activity but contains components of the cyclase system necessary for regulation by guanyl nucleotides and NaF. Little or no toxin-specific radiolabeling is observed in membranes of a fourth cell type, the adenylate cyclase activity-deficient S49 variant, which functionally lacks components of the cyclase system involved in cholera toxin action and regulation by guanyl nucleotides and NaF. The toxin-specific labeling pattern is not observed in membranes prepared from wild type S49 cells previously treated with cholera toxin in culture. One or both of the toxin substrates thus appears to be involved in regulation of adenylate cyclase by guanyl nucleotides and fluoride ion.  相似文献   

16.
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18.
A hypothesis on the role of the hormone-induced desensitization of adenylate cyclase is proposed. It is suggested that the desensitization process could provide the cell with a highly efficient cyclic AMP system for transmitting hormone stimulus without requiring a large energy consumption. Theoretical considerations show that in fact the desensitization phenomenon allows the cyclic AMP system to present a good compromise between the efficiency and economy requirements of the cells.  相似文献   

19.
Cholera toxin was found to stimulate adenylate cyclase activity in washed membrane of pigeon erythrocytes in the presence of dithiothreitol and NAD. When tested with isolated cholera toxin components, the stimulatory activity was found with subunit A or polypeptide A1 derived from this subunit, but not with A2 or subunit B. On a molar basis, polypeptide A1 was approximately four times more active than cholera toxin. Dithiothreitol was not required in the action of polypeptide A1, suggesting that the reagent was needed only to release A1 from subunit A or the holotoxin for their action on adenylate cyclase. The single SH group in polypeptide A1 was not involved in the activity of the peptide, since chemical modification of the thiol group did not alter the stimulatory activity of the peptide. The presence of NAD was, however, essential for the activation of adenylate cyclase with cholera toxin, subunit A, or polypeptide A1. Elevation of the adenylate cyclase activity was also observed when the intact pigeon erythrocytes were incubated with polypeptide A1, although a 30-fold molar excess of A1 over that of holotoxin was required for the same level of activation.  相似文献   

20.
In IPC-81 cells, the adenylyl-cyclase activation by cholera toxin produces an elevation of cAMP that causes a rapid cytolysis. A resistant clone with deficient cholera toxin-induced cyclase activity (yet sensitive to cAMP) showed a rapid decrease in the amount of membrane-bound Gs alpha (42-47 kDa) detectable soon after ADP-ribosylation of these proteins; pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins (41 kDa) were not affected. Resistant cells showed a rapid decrease of Gs alpha that is consistent with the finding that cAMP did not accumulate in these cells. Cholera toxin treatment of resistant cells had long-lasting effects (several weeks) on the level of Gs alpha in the cell membrane. The duration of Gs alpha decrease does not correspond to the probable life of catalytically active cholera toxin in the cells, and suggests a regulated process more complex than a proteolytic degradation targeted on ADP-ribosylated molecules.  相似文献   

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