首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Incubation of rat liver plasma membranes with liposomes of dioleoyl phosphatidic acid (dioleoyl-PA) led to an inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity which was more pronounced when fluoride-stimulated activity was followed than when glucagon-stimulated activity was followed. If Mn2+ (5 mM) replaced low (5 mM) [Mg2+] in adenylate cyclase assays, or if high (20 mM) [Mg2+] were employed, then the perceived inhibitory effect of phosphatidic acid was markedly reduced when the fluoride-stimulated activity was followed but was enhanced for the glucagon-stimulated activity. The inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity observed correlated with the association of dioleoyl-PA with the plasma membranes. Adenylate cyclase activity in dioleoyl-PA-treated membranes, however, responded differently to changes in [Mg2+] than did the enzyme in native liver plasma membranes. Benzyl alcohol, which increases membrane fluidity, had similar stimulatory effects on the fluoride- and glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities in both native and dioleoyl-PA-treated membranes. Incubation of the plasma membranes with phosphatidylserine also led to similar inhibitory effects on adenylate cyclase and responses to Mg2+. Arrhenius plots of both glucagon- and fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity were different in dioleoyl-PA-treated plasma membranes, compared with native membranes, with a new 'break' occurring at around 16 degrees C, indicating that dioleoyl-PA had become incorporated into the bilayer. E.s.r. analysis of dioleoyl-PA-treated plasma membranes with a nitroxide-labelled fatty acid spin probe identified a new lipid phase separation occurring at around 16 degrees C with also a lipid phase separation occurring at around 28 degrees C as in native liver plasma membranes. It is suggested that acidic phospholipids inhibit adenylate cyclase by virtue of a direct headgroup specific interaction and that this perturbation may be centred at the level of regulation of this enzyme by the stimulatory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein NS.  相似文献   

2.
Prilocaine can increase the fluidity of rat liver plasma membranes, as indicated by a fatty acid spin-probe. This led to the activation of the membrane-bound fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but not the Lubrol-solubilized activity, suggesting that increased lipid fluidity can activate the enzyme. With increasing prilocaine concentrations above 10 mM, the membrane-bound fluoride-stimulated activity was progressively inhibited, even though bilayer fluidity continued to increase and the activity of the solubilized enzyme remained unaffected. Glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase was progressively inhibited by increasing prilocaine concentrations. Prilocaine (10 mM) had no effect on the lipid phase separation occurring at 28 degrees C and attributed to those lipids in the external half of the bilayer, as indicated by Arrhenius plots of both glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and the order parameter of a fatty acid spin-probe. However, 10 mM-prilocaine induced a lipid phase separation at around 11 degrees C that was attributed to the lipids of the internal (cytosol-facing) half of the bilayer. It is suggested that prilocaine (10 mM) can selectively perturb the inner half of the bilayer of rat liver plasma membranes owing to its preferential interaction with the acidic phospholipids residing there.  相似文献   

3.
Ca2+ decreased the lipid fluidity of rat liver plasma membranes labeled with 5-nitroxide stearate, I(12,3), as indicated by the order parameter (S). These effects form a reversible, saturable process with an association constant of 1 x 10(3) M-1. Arrhenius-type plots of S indicated that the lipid phase separation, present in the external leaflet of native membranes between 28 and 19 degrees C, is perturbed by mM Ca2+ such that the high temperature onset is elevated to 32-34 degrees C. Fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase was similarly inhibited by Ca2+ (ID50 = 1 mM) for the enzyme in membrane-bound or solubilized states. The glucagon-stimulated activity was more sensitive to Ca2+ inhibition with an ID50 of 0.2 mM. These inhibitory effects are due neither to perturbations of glucagon binding to its receptor nor to fluidity changes, but are instead attributed to direct Ca2+-enzyme interactions. Such binding desensitizes the enzyme to fluidity alterations induced by temperature elevation or benzyl alcohol addition. With Ca2+, Arrhenius plots of glucagon-stimulated activity indicated breaks at 32 and 16 degrees C, whereas those of fluoride-stimulated activity showed one break at 17 degrees C. Without Ca2+, Arrhenius plots exhibited one break at 28 degrees C for glucagon-stimulated activity, whereas fluoride-stimulated plots were linear. We propose that Ca2+ achieves these effects through asymmetric perturbations of the membrane lipid structure.  相似文献   

4.
Adenylate cyclase activation by corticotropin (ACTH), fluoride and forskolin was studied as a function of membrane structure in plasma membranes from bovine adrenal cortex. The composition of these membranes was characterized by a very low cholesterol and sphingomyelin content and a high protein content. The fluorescent probes 1,6-diphenylhexa-1,3,5-triene (DPH) and a cationic analogue 1-[4-(trimethylamino)phenyl]-6-phenylhexa-1,3,5-triene (TMA-DPH) were, respectively, used to probe the hydrophobic and polar head regions of the bilayer. When both probes were embedded either in the plasma membranes or in liposomes obtained from their lipid extracts, they exhibited lifetime heterogeneity, and in terms of the order parameter S, hindered motion. Under all the experimental conditions tested, S was higher for TMA-DPH than for DPH but both S values decreased linearly with temperature within the range of 10 to 40 degrees C, in the plasma membranes and the liposomes. This indicated the absence of lipid phase transition and phase separation. Addition to the membranes of up to 100 mM benzyl alcohol at 20 degrees C also resulted in a linear decrease in S values. Membrane perturbations by temperature changes or benzyl alcohol treatment made it possible to distinguish between the characteristics of adenylate cyclase activation with each of the three effectors used. Linear Arrhenius plots showed that when adenylate cyclase activity was stimulated by forskolin or NaF, the activation energy was similar (70 kJ.mol-1). Fluidification of the membrane with benzyl alcohol concentrations of up to 100 mM at 12 or 24 degrees C produced a linear decrease in the forskolin-stimulated activity, that led to its inhibition by 50%. By contrast, NaF stabilized adenylate cyclase activity against the perturbations induced by benzyl alcohol at both temperatures. In the presence of ACTH, biphasic Arrhenius plots were characterized by a well-defined break at 18 degrees C, which shifted at 12.5 degrees C in the presence of 40 mM benzyl alcohol. These plots suggested that ACTH-sensitive adenylate cyclase exists in two different states. This hypothesis was supported by the striking difference in the effects of benzyl alcohol perturbation when experiments were performed below and above the break temperature. The present results are consistent with the possibility that clusters of ACTH receptors form in the membrane as a function of temperature and/or lipid phase fluidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
1. The local anaesthetic benzyl alcohol progressively activated glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity up to a maximum at 50 mM-benzyl alcohol. Further increases in benzyl alcohol concentration inhibited the activity. The fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was similarly affected except for an inhibition of activity occurring at low benzyl alcohol concentrations (approx. 10 mM. 2. The fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity of a solubilized enzyme preparation was unaffected by any of the benzyl alcohol concentrations tested. 3. Increases in 3-phenylpropan-1-ol and 5-phenylpentan-1-ol concentrations progressively activated both the fluoride- and glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities up to a maximum, above which further increases in alcohol concentration inhibited the activities. 4. The 'break' points in Arrhenius plots of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in native plasma membranes, and in plasma membranes fused with synthetic dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine so as to constitute 60% of the total lipid pool, were decreased by approx. 6 degrees C by addition of 40 mM-benzyl alcohol. This was accompanied by a fall in the associated activation energies. 6. Arrhenius plots of fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in the presence and absence of 40 mM-benzyl alcohol were linear, although addition of benzyl alcohol caused a dramatic decrease in the associated activation energy of the reaction. 7. 5'-Nucleotidase activity was stimulated by benzyl alcohol, and the 'break' point in the Arrhenius plot of its activity was decreased by about 6 degrees C by addition of 40 mM-benzyl alcohol to the assay. 8. It is suggested that benzyl alcohol effects a fluidization of the bilayer, which is clearly demonstrated by its ability to lower the temperature of a lipid phase separation occurring at 28 degrees C in the outer half of the bilayer to around 22 degrees C. The increase in bilayer fluidity relieves a physical constraint on the membrane-bound adenylate cyclase, activating the enzyme. 9. The various inhibition phenomena are discussed in detail, together with the suggestion that the interaction between the uncoupled catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase and the lipids of the bilayer is altered on its physical coupling to the glucagon receptor.  相似文献   

6.
Irradiation inactivation was used to monitor changes in the state of adenylate cyclase in rat liver plasma membranes in the presence of F-.F- caused a decrease in the target size from 328000 to 237000 at 0 degrees C and from 329000 to 219000 at 30 degrees C. Adenylate cyclase was activated by F- at both 0 degrees C and 30 degrees C. The effect of F- was biphasic, activating up to a concentration of 10mM and inhibiting at higher concentrations. If adenylate cyclase weas maximally activated with glucagon and p[NH]ppG ([beta gamma-imido]GTP) all concentrations of F- were inhibitory. The implications of the results with respect to the mechanism of activation of adenylate cyclase are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Adenylate cyclase activation by GTP and octopamine as well as basal activity (in the presence of Mg2+) have been studied as a function of membrane structure in plasma membranes from brain of the dipterous Ceratitis capitata. Benzyl alcohol and lidocaine, but not phenobarbital, inhibited the three activities to the same extent. Triton X-100-solubilized adenylate cyclase was also inhibited by benzyl alcohol and lidocaine, but not by phenobarbital. Results could be explained by an effect on the catalytic unit lipid environment, which would be maintained after solubilization, counteracting the effect of these drugs to facilitate lateral diffusion and coupling of adenylate cyclase components in the lipid bilayer. The observation that the insect adenylate cyclase is relatively insensitive to changes in bulk bilayer fluidity is strengthened by the absence of effect of phenobarbital on enzyme activities. Indeed, this compound was as active as lidocaine or benzyl alcohol in increasing bulk membrane fluidity. The response of C. capitata adenylate cyclase to changes in membrane fluidity is different from that recorded in mammalian systems. This may be functionally important and result from the fact that insects are not warm-blooded.  相似文献   

8.
A method was devised which increases the cholesterol concentration of rat liver plasma membranes by exchange from cholesterol-rich liposomes at low temperature (4 degrees C). When the cholesterol concentration of liver plasma membranes is increased, there is an increase in lipid order as detected by a decrease in mobility of an incorporated fatty acid spin probe. This is accompanied by an inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity. The various ligand-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities exhibit different sensitivities to inhibition by cholesterol, with inhibition of glucagon-stimulated greater than fluoride-stimulated greater than basal activity. The bilayer-fluidizing agent benzyl alcohol is able to reverse the inhibitory effect of cholesterol on adenylate cyclase activity in full. The thermostability of fluoride-stimulated cyclase is increased in the cholesterol-rich membranes. Elevated cholesterol concentrations abolish the lipid-phase separation occurring at 28 degrees C in native membranes as detected by an incorporated fatty acid spin probe. This causes Arrhenius plots of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity to become linear, rather than exhibiting a break at 28 degrees C. It is suggested that the cholesterol contents of both halves of the bilayer are increased by the method used and that inhibition of adenylate cyclase ensues, owing to the increase in lipid order and promotion of protein-protein and specific cholesterol-phospholipid interactions.  相似文献   

9.
D C Bode  P B Molinoff 《Biochemistry》1988,27(15):5700-5707
The effects of chronic exposure to ethanol on the physical and functional properties of the plasma membrane were examined with cultured S49 lymphoma cells. The beta-adrenergic receptor-coupled adenylate cyclase system was used as a probe of the functional properties of the plasma membrane. Steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of diphenylhexatriene and the lipid composition of the plasma membrane were used as probes of the physical properties of the membrane. Cells were grown under conditions such that the concentration of ethanol in the growth medium remained stable and oxidation of ethanol to acetaldehyde was not detected. Chronic exposure of S49 cells to 50 mM ethanol or growth of cells at elevated temperature resulted in a decrease in adenylate cyclase activity. There were no changes in the density of receptors or in the affinity of beta-adrenergic receptors for agonists or antagonists following chronic exposure to ethanol. The fluorescence anisotropy of diphenylhexatriene was lower in plasma membranes prepared from cells that had been treated with 50 mM ethanol than in membranes prepared from control cells. However, this change was not associated with changes in the fatty acid composition or the cholesterol to phospholipid ratio of the plasma membrane. There was a small but statistically significant decrease in the amount of phosphatidylserine and an increase in the amount of phosphatidylethanolamine. These changes cannot account for the decrease in anisotropy. In contrast to the effect of ethanol, a decrease in adenylate cyclase activity following growth of S49 cells at 40 degrees C was not associated with a change in anisotropy.  相似文献   

10.
Adenylate cyclase and 5'-nucleotidase activities in rat liver plasma membranes were assayed in vitro in the presence of 4-hydroxy-2,3-trans-nonenal (HNE), a major end-product of microsomal lipid peroxidation. Both basal and glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase were inhibited in a dose-dependent manner, even at micromolar HNE concentrations, whereas fluoride-stimulated activity increased. A biphasic, dose- and time-dependent effect was noted when the basal activity was monitored at increasing doses. 5'-Nucleotidase activity was also decreased by HNE, but only at millimolar concentrations. These findings are related to the view that aldehydes, especially HNE, may act as diffusible cytotoxic compounds when lipid peroxidative derangement of membrane lipids is provoked by toxic conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The adenylate cyclase activity from a rat liver plasma membrane preparation was inhibited by low concentrations (1-10 muM) of the mercurial diuretic mersalyl. Complete inhibition was obtained with 0.1 mM mersalyl. Similar effects were observed whether the adenylate cyclase preparation was assayed in the presence of 10 muM GTP, 0.1 muM glucagon, 10 mM NaF or without any addition. The effect of mersalyl was not due to inhibition of the regenerating system present in the incubation medium, since the effect of mersalyl was preserved and even enhanced in its absence. The inhibition brought about by mersalyl was due to both a decrease of the maximal velocity of the reaction and of the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate. It was immediate, and irreversible spontaneously, but it was reversed by the simultaneous additions of 2-mercaptoethanol, in a dose-dependent fashion. Other -SH reagents were found to have an effect equal to, or lower than, that of mersalyl. Mersalyl had no effect upon Mg2+-ATPase, although it inhibited the (Na+-K+) activated ATPase. Since mersalyl is known to be a 'non-penetrant' reagent, it is postulated that a catalytically important, mercurial-sensitive, part of adenylate cyclase is at the surface of the plasma membrane. This view is supported by the following facts: (a) mersalyl acted with a similar dose-response curve upon an intact as well as a detergent-dispersed cyclase preparation while no effect was observed upon a solubilized Mg2+-ATPase preparation; (b) a covalent p-chloromercuribenzoate-Sephadex preparation (but not its supernatant) inhibited the cyclase from intact membranes. It is proposed that mercurial derivatives, by their relative specificity of action (no effect on Mg2+-ATPase), can serve as useful probes in the elucidation of the multicomponent structure of the cyclase system.  相似文献   

12.
Increasing concentrations of either quinidine or melittin gave a dose-dependent inhibition of both the glucagon- and fluoride-stimulated activities of adenylate cyclase in the liver plasma membranes. At similar concentrations these agents increased the order of liver plasma membranes as detected by a fatty acid ESR probe, doxyl stearic acid. This increase in bilayer order (decrease in 'fluidity') is suggested to explain the inhibitory action of quinidine on adenylate cyclase activity but only in part contributes to the inhibitory action of melittin on adenylate cyclase. Arrhenius plots of fluoride-stimulated activity became non-linear in the presence of either quinidine or melittin, with a single well-defined break occurring at around 12 degrees C in each instance. Arrhenius plots of the glucagon-stimulated activity also exhibited such a novel break at around 12 degrees C when either quinidine or melittin were present as well as exhibiting a break at around 28 degrees C, as was seen in the absence of these ligands. The fatty acid spin probe inserted into liver plasma membranes detected a novel lipid phase separation occurring at around 12 degrees C when either quinidine or melittin was present and showed that the lipid phase separation occurring at around 28 degrees C in native membranes was apparently unaffected by these ligands.  相似文献   

13.
The structures of rat liver and heart plasma membranes were studied with the 5-nitroxide stearic acid spin probe, I(1 2,3). The polarity-corrected order parameters (S) of liver and heart plasma membranes were independent of probe concentration only if experimentally determined low I(1 2,3)/lipid ratios were employed. At higher probe/lipid ratios, the order parameters of both membrane systems decreased with increasing probe concentration, and these effects were attributed to enhanced nitroxide radical interactions. Examination of the temperature dependence of approximate and polarity-corrected order parameters indicated that lipid phase separations occur in liver (between 19° and 28°C) and heart (between 21° and 32°C) plasma membranes. The possibility that a wide variety of membrane-associated functions may be influenced by these thermotropic phase separations is considered. Addition of 3.9 mM CaCl2 to I(1 2,3)-labeled liver plasma membrane decreased the fluidity as indicated by a 5% increase in S at 37°C. Similarly, titrating I(1 2,3)-labeled heart plasma membranes with either CaCl2 or LaCl3 decreased the lipid fluidity at 37°C, although the magnitude of the La3+ effect was larger and occurred at lower concentrations than that induced by Ca2+; addition of 0.2 mM La3+ or 3.2 mM Ca2+ increased S by approximately 7% and 5%, respectively. The above cation effects reflected only alterations in the membrane fluidity and were not due to changes in probe–probe interactions. Ca2+ and La3+ at these concentrations decrease the activities of such plasma membrane enzymes as Na+, K+-ATPase and adenylyl cyclase, and it is suggested that the inhibition of these enzymes may be due in part to cation-mediated decreases in the lipid fluidity.  相似文献   

14.
Further modification of Neville's method of preparation of rat liver plasma membrane has been made in order to study glucagon-sensitive adenylate cyclase. This modified method introduces two additional steps to the Neville procedures. One involves saving an intermediate layer above the pellet following 1500g centrifugation. The other adds a centrifugation step at 20,000g. The improved method increases the yield of membrane protein by 5-fold and increases forskolin, glucagon, and 5'-guanyl imidodiphosphate stimulated activity of adenylate cyclase by 2.8-fold. A 13-fold increase in the yield of total adenylate cyclase activity above the current method was obtained. The membrane adenylate cyclase and its hormone sensitivity was stable in liquid nitrogen for at least 8 months. This modified method appears to be useful in preparing a better yield and quality of rat liver plasma membrane from given starting hepatic tissue for studies of glucagon-sensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

15.
Calcium ion decreases the motional freedom of lipid molecules in isolated rat hepatocyte plasma membranes and in sonicated dispersions (liposomes) of the membrane lipid. The decrease in lipid fluidity was monitored by estimation of the fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. At least two processes are involved in the mode of action of the cation. The first is direct, i.e., observed on addition of calcium to the liposomes, relatively rapid, with a half-time of 10-15 at 37 degrees C, proportional to the calcium concentration in the range 0-4 mM, and readily reversed on addition of excess EDTA. The second mechanism is indirected and requires the presence of the membrane proteins. It occurs relatively slowly, with a half-time of 75 min at 37 degrees C, tends to plateau with a calcium half-saturation concentration of approximately 1 mM, is of greater magnitude than the direct effect, and cannot be reversed on chelation of calcium by EDTA. Moreover, the indirect effect is specific for Ca2+ as compared to other divalent cations and it results in changes in the lipid composition. Stimulation of phospholipase A activity is likely but does not account for the change in fluidity. The direct action of calcium is ascribed to binding to the lipid bilayer, whereas the indirect action probably results from modulation of membrane-bound enzymes which can alter the lipid composition. The effects of calcium on the membrane lipid fluidity may underly certain of its regulatory actions on membrane functions.  相似文献   

16.
ADP-ribosylation by cholera toxin of the guanine nucleotide binding regulatory protein (Gs) of rat liver membrane adenylate cyclase was inhibited by 0.1-1 mM MDL 12330A or 0.1-1 mM chlorpromazine. Basal as well as cholera toxin activated adenylate cyclase activity in liver membranes was also inhibited by the two drugs. NAD glycohydrolase activity and self-ADP-ribosylation of cholera toxin were also inhibited by MDL 12330A and chlorpromazine. These effects of MDL 12330A and chlorpromazine may be related to their effects on cholera toxin-induced fluid secretion in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
1. The lipids composition of rat liver plasma membranes was substantially altered by introducing synthetic phosphatidylcholines into the membrane by the techniques of lipid substitution or lipid fusion. 40-60% of the total lipid pool in the modified membranes consisted of a synthetic phosphatidylcholine. 2. Lipid substitution, using cholate to equilibrate the lipid pools, resulted in the irreversible loss of a major part of the adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by F-, GMP-P(NH)P or glucagon. However, fusion with presonicated vesicles of the synethic phosphatidylcholines causes only small losses in adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by the same ligands. 3. The linear form of the Arrhenius plots of adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by F- or GMP-(NH)P was unaltered in all of the membrane preparations modified by substitution or fusion, with very similar activation energies to those observed with the native membrane. The activity of the enzyme therefore appears to be very insensitive to its lipid environment when stimulated by F- or gmp-p(nh)p. 4. in contrast, the break at 28.5 degrees C in the Arrhenius plot of adenylate cyclase activity stimulated by glucagon in the native membrane, was shifted upwards by dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine, downwards by dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine, and was abolished by dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine. Very similar shifts in the break point were observed for stimulation by glucagon or des-His-glucagon in combination with F- or GMP-P(NH)P. The break temperatures and activation energies for adenylate cyclase activity were the same in complexes prepared with a phosphatidylcholine by fusion or substitution. 5. The breaks in the Arrhenius plots of adenylate cyclase activity are attributed to lipid phase separations which are shifted in the modified membranes according to the transition temperature of the synthetic phosphatidylcholine. Coupling the receptor to the enzyme by glucagon or des-His-glucagon renders the enzyme sensitive to the lipid environment of the receptor. Spin-label experiments support this interpretation and suggest that the lipid phase separation at 28.5 degrees C in the native membrane may only occur in one half of the bilayer.  相似文献   

18.
Plasma membranes from liver of control rats or from chemical-induced hepatoma were prepared. The basal activity of adenylate cyclase was increased significantly in the rat plasma membranes of DEN-induced hepatoma compared to normal tissue. The glucagon-induced response on the cellular effector systems via guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) was inhibited in hepatoma plasma membranes. These findings suggest that in hepatoma membranes, unlike normal hepatic membranes, the response to hormonal stimuli through regulatory G proteins results in a loss of response to glucagon, as well as to GTP plus glucagon or to GTPγS. However, the activating effects of forskolin, which catalyses the formation of cyclic AMP from ATP acting on the catalytic subunit, were to some extent retained. The methyltransferase-I behaved in the opposite direction to the adenylate cyclase, showing a decreased activity in hepatoma plasma membranes compared to control membranes. In contrast, the activity of the ecto-5′-nucleotidase was significantly increased in hepatoma. These enzymatic changes have been found to influence the membrane fluidity and to be responsible for the ultrastructural modifications of hepatoma plasma membranes which are induced by chemical carcinogens.  相似文献   

19.
1. Adenylate cyclase in plasma membranes from rat liver was stimulated by prostaglandin E1, and to a lesser extent by prostaglandin E2. Prostaglandin F1alpha and A1 did not stimulate the cyclase. The prostaglandin E1-mediated activation was found to require GTP when the substrate ATP concentration was reduced from 3 mM to 0.3 mM in the reaction mixture. Adenylate cyclase of the plasma membranes from rat ascites hepatomas AH-130 and AH-7974 was not stimulated by prostaglandin E1 in the presence or the absence of GTP, although the basal activity of adenylate cyclase as well as its stimulation by GTP alone were similar to normal liver plasma membranes. 2. Liver plasma membranes were found to have two specific binders for [3H] prostaglandin E1 with dissociation constants of 17.6-10(-9) M and 13.6-10(8) M (37 degrees C) and one specific binder for [3H]prostaglandin F2alpha with a dissociation constant of 2.31-10(8) M (37 degrees C). The specific binders for prostaglandin E1 could not be detected in the hepatoma plasma membranes. 3. Binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 to the liver plasma membranes was exchange by, GTP dGPT, GDP, ATP and GMP-P(N)P, but not by GMP, CGMP, DTTP, UTP or CTP. The increase in the binding of [3H] prostaglandin E1 was found to be due to the increased affinity of the specific binders to prostaglandin F2alpha was not affected by GTP. 4. GTP alone was found to increase V of adenylate cyclase of liver plasma membranes, while GTP plus prostaglandin E1 was found to decrease Km of adenylate cyclase in addition to the increase of V to a further extent.  相似文献   

20.
The nonspecific lipid transfer protein from beef liver was used to modify the phospholipid composition of intact turkey erythrocytes in order to study the dependence of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity on membrane phospholipid composition. Incorporation of phosphatidylinositol into turkey erythrocytes inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation in a linear, concentration-dependent manner. Inhibition was relatively specific for phosphatidylinositol; phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidic acid were from 3 to 7 times less effective as inhibitors of hormone-stimulated cyclase activity. Inhibition by phosphatidylinositol was not reversible when up to 90% of the incorporated phosphatidylinositol was removed, either by incubation with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C or a second incubation with transfer protein; possibly adenylate cyclase activity depends on a small pool of phosphatidylinositol that is inaccessible to either phospholipase C hydrolysis or removal by lipid transfer protein. Phosphatidylinositol incorporation inhibits adenylate cyclase activity by uncoupling beta-adrenergic receptors from the remainder of the cyclase complex. Phosphatidylinositol incorporation had no effect on stimulation of cAMP accumulation by either cholera toxin or forskolin, indicating that inhibition occurs only at the level of receptor. Phosphodiesterase activity was not altered in phosphatidylinositol-modified cells. Inhibition of cAMP accumulation was not the result of changes in either membrane fluidity or in cAMP transport out of modified turkey erythrocytes. Phosphatidylinositol inhibition of isoproterenol-stimulated cyclase activity may serve as a useful model system for hormone-induced desensitization.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号