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1.
We examined the effect of porcine brain Ca2+-dependent regulator (CDR) protein on microtubule (MT) assembly from microtubular proteins isolated from porcine brain by temperature-dependent cycles of assembly-disassembly. CDR exhibited a potent inhibitory effect on MT assembly in the presence of Ca2+, whereas it had little or no effect on the extent of MT assembly in the absence of Ca2+. The increase in KCl concentration greatly potentiated the Ca2+-dependent inhibitory effect of CDR. The effect of CDR was reversible in a Ca2+ concentration-dependent manner, and the extent of inhibition by CDR at a fixed concentration of free Ca2+ was roughly proportional to the concentration of CDR. Moreover, the Ca2+ concentration required for the half-maximal inhibition of MT assembly from a fixed concentration of purified microtubular proteins (PMP) decreased with increasing CDR concentration. On the basis of these results, together with data on the Ca2+-dependent association of CDR and tubulin (J. Biochem., accompanying paper), we propose the following model; Ca2+ + CDR in equilibrium Ca2+-CDR Ca2+-CDR + tubulin in equilibrium Ca2+-CDR-tubulin (nonpolymerizable).  相似文献   

2.
The calcium-dependent regulatory protein (CDR) purified from bovine brain was iodinated with Na[125I]I using the lactoperoxidase-glucose oxidase system. The iodinated protein retained its ability to stimulate the Ca2+-sensitive CDR-depleted cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from bovine heart. Stimulation of the phosphodiesterase by 125I-CDR was Ca2+-dependent and the labeled protein had a Ka for activation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase that was 4 times greater than unmodified CDR. 125I-CDR formed a Ca2+-dependent complex with the partially purified cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase which was detectable by autorradiography following electrophoresis of the complex on nondenaturing gels. This technique was used to detect CDR binding components in crude homogenates prepared from bovine heart and brain.  相似文献   

3.
A Ca2+-binding protein which is capable of activating mammalian Ca2+-activatable cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase has been purified from Lumbricus terrestris and characterized. This protein and the Ca2+-dependent protein modulator from bovine tissues have many similar properties. Both proteins have molecular weights of approximately 18,000, isoelectric points of about pH 4, similar and characteristic ultraviolet spectra, and similar amino acid compositions. Both proteins bind calcium ions with high affinity. However, the protein from Lumbricus terrestris binds 2 mol of calcium ions with equal affinity, Kdiss = 6 X 10(-6) M, whereas the Ca2+-dependent protein modulator from bovine tissues binds 4 mol of calcium ions with differing affinities. Although the Ca2+-binding protein of Lumbricus terrestris activates the Ca2+-activatable cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from mammalian tissues, we have failed to detect the existence of a Ca2+-activatable phosphodiesterase activity in Lumbricus terrestris. The activation of phosphodiesterase by the Ca2+-binding protein from Lumbricus terrestris is inhibited by the recently discovered bovine brain modulator binding protein (Wang, J. H., and Desai, R. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 4175-4184). Since the modulator binding protein has been shown to associate with the mammalian protein modulator to result in phosphodiesterase inhibition, it can be concluded that the Lumbricus terrestris Ca2+-binding protein also associates with the bovine brain modulator binding protein. Attempts to demonstrate the existence of a similar modulator binding protein in Lumbricus terrestris have been unsuccessful.  相似文献   

4.
At alkaline pH, Ca2+ is no longer required for S-100 proteins to inhibit the assembly and to promote the disassembly of brain microtubules in vitro, though the presence of Ca2+ significantly favors the S-100 effects. These effects are inversely related to the microtubule protein concentration and directly related to the S-100 concentration and the pH. Ca2+-independent, pH-regulated inhibition of assembly of phosphocellulose-purified tubulin by S-100 is also described. The microtubule disassembling effect of S-100 is additive to that of alkali (used to raise the pH), and S-100 further disassembles microtubules after alkalinization. Thus the larger inhibitory effect of S-100 on microtubule assembly at alkaline versus acid pH depends on both a decrease in the assembly rate and an increase in the disassembly rate. Together with previous data on this topic, the present findings indicate that S-100 proteins act on microtubule protein in vitro primarily by binding to tubulin, this event being Ca2+-regulated at a given pH, and pH-regulated at a given free Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

5.
Effect of S-100 protein on assembly of brain microtubule proteins in vitro   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
R Donato 《FEBS letters》1983,162(2):310-313
S-100 protein inhibits the assembly of brain microtubule proteins in vitro in the presence of 10 microM free Ca2+. The S-100 effect is generally greater on the rate than on the extent of assembly, and even greater as the microtubule protein concentration decreases and the time of preincubation between S-100 and microtubule proteins before GTP addition increases, at a given S-100/tubulin dimer molar ratio. The S-100 effect is greatly enhanced in the presence of physiological concentrations of K+ and is completely reversed by EGTA.  相似文献   

6.
R Donato 《Cell calcium》1987,8(4):283-297
S-100 was shown to regulate the in vitro assembly of brain microtubule proteins (MTPs) in a Ca2+-mediated way by acting on both the nucleation and the elongation of microtubules (MTs). Here data will be shown suggesting that S-100 binds to tubulin. The binding is time-, temperature-, Ca2+-, and pH-dependent, and saturable with respect to S-100. At pH 6.75, the saturation curve is biphasic, displaying a high affinity component (dissociation constant, Kd1, approximately 0.1 microM) and a low affinity component (Kd2 approximately 3.8 microM). At pH 6.75, as the free Ca2+ concentration raises from 0 to 100 microM, the overall binding capacity increases from 0.065 to 0.66 mol S-100/mol tubulin dimer. This finding, together with the observation that the S-100 effect on MTP assembly is Ca2+-dependent at that pH, suggests that the S-100-induced inhibition of MTP assembly depends on S-100 binding to the low affinity sites on the tubulin molecule. The S-100 binding to tubulin is pH-dependent; as the pH raises from 6.75 to 8.3, both binding components are affected, the major changes consisting of an increase in the binding capacity and a decrease in the overall affinity. Moreover, as the pH raises, Ca2+ is no longer required for S-100 to bind to tubulin. S-100 also interacts with a component of whole MTPs (probably tubulin, on the basis of the above results). No S-100 binding to microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) could be evidenced by the techniques employed in this study. On the contrary, some competition between S-100 and MAPs for binding sites or tubulin seems to occur.  相似文献   

7.
Carp parvalbumin has been shown to activate rat brain phosphodiesterase in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The concentration of Ca2+ required for half-maximal stimulation is 1.4 X 10(-7) M, whereas rat testis Ca2+-dependent regulator (CDR) of phosphodiesterase required 1.2 X 10(-6) M Ca2+. The difference in the slopes of the two curves demonstrated that the activation induced by parvalbumin was not the result of a small contamination by CDR. In addition, it has been shown that Ca2+ binding to parvalbumin parallels its activation of phosphodiesterase. These data suggest that Ca2+ must bind to a single specific metal binding site before phosphodiesterase can be fully activated.  相似文献   

8.
Kinesin-like calmodulin binding protein (KCBP) is a microtubule motor protein involved in the regulation of cell division and trichome morphogenesis. Genetic studies have shown that KCBP is likely to interact with several other proteins. To identify KCBP-interacting proteins, we used the C-terminal region of KCBP in a yeast two-hybrid screen. This screening resulted in the isolation of a novel KCBP-interacting Ca2+ binding protein (KIC). KIC, with its single EF-hand motif, bound Ca2+ at a physiological concentration. Coprecipitation with bacterially expressed protein and native KCBP, gel-mobility shift studies, and ATPase assays with the KCBP motor confirmed that KIC interacts with KCBP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Interestingly, although both Ca2+-KIC and Ca2+-calmodulin were able to interact with KCBP and inhibit its microtubule binding activity, the concentration of Ca2+ required to inhibit the microtubule-stimulated ATPase activity of KCBP by KIC was threefold less than that required for calmodulin. Two KIC-related Ca2+ binding proteins and a centrin from Arabidopsis, which contain one and four EF-hand motifs, respectively, bound Ca2+ but did not affect microtubule binding and microtubule-stimulated ATPase activities of KCBP, indicating the specificity of Ca2+ sensors in regulating their targets. Overexpression of KIC in Arabidopsis resulted in trichomes with reduced branch number resembling the zwichel/kcbp phenotype. These results suggest that KIC modulates the activity of KCBP in response to changes in cytosolic Ca2+ and regulates trichome morphogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
XMAP215/Dis1 proteins are conserved tubulin-binding TOG-domain proteins that regulate microtubule (MT) plus-end dynamics. Here we show that Alp14, a XMAP215 orthologue in fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, has properties of a MT polymerase. In vivo, Alp14 localizes to growing MT plus ends in a manner independent of Mal3 (EB1). alp14-null mutants display short interphase MTs with twofold slower assembly rate and frequent pauses. Alp14 is a homodimer that binds a single tubulin dimer. In vitro, purified Alp14 molecules track growing MT plus ends and accelerate MT assembly threefold. TOG-domain mutants demonstrate that tubulin binding is critical for function and plus end localization. Overexpression of Alp14 or only its TOG domains causes complete MT loss in vivo, and high Alp14 concentration inhibits MT assembly in vitro. These inhibitory effects may arise from Alp14 sequestration of tubulin and effects on the MT. Our studies suggest that Alp14 regulates the polymerization state of tubulin by cycling between a tubulin dimer-bound cytoplasmic state and a MT polymerase state that promotes rapid MT assembly.  相似文献   

10.
S Roychowdhury  F Gaskin 《Biochemistry》1986,25(24):7847-7853
Two conflicting interpretations on the role of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) in microtubule protein and tubulin assembly have been previously reported. One study finds that GTP gamma S promotes assembly while another study reports that GTP gamma S is a potent inhibitor of microtubule assembly. We have examined the potential role of Mg2+ to learn if the conflicting interpretations are due to a metal effect. Turbidity, electron microscopy, and nucleotide binding and hydrolysis were used to analyze the effect of the Mg2+ concentration on GTP gamma S-induced assembly of microtubule protein (tubulin + microtubule-associated proteins) in the presence of buffer +/- 30% glycerol and in buffer with GTP added before or after GTP gamma S. GTP gamma S substantially lowers the Mg2+ concentration required to induce cross-linked or clustered rings of tubulin. These cross-linked rings do not assemble well into microtubules, and GTP only partially restores microtubule assembly. However, taxol will promote GTP gamma S-induced cross-linked rings of microtubule protein to assemble into microtubules. The effect of GTP gamma S on microtubule protein assembly in the presence of Zn2+ with and without added Mg2+ suggests that GTP gamma S also effects the formation of Zn2+-induced sheet aggregates. Purified tubulin was used in assembly experiments with Mg2+, Zn2+, and taxol to better understand GTP gamma S interactions with tubulin. The optimal Mg2+ concentration for assembly of tubulin is lower with GTP gamma S than with GTP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
We have examined the S-100-chlorpromazine interplay at the level of brain microtubule proteins in vitro. The results indicate that in the presence of 0.12 M KCl and 10 microM free Ca2+ the inhibitory effect of S-100 on microtubule assembly is additive to that of chlorpromazine, but S-100 fails to potentiate the disassembling effect of 0.1 mM Ca2+ if added to assembled microtubule proteins after chlorpromazine and Ca2+, probably because of inhibition of S-100 by the phenothiazine. Chlorpromazine does not compete with S-100 for binding to purified tubulin.  相似文献   

12.
The removal of tightly bound GDP from the exchangeable nucleotide-binding site of tubulin has been performed with alkaline phosphatase under conditions which essentially retain the assembly properties of the protein. When microtubule protein is treated with alkaline phosphatase, nucleotide is selectively removed from tubulin dimer rather than from MAP (microtubule-associated protein)-containing oligomeric species. Tubulin devoid of E-site (the exchangeable nucleotide-binding site of the tubulin dimer) nucleotide shows enhanced proteolytic susceptibility of the beta-subunit to thermolysin and decreased protein stability, consistent with nucleotide removal causing changes in protein tertiary structure. Pyrophosphate ion (3 mM) is able to promote formation of normal microtubules in the complete absence of GTP by incubation at 37 degrees C either with nucleotide-depleted microtubule protein or with nucleotide-depleted tubulin dimer to which MAPs have been added. The resulting microtubules contain up to 80% of tubulin lacking E-site nucleotide. In addition to its effects on nucleation, pyrophosphate competes weakly with GDP bound at the E-site. It is deduced that binding of pyrophosphate at a vacant E-site can promote microtubule assembly. The minimum structural requirement for ligands to induce tubulin assembly apparently involves charge neutralization at the E-site by bidentate ligation, which stabilizes protein domains in a favourable orientation for promoting the supramolecular protein-protein interactions involved in microtubule formation.  相似文献   

13.
The Ca2+-dependent regulator protein of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase was labeled with 125I to the extent of 1 mol of monoiodotyrosine per mol. The iodinated protein showed a small decrease in affinity for phosphodiesterase but gave the same maximal level of activation of the enzyme as did the unmodified regulator protein. Iodinated regulator protein formed complexes with both highly purified cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and phosphodiesterase inhibitory protein in the presence but not in the absence of Ca2+ as demonstrated by ultracentrifugation in glycerol gradients. Cross-linking experiments indicate that the Ca2+-dependent regulator protein interacts with the large subunit of the inhibitory protein.  相似文献   

14.
Rat brainstem tryptophan 5-monooxygenase was activated about 2-fold by rat brain calcium-dependent regulator (CDR) protein. The activation required both ATP and Mg2+ in the presence of low concentrations of Ca2+.  相似文献   

15.
Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) were phosphorylated by a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase from rat brain cytosol. The maximal amount of phosphate incorporated into MAPs was 25 nmol of phosphate/mg protein. A Ka value of the enzyme for calmodulin was 57.0 nM, with MAPs as substrates. Among MAPs, MAP2 and tau factor were phosphorylated in a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent manner. The phosphorylation of MAPs led to an inhibition of microtubule assembly in accordance with its degree. This reaction was dependent on addition of the enzyme, Ca2+, and calmodulin, and had a greater effect on the initial rate of microtubule assembly rather than on the final extent. The critical tubulin concentration for microtubule assembly was unchanged by the MAPs phosphorylation. Therefore assembly and disassembly of brain microtubule are regulated by the Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase that requires only a nanomolar concentration of calmodulin for activation.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the microtubule - associated proteins MAP-2 and tau interact selectively with common binding domains on tubulin defined by the low-homology segments a (430–441) and (422–434). It has been also indicated that the synthetic peptide VRSKIGSTENLKHQPGGG corresponding to the first tau repetitive sequence represents a tubulin binding domain on tau. The present studies show that the calcium-binding protein calmodulin interacts with a tubulin binding site on tau defined by the second repetitive sequence VTSKCGSLGNIHHKPGGG. It was shown that both tubulin and calmodulin bind to tau peptide-Sepharose affinity column. Binding of calmodulin occurs in the presence of 1 mM Ca 2+ and it can be eluted from the column with 4 mM EGTA. These findings provide new insights into the regulation of microtubule assembly, since Ca 2+/calmodulin inhibition of tubulin polymerization into microtubules could be mediated by the direct binding of calmodulin to tau, thus preventing the interaction of this latter protein with tubulin.  相似文献   

17.
S-100 proteins are a group of three 21-kilodalton, acidic, Ca2+-binding proteins of the "E-F hand" type shown to regulate several cell activities, including microtubule (MT) assembly-disassembly. We show here that S-100 proteins interact with MTs assembled from either whole microtubule protein or purified tubulin, both in the absence and in the presence of the MT-stabilizing drug taxol. Evidence for the binding of S-100 to MTs comes from both kinetic (turbidimetric) and binding studies. Kinetically, S-100 enhances the disassembly of steady-state MTs in the presence of high concentrations of colchicine or vinblastine at 10 microM free Ca2+ and disassembles taxol-stabilized MTs at high Ca2+ concentrations. Experiments performed using 125I-labeled S-100 show that S-100 binds Ca2+ independently to a single set of sites on taxol-stabilized MTs assembled from pure tubulin with an affinity of 6 x 10(-5) M and a stoichiometry of 0.15 mol of S-100/mol of polymerized tubulin. Under certain conditions, S-100 proteins also cosediment with MTs prepared by coassembly of S-100 with MTs, probably in the form of an S-100-tubulin complex. Because S-100 binds to MTs under conditions where this protein fraction does not produce observable effects on the kinetics of assembly-disassembly, e.g., in the absence of Ca2+ at pH 6.7, we conclude that the S-100 binding to MTs does not affect the stability of MTs per se, but rather creates conditions for increased sensitivity of MTs to Ca2+.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of a calcium-dependent regulator protein (CDR) of brain adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) with synaptic membranes from guinea pig brain was examined using 125I-CDR as a tracer molecule. 125I-CDR binding was reversible, saturable, and temperature sensitive. The same Ca2+ and Mg2+ dependence was observed for 125I-CDR binding and for brain adenylate cyclase activation by CDR.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of ceramide on Ca2+-dependent translocation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) to membranes was studied. Pretreatment of platelets with sphingomyelinase or C6-ceramide (N-hexanoylsphingosine) led to apparent enhancement of Ca2+-ionophore A23187-stimulated arachidonic acid release but did not affect the cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) activity. Under these conditions, the cPLA2 proteins in membranes increased significantly, compared with those by A23187 alone. Sphingomyelinase and C6-ceramide, but not C6-dihydroceramide, a control analog of C6-ceramide, also facilitated the Ca2+-dependent increase in the cPLA2 protein, as well as the activity, in membranes induced by addition of Ca2+ into platelet lysate. Protein kinase Calpha, which possesses a Ca2+-dependent lipid binding domain, was increased in membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner, but the increase was not accelerated by sphingomyelinase or C6-ceramide. These findings suggest that ceramide in membranes potentiates Ca2+-dependent cPLA2 translocation from cytosol to membranes, probably through modification of membrane phospholipid organization.  相似文献   

20.
A Ca2+-dependent regulator protein of cyclic 3':5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) has previously been isolated from rat testis and shown to be a heat-stable, Ca2+-binding protein with a molecular weight of approximately 17,000. The Ca2+-dependent regulator protein is also structurally similar to troponin-C, the Ca2+-binding component of muscle troponin and Ca2+ mediator of muscle contraction. The present report describes a partial amino acid sequence of the Ca2+-dependent regulator. The protein (148 amino acids) is 50% homologous with skeletal muscle troponin-C, but is 11 residues shorter than the muscle protein. The Ca2+-dependent regulator protein has an NH2-terminal sequence of acetyl-Ala-Asp-Glu, a COOH-terminal sequence of Thr-Ala-Lys and 1 residue of epsilon-trimethyllysine located at position 115. All of these properties are distinct from those of other homologous Ca2+-binding proteins. These properties may account for the biological specificities demonstrated by these proteins as compared to the Ca2+-dependent regulator protein. Based on the sequence and a comparison of the Ca2+-dependent regulator protein to other calcium-binding proteins, our data support the view that all of these moecules contain common sequences, especially at their proposed metal-binding sites.  相似文献   

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