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1.
Abstract: A new protein kinase modulated by S-100 (tentatively referred to as protein kinase X) was partially purified from pig brain extracts. The activity of protein kinase X, which was independent of Ca2+, was demonstrated when protamine (free base), but not protamine sulfate and other proteins (including histone), was used as substrate. The enzyme activity, found to distribute in both soluble and particulate fractions and to occur at the highest level in brain compared with other tissues (heart, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle, spleen, and testis) of rats, was also modulated by other acidic proteins (calmodulin, troponin C, and stimulatory modulator) in a Ca2+-independent manner. S-100 and other acidic proteins appeared to function as "substrate modifiers" by interacting with protamine (a highly basic protein), but not with the enzyme, thus rendering protamine in the complex a superior phosphate acceptor. The two isoforms of S-100 (i.e., a and b) were equally effective. Although the enzyme was not inhibited by many agents (trifluoperazine, melittin, cytotoxin I, polymyxin B, and spermine) shown to inhibit markedly phospholipid/Ca2+- or calmodulin/Ca2+-stimulated protein kinase, gossypol was found to inhibit specifically protein kinase X. The present findings suggest that S-100, a major acidic protein specific to nervous system, may promote phosphorylation by protein kinase X of certain neural proteins resembling protamine or containing protamine-like domains, in addition to its presumed role of a low-affinity Ca2+-binding protein.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: Fractions of neurospecific S-100 protein were purified from bovine brain and their physicochemical properties were studied. Conformational changes caused by the binding of calcium to S-100 protein fractions were detected by means of differential and fluorescence spectroscopy. Fractions demonstrating opposite shifts of their spectra also differ in the distribution in double-phase system. The number of calcium-binding centers and their association constants were determined by means of equilibrium dialysis and gel filtration. The nature of the differences in the interaction of various S-100 protein fractions with calcium is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
S-100-Mediated Inhibition of Brain Protein Phosphorylation   总被引:2,自引:5,他引:2  
The effects of the glial-specific, calcium-binding, S-100 protein on brain membrane and supernatant protein phosphorylation were assessed. S-100 concentrations as low as 5 micrograms/ml caused a marked inhibition of the phosphorylation of a soluble brain protein having a molecular weight of 73,000 daltons (73K). This protein was designated the S-100 protein-modulated phosphoprotein (SMP). Half-maximal inhibition of the phosphorylation of SMP by S-100 was obtained at concentrations of 12 micrograms/ml (0.57 microM). The inhibition of SMP phosphorylation by S-100 was calcium-dependent, with a calculated calcium Ka of 2.0 +/- 0.3 microM. SMP phosphorylation was also inhibited by calmodulin, but only partially and with a much lower potency. The inhibition of SMP phosphorylation by S-100 was not inhibited by fluphenazine, whereas the effect of calmodulin was. SMP was found in many brain areas, with the highest levels seen in the corpus callosum. Various peripheral tissues, such as kidney; liver; and pineal, pituitary, and adrenal glands, did not contain detectable SMP levels. At higher S-100 concentrations, greater than 10 micrograms/ml, the phosphorylation of several other soluble proteins was markedly inhibited. These proteins have molecular weights of 56K, 50K, and 47K. The phosphorylation of these proteins was enhanced by calmodulin. These data suggest that the S-100 protein may function to modulate the phosphorylation of brain proteins in a manner analogous to (although in a reciprocal fashion) that of calmodulin.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: Purified rat brain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) is stimulated by brain gangliosides to a level of about 30% the activity obtained in the presence of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). Of the various gangliosides tested, GT1b was the most potent, giving half-maximal activation at 25 μ M . Gangliosides GD1a and GM1 also gave activation, but asialo-GM1 was without effect. Activation was rapid and did not require calcium. The same gangliosides also stimulated the autophosphorylation of CaM-kinase II on serine residues, but did not produce the Ca2+-independent form of the kinase. Ganglioside stimulation of CaM-kinase II was also present in rat brain synaptic membrane fractions. Higher concentrations (125-250 μ M ) of GT1b, GD1a, and GM1 also inhibited CaM-kinase II activity. This inhibition appears to be substrate-directed, as the extent of inhibition is very dependent on the substrate used. The molecular mechanism of the stimulatory effect of gangliosides was further investigated using a synthetic peptide (CaMK 281-309), which contains the CaM-binding, inhibitory, and autophosphorylation domains of CaM-kinase II. Using purified brain CaM-kinase II in which these regulatory domains were removed by limited proteolysis, CaMK 281-309 strongly inhibited kinase activity (IC50=0.2 μ M ). GT1b completely reversed this inhibition, but did not stimulate phosphorylation of the peptide on threonine-286. These results demonstrate that GT1b can partially mimic the effects of Ca2+/CaM on native CaM-kinase II and on peptide CaMK 281-309.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: We examined protein kinase C (PKC) activity in Ca2+-dependent PKC (Ca2+-dependent PKC activities) and Ca2+-independent PKC (Ca2+-independent PKC activities) assay conditions in brains from Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and age-matched controls. In cytosolic and membranous fractions, Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent PKC activities were significantly lower in AD brain than in control brain. In particular, reduction of Ca2+-independent PKC activity in the membranous fraction of AD brain was most enhanced when cardiolipin, the optimal stimulator of PKC-ε, was used in the assay; whereas Ca2+-independent PKC activity stimulated by phosphatidylinositol, the optimal stimulator of PKC-δ, was not significantly reduced in AD. Further studies on the protein levels of Ca2+-independent PKC-δ, PKC-ε, and PKC-ζ in AD brain revealed reduction of the PKC-ε level in both cytosolic and membranous fractions, although PKC-δ and PKC-ζ levels were not changed. These findings indicated that Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent PKC are changed in AD, and that among Ca2+-independent PKC isozymes, the alteration of PKC-ε is a specific event in AD brain, suggesting its crucial role in AD pathophysiology.  相似文献   

6.
The Ca2+ and calmodulin sensitivity of endogenous protein kinase activity in synaptosomal membrane fragments from rat brain was studied in medium containing Ca2+ plus EGTA using a modified computer programme to calculate free Ca2+ concentrations that took into account the effect of all competing cations and chelators. The Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of 10 major polypeptide acceptors with Mr values ranging from 50 to 360 kilodaltons required calmodulin in reactions that were all equally sensitive to Ca2+; half-maximal phosphorylation required a free Ca2+ concentration of 45 nM and maximal phosphorylation approximately 110 nM. The significance of these values in relation to published data on the intracellular concentration of free Ca2+ in the nervous system is discussed. One acceptor of 45 kilodaltons was phosphorylated in a Ca2+-dependent reaction that did not require calmodulin. This polypeptide appeared to correspond to the B-50 protein, an established substrate of the lipid-dependent protein kinase C. Further study of this phosphorylating system showed that the reaction was only independent of calmodulin at saturating concentrations of Ca2+; at subsaturating concentrations (in the range 50-130 nM), a small but significant stimulation of the enzyme by calmodulin was demonstrated. The possible significance of this finding is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Purified P400 protein was phosphorylated by both purified Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) and the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase). Because P400 protein was suggested to function as an integral membrane protein, we investigated the phosphorylation of P400 protein using crude mitochondrial and microsomal fractions (P2/P3 fraction). Incubation of the P2/P3 fraction from mouse cerebellum with cyclic AMP or the catalytic subunit of A-kinase stimulated the phosphorylation of P400 protein. The phosphorylation of P400 protein was not observed in the P2/P3 fraction from mouse forebrain. Cyclic AMP and A-kinase enhanced the phosphorylation of several proteins, including P400 protein, suggesting that P400 protein is one of the best substrates for A-kinase in the P2/P3 fraction. Although endogenous and exogenous CaM kinase II stimulated the phosphorylation of some proteins in the P2/P3 fraction, the phosphorylation of P400 protein was weak. Immunoprecipitation with the monoclonal antibody to P400 protein confirmed that the P400 protein itself was definitely phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of A-kinase and CaM kinase II. A-kinase phosphorylated only the seryl residue in P400 protein. Immunoblot analysis of the cells in primary culture of mouse cerebellum confirmed the expression of P400 protein, which migrated at the same position on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as that in the P2/P3 fraction. Incubation of the cultured cerebellar cells with [32P]orthophosphate resulted in the labeling of P400 protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: The Ca2+-dependent conformational alteration of the brain-specific S-100 protein was studied by reacting the protein with N -ethyl[2,3-14C]maleimide in the absence and presence of Ca2+ and under denaturing conditions. Peptic hydrolysates of the 14C-labeled protein were analyzed and fractionated by high-performance liquid chromatography. Labeled peptide fractions were characterized by high-voltage electrophoresis and TLC. A clear distinction could be made between two classes of sulfhydryl-containing fragments: (a) neutral, hydrophobic, and (b) acidic. Ca2+ markedly favored 14C incorporation into the former components, whereas the latter were readily available only under denaturing conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: Phosphorylation of myelin basic protein (MBP) in rat or rabbit brain myelin was markedly stimulated by Ca2+, and this reaction was not essentially augmented by exogenous phosphatidylserine or calmodulin or both. Solubilization of myelin with 0.4% Triton X-100 plus 4 m M EGTA, with or without further fractionation, showed that Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of MBP required phosphatidylserine, but not calmodulin. DEAE-cellulose chromatography of solubilized myelin revealed a pronounced peak of protein kinase activity stimulated by a combination of Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine; a protein kinase stimulated by Ca2+ plus calmodulin was not detected. These findings clearly indicate an involvement of phospholipid-sensitive Ca2+-dependent protein kinase in phosphorylation of brain MBP, although a possible role for the calmodulin-sensitive species of Ca2+-dependent protein kinase in this reaction could not be excluded or established. Phosphorylation of MBP in solubilized rat myelin catalyzed by the phospholipid-sensitive enzyme was inhibited by adriamycin, palmitoylcarnitine, trifluoperazine, melittin, polymyxin B, and N -(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-l-naphthalenesulfonamide (W–7).  相似文献   

10.
Synaptic membranes were incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP, and glycoproteins were isolated by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A agarose. Glycoproteins accounted for 1.5-2.5% of the total 32P incorporated into synaptic membrane proteins. Ca2+ and calmodulin enhanced the phosphorylation of synaptic membrane glycoproteins approximately threefold. In the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, the rate of glycoprotein dephosphorylation was also increased three- to four-fold. Gel electrophoretic analysis identified several synaptic membrane glycoproteins that incorporated 32P, with the most highly labeled glycoprotein under basal phosphorylating conditions having an apparent Mr of 205,000 (gpiii). Ca2+ and calmodulin produced a marked increase in the phosphorylation of a glycoprotein with an apparent Mr of 180,000 (gpiv) and lesser increases in the labeling of three other glycoproteins. Membranes that had been labeled with [gamma-32P]ATP were extracted with Triton X-100 under conditions that yield a detergent-insoluble residue enriched in postsynaptic structures. The Triton X-100 insoluble residue accounted for 20-25% of the 32P associated with synaptic membrane glycoproteins. Gpiv and other glycoproteins, the phosphorylation of which was stimulated by calmodulin, were located exclusively in the Triton X-100 insoluble residue, whereas gpiii and other calmodulin-insensitive glycoproteins partitioned predominantly into the Triton X-100-soluble fraction. Phosphopeptide maps and phosphoamino acid analysis of gpiv isolated from synaptic membranes and a postsynaptic glycoprotein of apparent Mr of 180,000 (gp180) isolated from synaptic junctions indicated that the former protein was identical to the previously identified postsynaptic-specific gp180. In addition to phosphoserine and phosphothreonine, gpiv also contained phosphotyrosine, identifying it as a substrate for tyrosine-protein kinase as well as for Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

11.
Endogenous synaptic vesicle alpha- and beta-tubulin were shown to be the major substrates for a Ca2+-calmodulin-regulated protein kinase system in enriched synaptic vesicle preparations from rat cortex as determined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and peptide mapping. The activation of this endogenous tubulin kinase system was dependent on Ca2+ and the Ca2+ binding protein, calmodulin. Under maximally stimulated conditions, approximately 40% of the tubulin present in enriched synaptic vesicles was phosphorylated within less than 50 s by the vesicle Ca2+-calmodulin kinase. Evidence is presented indicating that the Ca2+-calmodulin tubulin kinase is an enzyme system distinct from previously described cyclic AMP protein kinases. alpha-Tubulin and beta-tubulin were identified as major components of previously designated vesicle phosphorylation bands DPH-L and DPH-M. The Ca2+-calmodulin tubulin kinase is very labile and specialized isolation procedures were necessary to retain activity. Ca2+-activated synaptic vesicle tubulin phosphorylation correlated with vesicle neurotransmitter release. Depolarization-dependent Ca2+ uptake in intact synaptosomes simultaneously stimulated the release of neurotransmitters and the phosphorylation of synaptic vesicle alpha- and beta-tubulin. The results indicate that regulation of the synaptic vesicle tubulin kinase by Ca2+ and calmodulin may play a role in the functional utilization of synaptic vesicle tubulin and may mediate some of the effects of Ca2+ on vesicle function and neurosecretion.  相似文献   

12.
Postsynaptic densities (PSDs) were prepared by the aqueous two-phase extraction of synaptic membranes in the presence of n-octyl glucoside. Incubation of postsynaptic densities with [gamma-32P]ATP resulted in the incorporation of 32P into a range of proteins. Isolation of glycoproteins from 32P-labelled PSDs by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A-agarose identified the postsynaptic glycoprotein of apparent Mr 180,000 (gp180) as a substrate for endogenous protein kinase(s). When the phosphorylation reaction was performed in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, there was an overall 13-fold increase in the phosphorylation of PSD proteins. The largest effects of calmodulin were associated with two proteins of molecular weights 51,000 and 60,000, which showed average calmodulin-dependent increases in phosphorylation of 68-fold. The phosphorylation of gp180 was increased 7.5-fold in the presence of calmodulin. Fifty percent of maximum phosphorylation of proteins and glycoproteins occurred with a free Ca2+ concentration of 0.3 X 10(-6) M. The amounts 12.6 micrograms/ml and 9.1 micrograms/ml of calmodulin were required for 50% of maximum phosphorylation of proteins and glycoproteins, respectively. Peptide mapping experiments identified three major phosphorylation sites in gp180. The phosphorylation of all three sites was increased in the presence of calmodulin. Phosphoamino acid analysis of gp180 revealed that [32P]phosphoserine and [32P]phosphothreonine were both produced during the phosphorylation reaction, with phosphoserine being the predominant product. The phosphorylation of both amino acids was increased in the presence of calmodulin. [32P]phosphotyrosine was also identified as a product of the phosphorylation of gp180.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: In developing chicken brain Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase II (CaMPK-II) changes from being primarily cytosolic to being primarily particulate during the protracted maturation period. To investigate whether thyroid hormone levels may be involved in regulating this subcellular redistribution, we raised chickens from 1 day posthatching on food soaked in 0.15% (wt/vol) propylthiouracil (PTU) plus 0.05% (wt/vol) methimazole (MMI). This produced a mild hypothyroidism specifically during the maturation period and resulted in a 67% reduction in the levels of free triiodothyronine (T3) at 42 days. The concentrations of α- and β-CaMPK-II in cytosol (S3) and crude synaptic membrane (P2M) fractions from forebrain were measured by three methods: Ca2+/calmodulin- or Zn2+-stimulated autophosphorylation or binding of biotinylated calmodulin. By all three methods hypothyroid animals showed a marked retardation of the redistribution of both subunits of CaMPK-II: an increase in the concentration of the enzyme in S3 and a corresponding decrease in P2M with no overall change in the total amount of enzyme and little apparent change in the concentration of other proteins. In both fractions, there was a parallel change in the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated phosphorylation of endogenous protein substrates but no change in the basal or cyclic AMP-stimulated protein phosphorylation. Supplementing the PTU/MMI-treated diet with thyroxine (0.5 ppm) prevented all of the observed changes.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphorylation of brain synaptic and coated vesicle proteins was stimulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin. As determined by 5-15% sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), molecular weights (Mr) of the major phosphorylated proteins were 55,000 and 53,000 in synaptic vesicles and 175,000 and 55,000 in coated vesicles. In synaptic vesicles, phosphorylation was inhibited by affinity-purified antibodies raised against a 30,000 Mr protein doublet endogenous to synaptic and coated vesicles. When this doublet, along with clathrin, was extracted from coated vesicles, phosphorylation did not take place, implying that the protein doublet may be closely associated with Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. Affinity-purified antibodies, raised against clathrin used as a control antibody, failed to inhibit Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation in either synaptic or coated vesicles. Immunoelectron cytochemistry revealed that this protein doublet was present in axon terminal synaptic and coated vesicles. Synaptic vesicles also displayed cAMP-dependent kinase activity; coated vesicles did not. The molecular weights of phosphorylated synaptic vesicle proteins in the presence of Mg2+ and cAMP were: 175,000, 100,000, 80,000, 57,000, 55,000, 53,000, 40,000, and 30,000. Based on the different phosphorylation patterns observed in synaptic and coated vesicles, we propose that brain vesicle protein kinase activities may be involved in the regulation of exocytosis and in retrieval of synaptic membrane in presynaptic axon terminals.  相似文献   

15.
The homologous proteins S-100a and S-100b affect the microtubule system in a distinctly different way in the presence of low molar ratios of Zn2+. Assembly of brain microtubule proteins can be almost completely inhibited and rapid disassembly can be induced by low molar amounts of S-100b in the presence of low molar ratios [2-4] of Zn2+. Higher molar ratios per S-100b (greater than 4) potentiate the general Zn2+ effect, promoting the formation of sheets of microtubules. However, the effect of S-100a is quite different, no inhibition of assembly can be observed and the presence of S-100a seems to protect the microtubule proteins against the effect of Zn2+ by chelating the Zn2+ and decreasing the free metal-ion concentration. S-100a or S-100b cannot bind to the microtubule polymer-form, either in the absence or in the presence of Zn2+.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously isolated two Ca2+, calmodulin-dependent protein kinases with molecular weights of 120,000 (120K enzyme) and 640,000 (640K enzyme), respectively, by gel filtration analysis from rat brain. Chicken gizzard myosin light-chain kinase and the 120K enzyme phosphorylated two light chains of brain myosin, whereas the 640K enzyme phosphorylated both the two light chains and the heavy chain. The phosphopeptides of the light chains digested by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease were similar among chicken gizzard myosin light-chain kinase, the 120K enzyme, and the 640K enzyme. Only the seryl residue in the light chains and the heavy chain was phosphorylated by the enzymes. The phosphorylation of brain myosin by any of these enzymes led to an increase in actin-activated Mg-ATPase activity. The results suggest that brain myosin is regulated by brain Ca2+, calmodulin-dependent protein kinases in a similar but distinct mechanism in comparison with that of smooth muscle myosin.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Autophosphorylation of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) at Thr286 generates Ca2+-independent activity. As an initial step toward understanding CaMKII inactivation, protein phosphatase classes (PP1, PP2A, PP2B, or PP2C) responsible for dephosphorylation of Thr286 in rat forebrain subcellular fractions were identified using phosphatase inhibitors/activators, by fractionation using ion exchange chromatography and by immunoblotting. PP2A-like enzymes account for >70% of activity toward exogenous soluble Thr286-autophosphorylated CaMKII in crude cytosol, membrane, and cytoskeletal extracts; PP1 and PP2C account for the remaining activity. CaMKII is present in particulate fractions, specifically associated with postsynaptic densities (PSDs); each protein phosphatase is also present in isolated PSDs, but only PP1 is enriched during PSD isolation. When isolated PSDs dephosphorylated exogenous soluble Thr286-autophosphorylated CaMKII, PP2A again made the major contribution. However, CaMKII endogenous to PSDs (32P autophosphorylated in the presence of Ca2+/calmodulin) was predominantly dephosphorylated by PP1. In addition, dephosphorylation of soluble and PSD-associated CaMKII in whole forebrain extracts was catalyzed predominantly by PP2A and PP1, respectively. Thus, soluble and PSD-associated forms of CaMKII appear to be dephosphorylated by distinct enzymes, suggesting that Ca2+-independent activity of CaMKII is differentially regulated by protein phosphatases in distinct subcellular compartments.  相似文献   

18.
Phospholipid-sensitive Ca2+ -dependent protein kinase (PL-Ca-PK) and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (A-PK) both preferentially phosphorylated serine residues of bovine myelin basic protein (MBP). Tryptic peptide maps of MBP phosphorylated by PL-Ca-PK or A-PK, however, revealed different phosphopeptides, suggesting a difference in the intramolecular substrate specificity for the two enzymes. Serine-115 of MBP, in the sequence (-Arg-Phe-Ser(115)-Trp-), was found to be a preferred and probably major phosphorylation site for PL-Ca-PK. Because serine-115 of bovine MBP corresponds to serine-113 of rabbit MBP, an in vivo phosphorylation site reported by Martenson et al. (1983), and PL-Ca-PK is present at a very high level in brain and myelin, it is suggested that the enzyme may be responsible for the in vivo phosphorylation of this and other sites in MBP.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The endogenous phosphorylation of serotonin binding protein (SBP), a soluble protein found in central and peripheral serotonergic neurons, inhibits the binding of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin). A protein kinase activity that copurifies with SBP (SBP-kinase) was partially characterized and compared with calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CAM-PK II). SBP itself is not the enzyme since heating destroyed the protein kinase activity without affecting the capacity of the protein to bind [3H]5-HT. SBP-kinase and CAM-PK II kinase shared the following characteristics: (1) size of the subunits; (2) autophosphorylation in a Ca2+-dependent manner; and (3) affinity for Ca2+. In addition, both forms of protein kinase phosphorylated microtubule-associated proteins well and did not phosphorylate myosin, phosphorylase b, and casein. Phorbol esters or diacylglycerol had no effect on either of the protein kinases. However, substantial differences between SBP-kinase and CAM-PK II were observed: (1) CAM enhanced CAM-PK II activity, but had no effect on SBP-kinase; (2) synapsin I was an excellent substrate for CAM-PK II, but not for SBP-kinase; (3) 5-HT inhibited both the autophosphorylation of SBP-kinase and the phosphorylation of SBP, but had no effect on CAM-PK II. These data indicate that SBP-kinase is different from CAM-PK II. Phosphopeptide maps of SBP and SBP-kinase generated by digestion with S. aureus V8 protease are consistent with the conclusion that these proteins are distinct molecular entities. It is suggested that phosphorylation of SBP may regulate the transport of 5-HT within neurons.  相似文献   

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