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1.
Regulation of ciliary adenylate cyclase by Ca2+ in Paramecium.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
In the ciliated protozoan Paramecium, Ca2+ and cyclic nucleotides are believed to act as second messengers in the regulation of the ciliary beat. Ciliary adenylate cyclase was activated 20-30-fold (half-maximal at 0.8 microM) and inhibited by higher concentrations (10-20 microM) of free Ca2+ ion. Ca2+ activation was the result of an increase in Vmax., not a change in Km for ATP. The activation by Ca2+ was seen only with Mg2+ATP as substrate; with Mn2+ATP the basal adenylate cyclase activity was 10-20-fold above that with Mg2+ATP, and there was no further activation by Ca2+. The stimulation by Ca2+ of the enzyme in cilia and ciliary membranes was blocked by the calmodulin antagonists calmidazolium (half-inhibition at 5 microM), trifluoperazine (70 microM) and W-7 (50-100 microM). When ciliary membranes (which contained most of the ciliary adenylate cyclase) were prepared in the presence of Ca2+, their adenylate cyclase was insensitive to Ca2+ in the assay. However, the inclusion of EGTA in buffers used for fractionation of cilia resulted in full retention of Ca2+-sensitivity by the ciliary membrane adenylate cyclase. The membrane-active agent saponin specifically suppressed the Ca2+-dependent adenylate cyclase without inhibiting basal activity with Mg2+ATP or Mn2+ATP. The ciliary adenylate cyclase was shown to be distinct from the Ca2+-dependent guanylate cyclase; the two activities had different kinetic parameters and different responses to added calmodulin and calmodulin antagonists. Our results suggest that Ca2+ influx through the voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in the ciliary membrane may influence intraciliary cyclic AMP concentrations by regulating adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

2.
Ca2+-regulated guanylate cyclase in ciliary membranes from Paramecium contained tightly bound calmodulin. Antisera against calmodulin from Tetrahymena and soybean inhibited enzyme activity. EGTA did not easily release calmodulin; however, La3+ inhibited guanylate cyclase by dissociation of calmodulin. While La could not replace Ca in the activation of guanylate cyclase, it substituted for Ca2+ in the activation of calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase from pig brain independently of whether homologous or Paramecium calmodulin was used. After removal of endogenous calmodulin from guanylate cyclase, reconstitution was achieved with calmodulin from Paramecium, Tetrahymena, pig brain, and soybean. Ca2+-binding proteins lacking trimethyllysine like calmodulin from Dictyostelium, parvalbumin, and troponin C failed to restore enzyme activity. The properties of the native and reconstituted guanylate cyclase/calmodulin complex were compared. Reassociation of calmodulin with its target enzyme was weak since all calmodulin remained in the supernatant after a single centrifugation. While most enzyme characteristics remained unchanged in the reconstituted complex, the inhibition by Ca greater than 100 microM was of a mixed-type compared to noncompetitive inhibition in the native enzyme. The regulation of the enzyme by cations was also altered. Whereas Ca was the most potent and specific activator of the native enzyme, in the reconstituted system Sr was far more effective.  相似文献   

3.
The subcellular distribution of calmodulin and particulate calmodulin-binding activity was studied in a eukaryotic protozoan, Tetrahymena pyriformis NT-1. The particulate calmodulin-binding activity was found to be localized principally in microsomes and to some extent in cilia and surface membranes called pellicles. Nearly all (93%) of the total amount of calmodulin was recovered in two soluble compartments, the ciliary and postmicrosomal supernatant fractions.  相似文献   

4.
Guanylate cyclase activity decreased during the division phase of heat-shock synchronized Tetrahymena pyriformis, strain GL. However, when Ca2+ was removed by EGTA to negate the effects of the Ca2+-binding protein (calmodulin), which is required for the full activity of guanylate cyclase in this organism, no significant change in the enzymatic activity was observed throughout the cell cycle. On the other hand, the reduced guanylate cyclase activity at division phase was associated with a decreased level of calmodulin content. These results suggest that fluctuations in guanylate cyclase activity during the cell cycle would be dependent on the concentration of calmodulin.  相似文献   

5.
Previously, the guanylate cyclase activity of Tetrahymena pyriformis was shown to be activated by an endogenous modulator (calmodulin)-like protein (Na-gao, S., Suzuki, Y., Watanabe, Y., and Nozawa, Y. (1979) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 90, 261-268). This protein has now been identified as the modulator protein. The identification was based on the capability of this protein to activate the brain modulator-deficient phosphodiesterase and the mobility of this protein upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The activation of guanylate cyclase was specifically attributable to the Tetrahymena modulator protein since other modulator proteins examined (bovine brain, sea anemone, and scallop) were ineffective. Under the conditions where the activation of Tetrahymena guanylate cyclase occurred, guanylate cyclase activities from other sources, that include rat brain, rat lung, and human platelet, were not affected. In the phosphodiesterase activation, the potencies of scallop and Tetrahymena modulator proteins, which are represented by reciprocals of the quantities of proteins required for half-maximal activation of enzyme, were 66% and 55%, respectively, of that of the brain protein. The same decreasing order was seen for the affinity of these proteins for Ca2+ in enzyme activation. The results suggest a directional change of the modulator protein during the molecular evolution toward an increase in the capability in Ca2+-dependent enzyme activation.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine brain calmodulin (B-CaM) was shown to inhibit the native Tetrahymena calmodulin (T-CaM)-dependent activation of guanylate cyclase in Tetrahymena at the concentrations that failed to affect the basal enzyme activity. The enzyme inhibition was completely reversed by high concentration of T-CaM, but not by Ca2+. The antagonistic interaction between T-CaM and B-CaM was not observed in the calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from bovine brain. Two calmodulins migrated independently on 15% polyacrylamide gel system. These results suggest that B-CaM exerts its inhibitory effect on the guanylate cyclase activation by interacting with the calmodulin-binding site of this enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
The ultracytochemical localization of adenylate cyclase (AC) and guanylate cyclase B (GC-B) and C (GC-C) activity was studied after stimulation with pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide, C-type natriuretic peptide and guanylin, respectively, in normal human respiratory nasal mucosa and mucosa of nasal polyps. To demonstrate these enzymatic activities, we employed enzyme-ultracytochemical methods for electron microscopy. Both normal and pathologic nasal mucosa contained AC, GC-B and GC-C activity. In the upper portion of respiratory epithelium, the enzymes were detected on ciliary and microvillar membranes. In ciliary membranes, GC-B was the predominant form expressed. In goblet cells and in glands of the lamina propria, enzymatic activities were localized mainly on plasma membranes and on membranes lining secretory granules. The results did not reveal any evident differences between the enzymatic activities in normal and pathological nasal mucosa and suggest complementary activities for these enzymes and their stimulators in the regulation of mucociliary transport and glandular secretion.  相似文献   

8.
Adenylate cyclase activity measured by the formation of cyclic AMP in rat brain membranes was inhibited by a shellfish toxin, domoic acid (DOM). The inhibition of enzyme was dependent on DOM concentration, but about 50% of enzyme activity was resistant to DOM-induced inhibition. Rat brain supernatant resulting from 105,000×g centrifugation for 60 min, stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in membranes. Domoic acid abolished the supernatant-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. The brain supernatant contains factors which modulate adenylate cyclase activity in membranes. The stimulatory factors include calcium, calmodulin, and GTP. In view of these findings, we examined the role of calcium and calmodulin in DOM-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase in brain membranes. Calcium stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in membranes, and further addition of calmodulin potentiated calcium-stimulated enzyme activity in a concentration dependent manner. Calmodulin also stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but further addition of calcium did not potentiate calmodulin-stimulated enzyme activity. These results show that the rat brain membranes contain endogenous calcium and calmodulin which stimulate adenylate cyclase activity. However, calmodulin appears to be present in membranes in sub-optimal concentration for adenylate cyclase activation, whereas calcium is present at saturating concentration. Adenylate cyclase activity diminished as DOM concentration was increased, reaching a nadir at about 1 mM. Addition of calcium restored DOM-inhibited adenylate cyclase activity to the control level. Similarly, EGTA also inhibited adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes in a concentration dependent manner, and addition of calcium restored EGTA-inhibited enzyme activity to above control level. The fact that EGTA is a specific chelator of calcium, and that DOM mimicked adenylate cyclase inhibition by EGTA, indicate that calcium mediates DOM-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes. While DOM completely abolished the supernatant-, and Gpp (NH)p-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, it partly blocked calmodulin-, and forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes. These results indicate that DOM may interact with guanine nucleotide-binding (G) protein and/or the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase to produce inhibition of enzyme in rat brain membranes.  相似文献   

9.
Guanylate cyclase activity decreased during the division phase of heat-shock synchronized Tetrahymena pyriformis, strain GL. However, when Ca2+ was removed by EGTA to negate the effects of the Ca2+-binding protein (calmodulin), which is required for the full activity of guanylate cyclase in this organism, no significant change in the enzymatic activity was observed throughout the cell cycle. On the other hand, the reduced guanylate cyclase activity at division phase was associated with a decreased level of calmodulin content. These results suggest that fluctuations in guanylate cyclase activity during the cell cycle would be dependent on the concentration of calmodulin.  相似文献   

10.
P Kov?cs  G Csaba  S Nagao  Y Nozawa 《Microbios》1989,59(239):123-128
The primary interaction with insulin accounted for considerable increases in both the calmodulin content and guanylate cyclase activity of Tetrahymena. Both activities were still elevated after 24 h (6-8 generations), but while the calmodulin level showed a decrease, guanylate cyclase activity showed a further significant increase relative to the immediate response. A second treatment with insulin decreased rather than increased both activities, but to dissimilar degrees, in that the calmodulin content returned to the control level, whereas guanylate cyclase activity still increased over the level measured after the first treatment. It appears that insulin imprinting altered the calmodulin-dependent guanylate cyclase regulation in Tetrahymena, and caused a switch-over to an 'energy-saving' system through decelerating the breakdown of cGMP by phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

11.
The subcellular localization of guanylate cyclase was examined in rat liver. About 80% of the enzyme activity of homogenates was found in the soluble fraction. Particulate guanylate cyclase was localized in plasma membranes and microsomes. Crude nuclear and microsomal fractions were applied to discontinuous sucrose gradients, and the resulting fractions were examined for guanylate cyclase, various enzyme markers of cell components, and electron microscopy. Purified plasma membrane fractions obtained from either preparation had the highest specific activity of guanylate cyclase, 30 to 80 pmol/min/mg of protein, and the recovery and relative specific activity of guanylate cyclase paralleled that of 5'-nucleotidase and adenylate cyclase in these fractions. Significant amounts of guanylate cyclase, adenylate cyclase, 5'-nucleotidase, and glucose-6-phosphatase were recovered in purified preparation of microsomes. We cannot exclude the presence of guanylate cyclase in other cell components such as Golgi. The electron microscopic studies of fractions supported the biochemical studies with enzyme markers. Soluble guanylate cyclase had typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to GTP and had an apparent Km for GTP of 35 muM. Ca-2+ stimulated the soluble activity in the presence of low concentrations of Mn-2+. The properties of guanylate cyclase in plasma membranes and microsomes were similar except that Ca-2+ inhibited the activity associated with plasma membranes and had no effect on that of microsomes. Both particulate enzymes were allosteric in nature; double reciprocal plots of velocity versus GTP were not linear, and Hill coefficients for preparations of plasma membranes and microsomes were calculated to be 1.60 and 1.58, respectively. The soluble and particulate enzymes were inhibited by ATP, and inhibition of the soluble enzyme was slightly greater. While Mg-2+ was less effective than Mn-2+ as a sole cation, all enzyme fractions were markedly stimulated with Mg-2+ in the presence of a low concentration of Mn-2+. Triton X-100 increased the activity of particulate fractions about 3- to 10-fold and increased the soluble activity 50 to 100%.  相似文献   

12.
Tetrahymena calmodulin radioiodinated with a lactoperoxidase method retained full ability to activate Tetrahymena guanylate cyclase. Binding of [125I]calmodulin to Tetrahymena microsomal membranes was Ca2+-dependent and inhibited by excess unlabeled calmodulin or trifluoperazine. When Triton X-100-solubilized microsomes were chromatographed on calmodulin Sepharose, several proteins were found to interact with calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

13.
Particulate adenylate cyclase (AC) and guanylate cyclase (GC) activities localized in the ciliary membrane from Paramecium were solubilized by a two-step procedure using the detergents Brij 56 and Lubrol PX. The enzymes remained in the supernatant after a 100 000 × g centrifugation. Upon gel chromatography, AC and GC were almost completely separated proving that each enzyme is a distinct molecular entity. Solubilization of GC was achieved with the calmodulin subunit remaining firmly attached to the catalytic part. Antibodies against calmodulin inhibited the enzyme as did La3+ and EGTA. AC activity appeared to be regulated specifically by K+, enzyme activity being enhanced up to 100% by 15 mM K+. Na+ and Li+ were inactive.  相似文献   

14.
A particulate adenylate cyclase was identified in the excitable ciliary membrane from Paramecium tetraurelia. MnATP was preferentially used as substrate, the Km was 67 μM, Vmax was 1 nmol cAMP.min?1.mg?1, a marked temperature optimum of 37°C was observed. Adenylate cyclase was not inhibited by 100 μM EGTA or 100 μM La3+, whereas under these conditions guanylate cyclase activity was abolished. Fractionation of ciliary membrane vesicles by a Percoll density gradient yielded two vesicle populations with adenylate cyclase activity. In contrast, calmodulin/Ca-dependent guanylate cyclase was associated with vesicles of high buoyant density only.  相似文献   

15.
Further studies of dopamine metabolism and function in Tetrahymena   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The large amounts of dopamine accumulated by cells of Tetrahymena pyriformis strain NT-1 and secreted into their growth medium were found to depend primarily upon an extracellular, non-enzymatic conversion of tyrosine to L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA); L-DOPA was then rapidly taken into the cells and transformed into dopamine enzymatically. Efforts to find physiologically significant dopamine binding sites on the cell surface or dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity were unsuccessful, suggesting that the catecholamine does not function in Tetrahymena as it does in higher animals.  相似文献   

16.
The concentration of adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) and the activity of adenylate cyclase were determined for the first time in conjuncation with cyclic 3',5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase (phosphodiesterase) during the growth cycle of Tetrahymena pyriformis. High levels of cyclic AMP observed during early exponential and late stationary phases were associated with elevated adenylate cyclase and decreased phosphodiesterase activities. Adenylate cyclase and cyclic AMP were decreased and phosphodiesterase was increased in cells grown in glucose-supplemented medium. In contrast to findings in mammalian liver, cyclic AMP was decreased during active gluconeogenesis in Tetrahymena. This suggests a different modulation of carbohydrate metabolism in the two species. The results illustrate that both the content of cyclic AMP and its action as a regulatory agent in Tetrahymena are uniquely suited to the metabolism of this organism.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylate cyclase activity in bovine cerebellar membranes is regulated by calmodulin, forskolin, and both stimulatory (Ns) and inhibitory (Ni) guanine nucleotide-binding components. The susceptibility of the enzyme to chymotrypsin proteolysis was used as a probe of structure-function relationships for these different regulatory pathways. Pretreatment of membranes with low concentrations of chymotrypsin (1-2 micrograms/ml) caused a three- to fourfold increase in basal adenylate cyclase activity and abolished the Ca2+-dependent activation of the enzyme by calmodulin. In contrast, the stimulation of the enzyme by GTP plus isoproterenol was strongly potentiated after protease treatment, an effect that mimics the synergistic activation of adenylate cyclase by Ns and calmodulin in unproteolyzed membranes. Limited proteolysis revealed low- and high-affinity components in the activation of adenylate cyclase by forskolin. The low-affinity component was readily lost on proteolysis, together with calmodulin stimulation of the enzyme. The activation via the high-affinity component was resistant to proteolysis and nonadditive with the Ns-mediated activation of the enzyme, suggesting that both effectors utilize a common pathway. The inhibitory effect of low concentrations (10(-7) M) of guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] on forskolin-activated adenylate cyclase was retained after limited proteolysis of the membranes, indicating that the proteolytic activation does not result from an impairment of the Ni subunit. Moreover, in the rat cerebellum, proteolysis as well as calmodulin was found to enhance strongly the inhibitory effect of Gpp(NH)p on basal adenylate cyclase activity. Our results suggest that calmodulin and Ns/Ni interact with two structurally distinct but allosterically linked domains of the enzyme. Both domains appear to be involved in the mode of action of forskolin.  相似文献   

18.
Guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) is a chemorepellent in Tetrahymena thermophila that has been shown to stimulate cell division as well as ciliary reversal. Previous studies have proposed that GTP avoidance is linked to a receptor-mediated, calcium-based depolarization. However, the intracellular mechanisms involved in GTP avoidance have not been previously documented. In this study, we examine the hypothesis that GTP signals through a tyrosine kinase pathway in T. thermophila. Using behavioral assays, enzyme immunosorbent assays, Western blotting, and immunofluorescence, we present data that implicate a tyrosine kinase, phospholipase C, intracellular calcium, nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and guanylyl cyclase in GTP signaling. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein eliminates GTP avoidance in Tetrahymena in behavioral assays. Similarly, pharmacological inhibitors of phospholipase C, NOS, and guanylyl cyclase all eliminated Tetrahymena avoidance to GTP. Immunofluorescence data shows evidence of tyrosine kinase activity in the cilia, suggesting that this enzyme activity could be directly involved in ciliary reversal.  相似文献   

19.
Tetrahymena calmodulin (CaM) differs from mammalian CaM in its ability to activate Tetrahymena guanylate cyclase. Of 12 differences in amino acid sequence, two occur near the carboxyl terminus (Gln-143----Arg and Thr-146----deletion). To investigate the functional significance of the carboxyl-terminal region in activation of the guanylate cyclase, three mutated CaMs were engineered by using cassette mutagenesis of rat CaM cDNA: Gln-143----Arg (CaM.A), Thr-146----deletion (CaM.D), and Gln-143----Arg/Thr-146 deletion (CaM.AD). Recombinant wild type CaM (wCaM), CaM.A, CaM.D, and CaM.AD were indistinguishable in their ability to activate cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. The two mutated CaMs (CaM.A and CaM.AD) with the Gln-143 replacement activated guanylate cyclase of Tetrahymena plasma membrane in the presence of Ca2+, with the maximal activation being half of that produced by Tetrahymena CaM. In contrast, neither CaM.D nor wCaM could stimulate the cyclase activity. A CaM antagonist, W-7 (N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide), prevented the cyclase activation by either Tetrahymena CaM, CaM.A, or CaM.AD. Thus, we conclude that Arg-143 is in a region of the molecule involved in activation of Tetrahymena guanylate cyclase. The data also suggest that the cyclase activation by Tetrahymena CaM requires complex macromolecular interactions between the entire CaM molecule and the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Addition of bovine brain calmodulin and S-100 inhibited Tetrahymena calmodulin-induced stimulation of guanylate cyclase, but they did not affect enzymatic activity in the presence of calcium alone. Troponin C shows little effect on the cyclase activity regardless of the presence or absence of Tetrahymena calmodulin. The inhibitory effects of brain calmodulin and S-100 were overcome by the addition of Tetrahymena calmodulin, but not by calcium. Both calmodulins from Tetrahymena and bovine brain elicited stimulation of heart phosphodiesterase, while troponin C and S-100 did not affect the phosphodiesterase activity in the presence and absence of Tetrahymena calmodulin.  相似文献   

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