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1.
In the present study, the predominant pertussis toxin substrate in rabbit neutrophils, Gn, was biochemically compared to Gi and Go purified from brain, after being [32P]ADP-ribosylated by activated pertussis toxin and [32P]NAD. On SDS-polyacrylamide gels, a poorly resolved doublet from neutrophil membranes was observed; the upper band, corresponding to approximately equal to 25% labeling, comigrated with Gi-alpha and the predominant lower band, Gn, migrated intermediately between Gi-alpha and Go-alpha. Peptide maps generated by limited-digestion of the labeled Gn, Gi and Go with S. aureus V8 protease were slightly, but definitively and reproducibly different. Isoelectric focusing clearly distinguished Gn from the other two pertussis toxin substrates. The pI value of Gn, 5.60, was distinctly different from those of Gi, 5.75 and 5.80. Although the pI values for Go and Gn were similar (5.60), the patterns of the two proteins were qualitatively different, with Go being resolved into an equal doublet (pI = 5.55 and 5.60) while Gn appeared predominantly as a single band. Thus, Gn is biochemically distinguishable from Gi and Go of brain and these structural differences are most clearly evident following isoelectric focusing.  相似文献   

2.
Bovine peripheral neutrophils contain high levels of a 40-kDa pertussis toxin substrate, which was found highly enriched in a light membrane fraction upon subcellular fractionation of neutrophil homogenates. The 40-kDa pertussis toxin substrate, referred to as alpha n, was purified to near homogeneity from this fraction by sequential ion-exchange, gel-filtration and hydrophobic chromatography. Purified alpha n was shown to interact with beta gamma subunits, undergo ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin, and bind guanine nucleotides with high affinity. The mobility of purified alpha n on SDS/polyacrylamide gels was intermediate between those of the alpha subunits of Gi and Go, purified from bovine brain, and slightly lower than the mobility of the alpha subunit of transducin (Gt). Several polyclonal antisera against the alpha subunits of bovine Gt and Go did not react with alpha n on immunoblots. CW 6, a polyclonal antiserum reactive against the bovine alpha i, reacted only minimally with alpha n. These results suggest that the major pertussis toxin substrate of bovine neutrophils, designated Gn, is structurally different from previously identified pertussis toxin substrates and may represent a novel guanine-nucleotide-binding protein.  相似文献   

3.
In purified preparations of human erythrocyte GTP-binding proteins, we have identified a new substrate for pertussis toxin, which has an apparent molecular mass of 43 kDa by silver and Coomassie Blue staining. Pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of the 43-kDa protein is inhibited by Mg2+ ion and this inhibition is relieved by the co-addition of micromolar amounts of guanine nucleotides. GTP affects the ADP-ribosylation with a K value of 0.8 microM. Addition of a 10-fold molar excess of purified beta gamma subunits (Mr = 35,000 beta; and Mr = 7,000 gamma) of other GTP-binding proteins results in a significant decrease in the pertussis toxin-mediated ADP-ribosylation of the 43-kDa protein. Treatment of the GTP-binding proteins with guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) and 50 mM MgCl2 resulted in shifting of the 43-kDa protein from 4 S to 2 S on sucrose density gradients. Immunoblotting analysis of the 43-kDa protein with the antiserum A-569, raised against a peptide whose sequence is found in the alpha subunits of all of the known GTP-binding, signal-transducing proteins (Mumby, S. M., Kahn, R. A., Manning, D. R., and Gilman, A. G. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 83, 265-259) showed that the 43-kDa protein is specifically recognized by the common peptide antiserum. A pertussis toxin substrate of similar molecular weight was observed in human erythrocyte membranes, bovine brain membranes, membranes made from the pituitary cell line GH4C1, in partially purified GTP-binding protein preparations of rat liver, and in human neutrophil membranes. Treatment of neutrophils with pertussis toxin prior to preparation of the membranes resulted in abolishment of the radiolabeling of this protein. From these data, we conclude that we have found a new pertussis toxin substrate that is a likely GTP-binding protein.  相似文献   

4.
A 40-kDa protein, in addition to the alpha-subunits of Gs (a GTP-binding protein involved in adenylate cyclase stimulation), was [32P]ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin (CT) in the membranes of neutrophil-like HL-60 cells, only if formyl Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP) was added to the ADP-ribosylation mixture. The 40-kDa protein proved to be the alpha-subunit of Gi serving as the substrate of pertussis toxin, islet-activating protein (IAP). No radioactivity was incorporated into this protein in membranes isolated from HL-60 cells that had been exposed to IAP. Gi-alpha purified from bovine brain and reconstituted into IAP-treated cell membranes was ADP-ribosylated by CT plus fMLP. Gi-alpha was ADP-ribosylated by IAP, but not by CT plus fMLP, in membranes from cells that had been pretreated with CT plus fMLP. When membrane Gi-alpha [32P]ADP-ribosylated by CT plus fMLP or IAP was digested with trypsin, the radiolabeled fragments arising from the two proteins were different from each other. These results suggest that CT ADP-ribosylates Gi-alpha in intact cells when coupled fMLP receptors are stimulated and that the sites modified by two toxins are not identical. CT-induced and fMLP-supported ADP-ribosylation of Gi-alpha was favored by Mg2+ and allow concentrations of GTP or its analogues but suppressed by GDP. The ADP-ribosylation did not occur at all, even in the presence of ADP-ribosylation factor that supported CT-induced modification of Gs, in phospholipid vesicles containing crude membrane extract in which Gi was functionally coupled to stimulated fMLP receptors. Thus, Gi activated via coupled receptors is the real substrate of CT-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation. This reaction may depend on additional factor(s) that are too labile to survive the process of membrane extraction.  相似文献   

5.
The pertussis toxin substrate from RAW264 macrophage cell membranes was characterized by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and by immunoblots using antibodies directed against different guanine nucleotide binding proteins. RAW264 membranes were found to contain one major pertussis toxin substrate, which was recognized by both antibodies AS/6 and LE/3. The AS/6 antibody was made against a synthetic peptide corresponding to the carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of the alpha-subunit of transducin, and the LE/3 antibody was made against the peptide corresponding to amino acids 160-169 of a guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gi-2-alpha) cloned from a mouse macrophage cell line. The RAW264 pertussis toxin substrate was not recognized by either antibody CW/6 or antibody RV/3, which recognize the 41-kilodalton alpha-subunit of brain Gi (Gi-1-alpha) and Go-alpha, respectively. Pertussis toxin substrates from bovine brain were resolved into four major alpha-subunits by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and the LE/3 antibody recognized only one of the four proteins. The brain LE/3 reactive protein also reacted with the AS/6 antibody, migrated with a 40K molecular weight, and had an isoelectric point slightly more basis than the RAW264 pertussis toxin substrate. Therefore, the major pertussis toxin substrate in RAW264 cells appears to be Gi-2, and bovine brain contains a relatively minor amount of a closely related guanine nucleotide binding protein.  相似文献   

6.
Subcellular localization of Gi alpha in human neutrophils   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Subcellular fractions were prepared from human neutrophils by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and analyzed for Gi-like proteins by pertussis toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation and by immunoblotting with rabbit antiserum AS/6 which recognizes purified transducin and Gi, but not Gs or Go alpha-subunits. In resting cells, approximately equal to 60% of pertussis toxin substrate retrieved from the sucrose density gradient localized to the plasma membrane-enriched fraction, approximately equal to 35% to the specific granule-enriched fraction, and approximately equal to 5% to cytosol. The azurophil granule-enriched fraction did not contain pertussis toxin substrate. In contrast to plasma membrane, the specific granule-enriched fraction demonstrated increased AS/6 immunoreactivity of a approximately equal to 41-kDa protein relative to a approximately equal to 40-kDa protein. Within the specific granule-enriched fraction, the peak of pertussis toxin substrate detected immunochemically or by [32P]ADP-ribosylation sedimented at a lighter density (rho = 1.6 g/ml) than did lactoferrin (rho = 1.19 g/ml), suggesting that the intracellular compartment bearing pertussis toxin substrate may not be the lactoferrin containing specific granule, per se. Furthermore, in neutrophils exposed to 10(-8) M N-formylmethionylleucylphenylalanine, a weak degranulating stimulus (7% lactoferrin degranulation), there was a 31-42% decline in pertussus toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation of approximately equal to 40-41-kDa proteins in the specific granule-enriched fraction accompanied by a near-quantitative increase in labeling of plasma membrane. The pool of intracellular formyl peptide receptors localized to the specific granule-enriched fraction appeared functionally coupled to a cosedimenting G-protein in experiments demonstrating modulation of high affinity N-formylmethionylleucyl[3H]phenylalanine binding by guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate or pertussis toxin. The data indicate that neutrophils contain a surface translocatable pool of intracellular G-protein sedimenting in the specific granule-enriched fraction and support the view that mobilization of intracellular G-protein represents a mechanism by which cells can regulate receptor activity.  相似文献   

7.
Antisera AS/6 and 7, raised against a synthetic peptide KENLKDCGLF corresponding to the carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of transducin-alpha, react on immunoblots with purified transducin-alpha and with proteins of 40-41 kDa in all tissues tested. The latter represent one or more forms of Gi alpha but not Go alpha, since a synthetic peptide, KNNLKDCGLF, corresponding to the carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of two forms of Gi alpha blocks AS/6 and 7 reactivity with transducin-alpha and Gi alpha on immunoblots, whereas the corresponding Go-related peptide, ANNLRGCGLY, does not. Antisera LE/2 and 3, raised against the synthetic peptide LERIAQSDYI, corresponding to an internal sequence predicted by one form of Gi alpha cDNA (Gi alpha-2) and differing by 3 residues from the sequence of another form, Gi alpha-1, react strongly with a 40-kDa protein abundant in neutrophil membranes and with the major pertussis toxin substrate purified from bovine neutrophils. LE/2 and 3 reveal a relatively faint 40-kDa band on immunoblots of crude brain membranes or of purified brain Gi/Go. LE/2 and 3 do not react with transducin-alpha or Go alpha nor with the 41-kDa form of pertussis toxin substrate in brain, Gi alpha-1. These antisera distinguish between the major pertussis toxin substrates of brain and neutrophil and tentatively identify the latter as Gi alpha-2.  相似文献   

8.
B Eide  P Gierschik  A Spiegel 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6711-6715
Rabbits immunized with ADP-ribose chemically conjugated to carrier proteins developed antibodies reactive against guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G proteins) that had been mono-ADP-ribosylated by bacterial toxins. Antibody reactivity on immunoblots was strictly dependent on incubation of substrate proteins with both toxin and NAD and was quantitatively related to the extent of ADP-ribosylation. Gi, Go, and transducin (ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin) and elongation factor II (EF-II) (ADP-ribosylated by pseudomonas exotoxin) all reacted with ADP-ribose antibodies. ADP-ribose antibodies detected the ADP-ribosylation of an approximately 40-kilodalton (kDa) membrane protein related to Gi in intact human neutrophils incubated with pertussis toxin and the ADP-ribosylation of an approximately 90-kDa cytosolic protein, presumably EF-II, in intact HUT-102 cells incubated with pseudomonas exotoxin. ADP-ribose antibodies represent a novel tool for the identification and study of G proteins and other substrates for bacterial toxin ADP-ribosylation.  相似文献   

9.
We have characterized the GTPase activity of the Ni-like guanine-nucleotide-binding regulatory protein in rabbit neutrophil plasma membranes. The low Km (3.64 +/- 0.87 X 10(-7) M) GTPase copurified with the formyl peptide receptor in the plasma membrane fraction obtained by discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The Vmax (23.9 +/- 2.91 pmol/mg/min) and Km of the unstimulated enzyme were similar to those reported for Ni in other cell types. The activity of the unstimulated enzyme was both magnesium and sodium dependent and linear over the first 4 min of the assay. The chemoattractants, formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP), C5a, and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) stimulated the GTPase in purified neutrophil plasma membrane preparations, whereas other secretagogues, such as A23187 and PMA, were without effect. Lineweaver-Burk analysis showed an fMLP-induced increase in Vmax (31.94 +/- 4.80 pmol/mg/min) (33.1 +/- 9.5%) but not in Km. The dose-response curve for fMLP stimulation showed an ED50 of 4.1 +/- 1.0 X 10(-8) M and an overall 22.2 +/- 3.1% maximal stimulation. C5a (30 micrograms/ml) increased the activity of the GTPase 21.3 +/- 5.7% and 10(-7) M LTB4 produced a 32.2 +/- 5.4% increase. Activated pertussis toxin treatment of neutrophil plasma membranes inhibited by 72.5 +/- 14.3% the stimulation of GTPase activity induced by fMLP; however, activated cholera toxin had no effect on the inhibition of fMLP stimulation, suggesting a direct role for an Ni-like protein in the coupling process. In contrast to the lack of inhibition of fMLP stimulation by activated cholera toxin treatment of plasma membranes, both pertussis toxin and to a lesser extent cholera toxin treatment reduced fMLP, C5a, and LTB4 stimulation of the GTPase in sonicates prepared from pretreated whole cells. Pertussis toxin inhibited fMLP stimulation of the GTPase by 75 +/- 7%, C5a stimulation was inhibited by 83 +/- 13%, and LTB4 stimulation was inhibited completely. Sonicates prepared from neutrophils treated similarly with cholera toxin showed a smaller inhibition of GTPase activity (50 +/- 4% and 14 +/- 9% for fMLP and LTB4, respectively) with the exception of C5a, where CT inhibition (81 +/- 32%) equaled pertussis toxin inhibition. Similarly, pertussis toxin completely inhibited the release of the granule enzyme N-acetyl-glucosaminidase by all three chemoattractants, whereas cholera toxin, except with C5a stimulation, had little or no effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Detergent extraction of plasma membranes from differentiated HL60 cells, specifically labeled with the chemoattractant, formyl-Nle-Leu-Phe-Nle-[125I-Tyr] Lys, resulted in the solubilization of a receptor-radioligand complex. GTP-binding activity coeluted with the radioligand when the sodium cholate extract was purified by chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose 6MB. A molecular size of approximately 59 A was estimated for the lectin-Sepharose-purified receptor complex by gel filtration chromatography on Ultrogel AcA 34. The isolated complex eluted from the gel filtration column exhibited an enhanced rate of ligand dissociation in response to GTP gamma S. Approximately 0.65 mol of pertussis toxin substrate/mol of receptor was estimated following partial purification of the receptor-ligand complex by sequential chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose, DEAE-Fractogel, and Ultrogel AcA 34. The pertussis toxin substrate which copurified with the receptor was compared with two distinct G proteins, containing alpha-subunits of 40 and 41 kDa, previously purified from HL60 cell plasma membranes. Approximately 86% of the pertussis toxin substrate identified in the receptor preparation consisted of the 40-kDa polypeptide. Differences in the peptide maps indicate that the predominant G protein which coelutes with the receptor is distinct from the purified G protein with an alpha-subunit of 41 kDa but homologous to the purified G protein with an alpha-subunit of 40 kDa.  相似文献   

11.
ADP-ribosylation of transducin by pertussis toxin   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Transducin, the guanyl nucleotide-binding regulatory protein of retinal rod outer segments that couples the photon receptor, rhodopsin, with the light-activated cGMP phosphodiesterase, can be resolved into two functional components, T alpha and T beta gamma. T alpha (39 kDa), which is [32P]ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin and [32P]NAD in rod outer segments and in purified transducin, was also labeled by the toxin after separation from T beta gamma (36 kDa and approximately 10 kDa); neither component of T beta gamma was a pertussis toxin substrate. Labeling of T alpha was enhanced by T beta gamma and was maximal at approximately 1:1 molar ratio of T alpha : T beta gamma. Limited proteolysis by trypsin of T alpha in the presence of guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) resulted in the sequential appearance of proteins of 38 and 32 kDa. The amino terminus of both 38- and 32-kDa proteins was leucine, whereas that of T alpha could not be identified and was assumed to be blocked. The 32-kDa peptide was not a pertussis toxin substrate. Labeling of the 38-kDa protein was poor and was not enhanced by T beta gamma. Trypsin treatment of [32P]ADP-ribosyl-T alpha produced a labeled 37-38-kDa doublet followed by appearance of radioactivity at the dye front. It appears, therefore, that, although the 38-kDa protein was poor toxin substrate, it contained the ADP-ribosylation site. Without rhodopsin, labeling of T alpha (in the presence of T beta gamma) was unaffected by Gpp(NH)p, guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S), GTP, GDP, and guanosine 5'-O-(thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) but was increased by ATP. When photolyzed rhodopsin and T beta gamma were present, Gpp(NH)p and GTP gamma S decreased [32P]ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin. Thus, pertussis toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation of T alpha was affected by nucleotides, rhodopsin and light in addition to T beta gamma. The amino terminus of T alpha, while it does not contain the pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylation site, appeared critical to its reactivity.  相似文献   

12.
In response to a meiosis-inducing hormone, 1-methyladenine (1-MA), starfish oocytes undergo reinitiation of meiosis with germinal vesicle breakdown. The 1-MA-initiated signal is, however, inhibited by prior microinjection of pertussis toxin into the oocytes (Shilling, F., Chiba, K., Hoshi, M., Kishimoto, T., and Jaffe, L.A. (1989) Dev. Biol. 133, 605-608), suggesting that a pertussis-toxin-sensitive guanine-nucleotide-binding protein (G protein) is involved in the 1-MA-induced signal transduction. Based on these findings, we purified a G protein serving as the substrate of pertussis toxin from the plasma membranes of starfish oocytes. The purified G protein had an alpha beta gamma-trimeric structure consisting of 39-kDa alpha, 37-kDa beta, and 8-kDa gamma subunits. The 39-kDa alpha subunit contained a site for ADP-ribosylation catalyzed by pertussis toxin. The alpha subunit was also recognized by antibodies specific for a common GTP-binding site of many mammalian alpha subunits or a carboxy-terminal ADP-ribosylation site of mammalian inhibitory G-alpha. An antibody raised against mammalian 36-/35-kDa beta subunits strongly reacted with the 37-kDa beta subunit of starfish G protein. The purified starfish G protein had a GTP-binding activity with a high affinity and displayed a low GTPase activity. The activity of the G protein serving as the substrate for pertussis-toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation was inhibited by its association with a non-hydrolyzable GTP analogue. Thus, the starfish G protein appeared to be similar to mammalian G proteins at least in terms of its structure and properties of nucleotide binding and the pertussis toxin substrate. A possible role of the starfish G protein is also discussed in the signal transduction between 1-MA receptors and reinitiation of meiosis with germinal vesicle breakdown.  相似文献   

13.
Dopaminergic inhibition of prolactin release from the anterior pituitary may be mediated through both the adenylate cyclase and Ca2+ mobilization/phosphoinositide pathways. The D2-dopamine receptor of the bovine anterior pituitary has been partially purified by affinity chromatography on CMOS-Sepharose (immobilized carboxymethyleneoximinospiperone). Reinsertion of these partially purified receptor preparations into phospholipid vesicles reconstituted guanine nucleotide-sensitive high affinity agonist binding, agonist-promoted GTPase and 35S-labeled guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) [( 35S]GTP gamma S) binding activity in these preparations. Pertussis toxin treatment of the purified receptor preparation abolished agonist-stimulated GTPase and guanine nucleotide-sensitive high affinity agonist binding. These observations suggest that the receptor copurifies with an endogenous, pertussis toxin-sensitive guanine nucleotide binding protein (N). [32P]ADP-ribosylation of affinity-purified D2 receptor preparations by pertussis toxin revealed the presence of a substrate of Mr 39,000-40,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Peptide maps generated using elastase of the [32P]ADP-ribosylated endogenous N protein, transducin, and Ni and No from brain revealed similarities but not identity between the endogenous pituitary N protein and brain Ni and No. Immunoblotting of the partially purified D2 receptor preparations showed an Mr 39,000-40,000 band with an Ni-specific antiserum raised against a synthetic peptide, and with RV3, an No-specific anti-serum, but not with CW6, an antiserum strongly reactive with brain Ni. Several lines of evidence indicate that endogenous pituitary N protein is functionally coupled to the D2 receptor. As measured by [35S]GTP gamma S binding, ratios of 0.2-0.6 mol N protein/mol receptor were observed. Association of N protein with the D2 receptor was increased by agonist pretreatment and decreased by guanine nucleotides. These results suggest that No and/or a form of Ni distinct from the Mr 41,000 pertussis toxin substrate (Ni) is the predominant N protein functionally coupled with the D2-dopamine receptor of anterior pituitary.  相似文献   

14.
Amounts of the guanine nucleotide binding regulatory proteins which are also pertussis toxin substrates (such as Ni and No) were measured in rat glioma, C6BU-1, cells and in neuroblastoma X glioma, NG108-15, hybrid cells. Measurements were performed both by quantitating pertussis toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation and by quantitative immunoblotting with affinity purified antibodies specific for Ni or No. The amounts of pertussis toxin substrate in C6 and NG108-15 cells are 7.5 and 0.6 pmol/mg membrane protein, respectively. These levels are minimum values and higher estimates of the total amounts of N proteins in the two cells are obtained by quantitative immunoblot analysis of the beta-subunit common to all N proteins. Immunoblots with specific antibodies show that NG108-15 cells contain 3.8 pmol/mg of No and detectable but small (less than 0.1 pmol/mg) amounts of Ni. In contrast, C6 cell membranes contain no detectable No and only 0.14 pmol/mg Ni. Thus, C6 cells contain large amounts of a pertussis toxin substrate which is neither Ni nor No.  相似文献   

15.
GTP-binding regulatory proteins (G-proteins) were identified in chemosensory membranes from the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. The common G-protein beta-subunit was identified by immunoblotting in both isolated olfactory cilia and purified taste plasma membranes. A cholera toxin substrate (Mr 45,000), corresponding to the G-protein that stimulates adenylate cyclase, was identified in both membranes. Both membranes also contained a single pertussis toxin substrate. In taste membranes, this component co-migrated with the alpha-subunit of the G-protein that inhibits adenylate cyclase. In olfactory cilia, the Mr 40,000 pertussis toxin substrate cross-reacted with antiserum to the common amino acid sequence of G-protein alpha-subunits, but did not cross-react with antiserum to the alpha-subunit of the G-protein from brain of unknown function. The interaction of G-proteins with chemosensory receptors was determined by monitoring receptor binding affinity in the presence of exogenous guanine nucleotides. L-Alanine and L-arginine bind with similar affinity to separate receptors in both olfactory and gustatory membranes from the catfish. GTP and a nonhydrolyzable analogue decreased the affinity of olfactory L-alanine and L-arginine receptors by about 1 order of magnitude. In contrast, the binding affinities of the corresponding taste receptors were unaffected. These results suggest that olfactory receptors are functionally coupled to G-proteins in a manner similar to some hormone and neurotransmitter receptors.  相似文献   

16.
A cDNA encoding a previously unknown G protein alpha-subunit lacking the site for pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation was recently cloned and its putative protein product named Gz (Fong, H. K. W., Yoshimoto, K. K., Eversole-Cire, P., and Simon, M. I. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 85, 3066-3070) or Gx (Matsuoka, M., Itoh, H. Kozasa, T., and Kaziro, Y. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 85, 5384-5388). A synthetic peptide corresponding to the deduced carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of this putative protein (alpha z) has been synthesized and used to prepare a polyclonal rabbit antiserum directed against the protein. The specificity and cross-reactivity of this antiserum was assessed using bacterially expressed recombinant G protein alpha-subunit fusion proteins (r alpha). The crude antiserum strongly recognizes r alpha z in immunoblots. Pretreatment of antiserum with antigen peptide greatly reduces the interaction of the antiserum with r alpha z. Affinity purified antiserum strongly recognizes expressed r alpha z, does not recognize r alpha s1, r alpha s1, r alpha o, or r alpha i3, and very weakly interacts with r alpha i1 and r alpha i2. In contrast, the alpha-subunits of purified bovine brain Gi1 and human erythrocyte Gi2 and Gi3 did not react with the alpha z-antiserum. Partially purified mixtures of human erythrocyte G proteins contain a 41-kDa protein that reacts specifically in immunoblots with both crude and affinity purified alpha z-specific antiserum. Quantitative immunoblotting using r alpha z as a standard indicates that there is 60-100 ng of alpha z/micrograms of 40/41-kDa alpha-subunit protein in partially purified human erythrocyte G protein preparations. We conclude that we have identified the alpha z gene product as a 41-kDa trace protein in human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
In response to a meiosis-inducing hormone, 1-methyladenine (1-MA), starfish oocytes undergo reinitiation of meiosis with germinal vesicle breakdown. The 1-MA-initiated signal is, however, inhibited by prior microinjection of pertussis toxin into the oocytes, suggesting that a guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein) serving as the substrate of pertussis toxin is involved in the 1-MA receptor-mediated signal. We thus investigated properties of 1-MA receptors by means of binding of the radiolabeled ligand to the oocyte membranes. There were apparently two forms of 1-MA receptors with high and low affinities in the membranes. The high-affinity form was converted into the low-affinity one in the presence of a non-hydrolyzable analogue of GTP. A 39-kDa protein, which had been identified as the alpha-subunit of the major substrate G protein for pertussis toxin, was also ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin only when 1-MA was added to the membranes. The ADP-ribosylated 39-kDa alpha-subunit could be immunoprecipitated with antibodies raised against the carboxy-terminal site of mammalian inhibitory G-alpha. These results indicate that 1-MA receptors are functionally coupled with the 39-kDa pertussis toxin-substrate G protein in starfish oocyte membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The ADP-ribosyl moiety of NAD was transferred to a 40-kDa protein when rat liver nuclei were incubated with pertussis toxin. The 40-kDa substrate in the nuclei displayed unique properties as follows, some of which were apparently distinct from those observed with the toxin-substrate GTP-binding protein (Gi) in the liver plasma membranes. 1) The nuclear 40-kDa protein was recognized with antibodies reacting with the alpha-subunits (alpha i-1 and alpha i-2) of Gi, but not with anti-Go-alpha-subunit antibody. 2) The nuclear protein had a higher mobility than alpha-subunit of the plasma membrane-bound Gi upon electrophoresis with a urea/sodium dodecyl sulfate-containing polyacrylamide gel. 3) The nuclear protein was not extracted from the nuclei with 1% Triton X-100, whereas Gi was easily solubilized from the plasma membranes. 4) There was a beta gamma-subunit-like activity in the nuclei, which was assayed by an ability to support pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a purified alpha-subunit of Gi. Moreover, a 36-kDa protein in the nuclei was recognized with antibody raised against purified beta-subunits of Gi. 5) Pertussis toxin-induced ADP-ribosylation of the nuclear protein was selectively inhibited by the addition of a nonhydrolyzable GTP analogue, and its inhibitory action was competitively blocked by the simultaneous addition of GDP or its analogues, as had been observed with plasma membrane-bound Gi. It thus appeared that a novel form of alpha beta gamma-trimeric GTP-binding protein serving as the substrate of pertussis toxin was present in rat liver nuclei. In order to examine a possible role of the nuclear GTP-binding protein, rats were injected with carbon tetrachloride, a necrosis inducer of hepatocytes. There was a marked increase in the nuclear substrate activity from 3-6 days after the injection, without a significant change in the activity of Gi in the plasma membranes. The time course of the increase corresponded with a recovering stage from the hepatocyte necrosis. These results suggested that the nuclear GTP-binding protein found in the present study might be involved at some stages in the hepatocyte growth.  相似文献   

19.
We have isolated the major GTP-binding proteins from myeloid HL-60 cell plasma membranes. Two pertussis toxin substrates with similar apparent molecular masses of 40 and 41 kDa, respectively, are contained in these preparations, with both proteins being ADP-ribosylated to a similar extent. Partial chymotryptic proteolysis of fractions containing the [32P]ADP-ribosylated 40-kDa GTP-binding protein alpha subunit demonstrated production of 32P-labeled peptides of 28 and 16 kDa which were not observed after partial proteolysis of fractions containing solely the 41-kDa protein. Similarly, mild acid hydrolysis produced an additional 28-kDa fragment only from fractions containing the 40-kDa protein. The results presented here indicate the presence of two distinct pertussis toxin substrates in myeloid cells. The 41-kDa pertussis toxin substrate is likely to represent the alpha subunit of the inhibitory GTP-binding regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase, whereas the 40-kDa substrate may represent the alpha subunit of the GTP-binding protein which is coupled to chemoattractant receptors. In addition to the pertussis toxin substrates, an additional major peak of guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate-binding activity closely corresponded to the appearance of a 23-kDa protein.  相似文献   

20.
In cloned osteoblast-like cells, MC3T3-E1, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) stimulated the formation of inositol phosphates in a dose-dependent manner in the range between 10 nM and 10 microM. Pertussis toxin inhibited the effect of PGE2 dose-dependently in the range between 1 ng/ml and 1 micrograms/ml. In the cell membranes, pertussis toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of a protein with an Mr of about 40,000. Pretreatment of membranes with 10 microM PGE2 in the presence of 2.5 mM MgCl2 and 100 microM GTP markedly attenuated this pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of the protein in a time-dependent manner. G12 was detected in these cells by immunoblotting with purified anti-G12 alpha antibodies. The results indicate the possible coupling of PGE2 signalling with pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein, which is probably G12, in osteoblast-like cells.  相似文献   

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