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1.
The hydrogen ion changes resulting from the photolysis of the rod visual pigment, rhodopsin, were investigated at acidic pH (5.2–6.5). After light-induced proton uptake, slow proton release occurred both in the dark and in the light. It was found that the amount of proton release in the dark was not equal to that in the light; about 0.9 proton remained bound to rhodopsin bleached in the dark, while all the bound protons were released in the light. Furthermore, the time course of proton release in the dark is not related to the decay of metarhodopsin II380, but is closely related to the formation of metarhodopsin III465.  相似文献   

2.
The soluble form of guanylate cyclase from rat lung has been purified approximately 23,000-fold to homogeneity by isoelectric precipitation, GTP-Sepharose chromatography, and preparative gel electrophoresis. A single protein-staining band is observed after analytical gel electrophoresis on either 4 or 7.5% polyacrylamide gels. The final purified enzyme has a specific activity of about 700 nmol of cyclic GMP formed/min/mg of protein at 37 degrees C in the presence of 4.8 mM MnCl2 and 100 micrometer GTP. Bovine serum albumin appears to slightly increase guanylate cyclase activity, but mainly stabilizes the purified enzyme; in its presence, specific activities in excess of 1 mumol of cyclic GMP formed/min/mg of enzyme protein can be obtained. When Mg2+ or Ca2+ are substituted for Mn2+, specific activities decrease to approximately 21 and 40 nmol of cyclic GMP formed/min/mg of protein, respectively. The apparent Michaelis constant for MnGTP in the presence of 4.8 mM MnCl2 is 10.2 micrometer. Kinetic patterns on double reciprocal plots as a function of free Mn2+ are concave downward. The native enzyme has a molecular weight of approximately 151,000 as determined on Sephacryl S-200; sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis results in two protein-staining bands with approximate molecular weights of 79,400 and 74,000. Thus, it appears that the soluble form of guanylate cyclase from rat lung exists as a dimer.  相似文献   

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6.
Soluble guanylate cyclase enzyme was purified from human platelets. The soluble fraction of the lysed platelets was sequentially chromatographed over DEAE-sepharose, GTP-agarose and HPLC size-exclusion columns. About 0.1 mg of purified enzyme could be obtained from 2000 ml of platelet rich plasma. The purified enzyme had the specific activity of 205 nmoles cGMP/mg/min with Mn2+ as cofactor. The enzyme eluted at the 160,000 daltons position from the size-exclusion column. Electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate under reducing conditions revealed two subunits of 83,000 and 71,000 daltons respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Guanylate cyclase was purified 12,700-fold from bovine brain supernatant, and the purified enzyme exhibited essentially a single protein band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Repeated injection of the purified enzyme into rabbits produced an antibody to guanylate cyclase. The immunoglobulin G fraction from the immunized rabbit gave only one precipitin line against the purified guanylate cyclase and the crude supernatant of bovine brain on double immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoreis. The antibody completely inhibited the soluble guanylate cyclase activity from bovine brain, various tissues of rat and mouse and neuroblastoma N1E 115 cells, whereas the Triton-dispersed particulate guanylate cyclase from these tissues was not inhibited by the antibody.  相似文献   

8.
The guanylate cyclase reaction was studied to determine the identity of the product(s) formed other than guanosine-3′,5′-monophosphate (cyclic GMP). Partially purified guanylate cyclase preparations from rat lung catalyzed the formation of nearly equal amounts of PP1 and of cyclic GMP from GTP. Column chromatography of the enzyme preparation on DEAE-Sephadex or Bio-Gel A-5m failed to separate the enzyme(s) involved in formation of cyclic GMP and of PP1. Nucleotide inhibitors of cyclic GMP formation also inhibited PP1 formation, and Ca2+, a stimulant of cyclic GMP formation in the presence of Mn2+, also stimulated PP1 formation. Detectable PP1 formation was not observed when ATP was present instead of GTP.The results show that guanylate cyclase, in vitro, catalyzes the formation of pyrophosphate from GTP concomitant with the synthesis of cyclic GMP.  相似文献   

9.
When the crude mitochondrial fraction of rat brain was homogenized with distilled water and centrifuged, most of guanylate cyclase activity was detected in the soluble fraction. The total guanylate cyclase activity recovered in the soluble fraction was 5- to 8-fold higher than that of the crude mitochondrial fraction. The greater recovery of guanylate cyclase activity was found to be due to a release of an endogenous activating factor for guanylate cyclase. The activating factor was partially purified by acid extraction followed by a gel filtration and ion exchange resin columns. The factor was a dialyzable small molecule. The molecular weight was estimated to be between 300 and 600 by a Sephadex G-15 column and Diaflo ultrafilter membranes. It was stable in dilute acids, but labile in alkaline solution. It was readily soluble in water, but insoluble in organic solvents. Treatment with various enzymes, so far as tested, failed to abolish the activity. The activating factor stimulated the initial velocity of the reaction. It altered neither the Km value for GTP nor the dependency of the enzyme on divalent metals. The activation by the factor was due to an increase in the Vmax of the reaction. The activation was prevented by lysolecithin, Lubrol PX, hydroxylamine, methylhydroxylamine, or hemoglobin.  相似文献   

10.
Guanylate cyclase was purified 1000-fold from washed rat lung particulate fractions to a final specific activity of 500 nmoles cyclic GMP produced/min/mg protein by a combination of detergent extraction and chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose, GTP-agarose, and blue agarose. Particulate guanylate cyclase has a molecular weight of 200 000 daltons, a Stokes radius of 48 A and a sedimentation coefficient of 9.4 while the soluble form has a molecular weight of 150 000 daltons, a Stokes radius of 44 A, and a sedimentation coefficient of 7.0. Whereas the particulate enzyme is a glycoprotein with a specific affinity for concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin, the soluble form of guanylate cyclase did not bind to these lectins. Purified particulate guanylate cyclase did not cross-react with a number of monoclonal antibodies generated to the soluble enzyme. While both forms of the enzyme could be regulated by the formation of mixed disulfides, the particulate enzyme was relatively insensitive to inhibition by cystine. With GTP as substrate both forms of the enzyme demonstrated typical kinetics, and with GTP analogues negative cooperativity was observed with both enzyme forms. These data support the suggestion that the two forms of guanylate cyclase possess similar catalytic sites, although their remaining structure is divergent, resulting in differences in subcellular distribution, physical characteristics, and antigenicity.  相似文献   

11.
A soluble, sodium-nitroprusside-stimulated guanylate cyclase as been purified from bovine lung by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, ammonium sulfate precipitation, chromatography on Blue Sepharose CL-6B and preparative gel electrophoresis. Apparent homogeneity was obtained after at least 7000-fold purification with a yield of 3%. A single stained band (Mr 72000) was observed after gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The purified enzyme migrated as one band also under non-denaturing conditions in acrylamide gels (5-12%). The mobility of this band corresponded to an Mr of 145000. The enzyme sedimented on sucrose gradients with an S20, w of 7.0 S. Gel filtration yielded a Stokes' radius of 4.6 nm. These data suggest that the enzyme has an Mr of approximately 150000 and consists of two, presumably identical, subunits of Mr 72000. Sodium nitroprusside stimulated the purified enzyme 15-fold and 140-fold to specific activities of 8.5 and 15.7 mumol of cGMP formed min-1 mg-1 in the presence of Mn2+ and Mg2+, respectively. Formation of cGMP was proportional to the incubation time and to the amount of enzyme added. The stimulatory effect of sodium nitroprusside was half-maximal at about 2 microM, was observed immediately after addition and could be reversed either by dilution or by removal of sodium nitroprusside on a Sephadex G-25 column. The purified enzyme in the absence of catalase was stimulated by sodium nitroprusside, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and 3-morpholino-sydnonimine and in the presence of catalase by sodium nitrite and sodium azide. In the presence of Mn2+ and sodium nitroprusside, the purified enzyme catalyzed the formation of cAMP from ATP at a rate of 0.6 mumol min-1 mg-1.  相似文献   

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Soluble guanylate cyclase was partially purified from rat lung homogenates, and shown to be inhibited by the following sulfated polyanions, with the I50 in μg/ml in parentheses: Polyvinyl sulfate (0.33), 40,000-dalton dextran sulfate (0.45), polyanetholesulfonate (0.63) 500,000-dalton dextran sulfate (1.8), λ-carrageenan (2.9), τ-carrageenan (6.1), κ-carrageenan (48.0), heparin (68.0). There was a good correlation between inhibitory potency and sulfate content (as total sulfur). Inhibition by heparin and the carrageenans (but not the others) was potentiated by Mn2+, but not Ca2+ or Mg2+, when [Mn2+] exceeded [GTP]. Mn2+-potentiation could be blocked by high Na+. Heparin-agarose shows promise as an affinity matrix for guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

14.
The soluble guanylate cyclase from rat lung was immobilized by absorption rather than covalent attachment on hexyl-, octyl-, or decyl-agarose. The enzyme retained activity after being bound to these matrices and could be compared to the soluble, mobile form of the enzyme. Compared to the soluble enzyme, the immobilized guanylate cyclase had a lower apparent maximal velocity and a higher apparent Km for MeGTP in the presence of Mg2+, Ca2+, or Mn2+. The apparent maximum velocity was reduced to the same extent by hexyl-, octyl-, or decyl-agarose, but the reduction in activity was greater with Mg2+ than with Ca2+ or Mn2+. Both the soluble and immobilized guanylate cyclase displayed concave downward patterns on double reciprocal polots as a function of Mn2+, and Ca2+ caused apparent activation of either form of the enzyme. MnATP appeared to be a linear competitive inhibitor with respect to MnGTP for both forms of the enzymes but the ki was 3 micron for the soluble form and 30 micron for the immobilized form. These results demonstrate that the soluble form of guanylate cyclase from rat lung retains many of its basic properties after being immobilized on a hydrophobic matrix; however, rather pronounced decreases in the maximum velocity and increases in the apparent Michaelis constant for MeGTP, particularly for MgGTP, are observed upon immobilization.  相似文献   

15.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) has been purified from 100 L cell culture infected by baculovirus using the newer and highly effective titerless infected-cells preservation and scale-up (TIPS) method. Successive passage of the enzyme through DEAE, Ni2+-NTA, and POROS Q columns obtained approximately 100 mg of protein. The sGC obtained by this procedure was already about 90% pure and suitable for various studies which include high throughput screening (HTS) and hit follow-up. However, in order to obtain enzyme of greater homogeneity and purity for crystallographic and high precision spectroscopic and kinetic studies of sGC with select stimulators, the sGC solution after the POROS Q step was further purified by GTP-agarose affinity chromatography. This additional step led to the generation of 26 mg of enzyme that was about 99% pure. This highly pure and active enzyme exhibited a Mr = 144,933 by static light scattering supportive of a dimeric structure. It migrated as a two-band protein, each of equal intensity, on SDS–PAGE corresponding to the α (Mr 77,000) and β (Mr 70,000) sGC subunits. It showed an A430/A280 = 1.01, indicating one heme per heterodimer, and a maximum of the Soret band at 430 nm indicative of a penta-coordinated ferrous heme with a histidine as the axial ligand. The Soret band shifted to 398 nm in the presence of an NO donor as expected for the formation of a penta-coordinated nitrosyl-heme complex. Non-stimulated sGC had kcat/Km = 1.7 × 10−3 s−1 μM−1 that increased to 5.8 × 10−1 s−1 μM−1 upon stimulation with an NO donor which represents a 340-fold increase due to stimulation. The novel combination of using the TIPS method for co-expression of a heterodimeric heme-containing enzyme, along with the application of a reproducible ligand affinity purification method, has enabled us to obtain recombinant human sGC of both the quality and quantity needed to study structure–function relationships.  相似文献   

16.
Purification and properties of the phosphorylated form of guanylate cyclase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Guanylate cyclase is dephosphorylated in response to the interaction of egg peptides with a spermatozoan surface receptor (Suzuki, N., Shimomura, H., Radany, E. W., Ramarao, C. S., Ward, G. E., Bentley, J. K., and Garbers, D. L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 14874-14879). Here, the phosphorylated form of guanylate cyclase was purified to apparent homogeneity from detergent-solubilized spermatozoan membranes by the use of GTP-agarose, DEAE-Sephacel, and concanavalin A-Sepharose chromatography. To prevent dephosphorylation of the enzyme during purification, glycerol (35%) was required in all buffers. Following purification, a single protein-staining band of Mr 160,000 was obtained on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The final specific activity of the purified enzyme was 83 mumol of cyclic GMP formed/min/mg of protein at 30 degrees C, an activity 5-fold higher than that observed with the purified, dephosphorylated form of guanylate cyclase. A preparation containing protein phosphatase from spermatozoa, or highly purified alkaline phosphatase (from Escherichia coli), catalyzed the dephosphorylation of the enzyme; this resulted in a subsequent decrease in guanylate cyclase activity and a shift in the Mr from 160,000 to 150,000. The phosphate content of the high Mr form of the enzyme was 14.6 mol/mol protein whereas the phosphate content of the low Mr form was 1.6 mol/mol protein. All phosphate was localized on serine residues. The Mr 160,000 form of guanylate cyclase demonstrated positive cooperative kinetics with respect to MnGTP while the Mr 150,000 form displayed linear, Michaelis-Menten type kinetics. The phosphorylation state of the membrane form of guanylate cyclase, therefore, appears to dictate not only the absolute activity of the enzyme but also the degree of cooperative interaction between catalytic or GTP-binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
We have studied factors controlling the release of endogenous ascorbate from synaptosomes prepared from various regions of the rat brain. Ascorbate was spontaneously released from synaptosomes, and this efflux could be enhanced by incubation at 37°C. A further additional ascorbate release could be induced by potassium depolarization or, in striatal, hippocampal and cortical synaptosomes, by incubation with the amino acid glutamate. Spontaneous, depolarization and glutamate-evoked ascorbate release were shown to occur by separate mechanisms. Glutamate-evoked ascorbate release occurred by a heteroexchange mechanism. In cerebellar synaptosomes there was no evidence for such heteroexchange; however, in synaptosomes of this brain region kainic acid induced ascorbate release, probably by acting on excitatory amino acid receptors. The results are discussed in relation to the changes in extracellular brain ascorbate occurring in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Complementary DNA clones corresponding to the 70- and 82-kDa subunits of soluble guanylate cyclase of rat lung have been isolated. Blot hybridization of total poly(A)+ RNA from rat tissues detected mRNA of about 3.4 kilobases for the 70-kDa subunit and about 5.5 kilobases for the 82-kDa subunit. Messenger RNA levels of both subunits were abundant in lung and cerebrum, moderate in cerebellum, heart, and kidney, and low in liver and muscle, consistent with previously described enzyme activities in these tissues. Southern blot analysis of high molecular weight genomic DNA from rat liver indicated that the genes for the 70- and 82-kDa subunits are different. The carboxyl-terminal region of the 70- and 82-kDa subunits showed a high degree of homology and also had a partial homology with the putative catalytic domain of particulate guanylate cyclase and adenylate cyclase, indicating that both the 70- and 82-kDa subunits have catalytic domains. The cDNAs were subcloned to an expression vector and transfected to L cells. The cells transfected with cDNA of the 70-kDa subunit or the 82-kDa subunit showed no guanylate cyclase activity, whereas the cells transfected with both the 70- and 82-kDa subunit cDNAs showed significant guanylate cyclase activity that was activated markedly by sodium nitroprusside. These data suggest that both subunits are required for both the basal catalytic and regulatory activity of soluble guanylate cyclase. Presumably both catalytic subunits must be present and interactive to permit synthesis of cyclic GMP and nitrovasodilator activation.  相似文献   

19.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (GTP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.2) from rat lung demonstrated concentration-dependent stimulation, that is, an increase in specific activity with increasing enzyme (protein) concentration. This phenomenon persisted through several steps of enzyme purification and was apparently due to the presence of a macromolecular activator, similar in size to the enzyme. Treatment of partially purified enzyme with N-ethylmaleimide destroyed catalytic activity, but did not effect the ability of the preparation to stimulate activity. Kinetic analysis demonstrated that the stimulation was due to an increased V value with no change in the apparent Km value for MnGTP. Stimulation occurred without a time lag, the activator apparently interacting reversibly with the enzyme to increase catalytic capability. Some nonionic detergents of the Triton series inhibited enzyme activity by decreasing the V value, with no change in the Km value, and also decreased concentration-dependent stimulation. However, the two phenomena were not directly related. While the physiological significance of the activator is unclear, its presence affects estimations of recovery during enzyme purification, V determinations, and determinations of the effect of hormone or drug treatment on the activity of tissue extracts.  相似文献   

20.
Photoreceptor guanylate cyclase was solubilized and purified from bovine rod outer segments with 50-150-fold increase in specific activity using the nonionic detergent n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside. Guanylate cyclase activities correlated with the enrichment of a protein with an apparent Mr = 112,000. The purified enzyme showed specific activities of 100-700 nmol of cGMP produced/min/mg protein and exhibited positive cooperativity with respect to MnGTP (Hill coefficient n = 1.6 +/- 0.1). The apparent Km was 274 +/- 67 microM, and the turnover number was determined to be 0.2-1.3 cGMP produced/s. The molar ratio of the 112-kDa protein to rhodopsin corresponds to 1:104. This indicates that the amount of guanylate cyclase in rod photoreceptors is nearly equimolar to the amount of the phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

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