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1.
In rat adrenal dispersed cells, both vanadyl and vanadate inhibited ACTH-stimulated steroidogenesis and the formation of cAMP, whereas these compounds did not inhibit the cAMP-dependent steroidogenesis. Then, the membrane fraction was prepared and activated by various secretagogues including ACTH, Gpp(NH)p, GTP gamma S, and forskolin. The cyclase activity was inhibited by vanadyl but not by vanadate in the presence of these stimulators. Based on these results, we conclude that cationic vanadyl acts against a metal-requiring step in the adenylate cyclase system containing G-protein and the catalytic subunit. In addition, we believe that vanadyl is a useful tool to investigate adenylate cyclase systems.  相似文献   

2.
Inhibition of a Low Km GTPase Activity in Rat Striatum by Calmodulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In rat striatum, the activation of adenylate cyclase by the endogenous Ca2+-binding protein, calmodulin, is additive with that of GTP but is not additive with that of the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, guanosine-5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate (GppNHp). One possible mechanism for this difference could be an effect of calmodulin on GTPase activity which has been demonstrated to "turn-off" adenylate cyclase activity. We examined the effects of Ca2+ and calmodulin on GTPase activity in EGTA-washed rat striatal particulate fractions depleted of Ca2+ and calmodulin. Calmodulin inhibited GTP hydrolysis at concentrations of 10(-9)-10(-6) M but had no effect on the hydrolysis of 10(-5) and 10(-6) M GTP, suggesting that calmodulin inhibited a low Km GTPase activity. The inhibition of GTPase activity by calmodulin was Ca2+-dependent and was maximal at 0.12 microM free Ca2+. Maximal inhibition by calmodulin was 40% in the presence of 10(-7) M GTP. The IC50 for calmodulin was 100 nM. In five tissues tested, calmodulin inhibited GTP hydrolysis only in those tissues where it could also activate adenylate cyclase. Calmodulin could affect the activation of adenylate cyclase by GTP in the presence of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (DA, dopamine). Calmodulin decreased by nearly 10-fold the concentration of GTP required to provide maximal stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity by DA in the striatal membranes. The characteristics of the effect of calmodulin on GTPase activity with respect to Ca2+ and calmodulin dependence and tissue specificity parallel those of the activation of adenylate cyclase by calmodulin, suggesting that the two activities are closely related.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Activation of human blood platelet adenylate cyclase is initiated through the binding of prostaglandin E1 to the membrane receptors. Incubation of platelet membrane with [3H]prostaglandin E1 at pH 7.5 in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2 showed that the binding of the autacoid was rapid, reversible and highly specific. The binding was linearly proportional to the activation of adenylate cyclase. Although the membrane-bound radioligand could not be removed either by GTP or its stable analogue 5'-guanylylimido diphosphate, 150 nM cyclic AMP displaced about 40% of the bound agonist from the membrane. Scatchard analyses of the binding of the prostanoid to the membrane in the presence or absence of cyclic AMP showed that the nucleotide specifically inhibited the high-affinity binding sites without affecting the low-affinity binding sites. Incubation of the membrane with 150 mM cyclic AMP and varying amounts of prostaglandin E1 (25 nM to 1.0 microM) showed that the percent removal of the membrane-bound autacoid was similar to the percent inhibition of adenylate cyclase at each concentration of the agonist. At a concentration of 25 nM prostaglandin E1, both the binding of the agonist and the activity of adenylate cyclase were maximally inhibited by 40%. With the increase of the agonist concentration in the assay mixture, the inhibitory effects of the nucleotide gradually decreased and at a concentration of 1.0 microM prostaglandin E1 the effect of the nucleotide became negligible. These results show that cyclic AMP inhibits the activation of adenylate cyclase by low concentrations of prostaglandin E1 through the inhibition of the binding of the agonist to high-affinity binding sites.  相似文献   

4.
Sodium and other monovalent cations (added as chloride salts) inhibited adenylate cyclase of luteinized rat ovary. Sodium chloride (150 mM) inhibited basal enzyme activity by 20%. Sodium chloride inhibition was enhanced to 34-54% under conditions of enzyme stimulation by guanine nucleotides (GTP and its nonhydrolyzable analog 5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate), fluoride anion, and agonists (ovine luteinizing hormone (oLH) and the beta-adrenergic catecholamine isoproterenol) acting at stimulatory receptors linked to adenylate cyclase. Sodium chloride inhibition was dependent on salt concentration over a wide range (25-800 mM) as well as the concentrations of GTP and oLH. Inhibition by NaCl was of rapid onset and appeared to be reversible. The order of inhibitory potency of monovalent cations was Li+ greater than Na+ greater than K+. The role of individual components of adenylate cyclase in the inhibitory action of monovalent cations was examined. Exotoxins of Vibrio cholerae and Bordetella pertussis were used to determine respectively the involvement of the stimulatory and inhibitory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory components (Ns and Ni) in NaCl inhibition. Sodium chloride inhibited cholera toxin-activated adenylate cyclase activity by 29%. Ni did not appear to mediate cation inhibition of adenylate cyclase because pertussis toxin did not attenuate inhibition by NaCl. Enzyme stimulation by agents (forskolin and Mn2+) thought to activate the catalytic component directly was not inhibited by NaCl but was instead significantly enhanced. Sodium chloride (150 mM) increased both the Kd for high-affinity binding of oLH to 125I-human chorionic gonadotropin binding sites and the Kact for oLH stimulation of adenylate cyclase by sevenfold. In contrast, NaCl had no appreciable effect on either isoproterenol binding to (-)-[125I]iodopindolol binding sites or the Kact for isoproterenol stimulation of adenylate cyclase. The results suggest that in luteinized rat ovary monovalent cations uncouple, or dissociate, Ns from the catalytic component and, in a distinct action, reduce gonadotropin receptor affinity for hormone. Dissociation of the inhibitory influence of Ni from direct catalytic activation could account for NaCl enhancement of forskolin- and Mn2+-associated activities. On the basis of these results, the spectrum of divergent stimulatory and inhibitory effects of monovalent cations on adenylate cyclase activities in a variety of tissues may be interpreted in terms of differential enzyme susceptibilities to cation-induced uncoupling of N and catalytic component functions.  相似文献   

5.
The visual excitation system of the retinal rod outer segments and the hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase complex are regulated through guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, transducin in the former and inhibitory and stimulatory regulatory components, Gi and Gs, in the latter. These proteins are functionally and structurally similar; all are heterotrimers composed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits and exhibit guanosine triphosphatase activity stimulated by light-activated rhodopsin or the agonist-receptor complex. Adenylate cyclase can be stimulated by vanadate, which, like NaF, probably acts through Gs. Effects of vanadate on the function of a guanine nucleotide-binding protein were investigated in a reconstituted model system consisting of purified transducin subunits (T alpha, T beta gamma) and rhodopsin in phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Vanadate (decameric) inhibited [3H]GTP binding to T alpha and noncompetitively inhibited GTP hydrolysis in a concentration-dependent manner with maximal inhibition of approximately 90% at 3-5 mM. Vanadate also inhibited release of bound GDP but did not affect the rate of hydrolysis of bound GTP (single turnover rate), indicating that vanadate did not interfere with the intrinsic GTPase activity of T alpha. Binding of T alpha to rhodopsin and the ADP-ribosylation of T alpha by pertussis toxin, both of which are enhanced in the presence of T beta gamma, were inhibited by vanadate. These findings are consistent with the conclusion that vanadate can cause the dissociation of T alpha from T beta gamma, resulting in the inhibition of GDP-GTP exchange and thereby GTP hydrolysis. Adenylate cyclase activation could result from a similar effect of vanadate on Gs.  相似文献   

6.
Guanyl nucleotides are known to play a dual role in the activation of the adenylate cyclase system of the rat corpus luteum, being required for human choriogonadotropin (hCG) stimulation of the enzyme and modulating hCG binding to some hormone receptors. Current models of adenylate cyclase activation require that guanyl nucleotide binding be enhanced by hormones, and we have examined this binding in rat luteal membrane preparations known to contain guanyl nucleotide-modulated hCG receptors. [3H] Guanylyl-imidodiphosphate (GMPPnP), a nonhydrolyzable analog of guanosine triphosphate (GTP), was used to investigate binding to urea-washed, heavy rat luteal membranes. Binding was found to be linear, with respect to the amount of membranes added, in the range of 2-10 mg wet wt. tissue equivalents, and equilibrium was reached after a 30-min incubation at 30 degrees C. Analysis of equilibrium binding experiments gave a Ka of 1.2.10(7) +/- 0.9.10(7) M-1, with 460 +/- 430 fmol binding sites per mg tissue in the absence of hormone, Kinetic experiments showed an association rate constant of 2.6.10(5) +/- 0.5.10(5) M-1 min-1 and a dissociation rate constant of 1.8.10(-2) +/- 0.9.10(-2) min-1. In the presence of hCG, the Ka was unchanged; however, the number of binding sites increased by 50-120%. Competitive binding assays utilizing other nucleotides revealed that a hierarchy of GMPPnP = GTP greater than guanosine diphosphate (GDP) greater than inosine triphosphate (ITP) in displacing labeled GMPPnP. A similar hierarchy was also found for hCG-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity (GMPPnP = GTP greater than ITP) and for modulation of hCG binding (GMPPnP greater than GTP greater than ITP).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
In Dictyostelium discoideum cells the enzyme adenylate cyclase is functionally coupled to cell surface receptors for cAMP. Coupling is known to involve one or more G-proteins. Receptor-mediated activation of adenylate cyclase is subject to adaptation. In this study we employ an electropermeabilized cell system to investigate regulation of D. discoideum adenylate cyclase. Conditions for selective permeabilization of the plasma membrane have been described by C.D. Schoen, J. C. Arents, T. Bruin, and R. Van Driel (1989, Exp. Cell Res. 181, 51-62). Only small pores are created in the membrane, allowing exchange of exclusively low molecular weight substances like nucleotides, and preventing the loss of macromolecules. Under these conditions functional protein-protein interactions are likely to remain intact. Adenylate cyclase in permeabilized cells was activated by the cAMP receptor agonist 2'-deoxy cAMP and by the nonhydrolyzable GTP-analogue GTP gamma S, which activates G-proteins. The time course of the adenylate cyclase reaction in permeabilized cells was similar to that of intact cells. Maximal adenylate cyclase activity was observed if cAMP receptor agonist or GTP-analogue was added just before cell permeabilization. If these activators were added after permeabilization adenylate cyclase was stimulated in a suboptimal way. The sensitivity of adenylate cyclase activity for receptor occupation was found to decay more rapidly than that for G-protein activation. Importantly, the adenylate cyclase reaction in permeabilized cells was subject to an adaptation-like process that was characterized by a time course similar to adaptation in vivo. In vitro adaptation was not affected by cAMP receptor agonists or by G-protein activation. Evidently electropermeabilized cells constitute an excellent system for investigating the positive and negative regulation of D. discoideum adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

8.
1. The activation of rat pancreatic adenylate cyclase by guanosine 5'-(beta-gamma-imido)triphosphate (p[NH]ppG) and GTP, and by the two gastrointestinal hormones pancreozymin (as C-terminal octapeptide) and secretin was correlated with the binding of [8-3H]guanosine 5'-(beta-gamma-imido)triphosphate to rat pancreatic plasma membranes. 2. The low basal adenylate cyclase activity was stimulated 17-fold by p[NH]ppG (after a 2 min lag period), 3,5-fold only by GTP, 21-fold by C-terminal octapeptide of pancreozymin, and 8-fold by secretin. GTP inhibited competitively the activation of adenylate cyclase by p[NH]ppG with a Ki,app almost identical with the Ka,app (0.3 micron). p[NH]ppG and GTP enhanced the stimulation by secretin more markedly than that by the C-terminal octapeptide of pancreozymin, leading to the same maximal activity. Both hormones suppressed the lag period of activation by p[NH]ppG. 3. The binding of [8-3H]p[NH]ppG was dependent on time, temperature and Mg2+ and it was also a saturable and reversible process. Scatchard plots with a concavity upward were linearized after co-addition of ATP, Mg2+ and an ATP-regenerating system that abolished low-affinity sites for p[NH]ppG without saturating higher affinity sites, GTP, ITP and UTP inhibited [8-3H]p[NH]ppG binding to the high-affinity sites in concentration ranges identical with those found for adenylate cyclase activation. Considerable binding of [8-3H]p[NH]ppG was still evident at 20 degrees C, but enzyme activation was not observed any more, except in the presence of hormones.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of detergents on fluoride- and vanadate-stimulated adenylate cyclases was investigated with enzyme from liver and adipocyte plasma membranes. Stimulation of the adipocyte cyclase by Na3VO4 was maximal (sixfold) at 3 mM, was not additive with fluoride stimulation, and was readily reversed by washing of the membranes. Vanadate stimulation of the hepatic cyclase was specifically blocked by catechol, which had no effect on basal activity or on fluoride- or glucagon-stimulated activities. The hepatic enzyme, stimulated by fluoride ion, guanyl-5'-yl-(beta,gamma-imino)diphosphate (GPP(NH)P), or GPP(NH)P and glucagon, was inhibited by vanadate with 50% inhibition seen with 2 to 6 mM vanadate. The fluoride-activated adipocyte adenylate cyclase was inhibited by guanosine 5'-O-(3-thio-triphosphate) (GTP gamma S) more potently than by GPP(NH)P, with 50% inhibition being seen with 10 nM GTP gamma S or 100 nM GPP(NH)P. These nucleotides also inhibited the vanadate-stimulated enzyme, but with one-third the potency seen with the fluoride-activated cyclase. Dispersion of the adipocyte cyclase by Lubrol-PX into a 30,000g supernatant fraction caused no change in activation of the enzyme by fluoride, but reduced vanadate-stimulated activity 80%. By comparison, this treatment enhanced stimulation by GPP(NH)P twofold and by GTP gamma S threefold. More importantly, perhaps, the treatment with detergent blocked inhibition of the basal enzyme by GTP, blocked inhibition of fluoride- and vanadate-stimulated cyclases by GTP, GPP(NH)P, or GTP gamma S, and rendered vanadate-stimulated activity sensitive to enhancement by guanine nucleotides. The data indicate differences in the actions of vanadate and fluoride, made evident by the influence of guanine nucleotides and detergent treatment. The observations would be consistent with the idea that the effects of vandate may be due to the formation of GDP X V on the enzyme. The data strongly suggest that treatment of adenylate cyclase with Lubrol-PX causes a functional blockade in the guanine nucleotide-dependent inhibitory regulation (mediated by Ni), thereby allowing activation by the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-dependent regulatory component (Ns).  相似文献   

10.
The specific mechanism by which the inhibitory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gi) mediates the inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity is still unclear. The subunit dissociation model, based on studies in purified or reconstituted systems, suggests that the beta gamma subunit, which is dissociated with activation of Gi, inhibits the function of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gs) by reducing the concentration of the free alpha s subunit. In the present study, Gs protein function is determined by measuring cholera toxin-blockable, isoproterenol-induced increases in guanosine triphosphate (GTP) binding capacity to rat cardiac ventricle membrane preparations. Carbamylcholine totally inhibited this beta-adrenergic receptor-coupled Gs protein function. Pretreatment of the cardiac ventricle membrane with pertussis toxin prevented this muscarinic agonist effect. These results confirm the possibility of an inhibitory agonist-receptor coupled effect through Gi on Gs protein function proximal to the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase in an intact membrane preparation.  相似文献   

11.
A method for preparing human platelet membranes with high adenylate cyclase activity is described. Using these membranes, epinephrine and GTP individually are noted to inhibit adenylate cyclase slightly. When present together, epinephrine and GTP act synergistically to cause a 50% inhibition of basal activity. The epinephrine effect is an alpha-adrenergic process as it is reversed by phentolamine but not propranolol. The quasi-irreversible activation of adenylate cyclase by Gpp(NH)p is time, concentration, and Mg2+-dependent but is not altered by the presence of epinephrine. Adenylate cyclase activated by Gpp(NH)p, and extensively washed to remove unbound Gpp(NH)p, is inhibited by the subsequent addition of Gpp(NH)p, GTP, and epinephrine. This effect of epinephrine is also an alpha-adrenergic phenomenon. In contrast to epinephrine which inhibits the cyclase, PGE1 addition results in enzyme stimulation. PGE1 stimulation does not require GTP addition. PGE1 accelerates the rate of Gpp(NH)p-induced activation. Low GTP concentrations (less than 1 x 10(-6) M) enhance PGE1 stimulation while higher GTP concentrations cause inhibition. These observations suggest that human platelet adenylate cyclase possesses at least two guanine nucleotide sites, one which interacts with the alpha-receptor to result in enzyme inhibition and a second guanine nucleotide site which interacts with the PGE1 receptor and causes enzyme stimulation.  相似文献   

12.
Heparin inhibits (I50 = 2 microgram/ml) the activity of luteinizing hormone and human chorionic gonadotropin-stimulated adenylate cyclase in purified rat ovarian plasma membranes. Unstimulated enzyme activity and activity stimulated by NaF, GTP or guanosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate were inhibited to a lesser extent. Human chorionic gonadotropin binding to this membrane preparation was inhibited by heparin (I50 = 6 microgram/ml). The inhibition with respect to hormone concentration was of a mixed type for hormone binding and adenylate cyclase stimulation. Inhibition by heparin was not eliminated at saturating hormone concentration. The degree of inhibition was unaffected by the order in which enzyme, hormone and heparin were introduced into the assay system. Heparin (3 microgram/ml) did not affect the pH activity relationship of basal and hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and did not change the dependence of enzyme activity on magnesium ion concentration. The inhibitory action of heparin cannot be solely attributed to interference with either catalysis or hormone binding. The possibility is considered that the highly charged heparin molecule interferes with enzyme receptor coupling, by restricting the mobility of these components or by effecting their conformation.  相似文献   

13.
Inhibition of basal adenylate cyclase by GTP or guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate was abolished in membranes isolated from rat adipocytes previously incubated with pertussis toxin. Forskolin (0.1 microM) stimulated adenylate cyclase about 4-fold and inhibition of cyclase by GTP or guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate was also abolished by pertussis toxin treatment of rat adipocytes. Forskolin (1 microM) increased adenylate cyclase activity at least ten-fold and the inhibitory effect of GppNHp was reduced but not abolished by pertussis toxin. In rabbit adipocytes, pertussis toxin reversed the inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by GppNHp to the same extent as that by GTP in the presence of 1 microM forskolin. The present results indicate that pertussis toxin can reverse the inhibition of adipocyte adenylate cyclase by nonhydrolyzable GTP analogs as well as that by GTP.  相似文献   

14.
Optimal conditions for activation of adenylate cyclase in membrane particles were studied. Enzyme activation with serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine). NaF, and guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)-triphosphate (GTP gamma S) was time-and temperature-dependent. Mg2+ was required for enzyme activation. Adenylate cyclase that was activated by NaF or GTP gamma S was gradually inhibited by N-methylmaleimide while enzyme activated with serotonin and GTP responded faster to inhibition by the same sulfhydryl reagent. Th enzyme responded in a similar fashion to a spin-labeled N-methylmaleimide analog 3-(maleimidomethyl)-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrolidinyloxyl (i.e., N-methylmaleimide nitroxide). Binding of the spin label was enhanced following enzyme activation by serotonin, NaF, or GTP gamma S in the presence of Mg2+. Activation of the enzyme was accompanied by an increase in the strong immobilization peaks in the EPR spectra. Both effects, the increase in binding and in the strong immobilization peaks, can be induced by Mg2+ alone. The results indicate that a general conformational induced by Mg2+ may be essential for adenylate cyclase activation.  相似文献   

15.
Radiation inactivation was used to examine the mechanism of activation of adenylate cyclase in the cultured renal epithelial cell line LLC-PK1 with hormonal (vasopressin) and nonhormonal (GTP, forskolin, fluoride, and chloride) activating ligands. Intact cells were frozen, irradiated at -70 degrees C (0-14 Mrad), thawed, and assayed for adenylate cyclase activity in the presence of activating ligands. The ln (adenylate cyclase activity) vs. radiation dose relation was linear (target size 162 kDa) for vasopressin- (2 microM) stimulated activity and concave downward for unstimulated (10 mM Mn2+), NaF- (10 mM) stimulated, and NaCl- (100 mM) stimulated activities. Addition of 2 microM vasopressin did not alter the ln activity vs. dose relation for NaF- (10 mM) stimulated activity. The dose-response relations for adenylate cyclase activation and for transition in the ln activity vs. dose curve shape were measured for vasopressin and NaF. On the basis of our model for adenylate cyclase subunit interactions reported previously [Verkman, A. S., Skorecki, K. L., & Ausiello, D. A. (1986) Am. J. Physiol. 260, C103-C123] and of new mathematical analyses, activation mechanisms for each ligand are proposed. In the unstimulated state, equilibrium between alpha beta and alpha + beta favors alpha beta; dissociated alpha binds to GTP (rate-limiting step), which then combines with the catalytic (C) subunit to form active enzyme. Vasopressin binding to receptor provides a rapid pathway for GTP binding to alpha. GTP and its analogues accelerate the rate of alpha GTP formation. Forskolin inhibits the spontaneous deactivation of activated C. Activation by fluoride may occur without alpha beta dissociation or GTP addition through activation of C by an alpha beta-F complex.  相似文献   

16.
Guanosine 5′ α, β methylene triphosphate activates adenylate cyclase of pigeon erythrocyte ghosts. Activation is inhibited by GTP, persists after free guanosine 5′ α, β methylene triphosphate is removed, and proceeds more rapidly in the presence of isoproterenol. Guanosine 5′ methylene diphosphate neither activates adenylate cyclase nor inhibits activation of adenylate cyclase by guanosine 5′ α, β methylene triphosphate. These results exclude pyrophosphorylation as a mechanism by which GTP normally activates adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

17.
Experiments were conducted to clarify the nucleotide requirements for lutropin (LH)-dependent adenylate cyclase desensitization in a cell-free membrane preparation derived from a thecal-cell-enriched component of preovulatory pig ovarian follicles. The follicular membranes were extensively washed in 2M-urea to remove endogenously bound GTP, and ATP devoid of GTP was utilized. Results conducted in the presence of 60 microM-GTP and various concentrations of ATP confirm the dependence of LH-stimulated adenylate cyclase activation and desensitization on millimolar concentrations of ATP. In experiments in which adenylate cyclase activation was supported by Mg2+, LH and adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate, GTP did not support the desensitization response. Moreover, although GTP increased both basal and LH-stimulable adenylate cyclase activities in a concentration-dependent manner, the percentage desensitization was not significantly modified by the presence of 10nM-10mM-GTP. These results demonstrate that, even in the presence of exogenous GTP and Mg2+, activation of adenylate cyclase by saturating concentrations of LH in the presence of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate is not sufficient to initiate desensitization; millimolar concentrations of ATP are also required for the adenylate cyclase desensitization response.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined the inhibitory regulation by Ca2+ of the adenylate cyclase activity associated with microsomes isolated from bovine aorta smooth muscle. In the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, Ca2+ (0.8-100 microM) inhibited in a noncompetitive manner activation of the enzyme by GTP, Gpp[NH]p, or forskolin. In all instances the value for half-maximal inhibition was between 2 and 3 microM. In contrast, Ca2+ inhibited the activation by MgCl2 (2-50 mM), alone or in the presence of GTP, in a competitive manner. The inhibition of adenylate cyclase by 10 microM Ca2+ was reversed in the presence of either 5 or 25 microM calmodulin or troponin C. These data show that (i) Ca2+, at concentrations similar to those which activate smooth muscle contraction, inhibits the stimulation of adenylate cyclase by several activators; (ii) Ca2+ and Mg2+ compete for a common site on the smooth muscle adenylate cyclase complex; and (iii) the reversal of Ca2+-dependent inhibition by Ca2+-binding proteins may be produced by chelation of the metal by these proteins.  相似文献   

19.
In this report, we show that fluoride activates dark-adapted rod outer segment phosphodiesterase, and that this activation is mediated, in analogy with adenylate cyclase, through a GTP binding protein. The GTP binding protein is released from dark-adapted rod outer segment membranes by exposure to fluoride and subsequent centrifugation. The 39-kilodalton subunit of the GTP binding protein, released from the membrane by this procedure, exhibits altered susceptibility to limited trypsin proteolysis, identical to that seen when hydrolysis-resistant GTP analogs are bound to that subunit. Repeated exposure of dark-adapted rod outer segment membranes to fluoride and subsequent centrifugation results in maximal activation of the membrane-bound phosphodiesterase. Thus, activation of phosphodiesterase by fluoride in the dark appears similar to fluoride activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

20.
Choleragen and beta-adrenergic agonists, both of which activate turkey erythrocyte adenylate cyclase, have been reported to accelerate release of bound [3H]guanyl nucleotides from turkey erythrocyte membranes. We have now obtained evidence that choleragen- or isoproterenol-stimulated release reflects a change in the affinity of the regulatory subunit (G/F) of adenylate cyclase for guanyl nucleotides. Solubilized preparations of turkey erythrocytes that had bound radiolabeled GTP were chromatographed on Ultrogel AcA 34. The protein from which guanyl nucleotide was released upon incubation with choleragen or isoproterenol was co-eluted with G/F activity. Furthermore, this protein appears to be the same size as the complex containing the 42,000-dalton peptide, ADP*-ribosylated by choleragen, which is presumably a subunit of G/F. ADP ribosylation of the 42,000-dalton subunit of G/F by choleragen occurred with a half-time of about 5 min, whereas choleragen-stimulated release of guanyl nucleotides was much slower (t1/2 greater than or equal to 60 min). When membranes were treated with choleragen and NAD, the delay in activation of adenylate cyclase by guanylyl imidodiphosphate was decreased but not abolished, a finding consistent with the idea that release of endogenously bound nucleotide (and subsequent binding of the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog) occurs only slowly following ADP ribosylation. In contrast, activation of the adenylate cyclase of either toxin-treated or untreated membranes in the presence of isoproterenol and guanylyl imidodiphosphate was very rapid. These data support the hypothesis that isoproterenol and choleragen may activate adenylate cyclase, at least in part, by increasing the rate of release of guanyl nucleotides from G/F.  相似文献   

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