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1.
Certain biochemical characteristics of an adenylate cyclase that is activated by low concentrations of histamine (Ka, 8 μm) and that is present in cell-free preparations from the dorsal hippocampus of guinea pig brain have been studied. Histamine increased the maximal reaction velocity of adenylate cyclase without altering the Km (0.18 mm) for its substrate, MgATP. Increasing concentrations of free Mg2+ stimulated enzymatic activity; the kinetic properties of this activation by Mg2+ suggest the existence of a Mg2+ allosteric site on the enzyme. Histamine increased the affinity of this apparent site for free Mg2+. Free ATP was a competitive inhibitor with respect to the MgATP substrate. The apparent potency of free ATP as an inhibitor increased in the presence of histamine. In the presence of Mg2+, low concentrations of Ca2+ markedly inhibited adenylate cyclase activity; half-maximal inhibition of both basal and histamine-stimulated enzyme activity occurred at 40 μm Ca2+. Other divalent cations, including Zn2+, Cu2+, and Cd2+, were also inhibitory. Of the divalent cations tested, only Co2+ and Mn2+ could replace Mg2+ in supporting histamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. The nucleoside triphosphates GTP and ITP increased basal adenylate cyclase activity and markedly potentiated the stimulation by histamine. Preincubation of adenylate cyclase with 5′-guanylylimidodiphosphate dramatically increased enzyme activity; in this activated state, the adenylate cyclase was relatively refractory to further stimulation by histamine or F?. The subcellular distribution of histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity was studied in subfractions from guinea pig cerebral cortex. The highest total and specific activities were observed in those fractions enriched in nerve endings, while adenylate cyclase activity was not detectable in the brain cytosol fraction. A possible physiological role for this histamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase in neuronal function is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: Stimulation of rat striatal adenylate cyclase by guanyl nucleotides was examined utilizing either MgATP or magnesium 5′-adenylylimidodiphos-phate (MgApp(NH) p) as substrate. GTP and 5′- guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH) p) stimulate adenylate cyclase under conditions where the guanyl nucleotide is not degraded. The apparent stimulation of adenylate cyclase by GDP is due to an ATP-dependent transphosphorylase present in the tissue which converts GDP to GTP. We conclude that GTP is the physiological guanyl nucleotide responsible for stimulation of striatal adenylate cyclase. Dopamine lowers the Ka for Gpp(NH) p stimulation twofold, from 2.4 μM to 1.2 μM and increases maximal velocity 60%. The kinetics of Gpp(NH) p stimulation indicate no homotropic interactions between Gpp(NH) p sites and are consistent with one nonessential Gpp(NH) p activator site per catalytic site. Double reciprocal plots of the activation by free Mg2+ were concave downward, indicating either two sets of sites with different affinities or negative cooperativity (Hill coefficient = 0.3, K0.5= 23 mM). The data conform well to a model for two sets of independent sites and dopamine lowers the Ka for free Mg2+ at the high-affinity site threefold, from 0.21 mM to 0.07 mM. The antipsy-chotic drug fluphenazine blocks this shift in Ka due to dopamine. Dopamine does not appreciably affect the affinity of adenylate cyclase for the substrate, MgApp(NH) p. Therefore, dopamine stimulates striatal adenylate cyclase by increasing the affinity for free Mg2+ and guanyl nucleotide and by increasing maximal velocity.  相似文献   

3.
Isolated hepatocytes converted exogenous [α-32P]ATP to cyclic [32P]AMP at high rates. This system was used for kinetic studies of the effects of glucagon, fluoride, free magnesium and free ATP4? on adenylate cyclase. In the absence or presence of glucagon, free Mg2+ activated adenylate cyclase by decreasing the Km for MgATP2? without changing V. Free ATP4? was not a potent inhibitor of adenylate cyclase and the only effect of glucagon was to increase V.Fluoride also increased the V of adenylate cyclase, but, in contrast to the results obtained with glucagon, the effect increased as the concentration of free Mg2+ increased. One explanation of the effect of fluoride, consistent with the idea that free Mg2+ activates adenylate cyclase and free ATP is not an inhibitor, is that fluoride increases the affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+. Weak inhibition of adenylate cyclase by ATP4? in the presence of fluoride cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

4.
A nucleotide phosphohydrolase-resistant analog of GTP, guanyl-5′-yl imidodiphosphate [GMP-P(NH)P], caused stimulation of basal adenylate cyclase activity of cardiac sarcolemma when ethylene glycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)- N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) was absent in the assay mixture, whereas the nucleotide, in the presence of EGTA, inhibited basal cyclase activity. GTP, GDP, GMP, and guanosine failed to show such an inhibition of basal enzyme activity. The degree of both stimulatory and inhibitory effects of GMP-P(NH)P depended on the concentration of magnesium ions. The apparent affinities toward magnesium ions of the metal binding site and toward MgATP2? of the catalytic site of control and ?GMP-P(NH)P-inhibited” enzyme were similar. Isoproterenol reversed the inhibitory effect, whereas calcium ions failed to revert it. Both in the presence and absence of EGTA, GMP-P(NH)P plus isoproterenol caused a synergistic stimulation of the enzyme activity, the degree of stimulation being lower with EGTA present. Exposure of sarcolemma to GMP-P(NH)P (with and without isoproterenol and in the absence and presence of EGTA) caused an activation of adenylate cyclase, the degree of activation being higher with isoproterenol present. The activated enzyme displayed increased affinity toward Mg2+ at the metal binding site. When activated enzyme preparations were assayed in the presence of EGTA, reversal of the activated state was observed in the case of the GMP-P(NH)P-activated enzyme but not in the case of the GMP-P(NH)P + isoproterenol-activated enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Agonists modulation of Mg2+-dependent adenylate cyclase activity has been studied in guinea-pig superior cervical ganglion crude membrane preparations. In the absence of receptors ligands, Mg2+ stimulates the enzyme in a concentration-dependent manner. The dose-activation curve shows heterogeneity and two components with higher and lower apparent affinity states, are extrapolated. In the presence ofD-Ala2-met-enkephalinamide only one component is present and the apparent affinity of the ganglionic adenylate cyclase system for the divalent cation as well as Vmax are inhibited. On the contrary, prostaglandin E2 increases affinity and Vmax values of the lower and, to a lesser extent, of the higher Km component. When the two drugs are tested in combination, not only the inhibitory effect of the opiate is overcome, but a large increase of the apparent affinities and Vmax values for both components is obtained, suggesting the involvement of the Mg2+-regulated subunits of the adenylate cyclase system in the supra-additive stimulation mechanism of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
The inhibition of rat liver adenylate cyclase (ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1) by Pb2+ could be separated into an irreversible and a reversible component.Evidence was obtained that both types of inhibition were due to free Pb2+, rather than Pb/ATP, and that Pb2+ did not act via the site wherein Mg2+ and Mn2+ activate the cyclase.Guanine nucleotides strongly counteracted the reversible inhibition of cyclase by Pb2+, providing onother example of guanine nucleotide effects on adenylate cyclase function.It is suggested that the Pb2+-inhibited cyclase may be of value in the study of guanine nucleotide-cyclase interactions.  相似文献   

7.
A comparison was made between the activation of membrane-bound adenylate cyclase from rat fat cell membranes and the enzyme solubilized with digitonin. The isoprenaline stimulation of the particulate enzyme was enhanced by GTP, both in the presence of Mg2+ and Mn2+, but no effect of the metal ion nor of GTP was found on the Ka of isoprenaline. The Ka of sodium fluoride for enzyme stimulation was shifted to 3-fold higher concentrations when Mg2+ was replaced by Mn2+, whereas V decreased. GTP did not influence the Ka of sodium fluoride but reduced V, irrespective of the metal ion. After digitonin solubilization the enzyme was no longer responsive to isoprenaline or GTP; however, V of the sodium fluoride activation was higher in the presence of Mn2+ than in the presence of Mg2+, and the Ka was found at 15-fold higher concentrations. Both the solubilized and the particulate adenylate cyclase were inhibited by adenosine; this inhibition was also seen with the fluoride stimulated enzyme. We conclude that solubilization with digitonin did not result in an enzyme preparation which preferentially turns over MnATP2+, although the fat cell adenylate cyclase possesses a metal ion regulatory site with a higher affinity for Mn2+ than for Mg2+. The data suggest that the guanyl nucleotide regulatory site and the sodium fluoride-sensitive site are located on different subunits while there is an interaction between the metal ion regulatory site and the fluoride-sensitive site.  相似文献   

8.
Low concentrations of Mn2+ supported the basal adenylate cyclase activity in crude and purified sarcolemmal membranes from cardiac muscle more effectively than did relatively high concentrations of Mg2+; at saturating concentrations the cyclase activities obtained with Mg2+ or Mn2+ were similar. In contrast, Mg2+ supported the basal cyclase activities of crude membrane fractions and purified sarcolemmal membranes from skeletal muscle far more effectively than did Mn2+; at saturating concentrations of either metal ion the Mg2+-supported cyclase activities were 5- to 10-fold greater than Mn2+-supported activities. Further, compared to Mg2+, Mn2+ supported the cyclase activities very poorly in all the primary subcellular fractions of skeletal muscle, whereas this cation was at least as effective as Mg2+ in all fractions of cardiac muscle. The apparent affinities of the cyclase for Mn2+ in heart as well as skeletal muscle appeared to be greater compared to those for Mg2+. The skeletal muscle cyclase displayed greater apparent affinity for MnATP2? (app. Km 0.10 mm) compared to MgATP2? (app. Km 0.32 mm) whereas the heart enzyme displayed greater apparent affinity for MgATP2? (app. Km 0.07 mm) compared to MnATP2? (app. Km 0.19 mm). Following preactivation with guanyl-5′-yl imidodiphosphate and isoproterenol, Mn2+ (0.15 to 2 mm) supported the cyclase activity of skeletal muscle even more effectively than did optimally effective concentrations of Mg2+. With the heart enzyme the relatively greater potency of Mn2+ persisted following preactivation. Significant enhancement in the Mn2+-sensitivity of skeletal muscle cyclase was also observed when assayed in the presence of GTP and isoproterenol or in the presence of NaF. Preactivation of both heart and skeletal muscle cyclases caused selective enhancement in the enzyme's apparent affinity for free Me2+ (Mg2+ or Mn2+) without influencing the apparent Km for MeATP2? (MgATP2? or MnATP2?). Evidences were obtained to show that the poor effectiveness of Mn2+ in supporting the basal activity of skeletal muscle cyclase is not related to (a) potentiation by Mn2+ of adenosine-mediated inhibition of the cyclase, (b) Mn2+-induced lability of the cyclase, (c) indirect effects of Mn2+ on ATP-regenerating system, or (d) the presence of different cation-specific molecular forms of the cyclase. It is also shown that the onset of enhanced Mn2+ sensitivity of the skeletal muscle enzyme following preactivation is not accompanied by a general loss of cation specificity of the cyclase. These results suggest that cations support the catalytic activity of adenylate cyclase by interacting with an enzymeregulatory free metal binding site and that the differential cation sensitivity of nonactivated (basal) cyclases from heart and skeletal muscle is likely due to differences in the properties of such an allosteric metal site. Furthermore, the metal site appears to undergo a conformational change following interaction of the cyclase system with the guanyl nucleotide and isoproterenol since the cation sensitivity of the cyclase and the relative potency of cations depend on the conformational status of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Regulation of Adenosine-Sensitive Adenylate Cyclase from Rat Brain Striatum   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2  
An adenosine-sensitive adenylate cyclase has been characterized from rat brain striatum. In whole homogenates as well as in particulate fractions, N6-phenylisopropyl adenosine (PIA), 2-chloroadenosine, and adenosine N′-oxide were equipotent in stimulating adenylate cyclase. Although GTP inhibited basal as well as PIA-stimulated activity of whole homogenates, the enzyme showed an absolute dependency on GTP for stimulation by PIA, dopamine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine in a particulate fraction derived from discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation. Adenosine exerts two effects on this adenylate cyclase, stimulation at low concentrations and inhibition at high concentrations, suggesting the presence of two adenosine binding sites. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by PIA was dependent on the concentration of Mg2-. The degree of stimulation by PIA was greater at a low concentration of Mg2+, which suggests that stimulation by PIA was accompanied by increasing the apparent affinity for Mg2+. Activation of adenylate cyclase by PIA was blocked by theophylline or 3-isobutyl- 1-methylxanthine (IBMX). The pH optimum for basal or (PIA + GTP)-stimulated activities was broad, with a peak between 8.5 and 9.5. In the presence of GTP, stimulation by an optimal concentration of PIA was additive, with maximal stimulation by the catecholamines. Phospholipase A2 treatment at a concentration of 1 U/ml for 5 min completely abolished the stimulatory effect of dopamine, whereas PIA-stimulated activity remained unaltered. These data suggest that rat brain striatum either has a single adenylate cyclase, which is stimulated by catecholamines and adenosine by distinct mechanisms, or has different cyclase populations, stimulated by either adenosine or catecholamines.  相似文献   

10.
Adenylate and guanylate cyclase activities do not vary in concert during the multiplication of KB cells. Adenylate cyclase activity is low and slightly increases at cell confluency, guanylate cyclase activity, great in sparce cells, decreases during cell multiplication period. These variations are not caused by a modification of catalytic sites because the apparent Km for ATP or GTP is not changed, but by a modification of the dependance on Mg++ or Mn++ ions. Fresh serum increases guanylate cyclase activity but does not affect adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

11.
In hamster adipocyte ghosts, ACTH stimulates adenylate cyclase by a GTP-dependent process, whereas prostaglandin E E1, α-adrenergic agonists and nicotinic acid inhibit the enzyme by a mechanism which is both GTP- and sodium-dependent. The influence of the divalent cations Mn2+ and Mg2+, was studied on these two different, apparently receptor-mediated effects on the adipocyte adenylate cyclase. At low Mn2+ concentrations, GTP (1 μM) decreased enzyme activity by about 80%. Under this condition, ACTH (0.1 μM) stimulated the cyclase by 6- to 8-fold, and NaCl (100 mM) caused a similar activation. In the presence of both GTP and NaCl, prostaglandin E1 (1 or 10 μM) and nicotinic acid (30 μM) inhibited the enzyme by about 70–80% and epinephrine (300 μM, added in combination with a β-adrenergic blocking agent) by 40–50%. With increasing concentrations of Mn2+, the GTP-induced decrease and the NaCl-induced increase in activity diminished, with a concomitant decrease in prostaglandin E1?, nicotinic acid- and epinephrine-induced inhibitions as well as in ACTH-induced stimulation. At 1 mM Mn2+, inhibition of the enzyme was almost abolished and stimulation by ACTH was largely reduced, whereas activation of the enzyme by KF (10 mM) was only partially impaired. The uncoupling action of Mn2+ on hormone-induced inhibition was half-maximal at 100–200 μM and appeared not to be due to increased formation of the enzyme substrate, Mn · ATP. It occurred without apparent lag phase and could not be overcome by increasing the concentration of GTP. Similar but not identical findings with regard to adenylate cyclase stimulation and inhibition by hormonal factors were obtained with Mg2+, although about 100-fold higher concentrations of Mg2+ than of Mn2+ were required. The data indicate that Mn2+at low concentrations functionally uncouples inhibitory and stimulatory hormone receptors from adenylate adenylate cyclase in membrane preparations of hamster adipocytes, and they suggest that the mechanism leading to uncoupling involves an action of Mn2+ on the functions of the guanine nucleotide site(s) in the system.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract— Mn2+ caused an 8-to 16-fold stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in homogenates as well as synaptosomcs. isolated synaptic membranes, and slices prepared from rat brain. The stimulation occurred at low concentrations of Mn2+. with a doubling of activity at 50-60μM. and was unaffected by a 60-fold excess of Mg2+. Whether or not Mg2+ was added, inclusion of a low concentration of Mn2+ reduced, but did not prevent the stimulation of adenylate cyclase caused by dopaminc in homogenates of corpus striatum. In contrast, Ca2+. at a concentration that had little effect on basal cyclase activity, completely prevented the stimulation by dopamine. The increase of cyclase activity produced by Mn2+ in brain homogenates was potentiated by F?. Other ions, notably Hg2+. Pb2+. Cu2+ and Zn2+. in order of decreasing potency, inhibited both basal and Mn2--stimulated cyclase activity. It is proposed that the effect of Mn2+ on adenylate cyclase activity may involve only the catalytic subunit of the enzyme, and that the mechanism is different from that by which either dopamine or F? stimulates the enzyme. These results suggest that the effects of low concentrations of Mn2+ and certain other divalent metal ions on adenylate cyclase activity may be involved in their neuropsychiatrie or other toxic effects, and that such ions may also participate in normal physiological mechanisms involving cyclic nucleotides.  相似文献   

13.
Vasopressin-sensitive pig kidney adenylate cyclase is sensitive to several effectors, such as Mg2+, other divalent cations, and guanyl nucleotides. The purpose of the present study was to compare the main characteristics of adenylate cyclase activation by vasopressin, Mg2+, and GMPPNP, respectively. Mg2+·ions were shown to exert at least three different effects on adenylate cyclase. The substrate of the adenylate cyclase reaction is the Mg-ATP complex. Mg2+ interacts with an enzyme regulatory site. Finally, Mg2+ can modulate the hormonal response, with Mg2+ions affecting the coupling function–that is, the quantitative relationship between receptor occupancy and adenylate cyclase activation. At all the magnesium concentrations tested, from 0.25 mM to 16 mM, adenylate cyclase activation was not a direct function of receptor occupancy. At low Mg2+ concentrations, adenylate cyclase activation dose-response curve to the hormone tended to be superimposable to the hormone dose-binding curve. These results suggest a role of magnesium at the coupling step between the hormone-receptor complex and adenylate cyclase response. Cobalt, but not calcium, ions could exert the same effects as Mg2+ ions on this coupling step. GMPPNP induced considerable adenylate cyclase activation (15 to 35 times the basal value). Activation by GMPPNP was highly time and temperature dependent. At 30° C, a 20 to 60 min preincubation period in the presence of GMPPNP was needed to obtain maximal activation. The higher the dose of GMPPNP in the medium, the longer it took to reach equilibrium. At 15° C, activation was still increasing with time after 3 hr preincubation in the presence of the nucleotide. GMPPNP was active in a 10?8 M to 10?5 M concentration range. Unlike the results obtained with lysine vasopressin, the kinetic characteristics of dose-dependent adenylate cyclase activation curves by GMPPNP were unaffected by varying Mg2+ concentrations except for the increase in velocity when raising Mg2+ concentration. It was not clear whether or not the activation processes by the hormone and by GMPPNP had common mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
Human platelet adenylate cyclase is stimulated by prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and is inhibited by epinephrine via alpha-adrenoceptors. Both agonists, epinephrine more than PGE1, increase the activity of a low Km GTPase in platelet membranes. Pretreatment of intact platelets or platelet membranes with the sulfhydryl reagent, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), abolished the inhibition of the adenylate cyclase and the concomitant stimulation of the GTPase by epinephrine. In contrast, stimulation of the adenylate cyclase by PGE1 was not affected or even increased by NEM pretreatment; only at high NEM concentrations were both basal and PGE1-stimulated activities decreased. Similarly, the PGE1-induced activation of the low Km GTPase was not or was only partially reduced by NEM. Adenylate cyclase activation by stable GTP analogs, NaF, and cholera toxin was also not decreased by NEM pretreatment. Exposure of intact platelets to NEM did not reduce alpha-adrenoceptor number and affinities for agonists and antagonists, as determined by [3H]yohimbine binding in platelet particles. The data indicate that NEM uncouples alpha-adrenoceptor-mediated inhibition of platelet adenylate cyclase, leaving the receptor recognition site and the adenylate cyclase itself relatively intact. Although the effect of NEM may be based on a reaction with the alpha-adrenoceptor site interacting with a coupling component, the selective loss of the adenylate cyclase inhibition together with an even increased stimulation of the enzyme by PGE1 suggests that there are two at least partially distinct regulatory sites involved in opposing hormonal regulations of adenylate cyclase activity, with that involved in hormonal inhibition being highly susceptible to inactivation by NEM.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the mechanism of calcium inhibition of adenylate cyclase using partially purified components of the enzyme complex and computer analysis of free metal and substrate concentrations. A sigmoidal relationship was observed between percentage maximal adenylate cyclase activity with 1-isoproterenol/guanylyl-β,γ-imidodiphosphate and the calculated free calcium. Fifty percent inhibition occurred at 2.5 × 10?4m free calcium. This inhibition appeared to be independent of calmodulin. Calcium inhibited the holocatalytic enzyme in a manner indentical to that of the native enzyme, but did not affect the ability of 1-isoproterenol and guanylyl-β,γ-imidodiphosphate to promote the formation of the holocatalytic state. There was no effect of calcium on the conformation of the activated G unit nor on the holocatalytic enzyme as determined by sedimentation velocity analysis. Calcium did not cause detectable dissociation of the activated G unit from the catalytic unit, nor convert activated G unit to an inactive form. Calcium inhibition of the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase was studied in S49 CYC? lymphoma cell membranes. High concentrations of calcium inhibited manganese-stimulated CYC? enzyme, but this could be explained by competition between calcium and manganese for ATP. With addition of forskolin, CYC? adenylate cyclase utilized MgATP2? as substrate and was shown to have a separate binding site for free magnesium. Calcium inhibited forskolin-stimulated CYC? enzyme by competing with free magnesium for its regulatory site. Calcium inhibition was noncompetitive with respect to MgATP2?. We conclude that calcium inhibits adenylate cyclase by direct competition with magnesium for a regulatory site on the catalytic unit.  相似文献   

16.
GMP-PNP, a non-hydrolyzable analog of GTP binds tightly to G-protein in the presence of Mg2+, so that the binding is stable even after exhaustive washings. This property was exploited to prepare membrane samples of rat brain where G-protein GTP-binding sites were saturated with GMP-PNP. Experiments carried out with these membranes showed that GTP, GMP-PNP, GDP-S and GMP (1 mM) inhibit the sodium-independent [3H]glutamate binding by 30–40% [F(4,40) = 5.9; p < .001], whereas only GMP-PNP activates adenylate cyclase activity [F(6,42) = 3.56; p < .01]. The inhibition of sodium-independent [3H]glutamate binding occurred in the absence of Mg2+. These findings suggest that guanine nucleotides may inhibit glutamate binding and activate adenylate cyclase through distinct mechanisms by acting on different sites.  相似文献   

17.
Cholesterol, a major structural component of plasma membranes, has a profound influence on cell surface receptor characteristics and on adenylate cyclase activity. β-Adrenergic receptor number, adenylate cyclase activity, and receptor-cyclase coupling were assessed in rat lung membranes following preincubation with cholesteryl hemisuccinate. β-Adrenergic receptor number increased by 50% without a change in antagonist affinity. However, β-adrenergic receptor affinity for isoproterenol increased 2-fold as a result of an increase in the affinity of the isoproterenol high-affinity binding site. This increase in agonist affinity did not potentiate hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, which decreased 3-fold following cholesterol incorporation. However, the ratio of isoproterenol to GTP-stimulated activity was unchanged with cholesterol. Stimulation distal to the receptor by GTP, NaF, GppNHp, Mn2+ and forskolin also demonstrated 50–80% reduced enzyme activity following cholesterol incorporation. These data suggest that membrane cholesterol incorporation decreases catalytic unit activity without affecting transduction of the hormone signal.  相似文献   

18.
The adenylate cyclase activity of human ejaculated spermatozoa in broken-cell preparations was investigated. In the presence of 5 mM metal cations and 0.1 mM ATP, the relative enzyme activity with Mn2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Ba2+ was 1.00, 0.28, 0.22, and 0.03, respectively. Added Ca2+ appeared to activate the enzyme in the presence of Mn2+ or Mg2+. The human sperm adenylate cyclase was stimulated by ~ 2-fold by free Ca2+ (lmM) in the presence of Mg2+ (5 mM). If the GTP analogue, 5′-guanylyl imidophosphate (Gpp(NH)p) was added to the sperm homogenate in the presence of 200 μM ethylene-glycol-bis (β-aminoethylether) N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), the adenylate cyclase activity was increased by approximately 25%, but with the addition of 280 μM Ca2+ there was a decrease in enzyme activity. A similar response to low concentrations of Ca2+ was obtained after complementation of the sperm enzyme with the guanine nucleotide regulatory component from human erythrocytes, where the addition of 40 μM Gpp(NH)p, 200 μM EGTA, and Ca2+ (≤ 160 μM) stimulated the sperm enzyme ~ 3–4-fold, but the further addition of Ca2+ (280 μM, final) neutralized the stimulatory effect. The addition of adenosine, and the nucleotides 5′-AMP and 5′-ADP inhibited the enzyme, whereas guanine and 5′-GMP had no appreciable effect. Human follicular fluid and serum also had little direct effect on the sperm adenylate cyclase. These resuls suggest that Ca2+ might be an important physiological modulator of the human sperm adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the properties of dopamine-dependent adenylate cyclase in rat striatal homogenates, 20 h after reserpine treatment. In this experimental condition, we have found that the affinity of the enzyme for dopamine is greatly enhanced. On the other hand, the concentration of apomorphine required to produced half-maximal activation of the enzyme in striatal homogenates of controls and reserpine-treated rats is not changed. The unchanged affinity of adenylate cyclase for the substrate (ATP:Mg++) indicates that reserpine probably affects the receptor component of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Adenosine and certain adenosine analogues inhibit beef thyroid membrane adenylate cyclase. The inhibition has a rapid onset, is not directly on the catalytic or nucleotide regulatory sites, occurs with all activators tested (ITP, Gpp(NH)p, TSH, and F?), and is seen also in mouse and human thyroid membranes. Addition of manganous ion, which activates adenylate cyclase, markedly enhances the inhibition by adenosine analogues. The order of potencies is: 2′,5′-dideoxyadenosine > 5′-deoxyadenosine > 2′-deoxy-3′-phosphoadenosine > 2′-deoxyadenosine > adenosine > adeninexyloside > adenine arabinoside. Purinemodified analogues are either inactive or stimulate slightly at high concentrations. This chemical specificity, the Mn2+ requirement, and the lack of reversal by theophylline, suggest that these membranes have little “R” site activity (stringent for the ribose moiety) and primarily contain a “P” site that has stringent purine requirement but permits changes in the ribose moiety. This site appears to be associated with the catalytic unit since it persists in solubilized adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

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