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1.
To examine the potential participation of the plasma membrane in differentiation, we studied the enzymatic activities of 5'-nucleotidase and adenylate cyclase as a function of chondrocyte maturation. 16-day- old chick embryo tibiae epiphyses were dissected into proliferative, growing and hypertrophying zones. Partially purified membrane fractions prepared by differential centrifugation from the respective tissue segments were assayed for enzymatic activity. Cell suspensions from the same segments were examined cytochemically for the presence of 5'- nucleotidase. The findings show that the 5'-nucleotidase activity of the chick embryo epiphyseal cartilage has the following characteristics: (a) it has a Km of about 25 muM for 5'AMP, and is inhibited by a mixture of 2' and 3'AMP (apparent Ki about 10(-4) M) and by AOPCP; (b) it is predominantly localized at the cell surface but is also detected in the cytoplasm and in association with nuclear heterochromatin; and (c) it increases 10-fold (on a DNA basis) during the maturation of the epiphyseal cartilage cells. The adenylate cyclase activity has these characteristics: (a) it does not change during chondrocyte maturation (on a DNA basis); (b) its susceptibility to adenosine inhibition decreases at least 10-fold. The implication of these findings relative to a possible role of adenosine in cellular communication is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Regulation of adenylate cyclase by adenosine   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Summary Adenosine may well be as important in the regulation of adenylate cyclase as hormones. Sattin and Rall first demonstrated in 1970 that adenosine was a potent stimulator of adenylate cyclase in the brain. However, adenosine is an equally potent inhibitor of adenylate cyclase in other cells such as adipocytes. The concentration of adenosine required for this regulation of adenylate cyclase is in the nanomolar range (10 to 100 nm). Both the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of low concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase are antagonized by methylxanthines. This antagonism of adenosine action may account for all or part of the effects of methyl xanthines on cyclic AMP levels in many tissues. Adenosine appears to be a particularly important endogenous regulator of adenylate cyclase in brain, smooth muscle and fat cells. Under conditions in which intracellular AMP rises, adenosine formation and release is accelerated. In addition to its direct effects on adenylate cyclase, adenosine (at higher concentrations approaching millimolar) exerts multiple effects on cellular metabolism as a result of its intracellular metabolism and especially conversion to nucleotides.The effects of nanomolar concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase are mediated through an adenosine site possessing strict structural specificity for the ribose moiety of the molecule (the R adenosine site) which is presumably located on the external surface of the plasma membrane. In brain, lung, platelets, bone, lymphocytes, skin, adrenals, Leydig tumors, and coronary arteries adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase via this site. However, in rat adipocytes, brain astroblasts and ventricular myocardium adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase through the R or adenosine site. Although the R site requires an intact ribose moiety, adenosine analogs modified in the purine ring such as N6-phenylisopropyladenosine appear to be potent agonists for this site. All effects of adenosine mediated via the R site are competitively antagonized by methyl xanthines.The effects of micromolar concentrations of adenosine appear to be mediated via a site with strict structural specificity with respect to the purine moiety of the molecule (the P or adenine adenosine site). This P site is postulated to be located on the intracellular face of the plasma membrane and mediates the effects of adenosine due to conversion of adenosine to 5-AMP or perhaps other nucleotides. The effects of high concentrations of adenosine are always inhibitory to adenylate cyclase activity, are readily demonstrated in broken cell preparations, and are unaffected by methylxanthines. An intact purine ring is required for these adenosine effects but modifications of the ribose moiety of the molecule generally increases the potency of the analog. A prime example is 2,5-dideoxyadenosine, which is the most potent known R-site specific adenosine analog.We propose a unitary model which explains both the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of low concentrations of adenosine on adenylate cyclase. In brief, adenylate cyclase is postulated to exist in three interconvertible activity states: (i) an inactive state (E0); (ii) a GTP-liganded state with high activity (EGTP); and (iii) a GDP-liganded state (EGDP) which is inactive in cells where adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase, but active in cells where adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase. We postulate that the enzyme cycles through these states in the following manner: the E0 state binds GTP and forms the EGTP state; hydrolysis of bound GTP converts the EGTP to the EGDP state; and release of bound GDP converts EGDP to the E0 state. The E0 state is the only form of the enzyme which can be stimulated by either hormones or GTP and its formation from the EGDP state is rate-limiting in this cycle. The conversion of EGDP to E0 regulates the ability of hormones and GTP to activate adenylate cyclase and is postulated to be adenosine sensitive.In cells where both EGDP and E0 states are inactive, adenosine stimulates adenylate cyclase activity. In cells where E0 is inactive, but EGDP is active, adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase activity. In addition we suggest that in cells where adenosine inhibits adenylate cyclase activity (cells postulated to have an EGDP state which is active) high concentrations of GTP favor accumulation of the enzyme in EGDP and thus are inhibitory to activity. Prostaglandins may also regulate adenylate cyclase in a manner similar to that described above for adenosine.We conclude that adenosine is an important regulator of adenylate cyclase whose role has only been appreciated recently. Further studies are warranted on both its binding to cells and mechanisms by which it regulates adenylate cyclase.This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Research Grant AM-10149 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolism and Digestive Diseases.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of adenosien of the adenylate cyclases of human and pig platelets were studied. Stimulation occurred at lower concentrations than did inhibition, and stimulatory effect was prevented by methylxanthines. Stimulation by adenosine was immediate in onset and was reversible, under conditions when cyclic AMP formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration.The stimulatory and inhibitory effects could be distinguished further by the use of various analogues of adenosine and could be prevented by adenosine deaminase. The data suggest that both stimulation and inhibition were due to adenosine itself and not one of its degradation products and that in the platelet preparation, neither formation nor degradation of adenosine during the adenylate cyclase incubation appreciably influenced measured activity.Stimulation by adenosine was additive with the effects of GMP-P(NH)P, and α- or β-adrenergic stimulation, but was abolished by prostaglandin E1 or by NaF. Prostaglandin E1 and NaF increased the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to inhibition by adenosine. The data suggests that guanly-5′-yl(β-γ imino)diphosphate and/or adrenergic stimulation and adenosine exert their effects on adenylate cyclase by distinct mechanisms, but that prostaglandin E1 or F? and adenosine increase enzyme activity by mechanisms which may involve common intermediates in the coupling to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

5.
The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of adenosine on the adenylate cyclases of human and pig platelets were studied. Stimulation occurred at lower concentrations than did inhibition, and the stimulatory effect was prevented by methylxanthines. Stimulation by adenosine was immediate in onset and was reversible, under conditions when cyclic AMP formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration. The stimulatory and inhibitory effects could be distinguished further by the use of various analogues of adenosine and could be prevented by adenosine deaminase. The data suggest that both stimulation and inhibition were due to adenosine itself and not one of its degradation products and that in the platelet preparation, neither formation nor degradation of adenosine during the adenylate cyclase incubation appreciably influenced measured activity. Stimulation by adenosine was additive with the effects of GMP-P(NH)P, and alpha- or beta-adrenergic stimulation, but was abolished by prostaglandin E1 or by NaF. Prostaglandin E1 and NaF increased the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to inhibition by adenosine. The data suggest that guanyl-5'-yl-(beta-gamma-imino)diphosphate and/or adrenergic stimulation and adenosine exert their effects on adenylate cyclase by distinct mechanisms, but that prostaglandin E1 or F- and adenosine increase enzyme activity by mechanisms which may involve common intermediates in the coupling to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
By SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, mitochondrial proteins having covalently-bound flavin were analyzed. Mitochondria were prepared from the liver of rat injected with radioactive riboflavin. Radioactivity was found to be associated with four protein components. Their subunit molecular weights were 91,000, 72,000, 60,000 and 44,000. The first two components exhibited yellowish fluorescence on a gel under ultraviolet illumination. The component of the highest molecular weight seems to be a new protein containing covalently-bound flavin.  相似文献   

7.
Gossypol, a polyphenolic binaphthalene -dialdehyde reputed to exert contraceptive action in males, reversibly inhibits adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1] in a concentration-dependent manner. In membranes prepared from a variety of organs, the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) ranges from 75 microM (rat Leydig tumor cells) to 250 microM (rat liver membranes). Kinetic studies using partially purified catalytic subunit isolated from bovine testis show that gossypol is competitive with ATP with an apparent Ki of 110 microM. These data suggest that gossypol inhibition of adenylate cyclase is due to direct interaction at the nucleotide-binding domain of the catalytic subunit of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
F Eckstein  R S Goody 《Biochemistry》1976,15(8):1685-1691
The chemical synthesis of adenosine 5'-(O-1-thiotriphosphate) (ATPalphaS) and adenosine 5'-(O-2-thiotriphosphate) (ATPbetaS) is described. Both exist as a pair of diastereomers, A and B. The isomers of ATPalphaS can be distinguished on the basis of their different reaction rates with myokinase as well as nucleoside diphosphate kinase. With both enzymes, isomer A reacts fast whereas isomer B reacts considerably more slowly. Phosphorylation of a mixture of isomers of ADPalphaS with pyruvate or acetate kinase yields ATPalphaS, isomer A, whereas the phosphoryl transfer with creatine or arginine kinase yields isomer B. The isomers of ATPbetaS differ in their reactivity with myosin. Isomer A is readily hydrolyzed, whereas isomer B is not. However, isomer B reacts faster with nucleoside diphosphate kinase and ADP than isomer A. Phosphoryl transfer with pyruvate kinase onto ADPbetaS yields ATPbetaS, isomer A, with acetate kinase, isomer B.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Hypothyroidism is associated with an enhanced sensitivity of rat fat cells to the inhibitory action of adenosine and adenosine agonists. The sensitivity of the forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP response of rat fat cells to the adenosine agonist N6-phenylisopropyladenosine is amplified 3-fold by hypothyroidism. Forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity is more sensitive to inhibition by this adenosine agonist in membranes of fat cells isolated from hypothyroid as compared to euthyroid rats. Hypothyroidism does not significantly alter the number of affinity of binding sites for N6-cyclohexyl[3H]adenosine or N6-phenylisopropyladenosine in membranes of rat fat cells. GTP-induced inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase was markedly enhanced in the hypothyroid state, suggesting an alteration in the inhibitory regulatory component (Ni)-mediated control of adenylate cyclase. Incubating membranes with [alpha-32P]NAD+ and preactivated pertussis toxin results in the radiolabeling of two peptides with Mr = 40,000 and 41,000 as visualized in autoradiograms of polyacrylamide gels run in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The amount of label incorporated by pertussis toxin into these two peptides (putative subunits of Ni) per mg of protein of membrane is increased 2-3-fold in the hypothyroid state. The amount of the stimulatory regulatory component, Ns, in fat cell membranes is not altered by hypothyroidism (Malbon, C. C., Graziano, M. P., and Johnson, G. L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3254-3260). The amplified response of hypothyroid rat fat cells to the inhibitory action of adenosine appears to reflect a specific increase in the activity and abundance of Ni.  相似文献   

11.
Ni-mediated inhibition of human platelet adenylate cyclase by thrombin   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Cefoxitin, a poor substrate of the RTEM beta-lactamase (penicillin amido-beta-lactam hydrolase, EC 3.5.2.6), induces a reversible change in the conformation of the enzyme. The change is manifested in gradual loss of catalytic activity and increased susceptibility to proteolytic inactivation. It is prevented by antibodies, which stabilize the native conformation. By contrast, divalent cations, which have no effect on the native enzyme, delay recovery from the cefoxitin-induced state, presumably by reacting with sites made accessible in the partly unfolded enzyme. Prolonged exposure to excess of cefoxitin causes a similar delay. The kinetic evidence, namely, the initial burst of consumption of cefoxitin and the subsequent gradual recovery of activity with better substrates, appears to be consistent with acylation of the active site by cefoxitin followed by a slower deacylation step [Fisher et al. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2895-2901]. However, additional evidence leads us to conclude that the kinetics observed reflect deformation of the active site, rather than its blockage, by cefoxitin. Of most significance is the transient change in specificity, i. e. a preferential interaction of the recovering enzyme with substrates which are closest in structure to cefoxitin.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Commercial preparations of adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate (App(NH)p) were found to be contaminated with a GTP-like substance(s) as well as a phosphate donor(s) for GDP. Thus, when these preparations were used as substrate with no purification, GDP was as effective as GTP in promoting PGE1 stimulation of human platelet adenylate cyclase. With purified App(NH)p as substrate, the effect of PGE1 with GDP was reduced but still observable, while that with GTP was unaltered. PGE1 also caused a stimulation in the presence of guanosine 5'-o-(2-thiodiphosphate)(GDP beta S) with ATP as substrate. Both of the PGE1-stimulated activities observed with GDP and its analog were completely lost by the addition of UDP, thereby, inhibiting GTP formation catalyzed by membrane-associated nucleoside diphosphate kinase. The results demonstrate that the stimulatory effects of PGE1 observed with GDP and App(NH)p, and with GDP beta S and ATP were transphosphorylation dependent and, therefore, the analogs must be used with special caution in adenylate cyclase studies.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Adenylate cyclase is the critical enzyme in the chemotactic signal relay mechanism of the slime mold amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum. However, few studies examining the regulation of this enzyme have been performed in vitro due to the instability of enzyme activity in crude lysates. For studies presented in this communication, a membrane preparation has been isolated that exhibits a high specific activity adenylate cyclase that is stable during storage at -70 degrees C and under assay conditions at 27 degrees C. The enzyme was activated by micromolar concentrations of MnCl2. GTP and its non-hydrolyzable analog, guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imino)triphosphate, inhibited the enzyme non-competitively in the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+. However, this inhibition was more pronounced in the presence of Mn2+. Since guanylate cyclase activity in the D. discoideum membranes was less than 10% of the adenylate cyclase activity, there could not be a significant contribution by guanylate cyclase toward the production of cyclic AMP. Experiments indicate that D. discoideum adenylate cyclase was also regulated by adenosine analogs. The enzyme was inhibited by 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine and 2'-deoxyadenosine and inhibition was augmented by the presence of Mn2+. However, the inhibition was not entirely consistent with that which would be expected for the P-site of eukaryotic systems because some purine-modified adenosine analogs also inhibited the enzyme. Guanine nucleotides had no effect on the inhibition by either purine-modified or ribose-modified adenosine analogs. The binding of cyclic AMP to its receptor on the D. discoideum membranes was not affected by either MnCl2 or adenosine analogs.  相似文献   

16.
Oligo(2'-5')adenylate synthetase in human lymphoblastoid cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The enzyme oligo(2′–5′)adenylate synthetase, when activated by double-stranded RNA, polymerizes ATP into the novel oligonucleotide (2′–5′)ppp(Ap)nA. We describe conditions for assay of this enzyme in crude extracts of a human lymphoblastoid cell line, Namalwa. The production of (2′–5′)ppp(Ap)nA by Namalwa extracts was 3–5 times greater than the production by extracts of interferon pretreated mouse L cells, and 700 fold higher than the production by extracts of untreated mouse L cells. The relatively high level of oligo(2′–5′)adenylate synthetase in Namalwa cells was not attributable solely to their constitutive secretion of low levels of interferon. Analysis of the size distribution of the oligomers formed at different times suggested that the enzyme can add ATP to a free pppApA. Infection by Newcastle disease virus or treatment with interferon raised the apparent synthetase levels only marginally. Experiments that employed antibody to interferon suggested that the interferon must be externalized from the NDV-infected cell to induce maximal synthetase levels.  相似文献   

17.
D Stübner  R A Johnson 《FEBS letters》1989,248(1-2):155-161
The effects of forskolin on the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to 'P'-site-mediated inhibition were studied. Stimulation of crude and purified preparations of adenylate cyclase by forskolin led to decreased sensitivity to inhibition by 2',5' dideoxyadenosine with enzyme from rat and bovine brain. This is in contrast with the enhancement of P-site sensitivity induced by calmodulin, divalent cations, and stable GTP analogs and is in contrast with behavior seen with enzyme from liver and S49 cyc membranes. The effect of forskolin on P-site sensitivity of the brain adenylate cyclase was not dependent on the presence of G-proteins or calmodulin. It was not the consequence of proteolysis nor was it due to an obvious artifact in the assay procedures. This distinct behavior of the brain enzyme is most likely due to a structural difference in the catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

18.
D Orlic  E Kirk  F Quaini  S Babbott 《Blood cells》1984,10(2-3):193-210
The trimer and tetramer core forms of 2'-5' Adenylate (2-5A) were tested in vitro for their effect on mouse liver CFU-E. Both forms of 2-5A core partially inhibited the CFU-E response to erythropoietin when given as a single dose at time 0 hours. Approximately 25% fewer colonies were seen after 2-days growth following exposure of the CFU-E to 0.1 mM 2-5A core. A 0.01 mM concentration of exogenous 2-5A core was not inhibitory. Endogenous 2-5A synthetase activity was assayed in spleen cell lysates from mice made anemic by several injections of phenylhydrazine. This method of treatment stimulated erythropoiesis, and this was directly correlated with an increase in the rate of enzyme activity measured by lysate conversion of 14C-ATP to 2-5A (our in press data suggests that the same may occur with hypoxic stimulation). This suggested to us that endogenous 2-5A synthetase and its 2-5A, a known inhibitor of DNA synthesis and protein synthesis, may help to regulate some of the late events in erythropoiesis.  相似文献   

19.
Alpha-adrenergic inhibition of renal cortical adenylate cyclase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Adenylate cyclase in homogenates of rat renal cortex was inhibited by alpha-adrenergic agonists. Inhibition required sodium ion and GTP. A maximum inhibition of 17.8 +/- 1.4% (S.E.M.) was produced by l-epinephrine in the presence of 0.2 M NaCl, 10 microM GTP and 10 microM propranolol. Similar inhibition was produced by l-norepinephrine and alpha-methylnorepinephrine. The EC50 values for l-epinephrine, l-norepinephrine and alpha-methylnorepinephrine were respectively 1.9 +/- 0.7 microM, 2.3 +/- 1.6 microM and 5.1 +/- 1.8 microM. Clonidine was a partial agonist causing 50% as much inhibition as epinephrine. Phenylephrine and methoxamine did not inhibit at concentrations up to 100 microM. Micromolar concentrations of phentolamine and yohimbine prevented the inhibition of adenylate cyclase by epinephrine. However, prazosin was ineffective. Thus the adenylate cyclase coupled alpha-receptors have alpha-2 specificity. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase by alpha-adrenergic agonists was not observed in homogenates of renal medulla.  相似文献   

20.
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