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1.
Two different phosphofructokinase-phosphorylating protein kinases were separated from extracts of Ascaris suum muscle by chromatography on DEAE-Fractogel. They were tentatively designated phosphofructokinase kinase I and phosphofructokinase kinase II. Phosphofructokinase kinase I eluted from the chromatography column at an ionic strength of 0.07 and contained about 25% of the phosphofructokinase-phosphorylating activity assayed in crude extracts. The protein kinase activity was not stimulated by the addition of either cAMP or cGMP. It was inhibited by the heat-stable protein kinase inhibitory protein from rabbit muscle (Walsh inhibitor), by the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase from beef heart, and by the cAMP-binding protein from Ascaris muscle. These properties suggest that phosphofructokinase kinase I is homologous to the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinases from mammals. This assumption is supported by the estimation of the Mr of 40,000 for the purified phosphofructokinase kinase I under denaturing conditions and by the fact that the presence of cAMP eliminated the inhibition by the cAMP binding proteins. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 8.7. Phosphofructokinase kinase II was eluted from the DEAE-Fractogel column at an ionic strength of 0.16 and contained approximately 75% of the phosphofructokinase kinase activity measured in the extracts. The molecular and kinetic properties were significantly different from those of phosphofructokinase kinase I. The enzyme was not inhibited by the heat-stable inhibitor protein nor by cAMP-binding proteins. The Mr of the native enzyme was estimated as 220,000 by molecular sieve chromatography. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was pH 5.45.  相似文献   

2.
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase from human erythrocyte plasma membranes was solubilized with Triton X-100, partially purified, and systematically characterized by a series of physicochemical studies. Sedimentation and gel filtration experiments showed that the 6.6 S holoenzyme had a Stokes radius (a) of 5.7 nm and was dissociated into native 4.8 S cAMP-binding (a = 4.5 nm) and 3.2 S catalytic (a = 2.6 nm) subunits. A minimum subunit molecular weight of 48,000 was established for the regulatory subunit by photoaffinity labeling with 8-azido[32P]cAMP, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and autoradiography. These data suggest an asymmetric tetrameric (R2C2) structure (Mr approximately equal to 160,000) for the membrane-derived enzyme. Membrane-derived protein kinase was characterized as a type I enzyme on the basis of its R subunit molecular weight, pI values (R, 4.9; holoenzyme, 5.75 and 5.95), dissociation by 0.5 M NaCl and 50 microgram/ml of protamine, 20-fold reduced affinity for cAMP in the presence of 0.3 mM MgATP, elution from DEAE-cellulose at low ionic strength, and kinetic and cAMP-binding properties. The physicochemical properties of the membrane protein kinase closely parallel the characteristics of erythrocyte cytosolic protein kinase I but are clearly dissimilar from those of the soluble type II enzyme. Moreover, regulatory subunits of the membrane-associated and cytosolic type I kinases were indistinguishable in size, shape, subunit molecular weight, charge, binding and reassociation properties, and peptide maps of the photoaffinity-labeled cAMP-binding site, suggesting a high degree of structural and functional homology in this pair of enzymes. In view of the predominant occurrence of particulate type II protein kinases in rabbit heart and bovine cerebral cortex, the present results suggest that the distribution of membrane-associated protein kinases may be tissue- or species-specific, but not isoenzyme-specific.  相似文献   

3.
Stage-specific mAb have been produced to amastigotes and epimastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi (Brazil strain). mAb C-1 through C-6 reacted specifically with T. cruzi strains; no cross-reactions were found with membranes of promastigotes or amastigotes of Leishmania species. One mAb produced against the epimastigote membranes (C-5) was found to be specific against this stage by radioimmune binding assay, immunofluorescence, and radioimmunoprecipitation. mAb C-5 recognized a novel epimastigote protein at Mr (greater than 200,000) on immunoprecipitation with radiolabeled epimastigotes. Three amastigote stage-specific monoclonal antibodies were produced against membrane-enriched preparations of T. cruzi (Brazil strain) amastigotes grown in axenic culture (C-1 through C-3). By indirect immunofluorescence assay, monoclonal antibody C-2 bound only to T. cruzi amastigotes; no reaction with either tissue culture-derived trypomastigotes or epimastigotes was observed. mAb C-1 and C-2 each specifically immunoprecipitated a single protein molecule with Mr 83,000 from [35S]-methionine-labeled amastigotes. mAb C-2 was also used to affinity purify an 83-kDa Ag that was recognized by human Chagasic sera from patients of endemic countries of Latin America in an enzyme immunoassay. Amino acid composition and preliminary sequence data of the 83-kDa protein are presented. These mAb and/or purified Ag may be useful in studying stage differentiation, monitoring transformation, and for further taxonomic, epidemiologic, and immunologic studies of Chagas' disease.  相似文献   

4.
The photoaffinity label 8-azido[32P]adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP) was used to analyze both the cAMP-binding component of the purified cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and the cAMP-binding proteins present in crude tissue extracts of bovine cardiac muscle. 8-Azido-cyclic [32P]AMP reacted specifically and in stoichiometric amounts with the cAMP-binding proteins of bovine cardiac muscle. Upon phosphorylation, the purified cAMP-binding protein from bovine cardiac muscle changed its electrophoretic mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels from an apparent molecular weight of 54,000 to an apparent molecular weight of 56,000. In tissue extracts of bovine cardiac muscle, most of the 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP was incorporated into a protein band with an apparent molecular weight of 56,000 which shifted to 54,000 upon treatment with a phosphoprotein phosphatase. Thus a substantial amount of the cAMP-binding protein appeared to be in the phosphorylated form. Autoradiograms following sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of both the pure and impure cAMP-binding proteins labeled with 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP revealed another binding component with a molecular weight of 52,000 which incorporated 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP without changing its electrophoretic mobility. Limited proteolysis of the 56,000- and 52,000-dalton proteins labeled with 32P from either [gamma-32P]ATP.Mg2+ or 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP showed patterns indicating homology. On the other hand, peptide maps of the major 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP-labeled proteins from tissue extracts of bovine cardiac muscle (Mr = 56,000) and rabbit skeletal muscle (Mr = 48,000) displayed completely different patterns as expected for the cAMP-binding components of types II and I protein kinases. Both phospho- and dephospho-cAMP-binding components from the purified bovine cardiac muscle protein kinase were also resolved by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide slab gels containing 8 M urea. The phosphorylated forms labeled with 32P from either [gamma-32P]ATP or 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP migrated as a doublet with a pI of 5.35. The 8-azido-cyclic [32P]AMP-labeled dephosphorylated form also migrated as a doublet with a pI of 5.40. The phosphorylated and dephosphorylated cAMP-binding proteins migrated with molecular weights of 56,000 and 54,000, respectively, following a second dimension electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The lower molecular weight cAMP-binding component (Mr = 52,000) was also apparent in these gels. Similar experiments with the cAMP-binding proteins present in tissue extracts of bovine cardiac muscle indicate that they are predominantly in the phosphorylated form.  相似文献   

5.
Tyrosine protein kinase present in the membrane fraction of bovine cerebral cortex were extracted and chromatographically fractionated. The activity associated with tyrosine protein kinases was fully extracted from the membranes by 1% sodium cholate and eluted in two peaks (I and II) during chromatography of protein extracts on DEAE-Toyopearl in the presence of sodium cholate. The predominant in cerebral cortex membrane tyrosine protein kinase of peak I (about 75% of the total activity) was purified 1930-fold by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300, chromatography on hexyl- and phenyl-Sepharose and by rechromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl. The amount of the enzyme prepared from 250 g of bovine brain was 20 micrograms, the enzyme yield and specific activity being 3.8% and 3.9 nmol/mg protein/min, respectively. The purified protein kinase of peak I represents a protein with Mr of 62-63,000 (p62) capable of being autophosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]. Protein kinase p62 phosphorylates enolase, tubulin and calpactin I as well as model substrates in the series: histone H5 greater than poly(G, T)n greater than or equal to histone H2A greater than poly(G, A, T)n, histone H4 greater than caseins, histones H1 and H2B, poly(G, A, L, T)n. The enzyme is specific for Mn2+ at the optimal concentration about 1 mM. The KmMn-ATP is 0.3 microM; Km for histone H5 and poly(G, T)n are 0.45 mg/ml and 0.06 mg/ml, respectively. The protein kinase p62 activity is inhibited by NaCl (IC50 approximately 75-100 mM) as well as by quercetin, adriamycin and lasalocid (IC50 approximately 14-34, 23 and 90 microM, respectively). It is concluded that protein kinase p62 is analogous to the c-src gene protein kinase.  相似文献   

6.
Phorbol ester binding was studied in protein kinase C-containing extracts obtained from Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigote forms. Specific 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate, [3H]PMA, or 12,13-O-dibutyryl phorbol, [3H]PDBu, binding activities, determined in T. cruzi epimastigote membranes, were dependent on ester concentration with a Kd of 9x10(-8) M and 11.3x10(-8) M, respectively. The soluble form of T. cruzi protein kinase C was purified through DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Both protein kinase C and phorbol ester binding activities co-eluted in a single peak. The DEAE-cellulose fraction was further purified into three subtypes by hydroxylapatite chromatography. These kinase activity peaks were dependent on Ca2+ and phospholipids and eluted at 40 mM (PKC I), 90 mM (PKC II) and 150 mM (PKC III) phosphate buffer, respectively. Western blot analysis of the DEAE-cellulose fractions, using antibodies against different isoforms of mammalian protein kinase C enzymes, revealed that the parasite expresses high levels of the alpha-PKC isoform. Immunoaffinity purified T. cruzi protein kinase C, isolated with an anti-protein kinase C antibody-sepharose column, were subjected to phosphorylation in the absence of exogenous phosphate acceptor. A phosphorylated 80 kDa band was observed in the presence of Ca2+, phosphatidylserine and diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

7.
Characterization of cholecystokinin receptors in toad retina   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
E A Bone  S A Rosenzweig 《Peptides》1988,9(2):373-381
The binding characteristics, structure, and pharmacologic properties of a cholecystokinin binding protein in toad retinal membranes have been studied. In competition binding studies using 125I-CCK-8, toad retinal membranes exhibited a high affinity binding site having a Ki50 of 1.5 nM using CCK-8 as competitive ligand. The relative potencies of CCK-related peptides in inhibiting radioligand binding were caerulein greater than gastrin II approximately equal to CCK-8 approximately equal to CCK-33 greater than CCK-8-DS approximately equal to gastrin I. L-364,718, a potent inhibitor of peripheral CCK receptors, was ineffective at competition binding at concentrations up to 1 microM; dibutyryl cyclic GMP was modestly effective at competing (KD approximately 10 mM). Covalent binding of 125I-CCK-33 to toad retinal membranes using chemical cross-linkers or UV irradiation resulted in the labeling of a major Mr 62,000 protein and the intermittent labeling of minor components of Mr 105,000 and Mr 40,000 as determined by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography. The binding of 125I-CCK-33 to retinal membranes and the concomitant labeling of the Mr 62,000 component was specifically inhibited by CCK-8 (KD approximately 1.5 nM). Reduction of membranes with DTT abolished specific binding of 125I-CCK. SDS-PAGE analysis of affinity cross-linked membranes under non-reducing conditions revealed that the Mr 62,000 protein migrated with an apparently lower molecular weight. These results suggest that the Mr 62,000 CCK binding protein in the toad retina contains an intramolecular disulfide bond(s). The Mr 62,000 protein was retained on a wheat germ agglutinin-agarose column and eluted with N-acetyl D-glucosamine, suggesting the glycoprotein nature of this protein. Digestion of the Mr 62,000 protein with neuraminidase together with O-glycanase resulted in a discrete product of Mr approximately 60,000. These results indicate that the Mr 62,000 protein is a glycoprotein with O-linked oligosaccharide chains. Taken together, these data indicate that the CCK receptor in toad retina has a distinct structure compared to that described in rat pancreas or brain. It will be important to establish whether this difference is reflected in differences in signal transduction mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
The activation of protein kinase A (cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinase) by cyclic adenosine monophosphate is believed to play an important role in regulating the growth and differentiation of Trypanosoma cruzi. A PCR using degenerate oligonucleotide primers against conserved motifs in the VIb and VIII subdomains of the ACG family of serine/threonine protein kinases was utilised to amplify regions corresponding to the parasite homologue of the protein kinase A catalytic subunit. This putative protein kinase A fragment was used to isolate the entire gene from T. cruzi genomic libraries. The deduced 329 amino acid sequence of this gene contained all of the signature motifs of known protein kinase A catalytic subunit proteins. The recombinant protein expressed in Escherichia coli was shown to phosphorylate Kemptide, a synthetic peptide substrate of protein kinase A, in a protein kinase inhibitor (PKI)-inhibitory manner. Immunoprecipitation with polyclonal antisera raised against recombinant protein of this gene was able to pull-down PKI-inhibitory phosphotransferase activity from epimastigote lysates. Immunoblot and Northern blot analyses, in combination with enzyme activity assays, revealed that this gene was a stage-regulated enzyme in T. cruzi with higher levels and activity being present in epimastigotes compared with amastigotes or trypomastigotes. Overall these studies indicate that the cloned gene encodes an authentic protein kinase A catalytic subunit from T. cruzi and are the first demonstration of PKI-inhibitory phosphotransferase activity in an expressed protozoan protein kinase A catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

9.
Protein kinases of the thylakoid membrane   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The claim of Racker and co-workers (Lin, Z. F., Lucero, H. A., and Racker, E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12153-12156 and Lucero, H. A., Lin, Z. F., and Racker, E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12157-12160) that two protein kinases, designated CPK1 (25 kDa) and CPK2 (38 kDa), are present in spinach thylakoid membranes was investigated in light of results from this laboratory (Coughlan, S. J., and Hind, G. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 11378-11385) showing that 75-80% of the measurable protein kinase activity of isolated thylakoids is attributable to a protein kinase of 64 kDa apparent molecular mass. Extraction of thylakoid membranes with octyl glucoside/cholate according to the procedure of Lin et al. (Lin, Z. F., Lucero, H. A., and Racker, E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12153-12156) released proteins assignable to CPK1 and CPK2 on the basis of photoaffinity labeling with 8-azido-[32P]ATP. The 64-kDa protein kinase was present in this extract and accounted for greater than 80% of the total phosphotransferase activity toward lysine-rich histone as substrate; it was not labeled by the photoaffinity reagent. The three presumptive kinases were purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, sucrose density gradient centrifugation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and affinity chromatography. CPK1 was specifically eluted from Cibacron blue-Sepharose by 10 mM ATP; it electrophoresed on denaturing polyacrylamide gels as a single band with apparent molecular mass of 25 kDa. Its specific activity toward lysine-rich histone as substrate was approximately 250 pmol of phosphate transferred (mg protein)-1 min-1. The 64-kDa protein kinase was eluted from the affinity column by 1% (w/v) lithium dodecyl sulfate or from a histone IIIs-Sepharose affinity column by 0.25 M NaCl. Its specific activity towards lysine-rich histone was 100-200 times greater than that of CPK1. CPK2 eluted from the Cibacron blue affinity column in 10 mM NADP+; it had an apparent molecular mass of 38 kDa, possessed NADPH-dependent diaphorase activity (specific activity: 225 nmol of ferricyanide reduced (mg protein)-1 min-1), and cross-reacted with immunoglobulin raised against purified ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase, with which it was thus identified. Kinase activity was not detectable in CPK2 or in reductase isolated by conventional procedures.  相似文献   

10.
Plasma membranes of 6-h differentiated Dictyostelium discoideum cells contain a cAMP-binding protein with the properties ascribed to the chemotaxis receptor present on these cells. We have purified this cAMP-binding protein using DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, hydrophobic chromatography on decylagarose and preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in nonionic detergent. Photoaffinity labeling of the DEAE-purified material with 8-azido-[32P] cAMP shows that only an Mr = 70,000 species on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels contains a cAMP-binding site. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of material eluted from decyl-agarose and photoaffinity labeled indicates that the cAMP-binding protein is the most acidic of many Mr = 70,000 proteins present. This method is readily scaled up to process up to 10(11) cells which yield from 25 to 100 micrograms of cAMP-binding protein. Nucleotide specificity studies established that the cAMP-binding site of the protein is similar to that of the cAMP receptor assayed on intact cells and membranes. The rates of association and dissociation of the cAMP-binding protein are extremely rapid as found for the receptor, and its affinity for cAMP is comparable. The cAMP-binding protein is a concanavalin A binding glycoprotein, and is resistant to proteolysis by trypsin, but not chymotrypsin. Like the cAMP receptor in membranes and crude detergent extracts, this cAMP-binding protein is inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The purified binding protein exists in solution largely as a monomeric species, with some dimer being detected on gel filtration. Based on these criteria, we conclude that this cAMP binding protein represents the binding subunit of the cAMP chemotaxis receptor.  相似文献   

11.
An activated S6 kinase in regenerating rat liver   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
S6 kinase activity was increased in the regenerating liver 5 h after partial hepatectomy compared with sham-operated liver. The protein kinase activity was eluted from DE-52 column at approximately 250 mM NaCl and was not affected by known regulators of protein kinases. The S6 kinase was further purified by chromatography on peptide R1A13-Sepharose 4B and Sephadex G-150. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 4.5 X 10(4) by gel filtration. The enzyme catalyzes the phosphorylation of whole histone, mainly H2B histone, at 75 mM Mg2+. These properties are similar to those of a proteolytically modified Ca2+/phospholipid-independent form of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

12.
The photoaffinity label 8-azido[32P]adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and affinity chromatography on N6-(2-aminoethyl)-cAMP-Sepharose were used to analyze the cAMP-binding proteins present in cell-free extracts of Blastocladiella emersonii zoospores. In the presence of a mixture of protease inhibitors, 8-azido[32P]cAMP was specifically and quantitatively incorporated into a major protein band of Mr = 58,000, and three minor protein bands of Mr = 50,000, Mr = 43,000, and Mr = 36,000 respectively, after autoradiography following sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacryl-amide gel electrophoresis. In the absence of the protease inhibitors, the Mr = 58,000 protein band was converted into the lower molecular weight cAMP-binding proteins, indicating a high sensitivity of the intact Mr = 58,000 protein band to endogenous proteases. The Mr = 58,000 protein corresponded to the regulatory subunit (R), of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase of zoospores, as shown by their identical behavior on DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The partially purified protein kinase incorporated 32P from [gamma-32P] ATP . Mg2+ into R as demonstrated by the specific adsorption of the 32P-labeled protein with N6-(2-aminoethyl)-cAMP-Sepharose. The incorporated 32P group was rapidly removed by endogenous phosphoprotein phosphatases in the presence of cAMP, as shown by pulse-chase experiments with [gamma-32P]ATP. Dephosphorylation of R-cAMP and rapid proteolysis may indicate two other mechanisms, in addition to cAMP, for the control of this protein kinase in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The existence of a GTP-binding protein of the Ns type in Trypanosoma cruzi was explored. Epimastigote membranes were labelled by cholera toxin in the presence of [adenine-14C]NAD+. After SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of extracted membrane proteins, a single labelled polypeptide band of apparent Mr approx. 45,000 was detected. Epimastigote cells were treated with N-ethylmaleimide and electrofused to lymphoma S49 cells lacking the Ns protein. Evidence indicates that in such electrofusion-generated cell hybrids a heterologous adenylate cyclase system was reconstituted with the Ns protein provided by T. cruzi epimastigotes.  相似文献   

14.
Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes were extracted under various conditions in order to examine the role of divalent cations in the solubilization of microtubule proteins. When epimastigotes were homogenized in the presence of 5 mM Mg+2 and 5 mM Ca+2, a protein kinase responsible for phosphorylating tubulin, as well as the tubulin that became phosphorylated, remained tightly associated with the parasite particulate and detergent-resistant fractions. On the contrary, tubulin kinase and its substrate were predominantly released into the parasite cytosolic and detergent-soluble fractions, when epimastigotes were extracted in the presence of 5 mM EDTA and 5 mM EGTA. These evidences demonstrated a divalent cation-dependent solubilization of the enzyme responsible for the phosphorylation of tubulin in T. cruzi epimastigotes and suggested a tight association between tubulin and this kinase. Under all conditions tested, tubulin kinase activity in epimastigote extracts was lower than the addition of the corresponding value in the parasite cytosolic and membranous fractions, suggesting the presence of a kinase inhibitor or regulatory subunit which also seemed to be modulated by divalent cations. Additionally, inhibition experiments in the presence of heparin, 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate and GTP established that the parasite tubulin kinase corresponded to a protein kinase CK2.  相似文献   

15.
ABSTRACT. [35S]methionine incorporation into proteins of either T. cruzi epimastigotes or trypomastigotes was drastically inhibited by low concentrations of crystal violet in a dose-dependent manner. This inhibition was not due to ATP depletion since cellular ATP levels did not change significantly after incubation of epimastigotes with 50 μM crystal violet for similar periods of time, and was unaffected by changes in the extracellular free calcium concentration. Although crystal violet was able to inhibit protein synthesis in a cell-free system from T. cruzi epimastigotes, half maximal inhibition was at 1 mM, a concentration three orders of magnitude higher than those that inhibited protein synthesis in intact cells. On the other hand, crystal violet was able to inhibit total [35S]methionine uptake at similar concentrations to those that inhibited protein synthesis while addition of increasing concentrations of cold methionine to the incubation medium protected the cells against crystal violet inhibition. Crystal violet also inhibited total [3H]proline uptake thus indicating that it has a general inhibitory effect upon the transport of amino acids, and not specifically upon methionine. These results indicate that inhibition of protein synthesis by crystal violet is probably due to inhibition of amino acid uptake.  相似文献   

16.
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase of Neurospora crassa   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Neurosporacrassa was surveyed for cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Two peaks (I and II) of protein kinase activity were demonstrated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography of wild type Neurospora extracts. Peak I was stimulated by cyclic AMP, eluted below 60 mM NaCl and had high activity using histone H2B as substrate. Peak II eluted at 200–250 mM NaCl; its activity was not cyclic AMP stimulated and was highest with dephosphorylated casein as a substrate. Cyclic AMP binding to a protein associated with the protein kinase is specifically inhibited by certain cyclic AMP analogs.  相似文献   

17.
Cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) dependent protein kinase and proteins specifically binding cAMP have been extracted from calf thymus nuclei and analyzed for their abilities to bind to DNA. Approximately 70% of the cAMP-binding activity in the nucleus can be ascribed to a nuclear acidic protein with physical and biochemical characteristics of the regulatory (R) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Several peaks of protein kinase activity and of cAMP-binding activity are resolved by affinity chromatography of nuclear acidic proteins on calf thymus DNA covalently linked to aminoethyl Sephrarose 4B. When an extensively purified protein kinase is subjected to chromatography on the DNA column in the presence of 10(-7) M cAMP, the R subunit of the kinase is eluted from the column at 0.05 M NaCl while the catalytic (C) subunit of the enzyme is eluted at 0.1-0.2 M NaCl. When chromatographed in the presence of histones, the R subunit is retained on the column and is eluted at 0.6-0.9 M NaCl. In the presence of cAMP, association of the C subunit with DNA is enhanced, as determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation of DNA-protein kinase complexes. cAMP increases the capacity of the calf thymus cAMP-dependent protein kinase preparation to bind labeled calf thymus DNA, as determined by a technique employing filter retention of DNA-protein complexes. This protein kinase preparation binds calf thymus DNA in preference to salmon DNA, Escherichia coli DNA, or yeast RNA. Binding of protein kinases to DNA may be part of a mechanism for localizing cyclic nucleotide stimulated protein phosphorylation at specific sites in the chromatin.  相似文献   

18.
This report describes the activity of a novel phospholipid-stimulated protein kinase from mouse DA-1 leukemic cells. The kinase was activated by phosphatidylglycerol or phosphatidylinositol. Phospholipid-stimulated protein phosphorylation occurred in the presence of Mn2+ or Mg2+; kinase activity was greater with Mg2+ than with Mn2+ from 4 to 10 mM, although at lower divalent cation concentrations Mn2+ was preferred. A Mr 75,500-77,000 endogenous protein doublet and a Mr 42,000 endogenous protein were phosphorylated in whole cell extracts under these conditions. These substrates contrasted with those identified under protein kinase C conditions. Of the exogenous proteins tested, phospholipid-stimulated phosphorylation was highest with histone H2B followed by other histones. In addition to DA-1 cells, phospholipid-stimulated protein kinase also was detected in high levels in normal mouse spleen, marrow, and kidney but not detectable in brain extracts. The phosphatidylglycerol-stimulated kinase was separated from protein kinase C by anion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, from which it eluted at 0.2 to 0.3 M NaCl. Physiological dissociation of the two types of kinase activity was demonstrated by down regulation of protein kinase C over 24 h by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetic acid. Under these conditions phosphatidylglycerol kinase activity and subcellular distribution were unaffected. Thus, phosphatidylglycerol-stimulated kinase was detectable in both normal and malignant cells and contrasted with, and was separable from, protein kinase C in numerous respects. Phosphatidylglycerol-stimulated protein kinase basic biochemistry and physiological roles are topics worthy of further investigation.  相似文献   

19.
A calcium-calmodulin (Ca2(+)-CaM) stimulated histone H3 phosphorylating activity was identified as a component of a nuclear protein complex purified from a 150 mM NaCl extract of calf thymus chromatin. This activity bound to a CaM-Sepharose affinity column in a Ca2+ dependent manner and was eluted off the column in the presence of EGTA. Equilibrium centrifugation of the EGTA eluate on a sucrose density gradient revealed that the activity is a component of a larger complex identified at 25% sucrose. This complex consisted of two major proteins, having Mr of 65 and 75 kDa. Using [125I] CaM and the gel overlay technique it was shown that the 75 kDa protein is the major CaM binding protein in the complex.  相似文献   

20.
Membranes of Rhizobium leguminosarum contain a 3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonic acid (Kdo)-activated lipid A 4'-phosphatase required for generating the unusual phosphate-deficient lipid A found in this organism. The enzyme has been solubilized with Triton X-100 and purified 80-fold. As shown by co-purification and thermal inactivation studies, the 4'-phosphatase catalyzes not only the hydrolysis of (Kdo)2-[4'-32P]lipid IVA but also the transfer the 4'-phosphate of Kdo2-[4'-32P]lipid IVA to the inositol headgroup of phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) to generate PtdIns-4-P. Like the 4'-phosphatase, the phosphotransferase activity is not present in Escherichia coli, Rhizobium meliloti, or the nodulation-defective mutant 24AR of R. leguminosarum. The specific activity for the phosphotransferase reaction is about 2 times higher than that of the 4'-phosphatase. The phosphotransferase assay conditions are similar to those used for PtdIns kinases, except that ATP and Mg2+ are omitted. The apparent Km for PtdIns is approximately 500 microM versus 20-100 microM for most PtdIns kinases, but the phosphotransferase specific activity in crude cell extracts is higher than that of most PtdIns kinases. The phosphotransferase is absolutely specific for the 4-position of PtdIns and is highly selective for PtdIns as the acceptor. The 4'-phosphatase/phosphotransferase can be eluted from heparin- or Cibacron blue-agarose with PtdIns. A phosphoenzyme intermediate may account for the dual function of this enzyme, since a single 32P-labeled protein species (Mr approximately 68,000) can be trapped and visualized by SDS gel electrophoresis of enzyme preparations incubated with Kdo2-[4'-32P]lipid IVA. Although PtdIns is not detected in cultures of R. leguminosarum/etli (CE3), PtdIns may be synthesized during nodulation or supplied by plant membranes, given that soybean PtdIns is an excellent phosphate acceptor. A bacterial enzyme for generating PtdIns-4-P and a direct link between lipid A and PtdIns-4-P biosynthesis have not been reported previously.  相似文献   

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