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1.
Abstract: Adenylate cyclase activity in the particulate fraction from rat brain was markedly enhanced by the cytoplasmic fraction, which itself contained negligible enzyme activity, indicating the presence of some stimulatory factor(s) in the supernatant. Activation of adenylate cyclase was dependent on the supernatant concentration up to 1 mgiml, but higher concentration of the supernatant did not produce further activation of the enzyme. The supernatant retained its stimulatory activity after boiling for 5 min, extensive dialysis, and phospholipase A and DNAase treatments, but was completely inactivated by digestion with trypsin. Ability of the supernatant to activate adenylate cyclase was low during fetal life, increased severalfold neonatally, and declined somewhat thereafter to an adult level. Adenylate cyclase in the particulate fraction from 2-day-old rat brain was also activated by GTP, calcium-dependent regulator (CDR) of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in the presence of 100 pM-Ca1, and by NaF. The supernatant produced additive activation of the enzyme with NaF but not with GTP or CDR, suggesting a common site of action of the supernatant factor(s) and the latter two agents. DEAE-cellulose chromatography of the boiled supernatant resolved the heat-stable proteins into several peaks. Adenylate cyclase activator eluted in two distinct peaks, one of which also contained CDR activity. It is concluded that rat brain supernatant contains some factor in addition to CDR which activates particulate adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

2.
The HLB dependency for the solubilization of membrane proteins and adenylate cyclase activity from a plasma membrane-enriched fraction from rat liver has been determined. The HLB (hydrophilic/lipophilic/balance) number of a detergent is an empirical measure of its relative hydrophobicity. Detergent HLB numbers vary systematically with the length of the ethylene oxide chain for a homologous series of detergents such as the Triton X series. These detergents have a constant hydrophobic moiety, octylphenyl, and a variable polar portion, polyethoxyethanol. Basal-NaF-epine-phrine-, and glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were solubilized in the HLB range of 16.8–17.4. Solubilization was most effective in 0.01 M Tris buffers at pH 7.5 containing 1–5 mM mercaptoethanol, 1 mM MgCl2, and 0.1% Triton X-305. The detergent to membrane protein ratio used in these studies was 3:1. Criteria for solubilization included lack of sedimentation at 100,000 × g, the absence of particulate material in the supernatant when examined by electron microscopy, and inclusion of hormonally sensitive adenylate cylcase activity in Sephadex G-200 gels. The apparent molecular weight of the solubilized enzyme was approximately 200,000 in the presence of Triton X-305. The solubilized enzyme was stimulated 5-fold by NaF, 7-fold by glucagon, and 20-fold by epinephrine compared to the particulate enzyme used in this study which was stimulated 10-fold, 3,4-fold, and 4-fold by NaF, epinephrine, and glucagon, respectively. The solubilized enzyme is stable for several weeks when stored at ?60° C.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
1. Adenylate cyclase of the washed 600g sediment of bovine corpus-luteum homogenate is stimulated by p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5'-[beta,gamma-imido]triphosphate), the imido analogue of GTP, and to a lesser extent by GTP itself. Activation by p[NH]ppG is not reversed by extensive washing before assay, but can, however, be reversed by NaF. 2. Both p[NH]ppG and NaF stabilize the enzyme during incubation at 37 degrees C. NaF also causes an irreversible activation, but only of part of the potentially NaF-activatable adenylate cyclase; there are possibly two components of the adenylate cyclase system, which can be distinguished by their response to NaF. 3. Solubilization of the adenylate cyclase activity in the 600g sediment, by using the non-ionic detergent Lubrol-PX, gave variable yields. A relationship between the magnitude of NaF stimulation of the 600g-sediment enzyme and the yield of soluble activity derived from the sediment was recognized. The results suggest that the pre-existing state of the enzyme complex in vivo is reflected by the response in vitro to NaF and may determine the success with which activity can be solubilized. 4. The absolute yields of soluble activity could be increased by p[NH]ppG preactivation of the 600g sediment. During the development of the maximally active state by preincubation with p[NH]ppG the enzyme passes through a stage in which Lubrol solubilization is increased, but the maximally active state is itself less amenable to solubilization. p[NH]ppG activation causes the appearance of NaF-inhibited states, which appear to be preferentially solubilized by Lubrol-PX.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of magnesium and sodium ions on adenylate cyclase activity in plasma membranes from chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa were studied. It was found that the increase in magnesium chloride concentration from 5 to 40 mM results in the stimulation (4.1-fold) of the adenylate cyclase activity. The increase in sodium chloride concentration up to 150 mM stimulated the enzyme activity 2-fold. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by magnesium and sodium ions was less pronounced in the eggshell gland. GTP did not activate adenylate cyclase. The activating effect of magnesium and sodium ions was accompanied by the attenuation of the enzyme sensitivity to NaF, guanylyl imidodiphosphate and isoproterenol. Activation by guanylyl imidodiphosphate was completely abolished in the presence of 40 mM magnesium chloride. It is assumed that high concentrations of the salt promote subunit dissociation of the adenylate cyclase regulatory protein and its interaction with the catalytic subunit in the presence of endogenous nucleotides. The differences in the adenylate cyclase sensitivity to cations in chicken heart and eggshell gland mucosa correlate with the amount of pertussis toxin substrate.  相似文献   

6.
1. The basal and NaF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities of Mytilus galloprovincialis mantle tissue were studied at different temperatures. 2. There are no significant differences in the Km for ATP at 13 degrees C and 20 degrees C in both basal and NaF-stimulated conditions. 3. NaF increases the Vmax of the enzyme (5-fold) and decreases about 50% the Km for ATP at both temperatures assayed. 4. Activation energy of the enzyme reaction is 33.4 kJ/mol. K in basal conditions and 29.4 kJ/mol. K when NaF is present. The Q10, at saturating substrate concentrations, is approximately 1.5 and this value is constant in the temperature range studied, 10-30 degrees C. 5. The adenylate cyclase starts being inactivated from 30 degrees C. The enzyme shows greater sensitivity to denaturalization by temperature in NaF-stimulated than in basal conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Basal adenylate cyclase activity in rat lung homogenate was low prenatally but increased several-fold after birth and remained elevated to maturity. The results also demonstrate the appearance of some factor(s) in the lung cytoplasm at a certain age which markedly activated adenylate cyclase. During late gestation and early neonatal life, when the cytoplasmic factor(s) was low or absent, basal adenylate cyclase activity was low and norepinephrine and NaF produced maximum activation of the enzyme. However, when the cytoplasmic factor(s) appeared in the adult lungs, basal adenylate cyclase activity was elevated and both norepinephrine and NaF produced little or no activation of the enzyme. These data suggest a role for the cytoplasmic factor(s) in regulating rat lung adenylate cyclase. The cytoplasmic factor(s) appeared to be a protein since it was inactivated by trypsin digestion and by heating to 75 degrees C. Activation of adenylate cyclase was not due to small ions or other low molecular weight components of the cytoplasm as dialysis of the supernatant did not alter its activation of adenylate cyclase. The cytoplasmic factor(s) did not appear to be either GTP or calcium-dependent regulator of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase as these did not activate the rat lung adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

8.
Transplantable mouse melanomas possess a melanotropin-sensitive adenylate cyclase system which is responsive to alpha-melanotropin, beta-melanotropin, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and prostaglandin E1. It was found that sensitivity to ACTH was not directed towards the ACTH activity but to the intrinsic melanotropin activity of the ACTH molecule. Therefore, the melanotropin-sensitive adenylate cyclase system is hormonally specific to the intrinsic melanotropin activity of peptide hormones and is unique in the melanoma tissue. The significance of the sensitivity to prostaglandin E1 is obscure at present. The melanotropin-sensitive adenylate cyclase requires the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+, for its enzymic activity. Ca2+ inhibit the enzyme in the presence of a wide range of concentrations of Mg2+. The enzymic activity is ATP concentration-dependent and the saturation concentration appears to be 1 mM. The enzyme is very labile in the unfractionated tumor homogenates. A washed 11000 X g particulate fraction, representing about 30-60% of the total enzymic activity, was found to be more stable and could be stored at 5 degrees C for 2 h without appreciable loss of the activity. This fraction retained sensitivity to melanotropin, prostaglandin E1 and NaF. About 20% of the activity of the tumor homogenate could not be sedimented by centrifugation at 105000 X g for 60 min. This "soluble" fraction was not responsive to melanotropin, prostaglandin E1 and NaF and might be a degradative product produced by the fractionation. Cyclic AMP and alpha-melanotropin were able to increase the tyrosinase activity of isolated mouse melanoma-cells in vitro under the same conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Purification of pork renal cortex membranes yielded a particulate adenylate cyclase retaining good sensitivity to stimulation by parathyroid hormone and glucagon and a modest but significant response to porcine calcitonin. Treatment of this partially purified membrane fraction with 0.5% Lubrol PX and 5 mM NaF released adenylate cyclase activity into a fraction which was not sedimented by centrifugation for 20 min at 37,000 X g or for 2 hours at 100,000 X g and passed through a Millipore filter (0.22 mum pore). This solubilized adenylate cyclase was stimulated by porcine calcitonin and NaF but not by parathyroid hormone or glucagon. On gel filtration (Sephadex G-200) in the presence of 1mM dithiothreitol and 5mM NaF, the major portion of the adenylate cyclase activity eluted with the void volume of the column and showed 2.0-fold stimulation with 10 muM calcitonin. Binding of 125I-labeled porcine calcitonin was demonstrated in the 37,000 X g and the 100,000 X g supernatants. From 74 to 86% of the observed binding could be blocked by the addition of unlabeled porcine calcitonin to the reaction mixture. Addition of salmon calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, or glucagon blocked only 12 to 18% of the binding. The dose-response curves for inhibition of binding of iodinated calcitonin by unlabeled calcitonin and the activation of adenylate cyclase by the hormone each showed 50% maximal effect at a concentration between 4.5 and 8 muM porcine calcitonin and maximal effect at a concentration between 33 and 66 muM porcine calcitonin.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Adenine nucleotides activate basal particulate guanylate cyclase in rat lung membranes. Activation is specific for adenine and not guanine, cytidine or uridine nucleotides. The concentration of adenine nucleotides yielding half-maximum activation of particulate guanylate cyclase is 0.1 mM and this nucleotide activates the enzyme by increasing maximum velocity 11-fold without altering affinity for substrate. Activation is specific for particulate guanylate cyclase, since soluble enzyme is inhibited by adenine nucleotides. Similarly, activation is specific for magnesium as the enzyme substrate cation cofactor, since adenine nucleotides inhibit particulate guanylate cyclase when manganese is used. Adenine nucleotide regulation of particulate guanylate cyclase may occur by a different molecular mechanism compared to other activators, since the effects of these nucleotides are synergistic with those of detergent, hemin and atrial natriuretic peptides. Cystamine inhibits adenine nucleotide activation of particulate guanylate cyclase at concentrations having minimal effects on basal enzyme activity suggesting a role for critical sulfhydryls in mechanisms underlying nucleotide regulation of particulate guanylate cyclase. Purification and quantitative recovery of particulate guanylate cyclase by substrate affinity chromatography results in the loss of adenine nucleotide regulation. These data suggest that adenine nucleotides may be important in the regulation of basal and activated particulate guanylate cyclase and may be mediated by an adenine nucleotide-binding protein which is separate from that enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Adenylate cyclase was assayed in a sonicated preparation of silkworm pupal fat body. The adenylate cyclase was found mostly in the particulate fraction. The activity depended upon either Mg2+ or Mn2+, and the degree of stimulation by Mn2+ was 2 times greater than that by Mg2+ compared at the saturating concentrations. In the presence of Mg2+, the enzyme was inhibited by both EGTA and high concentrations of Ca2+, showing biphasical response to Ca2+. The enzyme was stimulated several-fold by NaF. The enzyme exhibited typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics and Km values were 0.13 mM for MgATP and 0.086 mM for MnATP.  相似文献   

13.
Adenylate cyclase was solubilized from washed particulate fraction of rabbit cerebral cortex with the nonionic detergent Lubrol 12A9 and subjected to either gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 34 or chromatography on DEAE Bio-Gel A. By both procedures the enzyme was resolved into two components, one insensitive to guanyl 5'-yl imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] and NaF but stimulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin, and another that was sensitive to Gpp(NH)p and NaF but relatively insensitive to Ca2+ and calmodulin. The data support the possibility that two independent forms of adenylate cyclase exist in cerebral cortex, one regulated by guanine nucleotide regulatory protein and another by Ca2+-calmodulin. Fractions containing the guanylnucleotide-sensitive activity were found to contain a factor that inhibited basal and Ca2+-stimulated adenylate cyclase in the Ca2+-sensitive fraction. The inhibitor was inactivated by heating at 60 degrees C and by incubation with trypsin. Inhibition was not time-dependent, and it was not due to destruction of cAMP by phosphodiesterase or of ATP by ATPase. Inhibitory action was not reversed by calmodulin and therefore it does not appear to be a calmodulin binding protein. Sucrose density gradient sedimentation indicated a sedimentation coefficient of 4S for the inhibitor; by this technique it co-sedimented with the adenylate cyclase sensitive to Gpp(NH)p and NaF.  相似文献   

14.
Adenylate cyclase activation by corticotropin (ACTH), fluoride and forskolin was studied as a function of membrane structure in plasma membranes from bovine adrenal cortex. The composition of these membranes was characterized by a very low cholesterol and sphingomyelin content and a high protein content. The fluorescent probes 1,6-diphenylhexa-1,3,5-triene (DPH) and a cationic analogue 1-[4-(trimethylamino)phenyl]-6-phenylhexa-1,3,5-triene (TMA-DPH) were, respectively, used to probe the hydrophobic and polar head regions of the bilayer. When both probes were embedded either in the plasma membranes or in liposomes obtained from their lipid extracts, they exhibited lifetime heterogeneity, and in terms of the order parameter S, hindered motion. Under all the experimental conditions tested, S was higher for TMA-DPH than for DPH but both S values decreased linearly with temperature within the range of 10 to 40 degrees C, in the plasma membranes and the liposomes. This indicated the absence of lipid phase transition and phase separation. Addition to the membranes of up to 100 mM benzyl alcohol at 20 degrees C also resulted in a linear decrease in S values. Membrane perturbations by temperature changes or benzyl alcohol treatment made it possible to distinguish between the characteristics of adenylate cyclase activation with each of the three effectors used. Linear Arrhenius plots showed that when adenylate cyclase activity was stimulated by forskolin or NaF, the activation energy was similar (70 kJ.mol-1). Fluidification of the membrane with benzyl alcohol concentrations of up to 100 mM at 12 or 24 degrees C produced a linear decrease in the forskolin-stimulated activity, that led to its inhibition by 50%. By contrast, NaF stabilized adenylate cyclase activity against the perturbations induced by benzyl alcohol at both temperatures. In the presence of ACTH, biphasic Arrhenius plots were characterized by a well-defined break at 18 degrees C, which shifted at 12.5 degrees C in the presence of 40 mM benzyl alcohol. These plots suggested that ACTH-sensitive adenylate cyclase exists in two different states. This hypothesis was supported by the striking difference in the effects of benzyl alcohol perturbation when experiments were performed below and above the break temperature. The present results are consistent with the possibility that clusters of ACTH receptors form in the membrane as a function of temperature and/or lipid phase fluidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The adenylate cyclase of rat adipocyte plasma membrane is stimulated by sodium azide with a half maximal activation of 100–150% occuring at 50 mM NaN3. Studies of the effects of azide and fluoride indicate different mechanisms of stimulation of the enzyme by these ions. Comparable stimulation of the activity is obtained by 100 mM NaN3 or 10 mM NaF but unlike azide, higher concentrations of fluoride cause inhibition of the enzyme. Fluoride activated adenylate cyclase is further stimulated by azide. Epinephrine stimulation of the enzyme is absent in the presence of fluoride but the hormone enhances the activity in the presence of azide. Reversal of the inhibitory action of GTP on adenylate cyclase by epinephrine is demonstrated even in the presence of azide but not in the presence of fluoride.  相似文献   

16.
Epinephrine, histamine and prostaglandin E1 stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in lung membranes and their stimulation of the enzyme activity was completely blocked by propranolol, metiamide and indomethacin, respectively. A partially-purified activator from the adult rat lung also enhanced adenylate cyclase activity in membranes. However, stimulation of adenylate cyclase by the rat lung activator was not abolished by the above receptor antagonists. Further, epinephrine, NaF and Gpp(NH)p stimulated adenylate cyclase activity rather readily, whereas stimulation of the enzyme activity by the lung activator was evident after an initial lag phase of 10 min. Also, the lung activator produced additive activation of adenylate cyclase with epinephrine, NaF and Gpp(NH)p. These results indicate that the lung activator potentiates adenylate cyclase activity in membranes by a mechanism independent from those known for epinephrine, NaF and Gpp(NH)p. Incubation of lung membranes for 30 min at 40°C resulted in a loss of adenylate cyclase activation by NaF and Gpp(NH)p. Addition of the released proteins to the heat-treated membranes did not restore the enzyme response to these agonists. However, heat treatment of lung membranes in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol prevented the loss of adenylate cyclase response to NaF and Gpp (NH)p. N-ethylmaleimide abolished adenylate cyclase activation by epinephrine, NaF, Gpp(NH)p and the lung activator. These results indicate that the sulfhydryl groups are important for adenylate cyclase function in rat lung membranes.Abbreviations Gpp(NH)p 5-Guanylimidodiphosphate  相似文献   

17.
Errata     
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 (GTPγS) was time- and temperature-dependent. Mg2+ was required for enzyme activation. Adenylate cyclase that was activated by NaF or GTPγS was gradually inhibited by N-methylmaleimide while enzyme activated with serotonin and GTP responded faster to inhibition by the same sulfhydryl reagent. The 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 GTPγS 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 change induced by Mg2+ may be essential for adenylate cyclase activation.  相似文献   

18.
Some effects of salts on the adenylate cyclase of partially purified plasma membranes from rat liver have been studied. Under conditions where cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate formation was linear with respect to time and protein concentration, the enzyme was stimulated 3- to 6-fold by 10 mM NaF, 10- to 30-fold by 1 muM glucagon, 4- to 5-fold by 0.1 mM 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate, and in the presence of 3 muM GTP, 2-fold by 10 mug/ml of prostaglandin E1. Various salts were found to stimulate basal activity slightly, but enhanced the response to NaF 3- to 4-fold, to glucagon 1.5- to 2-fold, to 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate 2- to 3-fold, and to prostaglandin E1 1.5-fold. This enhancement was observed at maximally effective concentrations of each of the respective activators. Of the salts tested, NaN3 and the Na- or K-halides were most effective. Their action appeared to be due to the respective anions. Stimulation was detectable with 1.5 mM NaN3 or 3 mM NaCl and was maximal with 30 mM NaN3 or 60 mM NaCl. The stimulatory effect of NaN3 was not due to ATP-sparing, nor to an altered cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate recovery. It was independent of the chromatography and assay methods used, and was therefore not due to procedural artifact. Fluoride-stimulated cyclase activity was enhanced by salts to a greater degree than were 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate-, glucagon-, or (prostaglandin E1 + GTP)-stimulated activities. The effects of NaN3 were not the result of significant changes in the enzyme's responses to GTP, which increased basal and glucagon-stimulated activities but inhibited F--stimulated activity. The effects of NaN3 were greater when cyclase was assayed with Mn2+ than with Mg2+. The facilitatory effect of NaN3 or NaCl on fluoride-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was partially reversible as was the stimulatory effect of fluoride in the presence of NaN3. Enhancement of hormonal stimulation by NaN3 was also demonstrable with cardiac and adipose tissue adenylate cyclase. However, NaN3 did not stimulate detergent-dispersed adenylate cyclases from either liver plasma membranes or brain. The data suggest that stimulation of adenylate cyclase by salts may require the added presence of other stimulatory agents and an intact membrane structure.  相似文献   

19.
Vanadium ions activate as well as inhibit the activity of the NG108-15 adenylate cyclase in vitro in the absence of any hormone. Below 5mM ion, ortho- and metavanadate activate; the maximal increase in activity is 2-fold. Vanadyl sulfate, at 0.1–0.1mM, activates to a similar magnitude as does vanadate over these concentrations; above 0.1mM, it inhibits. Activation of the enzyme by vanadate is not additive to that induced by PGE1 or NaF. Vanadium ions do not alter the Ka for PGE1-activation, nor the Ki for Dala met amide-inhibition, nor diminish the efficacy of opiate, muscarinic and alpha adrenergic regulation of the enzyme. However, the mechanisms by which NaF and vanadium ions activate must differ. Vanadium, unlike NaF, does not attenuate the ability of hormone receptors to direct inhibition of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

20.
When a special detergent-extraction procedure is applied to rat brain particulate fractions, the latter's adenylate cyclase activity becomes virtually unresponsive to NaF or Gpp (NH)p (guanylyl-5′-imidodiphosphate) despite the fact that under these conditions the enzyme does not appear to be removed (i.e., solubilized) from the membranes. Addition of exogenous fractions of detergent-solubilized membranes or of water-soluble samples of homogenates, obtained from various tissues, restores the stimulation of the enzyme by both Gpp(NH)p and NaF. These findings indicate that the stimulation caused by these agents is mediated by one or more regulatory component(s), and that these are molecular components physically distinct from the enzyme itself. The regulatory component(s) appear to be proteinaceous in nature and sensitive to SH-reactive reagents. The properties of the reconstituted system resemble those of the original particulate adenylate cyclase. This system may serve as a convenient tool for the study of the molecular properties of adenylate cyclase and of the basis of its regulatory control.  相似文献   

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