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1.
B G Nair  T B Patel 《Life sciences》1991,49(12):915-923
Adenylate cyclase activity in isolated rat liver plasma membranes was inhibited by NADH in a concentration-dependent manner. Half-maximal inhibition of adenylate cyclase was observed at 120 microM concentration of NADH. The effect of NADH was specific since adenylate cyclase activity was not altered by NAD+, NADP+, NADPH, and nicotinic acid. The ability of NADH to inhibit adenylate cyclase was not altered when the enzyme was stimulated by activating the cyclase was not altered when the enzyme was stimulated by activating the Gs regulatory element with either glucagon or cholera toxin. Similarly, inhibition of Gi function by pertussis toxin treatment of membranes did not attenuate the ability of NADH to inhibit adenylate cyclase activity. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity to the same extent in the presence and absence of the Gpp (NH) p suggested that NADH directly affects the catalytic subunit. This notion was confirmed by the finding that NADH also inhibited solubilized adenylate cyclase in the absence of Gpp (NH)p. Kinetic analysis of the NADH-mediated inhibition suggested that NADH competes with ATP to inhibit adenylate cyclase; in the presence of NADH (1 mM) the Km for ATP was increased from 0.24 +/- 0.02 mM to 0.44 +/- 0.08 mM with no change in Vmax. This observation and the inability of high NADH concentrations to completely inhibit the enzyme suggest that NADH interacts at a site(s) on the enzyme to increase the Km for ATP by 2-fold and this inhibitory effect is overcome at high ATP concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
In cellular systems provided with activatory (Ra-site) receptors for adenosine, such as rat cerebral microvessels and rat liver plasma membranes, the adenosine-receptor antagonist 8-phenyltheophylline (10 microM) significantly decreased adenylate cyclase activity if ATP was the substrate and only if GTP was present. With dATP as substrate, adenylate cyclase activities in both preparations remained unaffected by 8-phenyltheophylline. In rat cerebral-cortical membranes, with inhibitory (Ri-site) receptors for adenosine, 8-phenyltheophylline significantly enhanced adenylate cyclase activity only in the presence of GTP and if ATP was the substrate. In rat cardiac ventricular membranes, which are devoid of any adenylate cyclase-coupled adenosine receptor, the methylxanthine had no GTP-dependent effect, irrespective of the substrate used. All assay systems contained sufficiently high amounts of adenosine deaminase (2.5 units/ml), since no endogenous adenosine, formed from ATP, was found chromatographically. In order to demonstrate a direct influence of phosphorylated adenosine derivatives on adenylate cyclase activity, we investigated AMP in a dATP assay system. AMP was verified chromatographically to remain reasonably stable under the adenylate cyclase assay conditions. In the microvessels, AMP increased enzyme activity in the range 0.03-1.0 mM, an effect competitively antagonized by 8-phenyltheophylline. In the cortical membranes, 0.1 mM-AMP inhibited adenylate cyclase, which was partially reversed by the methylxanthine. The presence of GTP was again necessary for all observations. In the ventricular membranes, AMP had no effect. Since the efficacy of adenosine-receptor agonists and, probably, that of other hormones on adenylate cyclase activity can be more efficiently measured with dATP as the enzyme substrate, this nucleotide seems preferable for adenylate cyclase measurements in systems susceptible to modulation by adenosine.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies using calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography have suggested that bovine brain may contain a mixture of calmodulin-sensitive and -insensitive adenylate cyclase activities (Wescott, K. R., La Porte, D. C., and Storm, D. R. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 82, 3086-3090). In this study, mice were immunized with a purified preparation of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase from bovine brain, and a polyclonal antiserum was obtained which was specific to the calmodulin-sensitive form of the enzyme. The antiserum was not inhibitory and precipitated enzyme activity from a homogeneous preparation of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase catalytic subunit. Furthermore, the antiserum did not interact with calmodulin-insensitive adenylate cyclase which was resolved from the calmodulin-sensitive form of the enzyme by calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Since the only polypeptide specifically precipitated by the antiserum had an Mr of 135,000, which was identical to the Mr of the catalytic subunit of the enzyme, it is concluded that the antiserum interacted directly and specifically with the catalytic subunit of the calmodulin-sensitive isozyme of adenylate cyclase. Detergent-solubilized membranes from several rat tissues were examined for the presence of calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase using anti-calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase antiserum. Approximately 40-60% of the total adenylate cyclase activity of rat brain and kidney were immunoprecipitated by the antiserum, whereas liver and testes contained no detectable calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase. Approximately 15% of the total adenylate cyclase activity in rat heart and lung was the calmodulin-sensitive form. These data indicate that the calmodulin-sensitive and insensitive adenylate cyclases from bovine brain are immunologically distinct and support the proposal that there may be two or more distinct adenylate cyclase isozymes in brain.  相似文献   

4.
Preincubation of pigeon erythrocyte plasma membranes with the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase results in the desensitization of erythrocyte adenylate cyclase. The adenylate cyclase activity measured in the presence of 10 microM isoproterenol and 50 microM GTP-gamma-S decreases by 40% after 10 min incubation; that in the presence of 50 microM GTP-gamma-S by 35% (20 min). The decrease of the adenylate cyclase activity is due to the prolongation of the lag phase of the enzyme activation in the presence of a hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog and to the drop in activity in the steady state of the activation. The heterologous desensitization of adenylate cyclase induced by cAMP-dependent protein kinase is also coupled with the decrease of the number of beta-adrenoreceptors capable of acquiring a high affinity for the agonists in the absence of guanyl nucleotides. The effect of the catalytic subunit on adenylate cyclase is fully compatible with the process of the enzyme desensitization in erythrocytes treated with isoproterenol or cAMP.  相似文献   

5.
The activities of several pivotal nucleotide metabolizing enzymes from the testis and vasal sperm of rats treated for 7 wk with 0, 20 or 30 mg X kg X day gossypol acetic acid were examined. Total testicular lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity increased 40% above control in the highest treatment group examined. However, the specific activity of the testis-specific isozyme of LDH, LDH-C4, decreased to 50 and 20% of control in the 20 and 30 mg X kg X day treatment groups, respectively. Basal soluble adenylate cyclase from a 100,000 X g supernatant of testis homogenate exhibited a 25% decrease in activity only in the 30-mg treatment group. Basal adenylate cyclase activity in the testicular membrane fraction increased 20 to 30% above control in response to gossypol administration. Testis membranes from the 20- and 30-mg treatment group exhibited a 2- and 4-fold greater activation of adenylate cyclase by guanine nucleotides. In vitro dose-response curves showed a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) for inhibition of soluble testicular adenylate cyclase by gossypol of 400 microM in each treatment group. Caudal epididymal sperm adenylate cyclase activity decreased to 25% of control levels in gossypol-treated animals, and the in vitro sensitivity of the enzyme to the inhibitory effects of gossypol increased 4-fold. IC50 values for gossypol inhibition of sperm adenylate cyclase decreased from 200 microM in control animals to 75 and 50 microM in the 20 and 30 mg X kg X day treatment groups, respectively. Cyclic adenosine 3':5' monophosphate phosphodiesterase activity in caudal sperm increased 6-fold in the 20- and 30-mg treatment groups. These results demonstrate that nucleotide metabolizing enzymes in sperm are major targets for the actions of gossypol and provide a possible mechanism for the inhibition of normal sperm function by this compound.  相似文献   

6.
In the presence of 1 microM atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and low (0.1 mM) Mg2+ concentrations, the initial rate of binding of [3H]guanosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate [( 3H]p[NH]ppG) to rat lung plasma membranes was increased twofold to threefold. ANF-dependent stimulation of the initial rate of [3H]p[NH]ppG binding was reduced at high (5 mM) Mg2+ concentrations. Preincubation of membranes with p[NH]ppG (5 min at 37 degrees C) eliminated the ANF-dependent effect on [3H]p[NH]ppG binding whereas ANF-dependent [3H]p[NH]ppG binding was unaffected by similar pretreatment with guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate (GDP[beta S]). An increase in ANF concentration from 10 pM to 1 microM caused a 40% decrease in forskolin-stimulated or isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities (IC50 5 nM) in rat lung plasma membranes. GTP (100 microM) was obligatory for the ANF-dependent inhibition of adenylate cyclase, which could be completely overcome by the presence of 100 microM GDP[beta S] or the addition of 10 mM Mn2+. Reduction of Na2+ concentration from 120 mM to 20 mM had the same effect. Pertussis toxin eliminated ANF-dependent inhibition of adenylate cyclase by catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of membrane-bound Ni protein (41-kDa alpha subunit of the inhibitory guanyl-nucleotide-binding protein of adenylate cyclase). The data support the notion that one of the ANF receptors in rat lung plasma membranes is negatively coupled to a hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase complex via the GTP-binding Ni protein.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of ciliary adenylate cyclase by Ca2+ in Paramecium.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
In the ciliated protozoan Paramecium, Ca2+ and cyclic nucleotides are believed to act as second messengers in the regulation of the ciliary beat. Ciliary adenylate cyclase was activated 20-30-fold (half-maximal at 0.8 microM) and inhibited by higher concentrations (10-20 microM) of free Ca2+ ion. Ca2+ activation was the result of an increase in Vmax., not a change in Km for ATP. The activation by Ca2+ was seen only with Mg2+ATP as substrate; with Mn2+ATP the basal adenylate cyclase activity was 10-20-fold above that with Mg2+ATP, and there was no further activation by Ca2+. The stimulation by Ca2+ of the enzyme in cilia and ciliary membranes was blocked by the calmodulin antagonists calmidazolium (half-inhibition at 5 microM), trifluoperazine (70 microM) and W-7 (50-100 microM). When ciliary membranes (which contained most of the ciliary adenylate cyclase) were prepared in the presence of Ca2+, their adenylate cyclase was insensitive to Ca2+ in the assay. However, the inclusion of EGTA in buffers used for fractionation of cilia resulted in full retention of Ca2+-sensitivity by the ciliary membrane adenylate cyclase. The membrane-active agent saponin specifically suppressed the Ca2+-dependent adenylate cyclase without inhibiting basal activity with Mg2+ATP or Mn2+ATP. The ciliary adenylate cyclase was shown to be distinct from the Ca2+-dependent guanylate cyclase; the two activities had different kinetic parameters and different responses to added calmodulin and calmodulin antagonists. Our results suggest that Ca2+ influx through the voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in the ciliary membrane may influence intraciliary cyclic AMP concentrations by regulating adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

8.
Forskolin, a novel diterpene activator of adenylate cyclase in membranes and intact cells, activates the enzyme in membranes from mutant cyc-S49 murine lymphoma cells and the soluble enzyme from rat testes. Each of these enzymes consists only of the catalytic subunit and does not have a functional guanine nucleotide-binding protein. In both cases forskolin converts the manganese-dependent enzymes to a form which does not require manganese for activity. Forskolin can also stimulate a detergent-solubilized preparation of adenylate cyclase from rat cerebral cortex. Activation of adenylate cyclase by forskolin is therefore not dependent on a perturbation of membrane structure nor does it require a functional guanine nucleotide-binding subunit.  相似文献   

9.
The periodate-oxidized analog of ATP, 2',3'-dialATP, competitively inhibited bovine brain and rat liver adenylate cyclase. The apparent Ki for inhibition of brain adenylate cyclase by 2',3'-dialATP was 196 microM in the presence of Mg2+ and 37 microM in the presence of Mn2+. The Ki values for inhibition of rat liver adenylate cyclase by 2',3'-dialATP were 48 and 30 microM in the presence of Mg2+; and Mn2+, respectively. Adenylate cyclase activity was irreversibly inactivated by 2'3'-dialATP in the presence of NaCNBH3 and the kinetics for loss in enzyme activity were pseudo-first order. Both ATP and Tris protected adenylate cyclase from irreversible inhibition by 2',3'-dialATP and NaCNBH3. It is proposed that 2',3'-dialATP forms a Schiff's base with an amino group at the active site of the enzyme and that Na-CNBH3 reduction of this Schiff's base causes irreversible modification of the catalytic subunit. The Km for 2',3'-dialATP inactivation, the maximal rate constant of inactivation, and protection of the enzyme by ATP were not affected by the presence or absence of free Mg2+. These data indicate that a divalent cation is not required for binding of 2',3'-dialATP to the active site of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

10.
The adenosine analogue 9-(Tetrahydro-2-furyl)adenine, SQ 22536, inhibited adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1] activity of crude membrane preparations from catfish (Ictalurus melas) and rat isolated hepatocytes in a non-competitive manner. The IC50s were reduced in the presence of NaF. SQ 22536 reduced the activity of adenylate cyclase also in the presence of increasing concentrations of GTP, as well as Mg++ and Mn++. In the presence of catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine, isoproterenol, phenylephrine) SQ 22536 reduced their activating effect on adenylate cyclase in both catfish and rat membranes. SQ 22536 also inhibited the effect of glucagon (0.1 microM) on rat membrane cyclase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Adenylate cyclase activity measured by the formation of cyclic AMP in rat brain membranes was inhibited by a shellfish toxin, domoic acid (DOM). The inhibition of enzyme was dependent on DOM concentration, but about 50% of enzyme activity was resistant to DOM-induced inhibition. Rat brain supernatant resulting from 105,000×g centrifugation for 60 min, stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in membranes. Domoic acid abolished the supernatant-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity. The brain supernatant contains factors which modulate adenylate cyclase activity in membranes. The stimulatory factors include calcium, calmodulin, and GTP. In view of these findings, we examined the role of calcium and calmodulin in DOM-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase in brain membranes. Calcium stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in membranes, and further addition of calmodulin potentiated calcium-stimulated enzyme activity in a concentration dependent manner. Calmodulin also stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but further addition of calcium did not potentiate calmodulin-stimulated enzyme activity. These results show that the rat brain membranes contain endogenous calcium and calmodulin which stimulate adenylate cyclase activity. However, calmodulin appears to be present in membranes in sub-optimal concentration for adenylate cyclase activation, whereas calcium is present at saturating concentration. Adenylate cyclase activity diminished as DOM concentration was increased, reaching a nadir at about 1 mM. Addition of calcium restored DOM-inhibited adenylate cyclase activity to the control level. Similarly, EGTA also inhibited adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes in a concentration dependent manner, and addition of calcium restored EGTA-inhibited enzyme activity to above control level. The fact that EGTA is a specific chelator of calcium, and that DOM mimicked adenylate cyclase inhibition by EGTA, indicate that calcium mediates DOM-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes. While DOM completely abolished the supernatant-, and Gpp (NH)p-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, it partly blocked calmodulin-, and forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in brain membranes. These results indicate that DOM may interact with guanine nucleotide-binding (G) protein and/or the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase to produce inhibition of enzyme in rat brain membranes.  相似文献   

12.
1. The irradiation-inactivation procedure was used to study changes in the state of association of the protein components of adenylate cyclase in intact rat liver plasma membranes by measurement of alterations in the target size determined from the catalytic activity of the enzyme. 2. A decrease in target size at 30 degrees C in response to p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5'-[betagamma-imido]triphosphate) or GTP was demonstrated, which we take to reflect the dissociation of a regulatory subunit. The effect of GTP is potentiated by glucagon. This effect is not observed at 0 degrees C. 3. An increase in target size was observed in response to glucagon in the absence of guanine nucleotides, which we take to reflect the association of glucagon receptor with adenylate cyclase. 4. We propose a model for the activation of adenylate cyclase by glucagon in which the binding of the hormone to its receptor causes an initial association of the receptor with the catalytic unit of the enzyme and a regulatory subunit to form a ternary complex. The subsequent activation of the adenylate cyclase results from the dissociation of the ternary complex to leave a free catalytic unit in the activated state. This dissociation requires the binding of a guanine nucleotide to the regulatory subunit. 5. The effects of variation of temperature on the activation of adenylate cyclase by glucagon and guanine nucleotides were examined and are discussed in relation to the irradiation-activation data. 6. The effectiveness of hormones, guanine nucleotides and combinations of hormone and guanine nucleotides as activators of adenylate cyclase in both rat liver and rat fat-cell plasma membranes was studied and the results are discussed in relation to the model proposed, which is also considered in relation to the observations published by other workers.  相似文献   

13.
An antibody (RM) raised against the carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of the alpha subunit of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein (Gs alpha) has been used to study the interaction of Gs alpha with bovine brain adenylate cyclase [ATP pyrophosphate-lyase (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.1]. RM antibody immunoprecipitated about 60% of the solubilized adenylate cyclase preactivated with either GTP-gamma-S or AlF4-. In contrast, RM antibody immunoprecipitated about 5% of the adenylate cyclase not preactivated (control) and 15% of the adenylate cyclase pretreated with forskolin. Adenylate cyclase solubilized from control membranes or GTP-gamma-S preactivated membranes was partially purified by using forskolin-agarose affinity chromatography. The amount of Gs alpha protein in the partially purified preparations was determined by immunoblotting with RM antibody. There was 3-fold more Gs alpha detected in partially purified adenylate cyclase from preactivated membranes than in the partially purified adenylate cyclase from control membranes. Partially purified adenylate cyclase from preactivated membranes was immunoprecipitated with RM antibody and the amount of adenylate cyclase activity immunoprecipitated (65% of total) corresponded to the amount of Gs alpha protein immunoprecipitated. Only 15% of the partially purified adenylate cyclase from control membranes was immunoprecipitated. The presence of other G proteins in the partially purified preparations of adenylate cyclase was investigated by using specific antisera that detect Go alpha, Gi alpha, and G beta. The G beta protein was the only subunit detected in the partially purified preparations of adenylate cyclase and the amount of G beta was about the same in adenylate cyclase from preactivated membranes and from control membranes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
In mouse parotid membranes forskolin activated adenylate cyclase four-fold; maximal activation of the enzyme occurred with 10 microM forskolin. Activation was not dependent on the guanyl nucleotide GTP nor on the inhibitory guanine nucleotide 5'-0-(2-Thiodiphosphate), GDP beta S. In contrast, stimulation of adenylate cyclase by isoproterenol required GTP and was antagonized by GDP beta S in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that the guanyl-binding protein of mouse parotid adenylate cyclase is not a requisite for forskolin activation and lends support for direct interaction of forskolin at the catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

15.
Plasma membranes from liver of control rats or from chemical-induced hepatoma were prepared. The basal activity of adenylate cyclase was increased significantly in the rat plasma membranes of DEN-induced hepatoma compared to normal tissue. The glucagon-induced response on the cellular effector systems via guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) was inhibited in hepatoma plasma membranes. These findings suggest that in hepatoma membranes, unlike normal hepatic membranes, the response to hormonal stimuli through regulatory G proteins results in a loss of response to glucagon, as well as to GTP plus glucagon or to GTPγS. However, the activating effects of forskolin, which catalyses the formation of cyclic AMP from ATP acting on the catalytic subunit, were to some extent retained. The methyltransferase-I behaved in the opposite direction to the adenylate cyclase, showing a decreased activity in hepatoma plasma membranes compared to control membranes. In contrast, the activity of the ecto-5′-nucleotidase was significantly increased in hepatoma. These enzymatic changes have been found to influence the membrane fluidity and to be responsible for the ultrastructural modifications of hepatoma plasma membranes which are induced by chemical carcinogens.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibition of basal adenylate cyclase by GTP or guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate was abolished in membranes isolated from rat adipocytes previously incubated with pertussis toxin. Forskolin (0.1 microM) stimulated adenylate cyclase about 4-fold and inhibition of cyclase by GTP or guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate was also abolished by pertussis toxin treatment of rat adipocytes. Forskolin (1 microM) increased adenylate cyclase activity at least ten-fold and the inhibitory effect of GppNHp was reduced but not abolished by pertussis toxin. In rabbit adipocytes, pertussis toxin reversed the inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by GppNHp to the same extent as that by GTP in the presence of 1 microM forskolin. The present results indicate that pertussis toxin can reverse the inhibition of adipocyte adenylate cyclase by nonhydrolyzable GTP analogs as well as that by GTP.  相似文献   

17.
Influence of synthetic water-soluble antioxidants gamma-(4-oxi-3,5-ditret-butylphenol) propionate (phenozan) and the potassium salt of phenozan on the signal processing in beta-receptor-adenylate-cyclase complex of rat cardiocyte membranes has been studied. It was demonstrated that these compounds act at the level of signal transduction from receptor to adenylate cyclase catalytic subunit rather than at the level of ligand-receptor complex formation. At concentrations exceeding-10 microM the antioxidants inhibit both isoproterenol-stimulated synthesis of cyclic 3',5'-AMP and accumulation of the products of lipid peroxidation in membranes. It is proposed that in vitro addition of antioxidants on cardiocyte beta-receptor-adenylate-cyclase complex is a result of alteration of physico-chemical properties of membrane lipids caused by these inhibitors of free radical reactions.  相似文献   

18.
The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) and thyroliberin exerted additive stimulatory effects on prolactin release and synthesis in rat adenoma GH4C1 pituicytes in culture. Both TPA and thyroliberin activated the adenylate cyclase in broken cell membranes. When combined, the secretagogues displayed additive effects. TPA did not alter the time course (time lag) of adenylate cyclase activation by hormones, guanosine 5'-[beta,gamma-imino]triphosphate or forskolin, nor did it affect the enzyme's apparent affinity (basal, 7.2 mM; thyroliberin-enhanced, 2.2 mM) for free Mg2+. The TPA-mediated adenylate cyclase activation was entirely dependent on exogenously added guanosine triphosphate. ED50 (dose yielding half-maximal activation) was 60 microM. Access to free Ca2+ was necessary to express TPA activation of the enzyme, however, the presence of calmodulin was not mandatory. TPA-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was abolished by the biologically inactive phorbol ester, 4 alpha-phorbol didecanoate, by the protein kinase C inhibitor polymyxin B and by pertussis toxin, while thyroliberin-sensitive adenylate cyclase remained unaffected. Experimental conditions known to translocate protein kinase C to the plasma membrane and without inducing adenylate cyclase desensitization, increased both basal and thyroliberin-stimulated enzyme activities, while absolute TPA-enhanced adenylate cyclase was maintained. Association of extracted GTP-binding inhibitory protein, Gi, from S49 cyc- murine lymphoma cells with GH4C1 cell membranes yielded a reduction of basal and hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities, while net inhibition of the cyclase of somatostatin was dramatically enhanced. However, TPA restored completely basal and hormone-elicited adenylate cyclase activities in the Gi-enriched membranes. Finally, TPA completely abolished the somatostatin-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase in both hybrid and non-hybrid membranes. These data suggest that, in GH4C1 cells, protein kinase C stimulation by phorbol esters completely inactivates the n alpha i subunit of the inhibitory GTP-binding protein, leaving the n beta subunit functionally intact. It can also be inferred that thyroliberin conveys its main effect on the adenylate cyclase through activation of the stimulatory GTP-binding protein, Gs.  相似文献   

19.
The influence of the diterpene, forskolin, was studied on adenylate cyclase activity in membranes of rat basophilic leukemia cells. Forskolin increased basal adenylate cyclase activity maximally 2-fold at 100 microM. However, adenylate cyclase activity stimulated via the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding protein, Ns, by fluoride and the stable GTP analog, guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate), was inhibited by forskolin. Half-maximal and maximal inhibition occurred at about 1 and 10 microM forskolin, respectively. The inhibition occurred without an apparent lag phase, whereas the enzyme stimulation by forskolin was preceded by a considerable lag period. The inhibition was not affected by treating intact cells or membranes with pertussis toxin and proteolytic enzymes, respectively, which have been shown in other cell types to prevent adenylate cyclase inhibition mediated by the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory component, Ni. The forskolin inhibition of the stable GTP analog-activated adenylate cyclase was impaired by increasing the Mg2+ concentration and was reversed into a stimulation by Mn2+. Under optimal inhibitory conditions, forskolin even decreased basal adenylate cyclase activity. Finally, forskolin largely reduced the apparent affinity of the rat basophilic leukemia cell adenylate cyclase for its substrate, MgATP, which reduction resulted in an apparent inhibition at low MgATP concentrations and a loss of the inhibition at higher MgATP concentrations. The data indicate that forskolin can cause both stimulation and inhibition of adenylate cyclase and, furthermore, they suggest that the inhibition may not be mediated by the Ni protein, but may be caused by a direct action of forskolin at the adenylate cyclase catalytic moiety.  相似文献   

20.
T Arima  T Segawa  Y Nomura 《Life sciences》1986,39(25):2429-2434
The influence of pertussis toxin on the effects of guanine nucleotide on adenylate cyclase activity were investigated in rat striatal membranes. GTP promoted and inhibited the activity at 1 and 100 microM, respectively. The inhibitory effects of GTP were abolished by pretreatment of the membranes with pertussis toxin. GppNHp (guanyl-5'-y1-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate) exerted only stimulatory effects and pertussis toxin did not affect the effects of GppNHp. GDP at 10 and 100 microM caused significant inhibition which was completely suppressed by pertussis toxin. It is suggested that guanine nucleotide regulates the affinity of as in stimulatory GTP-binding regulatory protein to either beta gamma or catalytic units of adenylate cyclase in a flip-flop manner. Inhibitory GTP-binding regulatory protein seems to play a regulatory role in inhibiting alpha s activity supplying the beta gamma heterodimer.  相似文献   

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