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1.
Extracellular cAMP induces the activation of adenylate cyclase in Dictyostelium discoideum cells. Conditions for both stimulation and inhibition of adenylate cyclase by guanine nucleotides in membranes are reported. Stimulation and inhibition were induced by GTP and non-hydrolysable guanosine triphosphates. GDP and non-hydrolysable guanosine diphosphates were antagonists. Stimulation was maximally twofold, required a cytosolic factor and was observed only at temperatures below 10 degrees C. An agonist of the cAMP-receptor-activated basal and GTP-stimulated adenylate cyclase 1.3-fold. Adenylate cyclase in mutant N7 could not be activated by cAMP in vivo; in vitro adenylate cyclase was activated by guanine nucleotides in the presence of the cytosolic factor of wild-type but of not mutant cells. Preincubation of membranes under phosphorylation conditions has been shown to alter the interaction between cAMP receptor and G protein [Van Haastert (1986) J. Biol. Chem. in the press]. These phosphorylation conditions converted stimulation to inhibition of adenylate cyclase by guanine nucleotides. Inhibition was maximally 30% and was not affected by the cytosolic factor involved in stimulation. In membranes obtained from cells that were treated with pertussis toxin, adenylate cyclase stimulation by guanine nucleotides was as in control cells, whereas inhibition by guanine nucleotides was lost. When cells were desensitized by exposure to cAMP agonists for 15 min, and adenylate cyclase was measured in isolated membranes, stimulation by guanine nucleotides was lost while inhibition was retained. These results suggest that Dictyostelium discoideum adenylate cyclase may be regulated by Gs-like and Gi-like activities, and that the action of Gs but not Gi is lost during desensitization in vivo and by phosphorylation conditions in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
We report that the adenylate cyclase system in human platelets is subject to multiple regulation by guanine nucleotides. Previously it has been reported that GTP is either required for or has little effect on the response of the enzyme to prostaglandin E1. We have found that when platelet lysates were prepared in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, GTP lowered the basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity when the enzyme was assayed in the presence of Mg2+. The basal and prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activities were also increased by washing, which presumably removes endogenous GTP. The analog, guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate mimics the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity but it stimulates basal enzyme activity. The onset of the inhibitory effect of GTP on the adenylate cyclase system is rapid (1 min) and is maintained at a constant rate during incubation for 10 min. GTP and guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate were noncompetitive inhibitors of prostaglandin E1. An increase in the concentration of Mg2+ gradually reduces the effect of GTP while having little influence on the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate. Neither the substrate concentration nor the pH (7.2–8.5) is related to the inhibitory effect of guanine nucleotides. The inhibition by nucleotides was found to show a specificity for purine nucleotides with the order of potency being guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate > dGTP > GTP > ITP > XTP > CTP > TTP. The inhibitory effect of GTP is reversible while the effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate is irreversible. The GTP inhibitory effect was abolished by preparing the lysates in the presence of Ca2+. However, the inhibitory effect of guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate persisted. Substitution of Mn2+ for Mg2+ in the assay medium resulted in a diminution of the inhibitory effect of GTP on basal activity and converted the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated activity to a stimulatory effect. At a lower concentration of Mn2+ (less than 2 mM) guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate inhibited prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, but at a higher concentration of Mn2+, it caused an increase in enzyme activity exceeding that occuring in the presence of prostaglandin E1. In the presence of Mn2+, dGTP mimics the effect of GTP and is 50% as effective as GTP. Our data suggest that the inhibitory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is mainly due to its direct effect on the enzyme itself, whereas the stimulatory effect of GTP on prostaglandin E1-stimulated adenylate cyclase is due to enhancement of the coupling between the prostaglandin E1 receptor and adenylate cyclase. These studies also indicate that the method of preparation of platelet lysates can profoundly alter the nature of guanine nucleotide regulation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
The adenylate cyclase activity of a participate preparation of rat cerebral cortex is composed of at least two contributing components, one of which requires a Ca2+-dependent regulator protein (CDR) for activity (Brostrom, C. O., Brostrom, M. A., and Wolff, D. J. (1977) J. Biol. Chem.252, 5677–5685). Each of these components of the activity was activated by GTP and its synthetic analog, 5-guanylylimidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p). The component of the adenylate cyclase activity which did not respond to CDR (CDR-independent activity) was stimulated approximately 60% by 100 μm GTP and 3.5-fold by 100 μm Gpp(NH)p. Concentrations of GTP required for maximal activation of the CDR-dependent adenylate cyclase component decreased as CDR concentrations in the assay were increased. Similarly, GTP pr Gpp(NH)p lowered the concentration of CDR required to produce half-maximal activation of this enzyme form. At saturating CDR concentrations, however, increases in activity were not observed with the addition of these nucleotides. The CDR-dependent component responded biphasically (activation followed by inhibition) to increasing free Ca2+ concentrations; both phases of this response occurred at lower free Ca2+ concentrations with GTP present in the assay. The concentration of chlorpromazine which inhibited activation of adenylate cyclase by CDR was elevated when GTP was present. The CDR-dependent form of activity, which is stabilized by CDR to thermal inactivation, was also stabilized by Gpp(NH)p. The increase in stability produced by Gpp(NH)p did not require the presence of CDR, and stabilization with both Gpp(NH)p and CDR was greater than that obtained with either Gpp(NH)p or CDR alone.  相似文献   

4.
Na+ has been implicated as a requirement for the inhibition of adenylate cyclase by hormones and neurotransmitters. This study examines effects of salt concentration on neuroblastoma plasma membranes that occur in the absence of an inhibitory hormone. The adenylate cyclase response to stimulatory agonists (GTP plus PGE1 (3), PGI2 or PGE2) was influenced by NaCl. As the [NaCl] increased to 150 mM, an increase in maximal activity and a decrease in apparent affinity was observed. At concentrations above 150 mM, NaCl decreased prostaglandin affinity and progressively decreased maximal activation. The GTP requirement was not altered by 30 or 150 mM NaCl in the presence of PGE1 or PGI2. The rate of Gpp(NH)p stimulated activity increased as the [NaCl] was increased in the assay. This increased rate was conserved when membranes activated in the presence of Gpp(NH)p and NaCl were reassayed in the absence of guanine nucleotide or salt. The salt evoked rate increase was proportionally greater at submaximal MgCl2 concentrations. The concentration requirement for Mg2+ was reduced by salt for adenylate cyclase in the presence of GTP or Gpp(NH)p. However, the enzyme stimulated by hormone exhibited a Mg2+ requirement that was low in the absence of salt and could not be further reduced by increased [NaCl]. Alternative monovalent cations (150 mM Li+, K+, Cs+, but not choline or tetramethylammonium) and anions (SO4=) substituted for NaCl. The observed effects were reversible upon washing the membranes and neither ouabain nor tetrodotoxin altered the response. These effects may result from a conformational alteration of a protein particularly sensitive to neutral salts in the assay.  相似文献   

5.
Many macrophage functions such as chemotaxis, phagocytosis, enzyme secretion, and cytotoxicity are influenced by intracellular cyclic nucleotide levels, but the regulatory mechanisms involved are poorly defined. We have developed methods that allowed us to study the activation of AC in isolated guinea pig (g.p.) macrophage membranes. AC in these membrane preparations could be stimulated approximately twofold by guanine nucleotides. We could not obtain any hormonal activation of membrane-bound AC in the absence of guanine nucleotides. In the presence of GTP, however, the hormones isoproterenol and PGE1 elicited an additional threefold rise in AC activity, which subsided after approximately 15 min. As little as 10(-8) M concentrations of these two hormones induced significant elevations of AC activity. Replacement of GTP by its nonhydrolyzable analogue Gpp(NH)p resulted in a persistent hormone-independent activation of AC, and addition of hormones enhanced this level of activation. Thus, GTP-ase activity is present in macrophage membrane preparations and serves to regulate AC activation. Hormonal stimulation of AC was receptor mediated, because the effect of the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol, but not PGE1, was inhibited by the beta-adrenergic blocker propranolol. In addition, the potency series of PG corresponded to that observed for stimulation of cAMP production in intact g.p. macrophages, i.e., PGE1 = PGE2 greater than PGA1 greater than PGF2 alpha. AC activation by PG in the membrane preparation was inhibited by an alpha-adrenergic agonist, thus demonstrating one means for down regulating cAMP production in g.p. macrophages. Our studies also showed that certain hormones (e.g., beta-adrenergic agonists, PG) can exert their effect on cAMP production by stimulation of membrane-bound AC, whereas other agents such as lectins or arachidonic acid require additional intracellular components to elevate cAMP levels in macrophages. The mechanism of activation of AC by hormones in g.p. macrophage membranes appears to fit the model of a ternary complex, the components of which include the hormone receptor, AC, and guanine nucleotide regulatory protein, which transmits the signal from the receptor to AC.  相似文献   

6.
Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-infected chicken embryo cells were used to study the effect of viral transformation on the hormone-stimulated synthesis of cyclic AMP. Transformation by RSV greatly increased the cells' ability to synthesize and accumulate cyclic AMP in response to the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol as compared to untransformed cells. This enhancement was observed in both intact cells and in membranes prepared from these cells. The inclusion of guanosine 5'-0-(3-thiotriphosphate), a nonhydrolyzable analogue of GTP, in assays of adenylate cyclase activity did not abolish the quantitative differences between the transformed and normal cell membranes. Infection of cells by Rous-associated virus, which lacks the oncogene src, did not induce this hyperresponsiveness thus indicating the probable involvement of the src gene product in this phenomenon. The duration of the isoproterenol-induced cyclic AMP elevation was longer in the transformed than in the untransformed cells; transformed cells, unlike untransformed cells, required at least 120 min before full desensitization became established. Membranes prepared from transformed cells specifically bound more than 5 times the quantity of the beta-adrenergic radiolabeled antagonist (-)3H-dihydroalprenolol and 125I-iodocyanopindolol compared to the untransformed cell membranes. Thus, it appears that major differences between the transformed and normal phenotypes reside in the concentration of membrane beta-adrenergic receptors and the inability of RSV-transformed cells to self-limit their response to specific external stimuli.  相似文献   

7.
The particulate fraction prepared after homogenization of planaria Polycelis tenuis in a buffer containing 3 mM EDTA and 15 mM 2-mercaptoethanol possesses an adenylate cyclase activity which was enhanced two-fold by serotonin and 20-fold by the nucleotide analog guanosine 5'-(beta-gamma-imino)triphosphate, Gpp(NH)p; when present together, the two activators exhibited a marked synergistic effect. The effect of serotonin was dose dependent, with a KA of 2 micrometer and a Hill coefficient of 0.4. In the presence of 10 micrometer Gpp(NH)p, these values became 45 nM and 1.5, respectively. The effect of serotonin was due to an increase in the maximal velocity of the enzyme and was specifically inhibited by methiotepin. The effect of methiotepin was half-maximal at 0.2 micrometer in the absence of Gpp(NH)p and at 5.0 micrometer in its presence. Planaria thus appear to be the lowest organisms in which guanine nucleotides are active upon adenylate cyclase. As serotonin is normally present in planaria, it is postulated that a serotonin-dependent regulation of adenylate cyclase activity plays a physiological role in this species.  相似文献   

8.
1. Preincubation of luteal membranes with human choriogonadotropin results in the formation of an activated state of adenylate cyclase which is not reversed by washing and which is limited only by the absence of guanine nucleotides, whereas preincubation with GTP yields only a partially activated adenylate cyclase which requires the presence of both GTP and human choriogonadotropin during assay to demonstrate maximal activity. 2. Preincubation of luteal membranes with GTP and human choriogonadotropin does not lead to a synergistic increase in wash-resistant activity. 3. Luteal membranes that had been preincubated with GTP and hormone exhibited a decreasing rate of cyclic AMP synthesis during the adenylate cyclase assay incubation; addition of GTP during the assay incubation reversed the decrease. 4. Membranes that had been preincubated in the absence of guanine nucleotide and hormone showed a `burst' phase of cyclic AMP synthesis when GTP was present in the assay incubation and a `lag' phase with p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5′-[β,γ-imido]triphosphate) present in the assay. The presence of human choriogonadotropin with either nucleotide in the assay incubation eliminated the curvatures in plots observed with guanine nucleotides alone. 5. Luteal adenylate cyclase was persistently activated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG alone or in combination with human choriogonadotropin; the activation caused by p[NH]ppG alone was still increasing after 70min of preincubation, whereas that caused by p[NH]ppG in the presence of hormone was essentially complete within 10min of preincubation. 6. Luteal adenylate cyclase that had been partially preactivated by preincubation with p[NH]ppG was slightly increased in activity by the inclusion of further p[NH]ppG in the adenylate cyclase assay incubation, but more so with p[NH]ppG and hormone. Human choriogonadotropin alone caused no further increase in the activity of the partially stimulated preparation unless p[NH]ppG was also added to the assay incubation. 7. GTP decreased the activity of adenylate cyclase in membranes that had been partially preactivated in the presence of p[NH]ppG; the decrease in activity was greater when GTP and hormone were present simultaneously in the assay. 8. The results indicate that stable activation states of adenylate cyclase can be induced by preincubation of luteal membranes in vitro with human choriogonadotropin or p[NH]ppG, and that in the presence of p[NH]ppG the hormone may accelerate events subsequent to guanine nucleotide binding. Stable activation of luteal adenylate cyclase by prior exposure to GTP is not achieved. The involvement of GTPase activity and of hormone-promoted guanine nucleotide exchange in the modulation of luteal adenylate cyclase activity is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The GTP analog 5′-quanylyl-imidodiphosphate Gpp(NH) p potentiated the action of VIP on adenylate cyclase from intestinal epithelial cell membranes. The other nucleotides tested were also active on adenylate cyclase with the following order of potency GTP>GDP>GMP>ITP>UTP=CTP. Guanine nucleotides act by increasing the Vmax of the enzyme activity and by decreasing the Km of enzyme activation by VIP. Activation of the peptide-induced adenylate cyclase activity by Gpp (NH) p was inhibited by GTP and the other nucleotides with the same order and range of potency than those observed for their intrinsic stimulatory effect on adenylate cyclase. These data demonstrate the potent and specific action of quanine nucleotides on the VIP-sensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

10.
The adenylate cyclase catalytic unit was partially purified from uterine smooth muscle by chromatography on columns of SM-2 Bio-Beads and Sepharose 6B. Stimulation of catalysis by forskolin was much greater in the presence of Mn2+ than in the presence of Mg2+. Neither NaF nor guanine nucleotide stimulated catalysis in the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+. These properties indicated the catalytic unit was not sensitive to regulation by the GS regulatory protein. Guanine nucleotide inhibited catalysis, however, and was a competitive inhibitor of the ATP substrate (Ki approximately 50 microM). Since inhibition affected Km but not Vmax, the catalytic unit also seemed insensitive to regulation by the Gi regulatory protein, which does not act like a competitive inhibitor in other enzyme systems. The catalytic unit was also phospholipid sensitive. Only phosphatidic acid (Pho-A) had a direct effect on catalysis and was a potent inhibitor. Its effects were antagonized by the concomitant addition of phosphatidylcholine (Pho-C) but not by phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, or phosphatidylinositol. Acyl chain composition had a marked effect on Pho-C binding when this was determined by antagonism of Pho-A-dependent inhibition. These properties suggest the catalytic unit has both polar head group and acyl chain requirements for phospholipid binding.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of adenylate cyclase coincident with transformation of chicken embryo fibroblasts by Rous sarcoma virus is manifest as a 10-50% decrease in basal, Mg2+-, and forskolin-stimulated activities; activities elicited by fluoride and guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) are unaltered. The level of the catalytic component of adenylate cyclase, assessed with activated stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding protein (Gs), increases approximately 1.5-fold. The level of the beta subunit common to Gs and the inhibitory regulatory protein assessed by enzyme-linked immunotransfer blotting, increases 2.7-fold. The isoelectric behavior of the beta subunit is unaltered. The amount of radiolabel incorporated into the alpha subunit of Gs (Mr = 45,000) upon incubation of membranes with 32P-labeled NAD and cholera toxin increases 3-fold upon transformation. Detergent extracts prepared from membranes of untransformed and transformed fibroblasts nevertheless exhibit equivalent abilities to reconstitute fluoride-stimulated activities to membranes of the cyc-variant of mouse S49 lymphoma cells. Islet-activating protein catalyzes incorporation of radiolabel from 32P-labeled NAD into 39,000- and 41,000-dalton proteins; the extent of radiolabel incorporation does not change upon transformation. Modest alterations in the isoelectric behaviors of substrates for cholera toxin and islet-activating protein occur.  相似文献   

12.
1. GTP and GMP-P(NH)P (guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate) were observed to increase the stimulation of neural adenylate cyclase by dopamine (3,4-dihydroxyphenethylamine) and noradrenaline. 2. GMP-P(NH)P had a biphasic effect on the enzyme activity. 3. Preincubation of membranes with GMP-P(NH)P activated the enzyme by a process dependent on time and temperature. Catecholamines increased the speed and the extent of this activation. 4. Membrane fractions contained high- and low-affinity sites for GMP-P(NH)P binding: this binding was due to protein(s) of the membrane preparations. 5. Low-affinity-site binding of GMP-P(NH)P appeared to be related to the stimulatory effect on the adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

13.
Guanosine 5′-tetraphosphate (GTP4) stimulated mammalian adenylate cyclase activity at concentrations down to 1 μM. Greater stimulatory activity was apparent with lung than with heart, brain or liver from the rat. At a concentration of 0.1 mM, GTP4 stimulated lung adenylate cyclase activity from rat, guinea pig and mouse about four-fold. Other guanine nucleotides such as GTP, GDP, GMP, guanosine 3′, 5′-monophosphate and 5′-guanylylimidodiphosphate (GMP · PNP) also stimulated mammalian adenylate cyclase activity. GMP · PNP irreversibly activated, whereas GTP4 and GTP reversibly activated adenylate cyclase. Adenosine 5′-tetraphosphate (ATP4) stimulated rat lung and liver but inhibited rat heart and brain adenylate cyclase activities. Lung from guinea pig and mouse were not affected by ATP4. The formation of cyclic AMP by GTP4-stimulated rat lung adenylate cyclase was verified by Dowex-50 (H+), Dowex 1-formate and polyethyleneimine cellulose column chromatography. GTP4 was at least three times more potent than 1-isoproterenol in stimulating rat lung adenylate cyclase activity. The β-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol blocked the effect of 1-isoproterenol but not that of GTP4, thus, suggesting that GTP4 and β-adrenergic agonists interact with different receptor sites on membrane-bound adenylate cyclase. Stimulation of rat lung and liver adenylate cyclase activities with 1-isoproterenol was potentiated by either GTP4 or GMP. PNP, thus indicating that GTP4 resembles other guanine nucleotides in their capacity to increase the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to β-adrenergic agonists. Stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity by guanine derivatives requires one or more free phosphate moieties on the 5 position of ribose, as no effect was elicited with guanine, guanosine, guanosine 2′-monophosphate, guanosine 3′-monophosphate or guanosine 2′,5′-monophosphate. Ribose, ribose 5-phosphate, phosphate and pyrophosphate were inactive. Pyrimidine nucleoside mono-, di-, tri- and tetraphosphates elicited negligible effects on mammalian adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

14.
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16.
Arginine vasopressin (AVP)- and parathyroid hormone (PTH)-sensitive adenylate cyclase were studied in the renal tissue of thyroparathyroidectomized dogs. The results indicate that AVP-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity was highest in the inner medulla followed by the middle medulla, outer medulla, and cortex, in declining order. In contrast, PTH-sensitive adenylate cyclase was absent in the inner medulla, and the highest stimulation was found in the cortex with lesser activity in outer and middle medulla. When 1 mm EGTA was included in the incubation mixture, the addition of both AVP- and PTH to the middle medullary homogenate resulted in additive responses suggesting two separate receptors for each hormone. This EGTA-induced additive effect was eliminated by the addition of calcium into the system, indicating that calcium concentration may be critical in modulating the interaction of AVP and PTH-sensitive adenylate cyclase. In contrast to some previous reports, a particulate fraction prepared from the middle medullary tissue was completely insensitive to either AVP or PTH. Hormonal sensitivity was restored by the addition of GTP or the supernatant.  相似文献   

17.
Spontaneous transformation of RL-PR-C hepatocytes leads to alterations in the adenylate cyclase complex which include a lower than normal basal level of activity, a loss of sensitivity to exogenous GTP, and a decreased sensitivity to isoproterenol. Both normal and transformed membranes possess substantial GTPase activity. Treatment of transformed hepatocyte membranes with either isoproterenol plus GMP or with cholera toxin, under conditions that displace tightly bound GDP, restored the GTP effect on adenylate cyclase, and eliminated the lag in the activation by guanyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate. Such pretreatment also enhanced guanine nucleotide effects on the adenylate cyclase of normal hepatocytes. These results are explainable on the basis that transformation increases adenylate cyclase-associated GTPase activity, and increases occupancy of nucleotide regulatory sites by inactive or inhibitory guanine nucleotides, e.g., GDP. Seemingly, both catecholamines and cholera toxin promote an exchange reaction at the regulatory sites, resulting in clearance of these sites of inhibitory nucleotides.  相似文献   

18.
Liver plasma membranes isolated from hypophysectomized rats were treated with 0.1 M Lubrol-PX, a nonionic detergent, and centrifuged at 165,000 × g for 1 hour. Adenylate cyclase activity remaining in the supernate had a specific activity that was at least equal to that of the particulate enzyme. The activity of the solubilized, non-sedimentable adenylate cyclase, as well as the membrane bound enzyme, was increased by GTP, ITP, and GMP-PCP at 10?4 M. The activity of the solubilized, non-sedimentable enzyme increased linearly with GTP from 10?6 to 10?4 M but there was no further increase in the activity of the solubilized enzyme with 10?3 M GTP. In contrast, the particulate liver membrane enzyme activity increased exponentially with GTP from 10?6 to 10?4 M and was further increased by 10?3 M GTP. These data indicate that GTP, ITP or GMP-PCP have direct effects on solubilized adenylate cyclase. This effect is in addition to a role of nucleotides in modifying membrane structure (16).  相似文献   

19.
Spontaneous transformation of RL-PR-C hepatocytes leads to alterations in the adenylate cyclase complex which include a lower than normal basal level of activity, a loss of sensitivity to exogenous GTP, and a decreased sensitivity to isoproterenol. Both normal and transformed membranes posses substantial TGPase activity. Treatment of transformed hepatocyte membranes with either isoproterenol plus GMP or with cholera toxin, under conditions that displace tightly bound GDP, restored the GTP effect on adenylate cyclase, and eliminated the lag in the activation by guanyl-5′-yl-imidodiphosphate. Such pretreatment also enhanced guanine nucleotide effects on the adenylate cyclase of normal hepatocytes. These results are explainable on the basis that transformation increases adenylate cyclase-associated GTPase activity, and increase occupancy of nuceotide regulatory sites by inactive or inhibitory guanine nucleotides, e.g., GDP. Seemingly, both catecholamines and cholera toxin promote an exchange reaction at the regulatory sites, resulting in clearance of these sites of inhibitory nucleotides.  相似文献   

20.
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