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1.
In this study, the influence of the inhibitory mu-opioid receptor on the potencies of 5'-guanosine alpha-thiotriphosphate (GTP gamma S) and GDP at the inhibitory GTP-binding protein (Gi) were investigated in an adenylyl cyclase system. It was hoped that a receptor-mediated change in the potency of either GTP gamma S or GDP in affecting adenylyl cyclase activity may elucidate how a receptor alters cyclase activity via its G-protein. In an adenylyl cyclase system employing 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate as substrate, GTP gamma S, a nonhydrolyzable analog of GTP, inhibited forskolin-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in the absence of morphine; morphine failed to significantly affect the apparent potency of GTP gamma S. GDP blocked the GTP gamma S-induced inhibition of adenylyl cyclase; morphine profoundly diminished the ability of GDP to block the inhibitory effect of GTP gamma S. The IC50 values of GTP gamma S were 0.02 +/- 0.01, 0.18 +/- 0.04, and 2.2 +/- 0.5 microM in the absence of other drugs, in the presence of a combination of 100 microM GDP and morphine, and in the presence of 100 microM GDP, respectively. GDP blocked the inhibitory effect of GTP gamma S (0.3 microM) in a concentration-dependent manner; the EC50 for GDP was 16 +/- 2.6 microM in the absence of morphine and 170 +/- 32 microM in the presence of morphine. Exposure of 7315c cells to pertussis toxin for 3 h resulted in a small decrease in the potency of GTP gamma S in inhibiting cyclase. However, the relative potency of GDP in blocking the GTP gamma S-mediated inhibition of cyclase was increased: the EC50 values of GDP were 11 +/- 4 and 0.81 +/- 0.2 microM in untreated and pertussis toxin-treated membranes, respectively. In untreated membranes, there was a brief lag in the GTP gamma S-induced inhibition of adenylyl cyclase; morphine diminished this lag. In membranes treated with pertussis toxin, there was an exaggerated lag in the onset of GTP gamma S inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity; morphine could no longer affect this lag. Thus, uncoupling the mu-opioid receptor from Gi appeared to increase the affinity of Gi for GDP. These data suggest that the effect of an inhibitory receptor is to decrease the affinity of Gi for GDP by virtue of its interaction with the carboxy-terminal region of Gi alpha.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The ability of GTP gamma S to activate release of inositol polyphosphates from isolated permeabilised guinea pig uterine smooth muscle cells and from partially purified PI-PLC alpha has been studied. Streptolysin O permeabilised and [3H]inositol prelabelled cells show a time dependent release of inositol polyphosphates, predominantly inositol 4-phosphate. Ca2+ stimulated IP release with a Ka of 161 +/- 1.1 nM and this was further enhanced in an additive manner by GTP gamma S between 1-100 microM; the Ka for Ca2+ in the presence of 0.1 mM GTP gamma S was 117 +/- 0.7 nM. GTP gamma S activation of IP production did not require Ca2+ in the medium. Permeabilisation of the uterine smooth muscle cells with Streptolysin O readily released PI-PLC activity into the medium. However, unlike studies with isolated membranes 63.4 +/- 6.4% of the enzyme activity remained associated with membranes and/or particulate fractions of the cell. Studies were undertaken with PI-PLC alpha, the predominant isoenzyme form, partially purified from uterine smooth muscle at different stages of pregnancy by Q-Sepharose and Heparin-Agarose chromatography. The enzyme co-purifies with firmly associated GTP-binding activity. Enzyme prepared from near-term uterus is activated by 0.1 mM GTP gamma S, up to 100% when Ca2+ is between 0.1-1 microM, while 10 microM AlF4- under those conditions caused complete inhibition of the enzymes. Responses for enzymes prepared from non-pregnant uteri were broadly similar. In contrast enzyme preparations from guinea pig uteri at 20-60 days of pregnancy show an inhibition of activity in response to 0.1 mM GTP gamma S addition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
R R Anholt 《Biochemistry》1988,27(17):6464-6468
Chemosensory cilia isolated from the olfactory epithelium of Rana catesbeiana were solubilized with Lubrol PX in the presence of supplementary lipid, forskolin, and sodium fluoride. Subsequent removal of the detergent by adsorption onto Biobeads SM2 results in the formation of proteoliposomes that display forskolin- and GTP gamma S-sensitive adenylate cyclase activity. Sucrose gradient centrifugation of liposomes formed in the presence of fluorescently labeled phosphatidylcholine demonstrates association between the olfactory adenylate cyclase and the exogenously added lipid. Forskolin stimulates the enzyme in reconstituted membranes with the same potency as in native membranes (EC50 = 1-2 microM). However, GTP gamma S is 350-fold more potent in native membranes (EC50 = 4.0 +/- 0.5 nM) than in reconstituted membranes (EC50 = 1.4 +/- 0.3 microM). These studies represent a first step toward the functional reconstitution and molecular dissection of the olfactory membrane.  相似文献   

4.
GTP hydrolysis in Dictyostelium discoideum membranes is caused by a low (Km greater than 1 mM) and a high affinity (Km 6.5 microM) GTPase. cAMP enhances GTP hydrolysis apparently by increasing the affinity of the high affinity GTPase (stimulated Km 4.5 microM); the low affinity GTPase was not affected by cAMP. Stimulation of GTP hydrolysis by cAMP was maximal at early time points and declined thereafter. A half-maximal stimulation of GTPase occurred at 3 microM cAMP and the specificity of cAMP derivatives for stimulation of GTPase activity showed a close correlation with the specificity for binding to the cell surface cAMP receptor. Treatment of D. discoideum cells with pertussis toxin decreased the cAMP-induced stimulation of GTPase from 42 +/- 6% in control cells to 17 +/- 9% in pertussis toxin-treated cells. These results suggest that the interaction of cAMP with its surface receptor leads to stimulation of high affinity GTPase in D. discoideum membranes. At least one of those enzymes may represent a guanine nucleotide-binding protein sensitive to pertussis toxin.  相似文献   

5.
Rabbit platelets were labelled with [3H]glycerol and incubated with or without phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). Membranes were then isolated and assayed for phospholipase D (PLD) activity by monitoring [3H]phosphatidylethanol formation in the presence of 300 mM-ethanol. At a [Ca2+free] of 1 microM, PLD activity was detected in control membranes, but was 5.4 +/- 0.8-fold (mean +/- S.E.M.) greater in membranes from PMA-treated platelets. Under the same conditions, 10 microM-guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) stimulated PLD by 18 +/- 3-fold in control membranes, whereas PMA treatment and GTP[S] interacted synergistically to increase PLD activity by 62 +/- 12-fold. GTP[S]-stimulated PLD activity was observed in the absence of Ca2+, but was increased by 1 microM-Ca2+ (3.5 +/- 0.2-fold and 1.8 +/- 0.1-fold in membranes from control and PMA-treated platelets respectively). GTP exerted effects almost as great as those of GTP[S], but 20-30-fold higher concentrations were required. Guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate inhibited the effects of GTP[S] or GTP, suggesting a role for a GTP-binding protein in activation of PLD. Thrombin (2 units/ml) stimulated the PLD activity of platelet membranes only very weakly and in a GTP-independent manner. The actions of PMA and analogues on PLD activity correlated with their ability to stimulate protein kinase C in intact platelets. Staurosporine, a potent protein kinase inhibitor, had both inhibitory and, at higher concentrations, stimulatory effects on the activation of PLD by PMA. The results suggest that PMA not only stimulates PLD via activation of protein kinase C but can also activate the enzyme by a phosphorylation-independent mechanism in the presence of staurosporine. However, under physiological conditions, full activation of platelet PLD may require the interplay of protein kinase C, increased Ca2+ and a GTP-binding protein, and may occur as a secondary effect of the activation of phospholipase C.  相似文献   

6.
Functional coupling of the human thrombin receptor PAR1 (protease-activated receptor 1) with the retinal rod G-protein transducin (Gt, a member of the Gi family) was studied in a reconstituted system of membranes from Sf9 cells expressing the thrombin receptor and purified Gt from bovine rod outer segments. TRAP6-agonist-activated PAR1 interacts productively with the distant G-protein. Agonist-dependent Gt activation was measured using a real-time fluorimetric GTP[S]-binding assay and membranes from Sf9 cells. To characterize nucleotide-exchange catalysis by PAR1, we analyzed dependence on nucleotides, temperature and pH. Activation was inhibited by low GDP concentrations (IC50 = 5.2 +/- 1.5 microM at 5 microM GTP[S]), indicating that receptor-Gt coupling, followed by instantaneous GDP release, is rate limiting under the conditions (25 degrees C). Arrhenius plots of the temperature dependence reflect an apparent Ea of 60 +/- 3.5 kJ.mol-1. Evaluation of the pH/rate profiles of Gt activation indicates that the activating conformation of the receptor is determined by protonation of a titratable group with an apparent pKa of 6.4. This supports the idea that the active state of agonist-bound PAR1 depends on forced protonation, indicating possible analogies to the scheme established for rhodopsin.  相似文献   

7.
Na, K-ATPase and Mg-ATPase activities were measured in the synaptosomes of the temporal auditory projection area and the frontal association area. Moreover, the effects of carbacholine and serotonin on those activities were investigated. Na, K-ATPase activity in the synaptosomes of the association area was shown to be reliably higher that in the synaptosomes of the projection area (11.02 +/- 0.45 vs 8.40 +/- 0.55 microM Pi/mg of protein hr; P less than 0.05). Mg-ATPase activity was higher in the second case as compared to the first one (11.40 +/- 0.38 vs 9.04 +/- 0.35; p less than 0.05). Carbacholine and serotonin (10(-8)-10(-3) M) were found to induce equal inhibition of Na, K-ATPase activity in the synaptosomes of both cortices (1 max = 25-30%, 1C50 = 0.2-0.3 microM) which is blocked respectively with atropine (10(-6) M) and methysergide (10(-6) M) and enhanced in presence of GTP (5.10(-5) M). The enzyme activity is also inhibited by the non-hydrolysable guanine nucleotide, GTP gamma S (10(-8)-10(-4) M), in the absence of the antagonists (1 max = 35-40%, 1 C50 = 0.02 microM). In the methysergide-containing medium serotonin exerts a dose-dependent stimulatory effect on Na, K-ATPase which is more pronounced in the synaptosomes of the association area (A max = 25%, A C50 = 0.05 microM). Mg-ATPase activity of membrane preparations is liable to be stimulated by both serotonin and carbacholine, stimulation being more pronounced in the synaptosomes of the association cortex as well (A max = 35%, A C50 = 0.2-0.3 microM). This effect is insensitive either to the antagonists of the corresponding receptors or to GTP. GTP gamma S does not cause alterations in the enzymatic activity. Na, K-ATPase is suggested to be coupled to muscarine and serotonin receptors in the synaptic membranes of both projection and association cortical areas via a GTP-binding protein. At the same time, the agonists of receptors mentioned above are presumably also capable to effect Mg-ATPase activity by the receptor-independent way.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of the cholinergic agonist carbachol on ouabain-sensitive K(+)-activated 4-nitrophenylphosphatase (K(+)-O2NPhPase) activity of rabbit and pig ventricular sarcolemma were examined. Carbachol (0.01-1000 microM) alone had no effect on K(+)-O2NPase. However, in the presence of GTP (100 microM) or its analog guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S], 1 microM) the agonist reduced this enzymatic activity (IC50 = 0.3 microM) by about 45% in a concentration-dependent manner. The GTP[S]-dependent effect of carbachol was blocked by 10 microM atropine, an antagonist of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAcChoR). In the presence of micromolar concentrations of ATP or the GDP analog guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate, carbachol did not change sarcolemmal K(+)-O2NPhPase activity. GTP[S] alone reduced this activity (IC50 = 2 microM) by about 40% in a concentration-dependent manner with a lag period of about 3 min. This lag disappeared in the presence of carbachol. Treatment of sarcolemmal membranes with 20 micrograms/ml pertussis toxin, which catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of the 40-41-kDa alpha-subunits of inhibitory GTP-binding protein (Gi), abolished the GTP[S]-promoted inhibitory effect of carbachol. Immunochemically, these alpha-subunits were identified as alpha 12- and alpha i3-subunits. It is suggested that the carbachol-induced inhibition of ouabain-sensitive K(+)-O2NPhPase activity of mammalian myocardial sarcolemma is a result of a negative coupling between mAcChoR and Na+/K(+)-ATPase via Gi protein.  相似文献   

9.
In the present study, we have examined the effect of guanine nucleotides on VIP binding to rat peritoneal macrophage membranes. Both guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) and its nonhydrolizable analog guanosine 5'-beta, Y-imidotriphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] inhibited, in a dose-dependent manner, the VIP binding to its specific binding sites. Half-maximal inhibition (IC50) was observed at 5.4 +/- 0.5 microM GTP. The inhibitory effect of GTP was due to an increase of the dissociation rate of peptide bound to membranes. The specificity of the binding inhibition was assessed from the lack of action of the other nucleotides tested. These results directly suggest the coupling of VIP binding sites with guanine nucleotide binding proteins in rat peritoneal macrophage membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Receptor-regulated binding of the labeled GTP analog, guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) ([35S]GTP[S]), to guanine-nucleotide-binding proteins (G-proteins) was studied in porcine atrial membranes enriched in muscarinic acetylcholine (mACh) receptors. Binding of [35S]GTP[S] to the membranes was not or only slightly affected by the cholinergic agonist, carbachol, unless a second nucleotide was simultaneously present in the binding assay. This additional nucleotide requirement was best fulfilled by GDP, being maximally effective at 0.1-1 microM. In contrast, the GDP analog, guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate), could not replace GDP in promoting carbachol-induced increase in [35S]GTP[S] binding. In addition to GDP, agonist-induced stimulation of [35S]GTP[S] binding to porcine atrial membranes required the presence of Mg2+, being half-maximally and maximally effective at about 30 microM and 300 microM, respectively. Addition of NaCl, which decreased control binding measured in the presence of GDP alone, had no effect on the maximal extent of agonist-stimulated binding, but reduced the potency of carbachol in stimulating [35S]GTP[S] binding. Under optimal conditions, carbachol increased the binding of [35S]GTP[S] without apparent lag phase up to about 2.5-fold, with half-maximal and maximal increase being observed at 5-10 microM and 100 microM, respectively. The agonist-induced stimulation was competitively antagonized by the mACh receptor antagonist, atropine. The number of GTP[S] binding sites under receptor control was two--three-fold higher than the number of mACh receptors in the porcine atrial membranes used. Pretreatment of the membranes with pertussis toxin under conditions leading to 95% ADP-ribosylation of the toxin-sensitive G-protein alpha-subunits markedly reduced agonist-stimulated [35S]GTP[S] binding, with, however, about 30% stimulation still remaining. The data presented indicate that agonist-stimulated binding of [35S]GTP[S] to G-proteins can be a sensitive assay for measuring receptor-regulated G-protein activation in native membranes and, furthermore, suggest that one agonist-activated mACh receptor can activate two or three cardiac G-proteins, being mainly members of the pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-proteins.  相似文献   

11.
NaF and guanosine 5'-O-thiotriphosphate [GTP(S)] stimulated the accumulation of [3H]inositol monophosphate ([3H]InsP) in rat brain cortical membranes, with half-maximal stimulation at 2 mM and 1 microM, respectively. Calcium also increased basal [3H]InsP formation over a range of concentrations from 10(-7) to 10(-4) M. The stimulatory effect of GTP(S) (30 microM) on [3H]InsP production was insensitive to Ca2+, whereas NaF-evoked [3H]InsP formation was dependent on Ca2+ concentrations. Guanosine 5'-O-thiodiphosphate significantly attenuated GTP(S)- but not NaF-stimulated [3H]InsP production. Coincubation of GTP(S) (30 microM) and submaximal concentrations of NaF (1 or 3 mM) stimulated [3H]InsP formation to a degree that was nearly additive with that produced by either drug alone. However, the resultant accumulation of [3H]InsP in the presence of maximally effective concentrations of GTP(S) and NaF was not different from that produced by NaF alone. Incubation of cortical membranes with GTP(S) and NaF for 1 min stimulated the accumulation of [3H]inositol bisphosphate (InsP2) but not [3H]InsP. [3H]InsP2 production elicited by GTP(S) was markedly enhanced by the muscarinic cholinergic agonist carbachol. In contrast, NaF-stimulated [3H]InsP2 formation was not potentiated by carbachol. Our findings of different characteristics of GTP(S) and fluoride activation of polyphosphoinositide (PPI) hydrolysis suggest that separate regulatory mechanisms are involved in these two modes of stimulation in brain membranes. Activation of PPI hydrolysis by fluoride may be mediated by a direct stimulation of PPI phosphodiesterase or by activating a putative guanine nucleotide regulatory protein at a location distinct from the GTP-binding site.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of GTP analogues and conditions in which various endogenous protein kinases were activated on photoaffinity labeling with [3H](+)PN200-110 (PN) of crude membranes from rat cardiac muscle and whole brain were investigated. Photoaffinity labeling with 20 nM [3H](+)PN of these crude membranes was decreased by 100 microM GTP-gamma-S, but not by 100 microM GTP or 100 microM GDP-beta-S. Similar results were obtained on the effects of GTP and its analogues on the specific binding of 20 nM [3H](+)PN to these crude membranes under the same conditions. Activation of endogenous protein kinases in these crude membranes did not influence the photoaffinity labeling with [3H](+)PN. These results suggested the binding sites, or DPH-sensitive, or L-type, calcium channels in curde membranes from rat cardiac muscle and whole brain are directly or indirectly modulated by endogenous GTP-binding protein, but not by various endogenous protein kinases in these crude membranes.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied beta-adrenergic stimulation of cyclic AMP formation in fragmented membranes and in unsealed or resealed ghosts prepared from rat reticulocytes. The maximal rate of isoprenaline-stimulated cyclic AMP formation with saturating MgATP concentrations and in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine was 5-8 nmol/min per ml ghosts and remained constant for at least 15 min. Transition from resealed ghosts to fragmented membranes was associated with a shift of the activation constant (Ka) for (+/-)-isoprenaline from 0.1 to 0.6 microM. THe apparent dissociation constant for propranolol (0.01 microM) remained unchanged. The Ka values for isoprenaline in native reticulocytes and in resealed ghosts were identical. The stimulating effect of NaF on cyclic AMP formation in resealed ghosts reached 15% of maximal beta-adrenergic stimulation. Cyclic AMP formation, both in fragmented membranes and in ghosts, was half-maximally inhibited with Ca2+ concentrations ranging between 0.1 and 1 microM. GTP stimulated isoprenaline-dependent cyclic AMP formation in unsealed ghosts and in fragmented reticulocyte membranes by a factor of 3-5 but did not change the Ka value for isoprenaline. Ka values for the guanylnucleotides in different experiments varied between 0.3 and 2 microM. Ca2+ concentrations up to 4.6 microM reduced the maximal activation by GTP and Gpp(NH)p but did not affect their Ka values. Compared to GTP, maximal activation by Gpp(NH)p was higher in fragmented membranes, but much lower in ghosts. Our results suggest that the native beta-receptor adenylate cyclase system of reticulocytes is more closely approximated in the ghost model than in fragmented membrane preparations. Membrane properties seem to modulate the actions of guanylnucleotides on isoprenaline-dependent cyclic AMP formation in ghosts. Some of these effects are not observed in isolated membranes.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of guanine nucleotides, thrombin, and platelet cytosol (100,000 X g supernatant) on the hydrolysis of polyphosphoinositides by phospholipase C was examined in isolated platelet membranes labeled with [3H]inositol. Guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) (10 microM) caused a 2-fold stimulation of polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis, compared to background. GTP gamma S (10 microM) plus thrombin (1 unit/ml) stimulated the release of inositol triphosphate, inositol diphosphate, and inositol phosphate 500, 300, and 250%, respectively, compared to GTP gamma S alone. Cytosol prepared from unlabeled platelets slightly increased the release of inositol phosphates from [3H]inositol-labeled membranes. Addition of cytosol plus GTP gamma S (10 microM), however, resulted in a 300% enhancement of the release of inositol phosphates compared to membranes incubated with thrombin and GTP gamma S. The stimulatory effects of cytosol and GTP gamma S on polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis were also observed when membranes were replaced by sonicated lipid vesicles prepared from a total platelet lipid extract. These data suggest that PIP2 hydrolysis in platelets is catalyzed by a soluble phospholipase C which is regulated by a GTP-binding regulatory protein.  相似文献   

15.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) inhibits cardiac adenylate cyclase activity by interacting with specific receptors coupled to a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein. Structure-activity studies revealed that only C-terminal fragments can exhibit an NPY-like inhibitory effect on 125I-NPY binding and adenylate cyclase activity of rat cardiac ventricular membranes. Although NPY(17-36) inhibited 125I-NPY binding with high potency, it produced a biphasic effect on basal (GTP, 10 and 100 microM or guanosine 5'-gamma-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S, 10 microM) adenylate cyclase activity. Low concentrations (less than 1 nM) of NPY(17-36) inhibited the adenylate cyclase activity whereas high concentrations (greater than 1 nM) reversed this action. GTP gamma S (100 microM) reversed the biphasic effect of NPY(17-36). NPY(17-36) exhibited only a stimulatory effect in the membranes from pertussis toxin-treated rats and an inhibitory effect with membranes from cholera toxin-treated rats. Low concentrations (less than 1 nM) of NPY(17-36) inhibited isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity whereas high doses (greater than 1 nM) reversed this activity. The cardiac NPY receptor antagonist, NPY(18-36) (1 microM), completely blocked the biphasic effect of NPY(17-36) on isoproterenol-stimulated activity. The inhibitory dose-response curve of NPY on isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was shifted parallel to the right by NPY(17-36) (1 microM), suggesting that it is an antagonist of NPY at high concentrations. N-alpha-acetylated and C-terminally deamidated analogs of NPY(17-36) had no effect on the adenylate cyclase activity. [im-DNP-His26] NPY exhibited a more pronounced biphasic effect whereas N-alpha-myristoyl-NPY(17-36) elicited only a stimulatory effect. These investigations suggest that: 1) the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of NPY(17-36) are mediated by high affinity NPY receptors coupled to a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein and a distinct population of low affinity receptors coupled to a cholera toxin-sensitive G protein, respectively; and 2) the stimulatory effect of NPY(17-36) is dissociable.  相似文献   

16.
Unsealed membranes from human erythrocytes bind GTP and GTP analogs according to first order kinetics, a single rate constant being observed. With [35S]GTP gamma S this is 0.15 +/- 0.2 min-1. Treatment of the membranes with detergents decreases binding considerably. Scatchard plots reveal uncomplicated patterns of ligand association, with Kd values of 10.2 +/- 2.3 nM [35S]GTP gamma S, of 18.2 +/- 4.3 nM [alpha-32P]GTP and of 28.6 +/- 3.5 nM [alpha-32P]GDP, respectively. The stoichiometry with the three ligands is strictly comparable, i.e. 65 +/- 7 picomoles/mg of membrane protein. Binding of each labeled nucleotide is competitively inhibited by the other two unlabeled ligands, the inhibition constants being very close to the corresponding Kd values. Metabolic depletion and subsequent repletion of intact erythrocytes result in membrane preparations still active in guanine nucleotide binding, with unmodified Kd values. However, the stoichiometry falls to 35 picomoles/mg protein with the "depleted" erythrocyte membranes and regains higher values (50 picomoles/mg protein) with the "repleted" cell membranes. Accordingly, the "in situ" characterization of guanine nucleotide-binding properties of erythrocyte membranes seems to represent a new tool for monitoring the metabolic state of intact erythrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
At different concentrations, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) can either stimulate or inhibit cAMP formation in freshly isolated rabbit cortical collecting tubule (RCCT) cells, but in cultured RCCT cells PGE2 can only stimulate cAMP synthesis (Sonnenburg, W. K., and Smith W. L. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 6155-6160). Here, we report characteristics of [3H]PGE2 binding to membrane receptor preparations from both freshly isolated and cultured RCCT cells. [3H]PGE2 binding to membranes from freshly isolated RCCT cells was saturable and partially reversible. Equilibrium binding analyses indicated that in the absence of guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) there is a single class of PGE2 binding sites (KD = 4.2 +/- 0.4 nM; Bmax = 583 +/- 28 fmol/mg); in the presence of 100 microM GTP gamma S, there is also only one class of binding sites but with a somewhat lower KD = 1.2 +/- 0.5 nM (Bmax = 370 +/- 40 fmol/mg). This stimulatory effect of GTP gamma S was blocked by pretreatment of the freshly isolated RCCT cells with pertussis toxin. The relative affinities of prostanoids for the [3H]PGE2-binding site were determined to be 17,18,19,20-tetranor-16-phenoxy-PGE2-methylsulfonylamide (sulprostone) approximately PGE2 approximately PGE1 approximately 16,16-dimethyl-PGE2 greater than carbacyclin approximately PGF2 alpha greater than PGD2. This is the order of potency with which prostaglandins inhibit arginine vasopressin-induced cAMP formation in fresh RCCT cells. Interestingly, [3H]PGE2 binding to membranes from cultured cells, which, unlike fresh cells, fail to show an inhibitory response to PGE2, was only 10-20% of that observed with membranes from fresh cells; moreover, binding of [3H]PGE2 to membranes from cultured cells was neither stimulated by GTP gamma S nor inhibited by sulprostone. The prostanoid binding specificities and the unusual pertussis toxin-sensitive, stimulatory effect of GTP gamma S on binding of [3H]PGE2 to membranes from freshly isolated RCCT cells are characteristics shared by a Gi-linked PGE receptor from renal medulla (Watanabe, T., Umegaki, K., and Smith, W. L. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 14340-14349). Our results suggest that the [3H]PGE2 binding site of freshly isolated RCCT cells is the PGE receptor which is coupled to a Gi to attenuate arginine vasopressin-induced cAMP synthesis in the renal collecting tubule.  相似文献   

18.
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) activate phospholipase C via a guanine nucleotide regulatory (G) protein. Pretreatment of the PMNs with pertussis toxin (PT) or 4-beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) inhibited chemoattractant-induced inositol trisphosphate generation. To determine the loci of inhibition by PT and PMA, G protein-mediated reactions in PMN plasma membranes were examined. Plasma membranes prepared from untreated and PMA-treated PMNs demonstrated equivalent ability of a GTP analogue to suppress high affinity binding of the chemoattractant-N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMet-Leu-Phe) to its receptor. The rate, but not the extent, of high affinity binding of GTP gamma[35S] to untreated PMN membranes was stimulated up to 2-fold by preincubation with 1 microM fMet-Leu-Phe. The ability of fMet-Leu-Phe to stimulate the rate of GTP gamma S binding was absent in membranes prepared from PT-treated PMNs, but remained intact in membranes from PMA-treated cells. Hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) via phospholipase C could be activated in untreated PMN membranes by either fMet-Leu-Phe plus GTP or GTP gamma S alone at low concentrations of Ca2+ (0.1-1 microM). Membranes prepared from PT-treated PMNs degraded PIP2 upon exposure to GTP gamma S, but not fMet-Leu-Phe plus GTP. In contrast, membranes prepared from phorbol ester-treated PMNs did not hydrolyze PIP2 when incubated with GTP gamma S. Treatment with PT or PMA did not affect the ability of 1 mM Ca2+ to activate PIP2 hydrolysis in PMN membranes, indicating that neither treatment directly inactivated phospholipase C. Therefore, PT appears to block coupling of the chemoattractant receptors to G protein activation, while phorbol esters disrupt coupling of the activated G protein to phospholipase C. The phorbol ester-mediated effect may mimic a negative feedback signal induced by protein kinase C activation by diacylglycerol generated upon activation of phospholipase C.  相似文献   

19.
S M Hughes  M D Brand 《Biochemistry》1983,22(7):1704-1708
Light activates a 3',5'-cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) in bovine retinal rod outer segments. The light is absorbed by rhodopsin situated in the disk membranes. PDE is a three-subunit peripheral protein on the disks and appears to be activated via a guanine nucleotide binding protein (G) in the presence of activated rhodopsin and GTP. Does the activation occur by collision coupling of G and PDE? We have studied the protein-protein interactions of PDE in situ in disk membranes by radiation inactivation. Irradiation of a protein with high-energy electrons leads to loss of activity in proportion to radiation dose and the molecular weight of the protein. We see no change in the size of PDE upon activation by light and 100 microM guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) (Gpp[NH]p) compared with PDE in dark with 260 microM GTP. Application of statistics to our data shows that a 27 000 change in molecular weight would be significant at the 95% level but that smaller changes would go undetected. The apparent molecular weight is 176 000 +/- 27 000 (mean +/- 95% confidence limit), in agreement with the size determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Thus there appears to be either (i) no permanent change in PDE size on activation or (ii) a small change, undetectable by the technique, or (iii) an exchange of subunits such that no net change in molecular weight is seen.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of thrombin and GTP gamma S on the hydrolysis of phosphoinositides by membrane-associated phospholipase C (PLC) from human platelets were examined with endogenous [3H]inositol-labeled membranes or with lipid vesicles containing either [3H]phosphatidylinositol or [3H]phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. GTP gamma S (1 microM) or thrombin (1 unit/mL) did not stimulate release of inositol trisphosphate (IP3), inositol bisphosphate (IP2), or inositol phosphate (IP) from [3H]inositol-labeled membranes. IP2 and IP3, but not IP, from [3H]inositol-labeled membranes were, however, stimulated 3-fold by GTP gamma S (1 microM) plus thrombin (1 unit/mL). A higher concentration of GTP gamma S (100 microM) alone also stimulated IP2 and IP3, but not IP, release. In the presence of 1 mM calcium, release of IP2 and IP3 was increased 6-fold over basal levels; however, formation of IP was not observed. At submicromolar calcium concentration, hydrolysis of exogenous phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) by platelet membrane associated PLC was also markedly enhanced by GTP gamma S (100 microM) or GTP gamma S (1 microM) plus thrombin (1 unit/mL). Under identical conditions, exogenous phosphatidylinositol (PI) was not hydrolyzed. The same substrate specificity was observed when the membrane-associated PLC was activated with 1 mM calcium. Thrombin-induced hydrolysis of PIP2 was inhibited by treatment of the membranes with pertussis toxin or pretreatment of intact platelets with 12-O-tetradecanoyl-13-acetate (TPA) prior to preparation of membranes. Pertussis toxin did not inhibit GTP gamma S (100 microM) or calcium (1 mM) dependent PIP2 breakdown, while TPA inhibited GTP gamma S-dependent but not calcium-dependent phospholipase C activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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