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M Takahashi  B Blazy  A Baudras 《Biochemistry》1980,19(22):5124-5130
The binding of adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) and guanosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP) to the adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate receptor protein (CRP) from Escherichia coli was investigated by equilibrium dialysis at pH 8.0 and 20 degrees C at different ionic strengths (0.05--0.60 M). Both cAMP and cGMP bind to CRP with a negative cooperativity that is progressively changed to positive as the ionic strength is increased. The binding data were analyzed with an interactive model for two identical sites and site/site interactions with the interaction free energy--RT ln alpha, and the intrinsic binding constant K and cooperativity parameter alpha were computed. Double-label experiments showed that cGMP is strictly competitive with cAMP, and its binding parameters K and alpha are not very different from that for cAMP. Since two binding sites exist for each of the cyclic nucleotides in dimeric CRP and no change in the quaternary structure of the protein is observed on binding the ligands, it is proposed that the cooperativity originates in ligand/ligand interactions. When bound to double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (dsDNA), CRP binds cAMP more efficiently, and the cooperativity is positive even in conditions of low ionic strength where it is negative for the free protein. By contrast, cGMP binding properties remained unperturbed in dsDNA-bound CRP. Neither the intrinsic binding constant K nor the cooperativity parameter alpha was found to be very sensitive to changes of pH between 6.0 and 8.0 at 0.2 M ionic strength and 20 degrees C. For these conditions, the intrinsic free energy and entropy of binding of cAMP are delta H degree = -1.7 kcal . mol-1 and delta S degree = 15.6 eu, respectively.  相似文献   

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Incubation of purified cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophospate-dependent protein kinase with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+ led to formation of one 32P-labeled protein, Mr = 75,000, which corresponded to the single protein band detected after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. When electrophoresis was performed without detergent, the labeled protein coincided with the position of cGMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Phosphorylation was enhanced severalfold by either histone or cAMP and was inhibited by the addition of cGMP. Low concentrations of cGMP blocked the stimulatory effects of cAMP or histone (or both). Since neither cAMP-dependent protein kinase nor cGMP-dependent phosphoprotein phosphatase activities were detected in the purified enzyme, we concluded that the cGMP-dependent protein kinase is a substrate for its own phosphotransferase activity and that other protein substrates (histone) and cyclic nucleotides modulate the process of self-phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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A specific cGMP receptor protein has been identified and separated from the cAMP receptor protein by chromatography on 8-(6-aminohexyl)-amino-cAMP-Sepharose. Scatchard analysis of cGMP binding indicates a single affinity class of receptor sites with KD = 1.4 × 10?8 M. The specificity of the cGMP receptor site has been defined by using a number of nucleotides as competitors for cGMP binding. The cGMP receptor protein sediments at 7S in glycerol density gradients.  相似文献   

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

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Binding sites for [3H]cAMP on purified regulatory dimers of type II A-kinase (II-R2) are independent as assessed by equilibrium binding (KD = 6 +/- 1.3 nM at pH 7.2, 25 degrees; nH = 1.0) and by the lack of effect of unlabeled cAMP on dissociation rate (kd = 1.0 X 10(-3) sec -1 at pH 7.2, 25 degrees). In contrast, binding sites for [3H]cGMP on purified G-kinase displayed positively cooperative interactions in both equilibrium and dissociation assays with convex upward Scatchard plots, an nH of 1.6 and a dissociation rate (kd = 6.2 X 10(-3) sec-1 at pH 6.8, 0 degree) which was slowed by excess unlabeled cGMP (kd = 1.13 X 10(-3) sec-1 at pH 6.8, degree). Calculated transition state free energies of dissociation revealed that dissociation of nucleotide from G-kinase in the presence of cGMP was restrained by an energy barrier (20.8 kcal.mol-1) similar to that of II-R2 (20.9 kcal.mol-1), whereas dissociation from G-kinase without excess nucleotide occurred more easily (18.9 kcal.mol-1).  相似文献   

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H Aiba  J S Krakow 《Biochemistry》1980,19(9):1857-1861
Photoaffinity labeling of the cAMP receptor protein (CRP) of Escherichia coli with 8-azidoadenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (8-N3cAMP) has been demonstrated. 8-N3cAMP is able to support the binding of (3H)d(I-C)n by CRP, indicating that it is a functional cAMP analogue. Following irradiation at 254 nm, (32P)-8-N3cAMP is photocross-linked to CRP. Photolabeling of CRP by (32P)-8-N3cAMP is inhibited by cAMP but not by 5'AMP. The data indicate that (32P)-8-N3cAMP is covalently incorporated following binding at the cAMP binding site of CRP. The (32P)-8-N3cAMP-CRP digested with chymotrypsin was analyzed by NaDodSO4-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Of the incorporated label, one-third remains associated with the amino-proximal alpha core region of CRP [Eilen, E., Pampeno, C., & Krakow, J.S. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 2469] which contains the cAMP binding domain; the remaining two-thirds of the label associated with the beta region are digested. Limited proteolysis of the (32P)-8-N3cAMP-CRP by chymotrypsin in the presence of NaDodSO4 shows the radioactivity to be distributed between the molecular weight 9500 (amino-proximal) and 13,000 (carboxyl-proximal) fragments produced. These results suggest that a part of the carboxyl-proximal region is folded over and close enough to the cAMP binding site to be cross-linked by the photoactivated (32P)-8-N3cAMP bound at the cAMP binding site.  相似文献   

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The cAMP-signaling pathway is composed of multiple components ranging from receptors, G proteins, and adenylyl cyclase to protein kinase A. A common view of the molecular interaction between them is that these molecules are disseminated on the plasma lipid membrane and random collide with each other to transmit signals. A limitation to this idea, however, is that a signaling cascade involving multiple components may not occur rapidly. Caveolae and their principal component, caveolin, have been implicated in transmembrane signaling, particularly in G protein-coupled signaling. We examined whether caveolin interacts with adenylyl cyclase, the membrane-bound enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of ATP to cAMP. When overexpressed in insect cells, types III, IV, and V adenylyl cyclase were localized in caveolin-enriched membrane fractions. Caveolin was coimmunoprecipitated with adenylyl cyclase in tissue homogenates and copurified with a polyhistidine-tagged form of adenylyl cyclase by Ninitrilotriacetic acid resin chromatography in insect cells, suggesting the colocalization of adenylyl cyclase and caveolin in the same microdomain. Further, the regulatory subunit of protein kinase A (RIIalpha, but not RIalpha) was also enriched in the same fraction as caveolin. Gsalpha was found in both caveolin-enriched and non-caveolin-enriched membrane fractions. Our data suggest that the cAMP-signaling cascade occurs within a restricted microdomain of the plasma membrane in a highly organized manner.  相似文献   

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