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1.
J S Tash  M J Welsh  A R Means 《Cell》1980,21(1):57-65
Multiple forms of protein kinase inhibitor exist in mammalian testis. Specific antibodies to testicular protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) have been raised in sheep. The antibody to the smallest of the inhibitors (9300 daltons) has been purified by antigen-affinity chromatography and shown to give a precipitin band with the inhibitor by double immunodiffusion. The antibody does not recognize any of the subunits of cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases, namely cGMP-dependent protein kinase or the catalytic or regulatory subunits from type I or type II cAMP-dependent protein kinases. The biological activity of the 9300 dalton PKI is blocked completely by a 5 fold molar excess of antibody. Furthermore, the antibody can also block the activity of all other forms of testicular PKI. Using the antibody in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, PKI localization was examined during interphase and mitosis in a variety of cell types. Our observations indicate that PKI is localized on microtubules in the cytoplasmic microtubule complex during interphase and in the spindle apparatus during mitosis. We suggest that PKI may play a role in the cAMP-dependent regulation of microtubule structure and/or function.  相似文献   

2.
A stimulatory modulator-requiring cyclic nucleotide-independent protein kinase was purified over 400-fold from the extract of fetal calf hearts by the steps of DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-100 chromatographies. The enzyme was activated by stimulatory modulator of cGMP-dependent protein kinase. Inhibitory modulator (protein inhibitor) of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, calcium, phosphatidyl serine and cyclic nucleotides were without effect. The enzyme (3.2 S) was much smaller than the holoenzymes of cGMP- and cAMP-dependent protein kinases. This new species of enzyme thus appears to be similar to the putative catalytic subunit of cGMP-dependent protein kinase previously reported.  相似文献   

3.
Methacholine (3 microM) and sodium nitroprusside (300 microM) increased cGMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratios (activity without cGMP divided by activity with 2 microM cGMP) in canine tracheal smooth muscle from a control value of 0.47 to 0.55 and 0.71, respectively. This correlates with 3-fold and 6-fold increases in cGMP concentrations in response to methacholine and sodium nitroprusside, respectively. Addition of charcoal to the homogenizing buffer prior to homogenization had no significant effect on the cGMP-dependent protein kinase response to either agent, suggesting that activation of the enzyme was not occurring as a result of cGMP release during homogenization. In order to limit cGMP dissociation from cGMP-dependent protein kinase during the assay procedure, it was necessary to perform assays at a reduced temperature (0 degree C) and with an abbreviated incubation time (2.5 min). When assayed at 30 degrees C, activated cGMP-dependent protein kinase rapidly lost activity. This inactivation occurred whether the enzyme had been activated exogenously, by exposing a supernatant fraction of canine trachealis to 0.1 microM cGMP, or endogenously, by treating intact canine trachealis with methacholine or sodium nitroprusside. By assaying instead at 0 degree C, the inactivation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase was minimized. Therefore, the activity ratio obtained by this new modified assay provided an estimate of the endogenous activation state of cGMP-dependent protein kinase. The data indicate that cGMP responses in canine trachealis to both methacholine and sodium nitroprusside are functionally linked to activation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase and are consistent with the hypothesis that cGMP, via cGMP-dependent protein kinase activation, regulates smooth muscle contractility.  相似文献   

4.
We studied regional variation in canine trachealis smooth muscle sensitivity and responsiveness to methacholine as well as basal and methacholine-stimulated adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. The trachea between the cricoid cartilage and the carina was divided into three segments of equal length (designated cervical, middle, and thoracic regions), each consisting of approximately 12-14 cartilage rings. Smooth muscle strips from each of the three regions were exposed to cumulative half-log increments of methacholine chloride. The sensitivity (-log EC50) and responsiveness (force per cross-sectional area and force per milligram protein) of the smooth muscle to methacholine in each region was determined from these data. Smooth muscle strips from cervical and thoracic regions were frozen before and after exposure to cumulative half-log increments of methacholine up to each region's previously determined EC50. Frozen samples were assayed for cAMP content or cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. The relationship between resting tension and methacholine sensitivity and responsiveness were studied. For the size strips we used, 4 g resting tension set the average cervical and thoracic strips at 96 and 101% of their optimal length, respectively. The methacholine EC50 was not affected by a variation in resting tension. Sensitivity to methacholine was 7.1, 6.8, and 6.5 for cervical, middle, and thoracic regions, respectively. The responsiveness of the cervical and thoracic smooth muscle to methacholine was 16.4 and 16.3 g force/mm2, respectively, at an EC50 methacholine. Basal cAMP was lower in cervical smooth muscle than in thoracic. cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratios under both basal and EC50 methacholine-stimulated conditions were lower in cervical smooth muscle than in thoracic. We have observed in trachealis smooth muscle an inverse relationship between methacholine sensitivity and either cAMP or cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. We suggest that cAMP and cAMP-dependent protein kinase play a role in the regulation of airway smooth muscle sensitivity to cholinergic agonists.  相似文献   

5.
The signal transduction mechanisms defining the role of cyclic nucleotides in the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone is currently an area of great interest. Normally, signaling mechanisms that elevate cAMP and guanosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) maintain the pulmonary vasculature in a relaxed state. Modulation of the large-conductance, calcium- and voltage-activated potassium (BK(Ca)) channel is important in the regulation of pulmonary arterial pressure, and inhibition (closing) of the BK(Ca) channel has been implicated in the development of pulmonary hypertension. Accordingly, studies were done to determine the effect of cAMP-elevating agents on BK(Ca) channel activity using patch-clamp studies in pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMC) of the fawn-hooded rat (FHR), a recognized animal model of pulmonary hypertension. Forskolin (10 micro M), a stimulator of adenylate cyclase and an activator of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), and 8-4-chlorophenylthio (CPT)-cAMP (100 micro M), a membrane-permeable derivative of cAMP, opened BK(Ca) channels in single FHR PASMC. Treatment of FHR PASMC with 300 nM KT5823, a selective inhibitor of cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) activity inhibited the effect of both forskolin and CPT-cAMP. In contrast, blocking PKA activation with 300 nM KT5720 had no effect on forskolin or CPT-cAMP-stimulated BK(Ca) channel activity. These results indicate that cAMP-dependent vasodilators activate BK(Ca) channels in PASMC of FHR via PKG-dependent and PKA-independent signaling pathways, which suggests cross-activation between cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases in pulmonary arterial smooth muscle and therefore, a unique signaling pathway for cAMP-induced pulmonary vasodilation.  相似文献   

6.
The rat cerebellum contains a significant amount of cGMP-dependent protein kinase, cAMP-dependent and cyclic nucleotide-independent protein kinases, and a large concentration of protein kinase inhibitors. These inhibitors are thermostable proteins which can be separated by gel chromatography into two molecular forms: the type 1 and type 2 inhibitors of protein kinase (14). The type 1 inhibitor blocks the rat cerebellar cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity while the type 2 inhibitor blocks the cGMP-dependent protein kinase, the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and the cyclic nucleotide-independent protein kinases. The activity of the type 2 inhibitor increased or decreased in opposite direction to changes of cerebellar cGMP content generated by injection of 10 mg/kg harmaline or 2.5 mg diazepam. No changes of type 1 inhibitor were observed under these conditions. The drug-induced shift of type 2 inhibitor of protein kinase was not mediated by changes in protein synthesis because it persisted after pretreatment with cycloheximide. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that cGMP modulates phosphorylation in cerebellum by changing the relationship between cGMP-dependent protein kinase and type 2 inhibitor content.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of adenylyl cyclase type V/VI and cAMP-specific, cGMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase (PDE) 3 and cAMP-specific PDE4 by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) was examined in gastric smooth muscle cells. Expression of PDE3A but not PDE3B was demonstrated by RT-PCR and Western blot. Basal PDE3 and PDE4 activities were present in a ratio of 2:1. Forskolin, isoproterenol, and the PKA activator 5,6-dichloro-1-beta-D-ribofuranosyl benzimidazole 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, SP-isomer, stimulated PDE3A phosphorylation and both PDE3A and PDE4 activities. Phosphorylation of PDE3A and activation of PDE3A and PDE4 were blocked by the PKA inhibitors [protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) and H-89] but not by the PKG inhibitor (KT-5823). Sodium nitroprusside inhibited PDE3 activity and augmented forskolin- and isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP levels; PDE3 inhibition was reversed by blockade of cGMP synthesis. Forskolin stimulated adenylyl cyclase phosphorylation and activity; PKI blocked phosphorylation and enhanced activity. Stimulation of cAMP and inhibition of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-induced Ca(2+) release and muscle contraction by isoproterenol were augmented additively by PDE3 and PDE4 inhibitors. The results indicate that PKA regulates cAMP levels in smooth muscle via stimulatory phosphorylation of PDE3A and PDE4 and inhibitory phosphorylation of adenylyl cyclase type V/VI. Concurrent generation of cGMP inhibits PDE3 activity and augments cAMP levels.  相似文献   

8.
cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinases are homologous proteins and are predicted to exhibit very similar three-dimensional structures. Their cyclic nucleotide binding domains share a high degree of amino acid sequence identity. cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinases are activated relatively specifically by cAMP and cGMP, respectively; and a single alanine-threonine difference between cAMP- and cGMP-binding domains partially accounts for this specificity. Thus, it would be expected that cAMP and cGMP mediate separate physiological effects. However, owing in part to the lack of absolute specificity of either enzyme and to the relatively high level of cAMP or cGMP in certain tissues, it is also possible that either cyclic nucleotide could cross-activate the other kinase. Increases in either cAMP or cGMP cause pig coronary artery relaxation. However, only cGMP-dependent protein kinase specific cyclic nucleotide analogues are very effective in causing relaxation, and cAMP elevation in arteries treated with isoproterenol or forskolin activates cGMP-dependent protein kinase, in addition to cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Conversely, increases in either cAMP or cGMP cause Cl- secretion in T-84 colon carcinoma cells, and the cGMP level in T-84 cells can be elevated sufficiently by bacterial enterotoxin to activate cAMP-dependent protein kinase. These results imply specific regulation of cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinases by the respective cyclic nucleotides, but either cyclic nucleotide is able to cross-activate the other kinase in certain tissues.  相似文献   

9.
Methacholine (3 μM) and sodium nitroprusside (300 μM) increased cGMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratios (activity without cGMP divided by activity with 2 μM cGMP) in canine tracheal smooth muscle from a control value of 0.47 to 0.55 and 0.71, respectively. This correlates with 3-fold and 6-fold increases in cGMP concentrations in response to methacholine and sodium nitroprusside, respectively. Addition of charcoal to the homogenizing buffer prior to homogenization had no significant effect on the cGMP-dependent protein kinase response to either agent, suggesting that activation of the enzyme was not occurring as a result of cGMP release during homogenization. In order to limit cGMP dissociation from cGMP-dependent protein kinase during the assay procedure, it was necessary to perform assays at a reduced temperature (0°C) and with an abbreviated incubation time (2.5 min). When assayed at 30°C, activated cGMP-dependent protein kinase rapidly lost activity. This inactivation occurred whether the enzyme had been activated exogenously, by exposing a supernatant fraction of canine trachealis to 0.1 μM cGMP, or endogenously, by treating intact canine trachealis with methacholine or sodium nitroprusside. By assaying instead at 0°C, the inactivation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase was minimized. Therefore, the activity ratio obtained by this new modified assay provided an estimate of the endogenous activation state of cGMP-dependent protein kinase. The data indicate that cGMP responses in canine trachealis to both methacholine and sodium nitroprusside are functionally linked to activation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase and are consistent with the hypothesis that cGMP, via cGMP-dependent protein kinase activation, regulates smooth muscle contractility.  相似文献   

10.
The search for an unusual cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase in nematodes represented an attempt to gain some insight into the proposed homology of the cAMP and cGMP-dependent protein kinases. Two species of protein kinase were found in high speed supernatants of the mycophagous nematode Aphelenchusavenae. One of the two, bound to DEAE cellulose and was eluted from it in a manner characteristic of the type I cAMP kinase. The enzyme had high affinity for cAMP and dissociated upon binding to the cyclic nucleotide, as judged by the fact that catalytic activity did not bind to a cAMP affinity column. The second enzyme did not bind to DEAE. Unexpectedly, it too had high affinity for cAMP and much lower affinity for cGMP (unlike the cAMPcGMP kinase from insects). The holoenzyme bound tightly to the cAMP affinity column and required a high concentration of the cyclic nucleotide for elution. This latter enzyme is the only example of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase that does not dissociate upon activation.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The phosphorylation of the calmodulin-dependent enzyme myosin light chain kinase, purified from bovine tracheal smooth muscle and human blood platelets, by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and by cGMP-dependent protein kinase was investigated. When myosin light chain kinase which has calmodulin bound is phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, 1 mol of phosphate is incorporated per mol of tracheal myosin light chain kinase or platelet myosin light chain kinase, with no effect on the catalytic activity. Phosphorylation when calmodulin is not bound results in the incorporation of 2 mol of phosphate and significantly decreases the activity. The decrease in myosin light chain kinase activity is due to a 5 to 7-fold increase in the amount of calmodulin required for half-maximal activation of both tracheal and platelet myosin light chain kinase. In contrast to the results with the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, cGMP-dependent protein kinase cannot phosphorylate tracheal myosin light chain kinase in the presence of bound calmodulin. When calmodulin is not bound to tracheal myosin light chain kinase, cGMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylates only one site, and this phosphorylation has no effect on myosin light chain kinase activity. On the other hand, cGMP-dependent protein kinase incorporates phosphate into two sites in platelet myosin light chain kinase when calmodulin is not bound. The sites phosphorylated by the two cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases were compared by two-dimensional peptide mapping following extensive tryptic digestion of the phosphorylated myosin light chain kinases. With respect to the tracheal myosin light chain kinase, the single site phosphorylated by cGMP-dependent protein kinase when calmodulin is not bound appears to be the same site phosphorylated in the tracheal enzyme by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase when calmodulin is bound. With respect to the platelet myosin light chain kinase, the additional site that was phosphorylated by cGMP-dependent protein kinase when calmodulin was not bound was different from that phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

13.
Affinities of the catalytic subunit (C1) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cAMP-dependent protein kinase and of mammalian cGMP-dependent protein kinase were determined for the protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) peptide PKI(6-22)amide and seven analogues. These analogues contained structural alterations in the N-terminal alpha-helix, the C-terminal pseudosubstrate portion, or the central connecting region of the PKI peptide. In all cases, the PKI peptides were appreciably less active as inhibitors of yeast C1 than of mammalian C alpha subunit. Ki values ranged from 5- to 290-fold higher for the yeast enzyme than for its mammalian counterpart. Consistent with these results, yeast C1 exhibited a higher Km for the peptide substrate Kemptide. All of the PKI peptides were even less active against the mammalian cGMP-dependent protein kinase than toward yeast cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and Kemptide was a poorer substrate for the former enzyme. Alignment of amino acid sequences of these homologous protein kinases around residues in the active site of mammalian C alpha subunit known to interact with determinants in the PKI peptide [Knighton, D. R., Zheng, J., Ten Eyck, L. F., Xuong, N-h, Taylor, S. S., & Sowadski, J. M. (1991) Science 253, 414-420] provides a structural basis for the inherently lower affinities of yeast C1 and cGMP-dependent protein kinase for binding peptide inhibitors and substrates. Both yeast cAMP-dependent and mammalian cGMP-dependent protein kinases are missing two of the three acidic residues that interact with arginine-18 in the pseudosubstrate portion of PKI. Further, the cGMP-dependent protein kinase appears to completely lack the hydrophobic/aromatic pocket that recognizes the important phenylalanine-10 residue in the N-terminus of the PKI peptide, and binding of the inhibitor by the yeast protein kinase at this site appears to be partially compromised.  相似文献   

14.
A unique cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
During the course of studying the soluble cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases of a developing insect, three different enzymes were isolated. Two of these were found to be cAMP-dependent enzymes eluting from DEAE-cellulose in a manner identical with protein kinases I and II found in vertebrate muscle. The third enzyme appears to be unique. It has high affinity for either cAMP or cGMP (KA of 43 nM and 25 nM, respectively), the only cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinase described, to have this property. The enzyme has lower affinity for cIMP and cCMP (KA of 160 nM and 340 nM, respectively). Binding to cyclic nucleotide does not alter enzyme size. The KM for ATP is 86 microM, and among several types of histones tried, the slightly lysine-rich subgroup f2a was the best phosphate acceptor. Maximum activity was obtained with 1 mM Mg2+ while Mn2+ was completely ineffective. This new enzyme was purified to homogeneity on a cAMP affinity column as judged by two-dimensional electrophoresis. On the basis of molecular sieving and sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis we have reached the preliminary conclusion that the native enzyme is a dimer of identical subunits with a molecular weight of 180,000. If the mammalian cAMP and cGMP enzymes are indeed homologous proteins, perhaps we have in this new kinase a species that represents a common ancestral protein.  相似文献   

15.
Membrane proteins of Mr 240,000, 130,000, and 85,000 (GS-proteins) were rapidly and selectively phosphorylated in particulate fractions of rabbit aortic smooth muscle in the presence of [Mg-32P]ATP and low concentrations of cGMP (Ka = 0.01 microM) or cAMP (Ka = 0.2 microM). The effects of both cyclic nucleotides in this preparation were mediated entirely by an endogenous, membrane-bound form of cGMP-dependent protein kinase (G-kinase). The GS-proteins were also phosphorylated by the soluble form of G-kinase purified from bovine lung; this effect was most evident following removal of endogenous G-kinase from the membranes using Na2CO3 and high salt washes. The membrane-bound and cytosolic forms of G-kinase phosphorylated the Mr 130,000 GS-protein with the same specificity as determined by two-dimensional peptide mapping. Despite this functional homology between the two forms of G-kinase, only the particulate enzyme appears to play a role in phosphorylating the GS-proteins. Although little endogenous cAMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase) activity was detected in washed aortic smooth muscle membranes, the GS-proteins could be phosphorylated when purified A-kinase catalytic subunit was added to this preparation. Peptide mapping of the Mr 130,000 GS-protein indicated that A-kinase phosphorylated a subset of the same peptides labeled by the two forms of G-kinase. The endogenous A-kinase of rabbit aortic smooth muscle homogenates was also found to phosphorylate the GS-proteins. Since the intracellular concentrations of cGMP or cAMP can be selectively elevated by different stimuli, these results suggest several possible mechanisms by which the phosphorylation state of the GS-proteins may be regulated by cyclic nucleotides: activation of the membrane-bound G-kinase by cGMP or cAMP; and activation of cytosolic A-kinase by cAMP.  相似文献   

16.
Ovariectomized mice were injected daily for 20 days with saline, 17 beta-estradiol (1 microgram/day), progesterone (1 mg/day), or estrogen + progesterone. Mammary glands were removed, homogenized, and analyzed for DNA, cAMP, cGMP, cAMP-dependent protein kinase (kinase A), cGMP-dependent protein kinase (kinase G), tyrosyl kinase (kinase T), and epidermal growth factor-stimulated tyrosyl kinase (EGF-T). Estrogen and progesterone, administered singly, increased DNA, cAMP, kinase A, kinase T, and EGF-T. In addition, progesterone, administered alone or with estrogen, decreased kinase G activity. cGMP concentrations were not altered by estrogen or progesterone. No evidence of a synergism between estrogen and progesterone on the levels of the cyclic nucleotides and the activities of kinase enzyme was observed, although an additive effect of these steroids was seen. These data indicate that ovarian steroid-induced growth of mouse mammary glands is accompanied by significant changes in protein phosphorylation, i.e., increased cAMP-dependent protein phosphorylation and tyrosyl phosphorylation and decreased cGMP-dependent protein phosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
Homogeneous cGMP-dependent protein kinase catalyzes the rapid incorporation of phosphate, specifically into the inhibitory subunit of purified cardiac troponin with a maximal incorporation of 1 mol of phosphate/mol of troponin. When troponin was incubated in the presence of both cGMP- and cAMP-dependent protein kinases, a maximal incorporation of 1 mol of phosphate/mol of troponin was observed which suggested phosphorylation of the same site by the two kinases. Both cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases had similar Km values for troponin, but the Vmax value for the phosphorylation reaction catalyzed by cAMP-dependent protein kinase was 12-fold greater than the value obtained for cGMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

18.
《Insect Biochemistry》1989,19(8):781-788
Cyclic nucleotide-dependent and cyclic nucleotide-independent protein kinase (PK) activities were quantified in the wing-pad epidermis of Locusta migratoria during the fifth larval instar. A low level of cyclic nucleotide-independent PK activity was detected in this tissue, whereas no PK-C (Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent enzyme) activity was found. The main cyclic nucleotide-PK activity was cAMP-PK and large changes were observed during the intermoult. Concomitant increases in cAMP-PK activity and cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of several endogenous polypeptide substrates occurred during the last part of the intermoult cycle. The most marked 32P-incorporation was observed in a 43 kDa polypeptide. These changes could be correlated with the peak of 20-OH-ecdysone in both hemolymph and integument.In vitro incubation of wing-pads with 20-OH-ecdysone (48 h) did not change cAMP-PK activity, but there were major changes in the pattern of endogenous phosphoproteins in particular the appearance of 43 and 45 kDa phosphoproteins. Two-dimensional analysis revealed several groups of phosphorylated spots. The results indicate a close relationship between certain cAMP-dependent phosphorylated polypeptides and the action of 20-OH-ecdysone.  相似文献   

19.
An unusual monomeric cGMP-dependent protein kinase, enriched in cilia, was isolated from Paramecium cilia and whole cells. Cilia and whole cell extracts had relatively high ratios of cGMP-dependent to cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity (1:2). The calculated molecular weight of the native enzyme was 88,000. The enzyme was identified on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels as a 77,000 molecular weight band based on copurification of this protein with enzyme activity, 8-N3-[32P]cAMP labeling, and autophosphorylation. Based on the size of the native enzyme, it was concluded that the kinase is a monomer with cGMP-binding and catalytic activities on the same polypeptide. Dimer-sized cGMP-dependent protein kinase, like that of the well characterized mammalian enzyme, was never seen, despite stringent efforts to control proteolysis. The structure of the Paramecium cGMP-dependent protein kinase supports a model in which the dimeric vertebrate form of the enzyme evolved from an early monomeric form. The catalytic properties of the Paramecium enzyme differed in several respects from those of the mammalian enzyme: it could use GTP or ATP as the phosphoryl donor, it did not phosphorylate Kemptide effectively, and it had poor histone kinase activity with high Mg2+ concentrations. Quercertin, 5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate, indomethacin, and the isoquinolinesulfonamide drug H7 inhibited Paramecium cGMP-dependent protein kinase activity. The enzyme had fast and slow binding sites (with kd values of 5-10 x 10(-3)s-1 and 0.44 x 10(-3)s-1) and showed an order of preference for cyclic nucleotides and cyclic nucleotide analogs similar to that of the mammalian enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The Y1 adrenocortical tumor cell mutants, Kin-7 and Kin-8, harbor point mutations in the regulatory subunit (RI) of the type 1 cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAMPdPK) that render the enzyme resistant to activation by cAMP. These mutants also are resistant to many of the regulatory effects of ACTH and cAMP. In order to examine the causal relationships between the mutations in cAMPdPK and the resistance to ACTH and cAMP, the Kin mutants were transfected with expression vectors encoding wild type subunits of cAMPdPK in order to restore cAMP-responsive protein kinase activity. The transformants then were screened for the concomitant recovery of cellular responsiveness to ACTH and cAMP. In the mutant Kin-7, cAMP-responsive protein kinase activity was recovered after transfection with an expression vector encoding wild type mouse RI. Protein kinase activity in the mutant Kin-8 remained largely cAMP-resistant after transfection with the RI expression vector but could be rendered cAMP-responsive by transfection with an expression vector encoding the wild type catalytic subunit. The recovery of cAMP-responsive protein kinase activity was accompanied by the recovery of steroidogenic and morphological responses to ACTH and cAMP, suggesting that the cAMP-dependent signaling cascade plays an obligatory role in these actions of ACTH. The growth-regulatory effects of cAMP were not reversed with the recovery of cAMP-responsive protein kinase activity, suggesting that cAMP-resistant growth regulation results from second-site, adaptive mutations either in the original Kin mutant population or in the transformants. Studies on the conversion of 22(R)-hydroxycholesterol into steroid products in parent and mutant cells indicate that the Kin mutations reduce the steroidogenic capacity of the cell as well as inhibit the hormone- and cyclic nucleotide-dependent mobilization of substrate cholesterol.  相似文献   

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