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1.
pineal acetyl-CoA hydrolase is measurable at 4 days before birth. It increases rapidly to a maximum of 0.37 nmol/min/0.1 mg protein during the first week after birth, thereafter gradually decreasing and stabilizing at adult levels (0.27 nmol/min/0.1 mg protein) 3-4 weeks after birth. Unlike A/-acetyltransferase, the activity of acetyl-CoA hydrolase does not increase following treatment with isoproterenol, does not exhibit a circadian rhythm and is not inactivated on exposure of the animals to light at night. In addition, denervation of the pineal gland does not alter acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity.  相似文献   

2.
Rat pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activity in crude homogenates is reduced by treatment with disulfides. Cystamine (IC50 = 128 microM) and selenocystamine (IC50 = 13 microM) are the most potent compounds tested. Reduced cystamine (cysteamine) and diaminohexane are inactive. N,N'-Diacetylcystamine, penicillamine disulfide, and glutathione disulfide are less potent or inactive; but several peptides (oxytocin, vasopressin, and arginine vasotocin) are active. Inactivation by cystamine is time- and temperature-dependent and is accelerated at higher pH. Disulfide treatment of intact pinealocytes also inactivates the enzyme. Addition of dithiothreitol during the enzyme assay completely reactivates inactivated enzyme formed by disulfide treatment of homogenates or intact cells. Rat hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase is also inactivated in the absence of added disulfides and dissolved O2. This spontaneous inactivation is time-, temperature-, and pH-dependent and can be completely prevented, but not reversed, by dithiothreitol. In contrast to the inhibitory effects of cystamine on the rat enzyme, cystamine does not alter bovine hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase and increases ovine hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activity. The bovine and ovine enzymes do not become inactive in the absence of added disulfides. Together these observations indicate that rat pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase can be inactivated by a protein thiol:disulfide exchange mechanism. This mechanism may contribute to the physiological regulation of this enzyme in the rat pineal gland but does not appear to be a common feature of pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase regulation in all species.  相似文献   

3.
Using intact pinealocytes in suspended cell culture it has been determined that acetyl CoA hydrolase activity can be rapidly increased by treatment with cystamine. Similar results are seen with diacetylcystamine, but not with GSSG, penicillamine disulfide, nor with oxidized DTT. The activation of acetyl CoA hydrolase by cystamine is reversible: after cystamine treatment is terminated, enzyme activity decreases slowly in cell culture. It is also possible to reverse the activation by treating homogenates of cystamine-treated cells with dithiothreitol. These observations are consistent with previous findings indicating that pineal acetyl CoA hydrolase activity can be regulated via protein thiol: disulfide exchange. The observations presented in this report also indicate that conditions within the cell allow this type of reaction to take place, and raise the possibility that disulfide exchange mechanisms may be physiologically involved in the intracellular regulation of the activity of this and perhaps other enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Partially purified tryptophan-5-monooxygenase (L-tryptophan, tetrahydropteridine: oxygen oxidoreductase (5-hydroxylating) EC 1.14.16.4)from bovine pineal gland was activated by preincubation with sulfhydryl agents such as dithiothreitol, L-cysteine, cysteamine, L-cysteine ethylester, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, 2-mercaptoethanol and reduced glutathione, at alkaline pH (optimum pH equals 8.5). Dithiothreitol was the most effective of these, leading to approximately 50-fold activation of the enzyme after preincubation. Fe-2+ or other reducing agents such as borohydride, dithionite and ascorbate facilitated the velocity of the activation in the presence of sulfhydryl agents. In the absence of sulfhydryl agents, no activation was observed even in the presence of Fe-2+ or other reducing agents, suggesting an obligatory role or sulhydryl agents during the activation. The relative velocity and full extent of the activation were dependent on the concentrations of both the sulfhydryl agent and the enzyme in the activation mixture. The kinetic analysis of the activation indicated that the sulfhydryl agent reacts with more than 2 sites in the enzyme; one type of site is reduced by sulfhydryl agents, Fe-2+ or other reducing agents and the other specifically modified by a sulfhydryl agent. The activated enzyme did not require any exogenous Fe-2+ for its catalytic activity, but some roles of iron maybe exist in its catalytic reaction. The optimum pH for catalytic reaction of the activated enzyme was approximately 6.5. The apparent Km for L-tryptophan and pteridine cofactor, tetrahydro-pteridine (2-amino-4-hydroxy-6,7-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin), of the activated enzyme were 30 and 35 muM respectively.  相似文献   

5.
Acetyl-CoA hydrolase, which hydrolyzes acetyl-CoA to acetate and CoASH, was isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and demonstrated by protein sequence analysis to be NH2-terminally blocked. The enzyme was purified 1080-fold to apparent homogeneity by successive purification steps using DEAE-Sepharose, gel filtration and hydroxylapatite. The molecular mass of the native yeast acetyl-CoA hydrolase was estimated to be 64 +/- 5 kDa by gel-filtration chromatography. SDS/PAGE analysis revealed that the denatured molecular mass was 65 +/- 2 kDa and together with that for the native enzyme indicates that yeast acetyl-CoA hydrolase was monomeric. The enzyme had a pH optimum near 8.0 and its pI was approximately 5.8. Several acyl-CoA derivatives of varying chain length were tested as substrates for yeast acetyl-CoA hydrolase. Although acetyl-CoA hydrolase was relatively specific for acetyl-CoA, longer acyl-chain CoAs were also hydrolyzed and were capable of functioning as inhibitors during the hydrolysis of acetyl-CoA. Among a series of divalent cations, Zn2+ was demonstrated to be the most potent inhibitor. The enzyme was inactivated by chemical modification with diethyl pyrocarbonate, a histidine-modifying reagent.  相似文献   

6.
The discovery of a cold-labile cytosolic acetyl-CoA hydrolase of high activity in rat liver by Prass et al. [(1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 5215-5223] has questioned the importance of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase for the formation of free acetate [Grigat et al. (1979) Biochem. J. 177, 71-79] under physiological conditions. Therefore this problem has been reevaluated by comparing various properties of the two enzymes. Cold-labile cytosolic acetyl-CoA hydrolase bands with an apparent Mr of 68000 during SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, while the native enzyme elutes in two peaks with apparent Mr of 136000 and 245000 during gel chromatography in the presence of 2 mM ATP. The mitochondrial enzyme elutes under the same conditions with an apparent Mr of 157000. Under conditions where the cold-labile enzyme binds strongly to DEAE-Bio-Gel and ATP-agarose, the mitochondrial enzyme remains unbound. The cold-labile enzyme can be activated 14-fold by ATP, half-maximal activation occurring already at 40 microM ATP. AdoPP[NH]P, AdoPP[CH2]P and GTP have a similar though weaker effect. ADP as well as GDP can completely inhibit the cold-labile enzyme with 50% inhibition occurring for both nucleotides at about 1.45 microM. The binding of ATP and ADP is competitive. Acetyl phosphate and pyrophosphate have no effect on the activity of the cold-labile enzyme. The mitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase is not affected by these nucleotides. CoASH is a strong product inhibitor (approximately equal to 80% inhibition at 40 microM CoASH) of the cold-labile enzyme, but only a weak inhibitor of the mitochondrial enzyme. Under in vivo conditions the activity of the cold-labile cytosolic acetyl-CoA hydrolase can be no more than 7% of the activity calculated for mitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase under the same conditions. Accordingly the mitochondrial enzyme seems to be mainly responsible for the formation of free acetate by the intact liver, especially in view of the fact that the substrate specificity of the mitochondrial enzyme is much higher (activity ratios acetyl-CoA/butyryl-CoA 4.99 and 1.16 for the mitochondrial and the cold-labile enzyme respectively). Alloxan diabetes neither increased the activity of the cold-labile enzyme nor that of the mitochondrial enzyme. No experimental support has been found yet for the hypothesis that the acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity of the cold-labile enzyme represents the side-activity of an acetyl-transferase.  相似文献   

7.
A mitochondrial short chain acyl-CoA hydrolase, purified 1375-fold from rat brain, has a molecular weight of approximately 1.55 × 105, a pH optimum of 8.1, an ionic strength optimum for activity and stability of 100–300 mM, is product activated by acetate and inhibited by DL-lipoic acid (Ki ? 5 μM) and 0.1 M orthophosphate (>50%). Acetyl, propionyl, butyryl, succinyl, acetoacetyl, malonyl and octanoyl-CoA are substrates. The highest maximum velocity and product activation was observed with acetyl-CoA as substrate.  相似文献   

8.
Both temperature-stable and temperature-labile testicular cholesteryl ester hydrolases are shown to be regulated by an endogenous cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. The temperature-stable form (Mr = 28,000) was activated 3-fold by the endogenous kinase. This activation was completely blocked by protein kinase inhibitor. Following purification by high performance gel permeation chromatography, the temperature-stable form could also be activated 2-fold by bovine heart protein kinase, type I. The partially purified endogenous protein kinase, type I, which was completely separated from hydrolase activity by ion exchange chromatography, increased hydrolase activity 2-fold in the presence of optimal concentrations of cAMP, ATP, and Mg2+. Cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity could be stabilized indefinitely at -10 degrees C with the addition of 0.1 mM thioglycolate, but not by other thiol reagents. In contrast, the endogenous protein kinase activity was lost from 104,000 X g supernatants after 14 days. However, the property of activation could be restored by addition of bovine heart protein kinase. The temperature-labile hydrolase (Mr = 72,000) could be totally inactivated by a Mg2+-dependent, fluoride-sensitive cytosolic factor and reactivated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. These observations strongly suggest that the inactivating factor is a phosphoprotein phosphatase.  相似文献   

9.
(S)-adenosylmethionine (SAM) is a critical element of melatonin synthesis as the methyl donor in the last step of the pathway, the O-methylation of N-acetyl 5-hydroxytryptamine by hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase. The activity of the enzyme that synthesizes SAM, methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT), increases 2.5-fold at night in the pineal gland. In this study, we found that pineal MAT2A mRNA and the protein it encodes, MAT II, also increase at night, suggesting that the increase in MAT activity is caused by an increase in MAT II gene products. The night levels of MAT2A mRNA in the pineal gland were severalfold higher than in other neural and non-neural tissues examined, consistent with the requirement for SAM in melatonin synthesis. Related studies indicate that the nocturnal increase in MAT2A mRNA is caused by activation of a well described neural pathway that mediates photoneural-circadian regulation of the pineal gland. MAT2A mRNA and MAT II protein were increased in organ culture by treatment with norepinephrine (NE), the sympathetic neurotransmitter that stimulates the pineal gland at night. NE is known to markedly elevate pineal cAMP, and here it was found that cAMP agonists elevate MAT2A mRNA levels by increasing MAT2A mRNA synthesis and that drugs that block cAMP activation of cAMP dependent protein kinase block effects of NE. Therefore, the NE-cAMP dependent increase in pineal MAT activity seems to reflect an increase in MAT II protein, which occurs in response to cAMP-->protein kinase-dependent increased MAT2A expression. The existence of this MAT regulatory system underscores the importance that MAT plays in melatonin biogenesis. These studies also point to the possibility that SAM production in other tissues might be regulated through cAMP.  相似文献   

10.
The regulation of purified glutathione S-transferase from rat liver microsomes was studied by examining the effects of various sulfhydryl reagents on enzyme activity with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as the substrate. Diamide (4 mM), cystamine (5 mM), and N-ethylmaleimide (1 mM) increased the microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity by 3-, 2-, and 10-fold, respectively, in absence of glutathione; glutathione disulfide had no effect. In presence of glutathione, microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity was increased 10-fold by diamide (0.5 mM), but the activation of the transferase by N-ethylmaleimide or cystamine was only slightly affected by presence of glutathione. The activation of microsomal glutathione S-transferase by diamide or cystamine was reversed by the addition of dithiothreitol. Glutathione disulfide increased microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity only when membrane-bound enzyme was used. These results indicate that microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity may be regulated by reversible thiol/disulfide exchange and that mixed disulfide formation of the microsomal glutathione S-transferase with glutathione disulfide may be catalyzed enzymatically in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
L Orning  F A Fitzpatrick 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4218-4223
Albumins from several species activated the bifunctional, Zn2+ metalloenzyme amino-peptidase/leukotriene A4 hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.6). Bovine serum albumin, 1 mg/mL, increased hydrolysis of L-proline-p-nitroanilide and leucine-enkephalin by 12-fold and 7-fold, respectively. The apparent Km for L-proline-p-nitroanilide was inversely proportional to the albumin concentration from 0 to 1 mg/mL, declining from 9.4 to 0.7 mM without an appreciable change in apparent Vmax. These data imply a random activation process in which the enzyme-activator complex is catalytically dominant. Hill plots indicated a 1:1 stoichiometric relationship between albumin and enzyme. Secondary plots of slope versus the reciprocal of albumin concentration indicated that it binds to the enzyme with an affinity constant of 0.9 microM. The pH optimum of the nonactivated enzyme occurred at pH 8; the albumin-activated enzyme had an optimum near pH 7. Neither ultrafiltration nor dialysis of albumin altered its activating effect, but boiling abolished it. Albumin did not affect other cytosolic or microsomal leucine aminopeptidases, or gamma-glutamyltransferase. Albumin functions as a nonessential activator, since enzymatic activity was always detectable in its absence. Chloride ions, which activate other Zn2+ metalloenzymes, also activated leukotriene A4 hydrolase/aminopeptidase with an EC50 = 50 mM, increasing its initial velocity 2.2-fold in the absence of albumin. Zn2+ activated the enzyme, increasing its apparent Vmax but not its apparent Km, suggesting it replaced Zn2+ lost from the active site, especially at acidic pH. At concentrations greater than 30-50 microM, Zn2+ was inhibitory. Albumin mitigated the effect of chloride, but not the effect of Zn2+ or that of the competitive inhibitor, captopril.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Cold labile extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase (dimeric form) purified from rat liver was activated by various nucleoside triphosphates and inhibited by various nucleoside diphosphates. Activation of acetyl-CoA hydrolase by ATP was inhibited by a low concentration of ADP (Ki congruent to 6.8 microM) or a high concentration of AMP (Ki congruent to 2.3 mM). ADP and AMP were competitive inhibitors of ATP. A Scatchard plot of the binding of ATP to acetyl-CoA hydrolase (dimer) at room temperature gave a value of 25 microM for the dissociation constant with at least 2 binding sites/mol of dimer. Cold-treated monomeric enzyme also associated with ATP-agarose, suggesting that the monomeric form of the enzyme also has a nucleotide binding site(s), probably at least 1 binding site/mol of monomer. Phenylglyoxal or 2,3-butanedione, both of which modify arginyl residues of protein, inactivated acetyl-CoA hydrolase. ATP (an activator) greatly protected acetyl-CoA hydrolase from inactivation by these reagents, while ADP (an inhibitor) greatly (a substratelike, competitive inhibitor), and CoASH (a product) were less effective. However, addition of ADP plus valeryl-CoA (or CoASH) effectively prevented the inactivation by 2,3-butanedione, but that is not the case for phenylglyoxal. These results suggest that one or more arginyl residues are involved in the nucleotide binding site of extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase and that their nucleotide binding sites locate near the substrate binding site.  相似文献   

13.
In experimental rat liver perfusion we observed net production of free acetate accompanied by accelerated ketogenesis with long-chain fatty acids. Mitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase, responsible for the production of free acetate, was found to be inhibited by the free form of CoA in a competitive manner and activated by reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH). The conditions under which the ketogenesis was accelerated favored activation of the hydrolase by dropping free CoA and elevating NADH levels. Free acetate was barely metabolized in the liver because of low affinity, high K(m), of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) synthetase for acetate. Therefore, infused ethanol was oxidized only to acetate, which was entirely excreted into the perfusate. The acetyl-CoA synthetase in the heart mitochondria was much lower in K(m) than it was in the liver, thus the heart mitochondria was capable of oxidizing free acetate as fast as other respiratory substrates, such as succinate. These results indicate that rat liver produces free acetate as a byproduct of ketogenesis and may supply free acetate, as in the case of ketone bodies, to extrahepatic tissues as fuel.  相似文献   

14.
1. The nature of the acetyl-CoA hydrolase (EC 3.1.2.1) reaction in rat and sheep liver homogenates was investigated. 2. The activity determined in an incubated system was 5.10 and 3.28nmol/min per mg of protein for rat and sheep liver homogenate respectively. This activity was not affected by the addition of l-carnitine, but was decreased by the addition of d-carnitine. 3. No acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity could be detected in rat or sheep liver homogenates first treated with Sephadex G-25. This treatment decreased the carnitine concentrations of the homogenates to about one-twentieth. Subsequent addition of l-carnitine, but not d-carnitine, restored the apparent acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity. 4. Sephadex treatment did not affect acetyl-carnitine hydrolase activity of the homogenates, which was 5.8 and 8.1nmol/min per mg of protein respectively for rat and sheep liver. 5. Direct spectrophotometric assay of acetyl-CoA hydrolase, based on the reaction of CoA released with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), clearly demonstrated that after Sephadex treatment no activity could be measured. 6. Carnitine acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.7) activity measured in the same assay system in response to added l-carnitine was very low in normal rat liver homogenates, owing to the apparent high acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity, but was increased markedly after Sephadex treatment. The V(max.) for this enzyme in rat liver homogenates was increased from 3.4 to 14.8nmol/min per mg of protein whereas the K(m) for l-carnitine was decreased from 936 to 32mum after Sephadex treatment. 7. Acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity could be demonstrated in disrupted rat liver mitochondria but not in separated outer or inner mitochondrial membrane fractions. Activity could be demonstrated after recombination of outer and inner mitochondrial membrane fractions. The outer mitochondrial membrane fraction showed acetylcarnitine hydrolase activity and the inner mitochondrial membrane fraction showed carnitine acetyltransferase activity. 8. The results presented here demonstrate that acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity in rat and sheep liver is an artifact and the activity is due to the combined activity of carnitine acetyltransferase and acetylcarnitine hydrolase.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract— Bovine pineal gland S-adenosylmethionine: N-acetylserotonin O-methyltransferase has been purified about 2800-fold using cell fractionation, ammonium sulphate treatment, Sephadex G-200 gel filtration and anion exchange chromatography. The enzyme has been found to be a polymer; the smallest unit observed had a mol. wt. of 21,800 and the other polymers' molecular weights were multiples of this figure. In the gland extract polymers of 83,000, 100,000, 125,000 and 150,000 mol. wt. were more abundant than the others; they showed also higher specific activity. One of the products of the reaction, S-adenosylhomocysteine was found to be a potent inhibitor, whereas the other product, melatonin, did not inhibit the bovine pineal gland enzyme, even at much higher concentrations. Homocysteic acid, cysteic acid, GSG and GSSG inhibited the enzyme. The required concentrations for this effect was 100 times higher than that of S-adenosylhomocysteine. The addition of GSH to the medium during purification led to complete loss of activity. Adenosine, homocysteine and other thio compounds had little or no effect. The enzyme was found to be activated by its substrates and also by certain anions. Among various organic acid salts, citric acid cycle intermediates were found to be good activators; their nonsubstituted analogues were not as effective. The activator effect of oxaloacetate and bicarbonate was the highest, and was brought about by relatively low concentrations of these anions (1–5 × 10?3 M), hence their effect was considered specific. The degree of activation caused by oxaloacetate was decreased by increasing substrate concentrations and vice versa. The S-adenosylhomocysteine inhibition could not be reduced by increasing the substrate concentration; S-adenosylhomocysteine also inhibited the oxaloacetate-activated enzyme. These observations have been explained by the allosteric behaviour of the enzyme. The kinetic behaviour of various polymers was also investigated. The highest substrate and oxaloacetate activation and the highest S-adenosylhomocysteine inhibition was observed for polymers of 83,000, 100,000, 125,000 and 150,000 mol. wt. The Km values for S-adenosylmethionine and N-acetylserotonin calculated for the oxaloacetate activated enzyme were also lower for these polymers than others.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Abstract— Tryptophan-5-mono-oxygenase from both bovine raphe nuclei and pineal glands was activated by preincubation with dithiothreitol and ferrous ion at pH 8.5. The optimum pH for the enzyme activity lies between pH 6.4 and 7.3. Preincubation increased the activity of the enzyme from raphe nuclei by about 20 times in both the homogenate and 105,000 g precipitate prepared from it. Activity in the 105,000 g supernatant fraction was about trebled. Corresponding increases in pineal gland enzyme activity were noted: 100 times in homogenate and 105,000 g precipitate and 15 times in 105,000 g supernatant fluid. Total recoveries of activated enzyme from the homogenate prepared in hypo-osmotic medium, in the 105,000 g supernatant and precipitate, were 87.1% and 79.0% for raphe nuclei and pineal glands respectively. Of this, 89.5-91.3% in the case of the raphe nuclei and 76.0-82.0% in the case of the pineal glands, was found in the precipitate. In contrast, 85-90% of the lactate dehydrogenase activity was found in the supernatant fraction. The results of subcellular fractionation revealed that the raphe nuclear enzyme was located in both 'mitochondrial' and 'microsomal' fraction while the pineal gland enzyme was effectively restricted to the 'mitochondrial' fraction. The structural characteristics of the fraction were confirmed by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

18.
ATP-citrate lyase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase purified from lactating rat mammary gland are phosphorylated stoichiometrically by the calmodulin-dependent multiprotein kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle. The reactions are completely dependent on the presence of both Ca2+ and calmodulin. ATP-citrate lyase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase are also phosphorylated stoichiometrically by the Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) purified from bovine brain. Phosphorylation of these substrates is stimulated 6-fold and 40-fold respectively by Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine. The calmodulin-dependent and phospholipid-dependent protein kinases phosphorylate the same serine residue on ATP-citrate lyase that is phosphorylated by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. The sequence of the tryptic peptide containing this site on the mammary enzyme is identical with the sequence of the peptide containing the site on ATP-citrate lyase that is phosphorylated in isolated hepatocytes in response to insulin and/or glucagon. The calmodulin-dependent, phospholipid-dependent and cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinases phosphorylate distinct sites on acetyl-CoA carboxylase. However, one of the three phosphorylated tryptic peptides derived from enzyme treated with the phospholipid-dependent kinase is identical with the major phosphopeptide (T1) derived from enzyme treated with cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. Phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase by the phospholipid-dependent protein kinase inactivates acetyl-CoA carboxylase in a similar manner to cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. With either protein kinase slightly greater phosphorylation and inactivation is seen after pretreatment of acetyl-CoA carboxylase with protein phosphatase-2A, but the effects of the protein phosphatase treatment are not completely reversed. Inactivation by the phospholipid-dependent protein kinase is Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent, is reversed by protein phosphatase-2A, and correlates with the degree of phosphorylation. The relevance of these findings to insulin- and growth-factor-promoted phosphorylation of ATP-citrate lyase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase in intact cells is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Hormone-sensitive lipase and cholesterol ester hydrolase of chicken adipose tissue were markedly activated by adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase (on the average, 235 to 275%; occasionally as much as 1000%). Diglyceride and monoglyceride hydrolases were also activated, but to a lesser extent (60 to 87%). The activation of all four hydrolases was inhibited by protein kinase inhibitor and reversed by the addition of exogenous protein kinase. Following activation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, all four hydrolases were deactivated in a Mg2+-dependent reaction and then reactivated to or near initial levels on incubation with cAMP and Mg2+-ATP. The reversible deactivation is assumed to reflect activity of one or more protein phosphatases. The maximum activation obtainable for the four hydrolases decreased when the tissue had been previously exposed to glucagon, indicating that the glucagon-induced activation was probably similar to or identical with the activation demonstrated in cell-free preparations. The pH optima for the four hydrolase activities were similar (7.13 to 7.38). Although the absolute activities and relative degrees of kinase activation differed according to the particular emulsified substrates used, the results do not rule out the possibility that all four hydrolase activities are referable to a single hormone-sensitive hydrolase. Hormone-sensitive acyl hydrolases were separated from lipoprotein lipase by heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Lipoprotein lipase was active against triolein, diolein, and monoolein, but not cholesterol oleate. Incubation of lipoprotein lipase with exogenous protein kinase, cAMP, and Mg2+ATP had no effect on any of the three hydrolase activities. Lipoprotein lipase was further purified to homogeneity and used to prepare antiserum in rabbits. The immunoglobin G fraction from these antisera completely inhibited lipoprotein lipase eluted from heparin-Sepharose columns. However, the hormone-sensitive hydrolase activities (not retained on heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography) were not inhibited by anti-lipoprotein lipase immunoglobin G, and anti-lopoprotein lipase immunoglobin G did not affect the activation process in crude fractions. Thus, hormone-sensitive lipase and lipoprotein lipase, functionally distinct enzymes, have been physically resolved and immunochemically distinguished. Apparently lipoprotein lipase activity is not regulated, at least directly, by cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

20.
Rhythmic noradrenergic signaling from the hypothalamic clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus to the pineal gland causes an increase in intracellular cAMP which regulates the circadian fluctuation of melatonin synthesis. The activation of phospholipase C (PLC)-coupled P2Y(2) receptors upon treatment with ATP and UTP exclusively inhibited the isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP production in mouse pineal gland tumor cells. However, the activation of other PLC-coupled receptors including P2Y(1) and bombesin receptors had little or no effect on the isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP production. Also, ATP did not inhibit cAMP production caused by forskolin, prostaglandin E(2), or the adenosine analog NECA. These results suggest a selective coupling between signalings of P2Y(2) and beta(2)-adrenergic receptors. The binding of [(3)H]CGP12177 to beta(2)-adrenergic receptors was not effected by the presence of ATP or UTP. Ionomycin decreased the isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP production, whereas phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate slightly potentiated the isoproterenol response. Chelation of intracellular Ca(2+), however, had little effect on the ATP-induced inhibition of cAMP production, while it completely reversed the ionomycin-induced inhibition. Treatment of cells with pertussis toxin almost completely blocked the inhibitory effect of nucleotides. Pertussis toxin also inhibited the nucleotide-induced increase in intracellular Ca(2+) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate production by 30-40%, suggesting that the ATP-mediated inhibition of the cAMP generation and the partial activation of PLC are mediated by pertussis toxin-sensitive G(i)-protein. We conclude that one of the functions of P2Y(2) receptors on the pineal gland is the selective inhibition of beta-adrenergic receptor-mediated signaling pathways via the inhibitory G-proteins.  相似文献   

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