首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase Type II autophosphorylation in synaptosomes is localized to the cytoskeleton (synaptic junction), while a potent dephosphorylating activity is present in the lipid bilayer. The dephosphorylating activity is operative in intact synaptosomes and in a reconstitution system comprised of the cytoskeletal and Triton X-100 - soluble fractions. Dephosphorylation is inhibited by EDTA and pyrophosphate, but not by EGTA or NaF. The present characterization of endogenous synaptosomal dephosphorylating activity completes the regulatory cycle operating on this enzyme in which phosphorylation of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II inhibits its response to Ca+2 and calmodulin.  相似文献   

2.
A calmodulin-dependent protein kinase has been purified from rat spleen. The enzyme showed a remarkably similar substrate specificity and kinetic parameters to those of rat brain calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, and exhibited cross-reactivity to a monoclonal antibody against rat brain calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, indicating that the enzyme might be a calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II isozyme. The sedimentation coefficient was 13.9S, the Stokes radius was 67 A, and the molecular weight was calculated to be 380,000. The purified enzyme gave five polypeptides bands, corresponding to molecular weights of 51,000, 50,000, 21,000, 20,000, and 18,000, on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Incubation of the purified enzyme with Ca2+, calmodulin, and ATP under phosphorylating conditions induced the phosphorylation of all five polypeptides. When the logarithm of the velocity of the phosphorylation was plotted against the logarithm of the enzyme concentration (van't Hoff plot), slopes of 0.89, 0.94, and 1.1 were obtained for the phosphorylation of the 50/51-kDa doublet, 20/21-kDa doublet, and 18-kDa polypeptide, respectively. These results indicate that the phosphorylation of the five polypeptides is an intramolecular process, and further indicate that all five polypeptides are subunits of this enzyme. Of the five polypeptides, only the 50- and 51-kDa polypeptides bound to [125I]calmodulin, the other polypeptides not binding to it. A number of isozymic forms of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II so far demonstrated in various tissues are known to be composed of subunits with molecular weights of 50,000 to 60,000 which can bind to calmodulin. Thus a new type of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II was demonstrated in the present study.  相似文献   

3.
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV (CaM-kinase IV), a neuronal calmodulin-dependent multifunctional protein kinase, undergoes autophosphorylation in response to Ca2+ and calmodulin, resulting in activation of the enzyme (Frangakis et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 11309-11316). In contrast, the enzyme was phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, leading to a decrease in the enzyme activity. Thus, the results suggest differential regulation of CaM-kinase IV by two representative second messengers, Ca2+ and cAMP.  相似文献   

4.
Autophosphorylation of calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) under limiting conditions (2 microM ATP) decreased progressively with increasing concentrations of a substrate, Pro-Leu-Ala-Arg-Thr-Leu-Ser-Val-Ala-Gly-Leu-Pro-Gly-Lys-Lys (syntide-2), suggesting a competition between the substrate and the autophosphorylation site(s) of the enzyme. The rate and extent of the generation of Ca2+/CaM-independent activity of the enzyme by autophosphorylation were also decreased by the presence of syntide-2. The syntide-2 phosphorylation in the presence of Ca2+/CaM under the limiting conditions reached a steady state, after a lag, when the Ca2+/CaM-independent activity reached a plateau. A linear relationship was observed between the activities in the presence and absence of Ca2+/CaM of the enzyme which had undergone various degrees of autophosphorylation, and the extrapolation of activity in the absence of Ca2+/CaM to zero gave 15-20% of the maximum activity. The steady-state rate of syntide-2 phosphorylation in the presence of Ca2+/CaM by the enzyme that had not undergone prior autophosphorylation was decreased by high concentrations of syntide-2 which suppressed autophosphorylation as well as the generation of Ca2+/CaM-independent activity. These results suggest that although the nonautophosphorylated enzyme possesses a basal low level of Ca2+/CaM-dependent activity, autophosphorylation is required for full activation.  相似文献   

5.
Brain type II Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase was found to phoshorylate smooth muscle myosin, incorporating maximally 2 mol of phosphoryl per mol of myosin, exclusively on the 20,000 dalton light chain subunit. After maximal phosphorylation of myosin or the isolated 20,000 dalton light chain subunit by myosin light chain kinase, the addition of type II Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase led to no further incorporation indicating the two kinases phosphorylated a common site. This conclusion was supported by two dimensional mapping of tryptic digests of myosin phosphorylated by the two kinases. By phosphoamino acid analysis the phosphorylated residue was identified as a serine. The phosphorylation by type II Ca 2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase of myosin resulted in enhancement of its actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity. Taken together, these data strongly support the conclusion that type II Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase phosphorylates the same amino acid residue on the 20,000 dalton light chain subunit of smooth muscle myosin as is phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase and suggest an alternative mechanism for the regulation of actin-myosin interaction.Abbreviations SDS-PAGE Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis - EGTA Ethylene Glycol Bis (-amino-ethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-Tetraacetic Acid - DTT Dithiothreitol - LC20 Gizzard Smooth Muscle Phosphorylatable 20 kDa Myosin Light Chain - LC17 Gizzard Smooth Muscle, 17 kDa Myosin Light Chain - H Chain Gizzard Smooth Muscle 200 kDa Myosin Heavy Chain - TPCK L-1-Tosylamido-2-Phenylethyl Chloromethyl Ketone - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino) Propanesulfonic Acid  相似文献   

6.
Autophosphorylation of the type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase is known to remove the dependence of this enzyme on Ca2+ and calmodulin. The enzymatic activity in the presence of Ca2+, on the other hand, was reported to be unaffected or decreased by this interconversion. The role of autophosphorylation in the kinase reaction was reinvestigated using short assay times and low ATP concentrations to decrease the extent and rate of this process. Under these conditions, the ATP dependence of the kinase reaction with syntide-2 as the substrate (but not the autophosphorylation reaction) exhibited kinetic cooperativity due to a lag in the progress curve of syntide-2 conversion. Partial autophosphorylation of the protein kinase prior to phosphorylation of the peptide substrate completely abolished this hysteretic response without affecting the final rate of substrate conversion. These observations suggest that autophosphorylation is an obligatory step in the response of this kinase to activation by calmodulin.  相似文献   

7.
Modification of the type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase by 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl adenosine (FSBA) resulted in a time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme. The reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and showed a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration. The rate of inactivation was sensitive to Mg2+- and calmodulin-induced conformational changes on the enzyme. However, the enhancing effects of these ligands were not additive; indeed, the kinetic parameters of the Mg2+-stimulated inactivation reaction with FSBA (Kinact = 2.4 mM; kappa max = 0.12 min-1) were almost unaffected by the simultaneous addition of calmodulin (Kinact = 1.5 mM; kappa max = 0.086 min-1). Protection from inactivation by FSBA was provided by Mg2+-ADP which is consistent with modification of the catalytic site. An analysis of the protective effect of Mg2+-ADP in the absence (Kd = 590 microM) and presence (Kd = 68 microM) of calmodulin demonstrated that binding of the modulator protein to the enzyme increases the affinity of the protein kinase for nucleotides. Modification by FSBA resulted in labeling of both Tyr and Lys residues but only labeling of Lys was decreased by Mg2+-ADP which is consistent with the hypothesis that a conserved Lys residue is important in nucleotide binding to the protein kinase. However, the kinetic results of the inactivation reaction suggest that this Lys is not involved in mediating the calmodulin-promoted increase in the affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+-nucleotide complexes.  相似文献   

8.
The primary structure of the neuronal Type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase has been examined by protein sequence analysis and compared to cDNA-derived sequence. Tandem mass spectroscopic analysis was used for the sequence determination. Comparison with published cDNA sequence data for the alpha subunit revealed that the difference between the alpha- and beta-subunits lay in two insertions into the sequence for the alpha-subunit and a short alpha-specific sequence. The N-terminal amino acid of the alpha subunit which is blocked to Edman degradation has been tentatively identified as N-acetyl-alanine.  相似文献   

9.
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II from rat brain underwent autophosphorylation and the autophosphorylation caused a marked decrease in the enzyme activity. Calmodulin-dependent glycogen synthase kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle was also inactivated by incubation under autophosphorylating conditions. The inactivation of the protein kinases by the autophosphorylation may be an important self-regulatory mechanism in controlling the enzyme activities.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Cytoskeletal interactions which contribute to the assembly of the postsynaptic density (PSD) were investigated. PSDs bound 125I-tubulin specifically with an apparent Km of 2 X 10(-7) M and a Bmax of about 1 nmol/mg of protein. 125I-Tubulin blots revealed that a group of polypeptides between Mr 135,000 and 147,000 (P-140) was a major tubulin-binding PSD component. The P-140 polypeptides were highly enriched in the PSD fraction of purified synaptosomes and could not be detected in crude brain cytoplasm preparations. These polypeptides were subject to phosphorylation by endogenous calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II, with a concomitant reduction in 125I-tubulin binding. The tubulin-binding polypeptides could also associate with the radiolabeled alpha- and beta-subunits of the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. These observations are consistent with a role for the P-140 polypeptides in organizing the molecular structure of the PSD. The data also suggest that this structure may be modified by Ca2+-sensitive phosphorylation, thus permitting neuronal activity to modulate the cytoskeletal interactions of the PSD.  相似文献   

12.
A P Kwiatkowski  M M King 《Biochemistry》1987,26(24):7636-7640
The specificity of the ATP-binding site of the type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase was probed with 25 analogues of ATP modified at various positions of the molecule. The analogues were compared by their ability to compete with ATP in the protein kinase reaction. The result of this comparison indicates that the enzyme is most sensitive to modifications at, or replacement of, the purine moiety. Changes at the triphosphate chain are much better tolerated, although the enzyme exhibited a selective sensitivity to changes in the conformation of this group. The smallest contribution to the specificity of ATP binding appears to be made by the ribose ring. The Ki values obtained for a subset of these analogues were compared to those previously reported for phosphorylase b kinase and the cyclic nucleotide dependent protein kinases [Flockhart, D. A., Freist, W., Hoppe, J., Lincoln, T. M., & Corbin, J. D. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 140, 289-295]. A striking similarity in the responses of these protein kinases to modifications of the ATP molecule suggests that the type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase is related to these enzymes. Support for this conclusion was provided, recently, through comparisons of the deduced primary structures of the alpha and beta subunits of the type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase with the protein sequences of the catalytic subunits of phosphorylase b kinase and cAMP-dependent protein kinase [Hanley, R. M., Means, A. R., Ono, T., Kemp, B. E., Burgin, K. E., Waxham, N., & Kelly, P. T. (1987) Science (Washington, D.C.) 237, 293-297; Bennett, M. K., & Kennedy, M. B. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 1794-1798], which indicated areas of extensive homology.  相似文献   

13.
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase phosphatase (CaMKPase) is a protein phosphatase which dephosphorylates autophosphorylated Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) and deactivates the enzyme (Ishida, A., Kameshita, I. and Fujisawa, H. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 1904-1910). In this study, a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation relationship between CaMKII and CaMKPase was examined. CaMKPase was not significantly phosphorylated by CaMKII under the standard phosphorylation conditions but was phosphorylated in the presence of poly-L-lysine, which is a potent activator of CaMKPase. The maximal extent of the phosphorylation was about 1 mol of phosphate per mol of the enzyme and the phosphorylation resulted in an about 2-fold increase in the enzyme activity. Thus, the activity of CaMKPase appears to be regulated through phosphorylation by its target enzyme, CaMKII.  相似文献   

14.
Substrate analog peptides of CaMKII with varying degrees of the inhibitory potency were linked to ATPgammaS either by considering a phosphoryl transfer mechanism or simply by using a relatively long flexible linker. The latter bisubstrate inhibitors showed relatively little effects while the former ones improved inhibitory potency to different levels depending on the binding affinities of the peptide moieties. One of the mechanism-based bisubstrate inhibitors was then utilized to demonstrate an ATP-competitive but peptide substrate-uncompetitive inhibition, supporting an ordered binding mechanism for CaMKII.  相似文献   

15.
Adenylate kinase (ATP:AMP phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.4.3) isolated from porcine skeletal and heart muscle and from rabbit muscle are inactivated when a single arginine residue is modified. In adenylate kinase from pig the modified residue was identified as Arg-97 by peptide-mapping. In native adenylate kinase Arg-97 is located at the bottom of the active site cleft. The protein fluorescence of modified adenylate kinase is reduced. Whereas the addition of AMP, ADP and MgATP quench the fluorescence of native adenylate kinase, the fluorescence of phenylglyoxal-modified adenylate kinase is only affected by ADP and MgATP. This finding is discussed in connection with the structural isomerization observed in native adenylate kinase by X-ray diffraction analysis.  相似文献   

16.
Purified rat brain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) is stimulated by brain gangliosides to a level of about 30% the activity obtained in the presence of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). Of the various gangliosides tested, GT1b was the most potent, giving half-maximal activation at 25 microM. Gangliosides GD1a and GM1 also gave activation, but asialo-GM1 was without effect. Activation was rapid and did not require calcium. The same gangliosides also stimulated the autophosphorylation of CaM-kinase II on serine residues, but did not produce the Ca2+-independent form of the kinase. Ganglioside stimulation of CaM-kinase II was also present in rat brain synaptic membrane fractions. Higher concentrations (125-250 microM) of GT1b, GD1a, and GM1 also inhibited CaM-kinase II activity. This inhibition appears to be substrate-directed, as the extent of inhibition is very dependent on the substrate used. The molecular mechanism of the stimulatory effect of gangliosides was further investigated using a synthetic peptide (CaMK 281-309), which contains the CaM-binding, inhibitory, and autophosphorylation domains of CaM-kinase II. Using purified brain CaM-kinase II in which these regulatory domains were removed by limited proteolysis. CaMK 281-309 strongly inhibited kinase activity (IC50 = 0.2 microM). GT1b completely reversed this inhibition, but did not stimulate phosphorylation of the peptide on threonine-286. These results demonstrate that GT1b can partially mimic the effects of Ca2+/CaM on native CaM-kinase II and on peptide CaMK 281-309.  相似文献   

17.
A prominent role for calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in regulation of excitatory synaptic transmission was proposed two decades ago when it was identified as a major postsynaptic density protein. Since then, fascinating mechanisms optimized to fine-tune the magnitude and locations of CaMKII activity have been revealed. The importance of CaMKII activity and autophosphorylation to synaptic plasticity in vitro, and to a variety of learning and memory paradigms in vivo has been demonstrated. Recent progress brings us closer to understanding the regulation of dendritic CaMKII activity, localization, and expression, and its role in modulating synaptic transmission and cell morphology.  相似文献   

18.
Autophosphorylation of alpha-Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) at Thr(286) results in calmodulin (CaM) trapping, a >10,000-fold decrease in the dissociation rate of CaM from the enzyme. Here we present the first site-directed mutagenesis study on the dissociation of the high affinity complex between CaM and full-length CaM kinase II. We measured dissociation kinetics of CaM and CaM kinase II proteins by using a fluorescently modified CaM that is sensitive to binding to target proteins. In low [Ca(2+)], the phosphorylated mutant kinase F293A and the CaM mutant E120A/M124A exhibited deficient trapping compared with wild-type. In high [Ca(2+)], the CaM mutations E120A, M124A, and E120A/M124A and the CaM kinase II mutations F293A, F293E, N294A, N294P, and R297E increased dissociation rate constants by factors ranging from 2.3 to 116. We have also identified residues in CaM and CaM kinase II that interact in the trapped state by mutant cycle-based analysis, which suggests that interactions between Phe(293) in the kinase and Glu(120) and Met(124) in CaM specifically stabilize the trapped CaM-CaM kinase II complex. Our studies further show that Phe(293) and Asn(294) in CaM kinase II play dual roles, because they likely destabilize the low affinity state of CaM complexed to unphosphorylated kinase but stabilize the trapped state of CaM bound to phosphorylated kinase.  相似文献   

19.
Calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase purified from bovine cardiac muscle catalyzed the rapid dephosphorylation of Ser-95 of bovine cardiac cAMP-dependent protein kinase regulatory subunit (RII). The kinetic constants determined for the reaction (Km = 20 microM; Vmax = 2 mumol min-1 mg-1) are comparable to those determined for other good substrates of this phosphatase. Because little is known about the determinants of substrate specificity for the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase, various phosphopeptides were used to investigate the structural features important for substrate recognition. Limited proteolysis of phospho-RII with trypsin and chymotrypsin yielded fragments (residues 93-400 and 91-400, respectively) that were poor substrates, whereas digestion with Staphylococcal aureus V8 protease produced three phosphopeptides that were all dephosphorylated as rapidly as intact RII. The sequence of the shortest phosphopeptide produced by S. aureus V8 protease was determined by sequence analysis to be Asp-Leu-Asp-Val-Pro-Ile-Pro-Gly-Arg-Phe-Asp-Arg-Arg-Val-Ser-Val-Cys-Ala-Glu, corresponding to residues 81-99 of RII. Synthetic phosphopeptides corresponding to residues 81-99, 85-99, 90-99, and 91-99 were prepared to determine the minimum sequence necessary for substrate recognition. Only the 19-residue peptide (81-99) was dephosphorylated with kinetics comparable to RII (Km = 26 microM, Vmax = 1.7 mumol min-1 mg-1). Structural analysis of this peptide indicates that an amphipathic beta-sheet structure may be an important structural determinant for some substrates of the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2) by Ca2+-, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (protein kinase II) inhibited the actin filament cross-linking activity of MAP 2. This inhibition required the presence of ATP, Mg2+, Ca2+ and calmodulin. The minimal concentration of MAP 2 required for gel formation of actin filaments was increased with increasing amounts of phosphate incorporated into MAP 2, and the phosphorylated MAP 2, into which 10.3 mol of phosphate/mol of protein had been incorporated, did not cause actin filaments to gel under the experimental conditions used. The phosphorylation of MAP 2 by Ca2+-, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase also inhibited the actin filament cross-linking activity of MAP 2. The extent and rate of phosphorylation of MAP 2 by protein kinase II were higher than those of the phosphorylation by protein kinase C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The interaction of actin filaments with MAP 2 was inhibited more by the actions of protein kinase II and protein kinase C than by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The actin filament cross-linking activity of MAP 2 phosphorylated either by protein kinase II, cAMP-dependent protein kinase or protein kinase C was retrieved when phosphorylated MAP 2 was treated by protein phosphatase. These results indicate that the interaction of actin filaments with MAP 2 is regulated by the phosphorylation-dephosphorylation of MAP 2.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号