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1.
The light-activated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of frog photoreceptor membranes has been assayed in isolated outer segments suspended in a low-calcium Ringer's solution. Activation occurs over a range of light intensity that also causes a decrease in the permeability, cyclic GMP levels, and GTP levels of isolated outer segments. At intermediate intensities, PDE activity assumes constant intermediate values determined by the rate of rhodopsin bleaching. Washing causes an increase in maximal enzyme activity. Increasing light intensity from darkness to a level bleaching 5 x 10(3) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second shifts the apparent Michaelis constant (Km) from 100 to 900 microM. Maximum enzyme velocity increases at least 10-fold. The component that normally regulates this light- induced increase in the Km of PDE is removed by the customary sucrose flotation procedures. The presence of 10(-3) M Ca++ increases the light sensitivity of PDE, and maximal activation is caused by illumination bleaching only 5 x 10(2) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second. Calcium acts by increasing enzyme velocity while having little influence on Km. The effect of calcium appears to require a labile component, sensitive to aging of the outer segment preparation. The decrease in the light sensitivity of PDE that can be observed upon lowering the calcium concentration may be related to the desensitization of the permeability change mechanism that occurs during light adaptation of rod photoreceptors.  相似文献   

2.
Frog (Rana catesbiana) rod outer segment disc membranes contain a cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) which is activated by light in the presence of ATP. This enzyme is firmly bound to the disc membrane, but can be eluted from the membrane with 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4 and 2 mM EDTA. The eluted phosphodiesterase has reduced activity, but can be activated approximately 10-fold by polycations such as protamine and polylysine. The eluted phosphodiesterase can no longer be activated by light in the presence of ATP, that is, activation by light apparently depends on the native orientation of phosphodiesterase in relationship to other disc membrane components. The eluted phosphodiesterase was purified to homogeneity as judged by analytical polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and polyacrylamide gel isoelectric focusing. The over-all purification from intact retina was approximately 925-fold. The purification of phosphodiesterase from the isolated rod outer segment preparation was about 185-fold with a 28% yield. Phosphodiesterase accounts for approximately 0.5% of the disc membrane protein. The eluted phosphodiesterase (inactive form) has a sedimentation coefficient of 12.4 S corresponding to an approximate molecular weight of 240,000. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separates the purified phosphodiesterase into two subunits of 120,000 and 110,000 daltons. With cyclic 3':5'-GMP (cGMP) as substrate the Km for the purified phosphodiesterase is 70 muM. Protamine increases the Vmax without changing the Km for cGMP. The isoelectric point (pI) of the native dimer is 5.7. Limited exposure of the eluted phosphodiesterase (inactive form) to trypsin produces a somewhat greater activation than is obtained with 0.5 mg/ml of protamine. The trypsin-activated phosphodiesterase has a sedimentation coefficient of 7.8 S corresponding to an approximate molecular weight of 170,000. The 110,000-dalton subunit is much less sensitive to trypsin hydrolysis and the 120,000-dalton subunit is rapidly replaced by smaller fragments. On the basis of the molecular weight of the purified phosphodiesterase (240,000) and the concentrations of phosphodiesterase and rhodopsin in the rod outer segment, it is estimated that the molar ratio ophosphodiesterase to rhodopsin in the rod outer segment is approximately 1:900. Since all of the disc phosphodiesterase molecules are activated when 0.1% of the rhodopsins are bleached, we conclude that in the presence of ATP 1 molecule of bleached rhodopsin can activate 1 molecule of phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

3.
The light-activated GTP-binding protein (GBP) in toad rod outer segments has been located on the cytoplasmic surface (CS) of rod disk membranes by correlating biochemical results with images of quick- frozen, freeze-fractured, and deep-etched rod outer segments. This has been accomplished by selectively removing and replacing the 8-12-nm particles that are found on the CS of disk membranes, exactly in parallel with the GBP. In contrast, the large particles are not correlated with another major disk enzyme, the light-activated cGMP phosphodiesterase. We have been unable to visualize this protein. The surface density of large particles, one particle per eleven rhodopsins in isolated rod outer segments and one particle per nine rhodopsins in intact retina, correlates well with previous biochemical estimates of GBP numbers based on enzyme activity. After the identification of the large particles, we tested the effects of light on the density of particles on the surface of disk membranes in intact retinas. Retinas quick-frozen at various intervals after a bright flash of light show a modest increase (approximately 30%) in particle density by 10 s after the flash but no increase before 1 s. The number of particles on the disk membrane returns to dark levels between 1 and 10 min after the flash. The 1-s latency in the change of particle binding would appear to rule out this process as a mechanism for initiating phototransduction in the rod.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium-hydrogen exchange in isolated bovine rod outer segments   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have measured Ca-H exchange in rod photoreceptors with different preparations of rod outer segments isolated from bovine retinas (ROS). One preparation contained ROS with an intact plasma membrane (intact ROS), and in the other preparation, the plasma membrane was leaky to small solutes (leaky ROS) and the cytoplasmic space was freely accessible to externally applied solutes. Addition of Ca2+ to Ca2+-depleted ROS (both intact and leaky) resulted in uptake of Ca2+ that was accompanied by the release of protons when catalytic amounts of the ionophore A23187 were present. This ionophore mediates Ca-H exchange transport across ROS membranes and serves to gain access to the intracellular compartment where Ca-H exchange appears to take place. Two protons were ejected for each calcium ion taken up. Conversely, when protons were added to Ca2+-enriched ROS, Ca2+ was released in the presence of A23187. The majority of this Ca-H exchange was observed only when A23187 was present in both intact and leaky ROS. We conclude that Ca-H exchange occurs predominantly in the intradiskal space and at the surface of the disk membrane rather than across the disk membrane. These exchange binding sites can accommodate 10 mol of Ca2+/mol of rhodopsin at physiological pH. We were unable to detect any Ca2+ release when a proton gradient was rapidly established across the disk membrane in the absence of A23187. These results are discussed in relation to the hypothesis that protons produced by the light-induced hydrolysis of cGMP cause the release of Ca2+ into the cytoplasm of rod photoreceptor cells.  相似文献   

5.
The outer segment portion of photoreceptor rod cells is composed of a stacked array of disk membranes. Newly formed disks are found at the base of the rod outer segment (ROS) and are relatively high in membrane cholesterol. Older disks are found at the apical tip of the ROS and are low in membrane cholesterol. Disk membranes were separated based on their membrane cholesterol content and the extent of membrane protein phosphorylation determined. Light induced phosphorylation of ROS disk membrane proteins was investigated using magic angle spinning31P NMR. When intact rod outer segment preparations were stimulated by light, in the presence of endogenously available kinases, membrane proteins located in disks at the base of the ROS were more heavily phosphorylated than those at the tip. SDS-gel electrophoresis of the phosphorylated disk membranes subpopulations identified a phosphoprotein species with a molecular weight of approximately 68–72 kDa that was more heavily phosphorylated in newly formed disks than in old disks. The identity of this phosphoprotein is presently under investigation. When the phosphorylation reaction was carried out in isolated disk membrane preparations with exogenously added co-factors and kinases, there was no preferential protein phosphorylation. Taken collectively, these results suggest that within the ROS there is a protein phosphorylation gradient that maybe indicative of co-factor or kinase heterogeneity.  相似文献   

6.
Cyclic GMP has been implicated in controlling the light-regulated conductance of rod photoreceptors of the vertebrate retina. However, there is little direct evidence correlating changes in cGMP concentration with the light-regulated permeability mechanism in living cells. A preparation of intact frog rod outer segments suspended in a Ringer's medium containing low Ca2+ has been used to demonstrate that initial changes in total cellular cGMP concentration parallel changes in the light-regulated membrane current over a wide range of light intensities. At light intensities bleaching from 160 to 5.6 X 10(6) rhodopsin molecules/rod/s, decreases in the response latency for the cGMP kinetics parallel decreases in the latent period of the electrical response. Further, changes in the rate of the cGMP decrease parallel the rate of membrane current suppression as the light intensity is varied. Up to 10(5) cGMP molecules are hydrolyzed per photolyzed rhodopsin, consistent with in vitro studies showing that each bleached rhodopsin can activate over 100 phosphodiesterase molecules. Addition of the Ca2+ ionophore, A23187, does not affect the initial kinetics of the cGMP decrease or of the electrical response, excluding a direct role for Ca2+ in the initial events of phototransduction. These results are consistent with cGMP being the intracellular messenger that links rhodopsin isomerization with changes in membrane permeability upon illumination. It is unlikely, however, that light-induced changes in total cGMP concentration are the sole regulators of membrane current. This is suggested by several observations: at bright light intensities, the subsecond light-induced cGMP decrease is essentially complete prior to complete suppression of membrane current; maximal light-induced decreases in cGMP concentration occur at all light intensities tested, whereas the extent of membrane current suppression varies over the same range of light intensities; changing the external Ca2+ concentration from 1 mM to 10 nM in the dark causes an increase in membrane current that is significantly more rapid than corresponding changes in cGMP concentration. Thus, light-induced changes in total cellular cGMP concentration correlate with some, but not all, aspects of the visual excitation process in vertebrate photoreceptors.  相似文献   

7.
P J Bauer  E Bamberg    A Fahr 《Biophysical journal》1984,46(1):111-116
Purified bovine rod outer segment disk membranes were attached to a lecithin bilayer membrane. After photoexcitation with a 500-nm flash delivered by a dye laser, a negative photovoltage was observed on the bilayer under normal ionic strengths (100 mM KCl), which had a rise phase of 1-3 ms at 20 degrees C. The photoresponse was obviously due to bleaching of rhodopsin as it decreased for successive flashes of light. It originated most probably during the metarhodopsin-I metarhodopsin-II (meta-I-II) transition of rhodopsin because it was pH dependent at 2 degrees C but not at 20 degrees C. At 10 mM KCl, i.e., under hypotonic conditions, a positive photovoltage with slower kinetics than at high salt was observed. As the disk membranes were merely attached to the bilayer membrane, the photovoltage was apparently due to a light-induced transmembrane potential change in the disk membranes. Possible electrogenic mechanisms underlying the photosignal will be discussed.  相似文献   

8.
GTP-dependent light activation of cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase in bovine rod disc membranes was quenched by ATP. ATP reduced both initial velocity (V0) and turn off time (toff) of phosphodiesterase activated by a flash that bleached 1.5 X 10(-5) of the rhodopsin present. In the absence of rhodopsin kinase, ATP had no effect on either V0 or toff of reconstituted preparations containing phosphodiesterase and GTP*-binding protein. Addition of partially purified rhodopsin kinase to such reconstitutions again permitted ATP to quench both initial velocity and turn off time. It is thus likely that kinase-mediated phosphorylation of bleached rhodopsin reduces and arrests light-induced phosphodiesterase activation. Thermolysin cleavage of rhodopsin's COOH-terminal dodecapeptide eliminated ATP's effect on toff, but did not diminish its effect on V0. Thus, the effects of ATP and kinase on V0 may be mediated by sites proximal to and effects on toff by sites distal to the thermolysin cleavage point at rhodopsin's COOH-terminal end.  相似文献   

9.
The ion permeability properties of dark adapted bovine rod outer segment disk membranes were studied using light scattering to monitor osmotic responses of disks to various salts and ionophores. A preparation procedure is presented which provides very fresh rod outer segment material with mostly intact stacked disks, but with perforated plasma membrane. It is shown that in this preparation the disks (or rod sacs) are the only osmotically responding compartments and that these responses can be readily monitored by means of light-scattering techniques. The disk membrane is found under the conditions tested, to possess no measurable permeability to cations Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+ nor the the anions Cl-, Br-, NO3-, SO4(2-), H2PO4- and HPO4(2-). There is a considerable K+ permeability, which can be completely abolished by millimolar amounts of divalent cations. The proton permeability of the disk membrane is found to depend dramatically upon the preparation procedure and duration. The fresher the material used the lower is the proton permeability measured. In our freshest preparations, even after freeze-thawing in liquid nitrogen, the disks exhibit an H+ permeability which is so low that it cannot be measured with the techniques used in this study. Even in mitochondrial or chloroplast membmranes, in which proton gradients and therefore a low proton conductance play an essential role, such low proton permeabilities have not been found. This would suggest that proton gradients across the disk membrane could play an important role in the physiological function of the photoreceptor cell. In summary it can be said that the disk membrane, apparently more than any other natural membrane system studied so far, is capable of retaining ion gradients for extended periods of time.  相似文献   

10.
A Caretta  P J Stein 《FEBS letters》1987,219(1):97-102
Light triggers the cyclic nucleotide cascade in photoreceptor disk membranes. We report here that light-induced changes in the apparent viscosity of disk membrane suspensions can also be observed using either native disk membranes or washed membranes reconstituted with G protein and PDE. The viscosity changes are light- and GTP-dependent and require the presence of G protein and PDE. The magnitude of the viscosity change increases with increasing membrane concentration. Under the same conditions in which light elicits a change in viscosity, we observe a large increase in light scattering by the disk membrane suspension.  相似文献   

11.
Vertebrate rod photoreceptors in the dark maintain an inward current across the outer segment membrane. The photoresponse results from a light-induced suppression of this dark current. The light-regulated current is not sensitive to either tetrodotoxin or amiloride, potent blockers of Na+ channels. Here, we report that a derivative of amiloride, 3',4'-dichlorobenzamil (DCPA), completely suppresses the dark current and light response recorded from rod photoreceptors. DCPA also blocks a cyclic GMP-activated current in excised patches of rod plasma membrane and a cGMP-induced Ca++ flux from rod disk membranes. These results are consistent with the notion that the Ca++ flux mechanism in the disk membrane and the light-regulated conductance in the plasma membrane are identical. DCPA also inhibits the Na/Ca exchange mechanism in intact rods, but at a 5-10-fold-higher concentration than is required to block the cGMP-activated flux and current. The blocking action of DCPA in 10 nM Ca++ is different from that in 1 mM Ca++, which suggests either that the conductance state of the light-regulated channel may be modified in high and low concentrations of Ca++, or that there may be two ionic channels in the rod outer segment membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Precipitating monospecific antibodies against purified bovine retinal rod outer segment phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) were obtained from rabbit blood serum. These antibodies do not form precipitating complexes with phosphodiesterase isolated from rat or ox brain tissues or from the heart, lung, liver, kidney, testes and uterus of the rat. The antibodies inhibit the activity of retinal rod outer segment phosphodiesterase or that of rat brain, liver, heart and uterus enzyme (despite the lack of precipitation) but have no effect on the phosphodiesterase activity of preparations obtained from rat lungs, kidney or testes. The same effect on the phosphodiesterase activity of all these tissues is exerted by monovalent fragments of the antibodies. Using partially purified preparations of phosphodiesterase from retinal rod outer segments and brain of the ox and from human myometrium, the mechanisms of inhibition of the enzyme catalytic activity by the antibodies was studied. In the presence of the antibodies, the Km and V values appeared to be different, depending on the preparation. It was assumed that a certain site in the phosphodiesterase molecule is characterized by great structural rigidity. Taking into account the shifts in the Km values induced by the antibodies, the differences in the localization of the antigenic determinant in relation to the enzyme active center are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
This study reports the isolation and characterization of a Triton X-100-resistant membrane fraction from homogenates of rod outer segment (ROS) disk membranes purified free of the surrounding plasma membrane. A portion of the ROS disk membrane was found to be resistant to Triton X-100 extraction at 4 degrees C. This detergent-resistant fraction was isolated as a low buoyant density band on sucrose density gradients and exhibited an increase in light scattering detected at 600 nm. Biochemical analysis of the Triton X-100-resistant fraction showed it to be enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin relative to phospholipid and in phospholipid relative to protein compared with the soluble fraction. The Triton X-100-resistant membranes described herein did not arise simply from partial solubilization of the ROS disk membranes because detergent-treated low buoyant density fractions isolated from homogenates with octyl glucopyranoside had cholesterol and sphingomyelin content indistinguishable from that of solubilized ROS disk homogenates. Analysis of proteins associated with the Triton X-100-resistant fraction showed it to be enriched in the rim-specific protein ROM-1 and caveolin; surprisingly, the fusion protein peripherin/rds (where rds is retinal degeneration slow), also localized to the disk rim, was entirely absent from the membrane raft domain. The lipid profiles of the Triton X-100-resistant membranes were virtually identical in preparations homogenized in either the light or dark. Slightly more ROM-1 was recovered from samples prepared in the light (23%) than from samples prepared in the dark (13%), but peripherin/rds could not be detected in either preparation. When the Triton X-100-resistant membranes were treated with methyl-beta-cyclodextran to deplete membrane cholesterol, the resultant membranes contained slightly lower levels of ROM-1, specifically in the dimeric form. Cholesterol depletion also resulted in the collapse of the large caveolin complex to monomeric caveolae. The results presented herein characterize a pool of ROM-1, a photoreceptor tetraspanin protein, that may play a regulatory role in peripherin/rds-dependent fusion.  相似文献   

14.
Rhodopsin-containing retinal rod disk membranes from cattle have been examined by differential scanning calorimetry. Under conditions of 67 mM phosphate pH 7.0, unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes gave a single major endotherm with a temperature of denaturation (Tm) of 71.9 +/- 0.4 degrees C and a thermal unfolding calorimetric enthalpy change (delta Hcal) of 700 +/- 17 kJ/mol rhodopsin. Bleached rod outer segment disk membranes (membranes that had lost their absorbance at 498 nm after exposure to orange light) gave a single major endotherm with a Tm of 55.9 +/- 0.3 degrees C and a delta Hcal of 520 +/- 17 kJ/mol opsin. Neither bleached nor unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes gave endotherms upon thermal rescans. When thermal stability is examined over the pH range of 4-9, the major endotherms of both bleached and unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes were found to show maximum stability at pH 6.1. The observed delta Hcal values for bleached and unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes exhibit membrane concentration dependences which plateau at protein concentrations beyond 1.5 mg/mL. For partially bleached samples of rod outer segment disk membranes, the calorimetric enthalpy change for opsin appears to be somewhat dependent on the degree of bleaching, indicating intramembrane nearest neighbor interactions which affect the unfolding of opsin. Delta Hcal and Tm are particularly useful for assessing stability and testing for completeness of regeneration of rhodopsin from opsin. Other factors such as sample preparation and the presence of low concentrations of ethanol also affect the delta Hcal values while the Tm values remain fairly constant. This shows that the delta Hcal is a sensitive parameter for monitoring environmental changes of rhodopsin and opsin.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the specificity of CAAX box-related isoprenylation of rod photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) subunits expressed in bacteria and the consequences of this modification on rod disk membrane association. Full-length cDNA sequences of the alpha and beta subunits of mouse PDE, inserted into bacterial pET expression vectors, were overexpressed as fusion proteins containing 28 (bMP-alpha) and 26 (bMP-beta) additional amino acid residues at their N termini. Both fusion proteins were overexpressed and stored in inclusion bodies. Purified bMP-alpha and bMP-beta were recognized by bovine PDE-specific polyclonal antibodies, but did not associate with depleted rod disk membranes and were catalytically inactive. Using bovine brain or retina extracts as sources of protein prenyltransferases and tritiated farnesyl- or geranylgeranylpyrophosphate as donors, bMP-alpha (CAAX sequence CCIQ) was exclusively farnesylated, and bMP-beta (CAAX sequence CCIL) was exclusively geranylgeranylated. After isoprenylation, bMP-alpha and bMP-beta each associated with rod photoreceptor outer segment disk membranes under isotonic, but not under hypotonic, conditions. The results indicate that isoprenylated bMP-alpha and bMP-beta each interact independently with membranes and that isoprenylation is the key modification that facilitates membrane association.  相似文献   

16.
Although there have been several reports pertaining to the existence of the cGMP-gated channel in the disk membrane of rod photoreceptors, its density there relative to that of the photoreceptor plasma membrane is unknown. Using immunoblotting, immunohistochemical, and reconstitution techniques on purified disk and plasma membrane preparations, we found that the density of channels in the plasma membrane was at least 50-fold higher than that of the disk membrane. Purification of membrane fractions without prior digestion of cytoskeletal components by mild trypsinization was found to increase the amount of channel protein present in disk membrane preparations. We propose that the presence of the channel protein in rod disk membrane preparations is an artifact arising from fusion of plasma membrane components during permeabilization of the photoreceptor cell.  相似文献   

17.
cGMP influences guanine nucleotide binding to frog photoreceptor G-protein   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A rapid light-induced decrease in cGMP is thought to play a role in regulating the permeability or light sensitivity of photoreceptor membranes. Photo-excited rhodopsin activates a guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein) by catalyzing the exchange of bound GDP for GTP. This G-protein X GTP complex activates the phosphodiesterase resulting in a decrease in cGMP concentration. We have observed two processes in vitro which may be relevant for the regulation of G-protein activation. First, we have found that free GDP binds to G-protein with an affinity similar to that of GTP. These two nucleotides appear to compete for a common site. Since G-protein X GDP does not activate phosphodiesterase, light-induced changes in the GTP/GDP ratio known to occur on illumination may serve to reduce G-protein activation and hence reduce phosphodiesterase activation. Second, addition of cGMP in the presence of equimolar GTP and GDP causes GTP binding to G-protein to be enhanced compared to GDP binding. This effect increases as the cGMP concentration is increased from 0.05 to 2 mM. Thus, light-induced decreases in cGMP concentration may also act as a feedback control in reducing G-protein activation. One or both of these processes may be involved in the desensitization (light adaptation) of rod photoreceptors.  相似文献   

18.
A Sitaramayya 《Biochemistry》1986,25(19):5460-5468
Rhodopsin kinase was extracted into a buffer containing 200 mM KCl and no MgCl2. The activity of the enzyme was stabilized with the use of a mixture of protease inhibitors, aprotinin, benzamidine, leupeptin, and pepstatin. The extract consisted of three major proteins of molecular weight (Mr) 65,000, 56,000, and 37,000, of which the Mr 65,000 protein was identified with the kinase activity since preparations containing the other proteins had no kinase activity and the Mr 65,000 protein was phosphorylated when the extract was incubated with ATP. A reconstituted cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) system consisting of peripheral protein-depleted rod disk membranes (RDM), GTP binding protein (G-protein), and PDE was used to test the effectiveness of the rhodopsin kinase preparation in mediating the ATP-dependent quench of light activation of PDE. In the absence of kinase, light-activated PDE activity lasted several minutes. In its presence, ATP and to a lesser extent GTP quenched the activation about as rapidly as in rod disk membranes. The influence of kinase was unaffected by increasing G-protein or PDE content of the reconstituted system but was slowed down by brighter flashes, showing that quench was caused by the inactivation of bleached rhodopsin and not of PDE or G-protein.  相似文献   

19.
Cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate phosphodiesterase in crude extracts from bovine rod outer segments can be activated by the addition of bleached rod outer segment membranes and GTP. In the absence of rhodopsin-containing membranes, the phosphodiesterase specific activity decreases with increasing concentration. A trypsin-sensitive inhibitor believed to be responsible for this phenomenon can be separated from the phosphodiesterase by DEAE-cellulose chromatography of the crude extract. Phosphodiesterase eluted from the DEAE-cellulose column shows considerably less concentration-dependence than in the crude extract. This partially purified phosphodiesterase was used as the substrate to assay for inhibitor. A GTPase which is active only in the presence of bleached rod outer segment membranes coelutes with the phosphodiesterase and is distinct from the phosphodiesterase inhibitor we have isolated.  相似文献   

20.
A low-Km phosphodiesterase activity, which is acutely stimulated by insulin in vivo, has been identified in plasma membranes and Golgi fractions prepared from rat liver homogenates in isotonic sucrose. Within seconds after insulin injection (25 micrograms/100 g body weight) cAMP phosphodiesterase activity increases by 30-60% in Golgi fractions and by 25% in plasma membranes; activity in crude particulate and microsomal fractions is unaffected. The increase in activity is short-lived in the light and intermediate Golgi fractions, but persists for at least 10 min in the heavy Golgi fraction. It precedes the translocation of insulin and insulin receptors to these fractions, which is maximal at 5 min. The doses of insulin required for half-maximal and maximal activation are, respectively, 7.5 micrograms/100 g and 25 micrograms/100 g body weight. Golgi-associated cAMP phosphodiesterase activity shows non-linear kinetics; a high-affinity component (Vmax, 13 pmol min-1 mg protein-1; Km, 0.35 microM) is detectable. Insulin treatment increases the Vmax 60-70%, but does not affect the Km. Unlike the low-Km cAMP phosphodiesterase associated with crude particulate fractions, the Golgi-associated activity is not easily extractable by solutions of low or high ionic strength. On analytical sucrose density gradients, low-Km cAMP phosphodiesterase associated with the total particulate fraction equilibrates at lower densities than endoplasmic reticulum and lysosomal markers, but at a higher densities than plasma membrane, Golgi markers and insulin receptors. Insulin treatment increases the specific activity of the enzyme by 20-60% at densities below 1.12 g cm-3, and by 20-40% in the density interval 1.23-1.25 g cm-3. Such treatment also causes a slight, but significant shift in the distribution of phosphodiesterase towards lower densities. It is suggested that Golgi elements or physically similar subcellular structures are a major site of localization of insulin-sensitive cAMP phosphodiesterase in rat liver. However, internalization of the insulin-receptor complex is probably not required for enzyme activation.  相似文献   

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