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1.
Properties of the gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Enzymatic properties of the isolated, active gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase were characterized. Kinetic parameters indicated that the gamma subunit binds the substrates MgATP and phosphorylase b as well as the holoenzyme with a Km (MgATP) of 98 microM and a Km (phosphorylase b) of 80 microM at pH 8.2, but maximal velocities are significantly lower than the holoenzyme's. Unlike the gamma-calmodulin complex, the gamma subunit activity is dependent on pH in the range of pH 6.2-9.0, with a ratio of activity at pH 6.8 to activity at pH 8.2 of 0.5-0.6. Calmodulin activates the gamma subunit more at low pH than at high pH. ADP inhibits the gamma subunit in a competitive manner with a Ki of 60 microM. Free Mg2+ stimulates gamma subunit activity 3.5-fold at both pH 6.8 and 8.2. MnATP is equivalent to MgATP as a substrate for the enzyme, but free Mn2+ inhibits gamma subunit activity. Several protein substrates of holophosphorylase kinase were found also to be phosphorylated by the gamma subunit. These included kappa-casein, myelin basic protein, the troponin complex, and troponin T alone. In the troponin complex, the proportion of 32P incorporated by the gamma subunit into troponin I compared with troponin T was not Ca2+ dependent, but with the holoenzyme, this proportion was changed greatly by Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

2.
The major Mn2+-activated phosphoprotein phosphatase of the human erythrocyte has been purified to homogeneity from the cell hemolysate. It is sensitive to both inhibitors 1 and 2 of rabbit skeletal muscle, preferentially dephosphorylates the beta subunit of the phosphorylase kinase, and dephosphorylates a broad range of substrates including phosphorylase a, p-nitro-phenyl phosphate, phosphocasein, the regulatory subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, and both spectrin (Km = 10 microM) and pyruvate kinase (Km = 18 microM) purified from the human erythrocyte. The purified enzyme is stimulated by Mn2+ and to a lesser extent by higher concentrations of Mg2+. The purification procedure was selected to avoid any change in molecular weight, hence subunit composition, between the crude and purified enzyme. Maintenance of the original structure is demonstrated by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis and gel filtration chromatography. Gel filtration of the purified holoenzyme shows a single active component with a Stokes radius of 58 A at a molecular weight position of 180,000. Sedimentation velocity in a glycerol gradient gives a value of 6.1 for S20, w. Together these data indicate a molecular weight of about 135,000. Two bands of equal intensity appear on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis at molecular weights of 61,700 and 36,300, suggesting a subunit composition of two 36,000 and one 62,000 subunits. The 36-kDa catalytic subunit can be isolated by freezing and thawing the holoenzyme or by hydrophobic chromatography of the holoenzyme. The catalytic subunit shows unchanged substrate and inhibitor specificity but altered metal ion activation.  相似文献   

3.
Skeletal-muscle phosphorylase kinase is a hexadecameric oligomer composed of equivalent amounts of four different subunits, (alpha beta gamma delta)4. The delta-subunit, which is calmodulin, functions as an integral subunit of the oligomer, and the gamma-subunit is catalytic. To learn more about intersubunit contacts within the hexadecamer and about the roles of individual subunits, we induced partial dissociation of the holoenzyme with low concentrations of urea. In the absence of Ca2+ the quaternary structure of phosphorylase kinase is very sensitive to urea over a narrow concentration range. Gel-filtration chromatography in the presence of progressively increasing concentrations of urea indicates that between 1.15 M- and 1.35 M-urea the delta-subunit dissociates, allowing extensive formation of complexes larger than the native enzyme that contain equivalent amounts of alpha-, beta- and gamma-subunits. As the urea concentration is increased to 2 M and 3 M, nearly all of the enzyme aggregates to the heavy species devoid of delta-subunit. Addition of Ca2+, which is known to block dissociation of the delta-subunit [Shenolikar, Cohen, Cohen, Nairn & Perry (1979) Eur. J. Biochem. 100, 329-337], also blocks aggregation of the enzyme induced by the low concentrations of urea. These results suggest that in native phosphorylase kinase the delta-subunit, in addition to activating the catalytic subunit and conferring upon it Ca2(+)-sensitivity, may also serve a structural role in preventing aggregation of the alpha-, beta- and gamma-subunits, thus limiting to four the number of alpha beta gamma delta protomers that associate under standard conditions. In gel-filtration chromatography with urea a protein peak containing equivalent amounts of alpha- and gamma-subunits is also observed, as is a peak containing only beta-subunits. Increasing concentrations of urea have a biphasic effect on the activity of the holoenzyme, being stimulatory up to 1 M and then inhibitory. The concentration-dependence of urea in the inhibitory phase parallels its ability to induce dissociation of the delta-subunit.  相似文献   

4.
The regulatory subunit of type I cAMP-dependent protein kinase (RI) from rabbit skeletal muscle inhibited the activity of a low molecular weight phosphoprotein phosphatase. The inhibition was concentration and time dependent. A maximum inhibition, about 70%, was observed at 2 microM of RI with an apparent Ki of 0.8 microM. Inhibition was associated with a decrease in Vmax with no change in Km for substrate, phosphorylase a. On the other hand, cAMP-dependent protein kinase holoenzyme or its catalytic subunit was without any effect. The inhibition of phosphoprotein phosphatase by RI may be of physiological significance since the dissociation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase by cAMP would result in a simultaneous increase in the phosphorylation and decrease in the dephosphorylation rates of target proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The subunits of phosphorylase kinase are separated and isolated in high yield by gel filtration chromatography in pH 3.3 phosphate buffer containing 8 M urea. Three protein peaks are obtained: the alpha and beta subunits coelute in the first, whereas the gamma and delta subunits are separate peaks. Upon dilution of the denaturant, catalytic activity reappears, associated only with the gamma subunit. As has been previously observed (Kee, S.M., and Graves, D.J. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 4732-4737), addition of calmodulin dramatically stimulates the reactivation of gamma. Inclusion of increasing amounts of the alpha/beta subunit mixture in the renaturation progressively decreases the activity of the renatured gamma or gamma-calmodulin. This inhibition by alpha/beta is likely due to specific interactions with the gamma subunit because the inhibition is less at pH 8.2 than at pH 6.8 and less when equivalent amounts of phosphorylated alpha/beta subunits are used (both alkaline pH and phosphorylation are known to stimulate the activity of the holoenzyme). These results suggest that the role of either the alpha or beta subunits, or perhaps both, in the nonactivated (alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2 delta 2)2 complex of phosphorylase kinase is to suppress the activity of the gamma subunit and that activation of the enzyme, by phosphorylation for instance, is due to deinhibition caused by release of this quaternary constraint by alpha and/or beta upon gamma.  相似文献   

6.
Protein phosphatase C was purified 140-fold from bovine brain with 8% yield using histone H1 phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (cyclic AMP-kinase). Brain protein phosphatase C was considered to consist of 10 and 90%, respectively, of the catalytic subunits of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A on the basis of the effects of ATP and inhibitor-2. Protein phosphatase C dephosphorylated microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2), tau factor, and tubulin phosphorylated by a multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (calmodulin-kinase) and the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-kinase. The properties of dephosphorylation of MAP2, tau factor, and tubulin were compared. The Km values were in the ranges of 1.6-2.7 microM for MAP2 and tau factor. The Km value for tubulin decreased from 25 to 10-12.5 microM in the presence of 1.0 mM Mn2+. No difference in kinetic properties of dephosphorylation was observed between the substrates phosphorylated by the two kinases. Protein phosphatase C did not dephosphorylate the native tubulin, but universally dephosphorylated tubulin phosphorylated by the two kinases. The holoenzyme of protein phosphatase 2A from porcine brain could also dephosphorylate MAP2, tau factor, and tubulin phosphorylated by the two kinases. The phosphorylation of MAP2 and tau factor by calmodulin-kinase separately induced the inhibition of microtubule assembly, and the dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase C removed its inhibitory effect. These data suggest that brain protein phosphatases 1 and 2A are involved in the switch-off mechanism of both Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent and cyclic AMP-dependent regulation of microtubule formation.  相似文献   

7.
A strong Ca2+-independent interaction between the isolated, active gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase and dansyl-calmodulin (dansyl-CaM) was observed by monitoring changes in fluorescence intensity in the absence of calcium ion. The pure, active gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase was simply prepared by dialyzing the HPLC-purified, inactive gamma subunit against 8 M urea, containing 0.1 mM DTT, 0.1 M Hepes at pH 6.8 or 0.1 M Tris at pH 8.2, followed by dilution of urea with pH 6.8 or 8.2 buffer. The dissociation constants determined by fluorescence spectroscopy for the gamma subunit to dansyl-CaM are 25.7 +/- 0.6 and 104 +/- 12 nM at pH 6.8 in the presence and absence of CaCl2. At pH 8.2, these values are 4.9 +/- 0.3 and 29 +/- 8 nM in the presence and absence of CaCl2. As the free Ca2+ decreases to as low as 10(-9) M, the fluorescence intensity and the fluorescence polarization of the gamma subunit and dansyl-CaM complex do not decrease in parallel, indicating that the complex does not come apart at low Ca2+ concentration. The presence of Mg2+ affects the interaction between dansyl-CaM and the gamma subunit, as indicated by the increase in the polarization of fluorescence of dansyl-CaM. Mn2+ interferes with the interaction of the gamma subunit and dansyl-CaM. Free ATP has little effect.  相似文献   

8.
cDNA encoding the casein kinase II (CKII) subunits alpha and beta of human origin were expressed in Escherichia coli using expression vector pT7-7. Significant expression was obtained with E. coli BL21(DE3). The CKII subunits accounted for approximately 30% of the bacterial protein; however, most of the expressed proteins were produced in an insoluble form. The recombinant CKII alpha subunit was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, followed by phosphocellulose and heparin-agarose chromatography. The recombinant CKII beta subunit was extracted from the insoluble pellet and purified in a single step on phosphocellulose. From 10 g bacterial cells, the yield of soluble protein was 12 mg alpha subunit and 5 mg beta subunit. SDS/PAGE analysis of the purified recombinant proteins indicated molecular masses of 42 kDa and 26 kDa for the alpha and beta subunits, respectively, in agreement with the molecular masses determined for the subunits of the native enzyme. The recombinant alpha subunit exhibited protein kinase activity which was greatest in the absence of monovalent ions. With increasing amounts of salt, alpha subunit kinase activity declined rapidly. Addition of the beta subunit led to maximum stimulation at a 1:1 ratio of both subunits. Using a synthetic peptide (RRRDDDSDDD) as a substrate, the maximum protein kinase stimulation observed was fourfold under the conditions used. The Km of the reconstituted enzyme for the synthetic peptide (80 microM) was comparable to the mammalian enzyme (40-60 microM), whereas the alpha subunit alone had a Km of 240 microM. After sucrose density gradient analysis, the reconstituted holoenzyme sedimented at the same position as the mammalian CKII holoenzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Y H Xu  G M Carlson 《Biochemistry》1999,38(30):9562-9569
A polyclonal antibody was generated against a peptide corresponding to a region opposite the regulatory face of glycogen phosphorylase b (P-b), providing a probe for detecting and quantifying P-b when it is bound to its activating kinase, phosphorylase kinase (PhK). Using both direct and competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), we have measured the extent of direct binding to PhK of various forms of phosphorylase, including different conformers induced by allosteric effectors as well as forms differing at the N-terminal site phosphorylated by PhK. Strong interactions with PhK were observed for both P-b', a truncated form lacking the site for phosphorylation, and P-a, the phosphorylated form of P-b. Further, the binding of P-b, P-b', and P-a was stimulated a similar amount by Mg(2+), or by Ca(2+) (both being activators of PhK). Our results suggest that the presence and conformation of P-b's N-terminal phosphorylation site do not fully account for the protein's affinity for PhK and that regions distinct from that site may also interact with PhK. Direct ELISAs detected the binding of P-b by a truncated form of the catalytic gamma subunit of PhK, consistent with the necessary interaction of PhK's catalytic subunit with its substrate P-b. In contrast, P-b' bound very poorly to the truncated gamma subunit, suggesting that the N-terminal phosphorylatable region of P-b may be critical in directing P-b to PhK's catalytic subunit and that the binding of P-b' by the PhK holoenzyme may involve more than just its catalytic core. The sum of our results suggests that structural features outside the catalytic domain of PhK and outside the phosphorylatable region of P-b may both be necessary for the maximal interaction of these two proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Calmodulin is a tightly bound, intrinsic subunit (delta) of the hexadecameric phosphorylase-b kinase holoenzyme, (alphabetagammadelta)4. To introduce specifically labeled calmodulin into the phosphorylase-b kinase complex for its eventual visualization by electron microscopy, we have developed a method for rapidly exchanging exogenous calmodulin for the intrinsic delta subunit. This method exploits previous findings that low concentrations of urea in the absence of Ca(2+) ions cause the specific dissociation of only the delta subunit from the holoenzyme [Paudel, H. K., and Carlson, G. M. (1990) Biochem. J. 268, 393-399]. In the current study, phosphorylase-b kinase was incubated with excess exogenous calmodulin and a threshold concentration of urea to promote exchange of its delta subunit with the exogenous calmodulin. Size exclusion HPLC was then used to remove the excess calmodulin from the holoenzyme containing exchanged delta subunits. Using metabolically labeled [35S]calmodulin to allow quantification and optimization of exchange conditions, we achieved exchange of approximately 10% of all delta subunits within 1 h, with the exchanged holoenzyme retaining full catalytic activity. Calmodulins derivatized with Nanogold for visualization by scanning transmission electron microscopy were then exchanged for delta, which for the first time allowed localization of the delta subunit within the bridged, bilobal phosphorylase b kinase holoenzyme complex. The delta subunits were determined to be near the edge of the lobes, just distal to the interlobal bridges and proximal to a previously identified region of the enzyme's catalytic gamma subunit.  相似文献   

11.
A truncated regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I was constructed which contained deletions at both the carboxyl terminus and at the amino terminus. The entire carboxyl-terminal cAMP-binding domain was deleted as well as the first 92 residues up to the hinge region. This monomeric truncated protein still forms a complex with the catalytic subunit, and activation of this complex is mediated by cAMP. The affinity of this mutant holoenzyme for cAMP and its activation by cAMP are nearly identical to holoenzyme formed with a regulatory subunit having only the carboxyl-terminal deletion and very similar to native holoenzyme. The off rate for cAMP from both mutant regulatory subunits, however, is monophasic and very fast relative to the biphasic off rate seen for the native regulatory subunit. The effects of NaCl, urea, and pH on cAMP binding are also very similar for the mutant and native holoenzymes. Like the native type I holoenzyme, both mutant holoenzymes bind ATP with a high affinity. The positive cooperativity seen for MgATP binding to the native holoenzyme, however, is abolished in the double deletion mutant. The Hill coefficient for ATP binding to this mutant holoenzyme is 1.0 in contrast to 1.6 for the native holoenzyme. The Kd (cAMP) is increased by approximately 1 order of magnitude for both mutant forms of the holoenzyme in the presence of MgATP. A similar shift is seen for the native holoenzyme. Further characterization of the MgATP-binding properties of the wild-type holoenzyme indicates that a binary complex containing catalytic subunit and MgATP is required, in particular, for reassociation with the cAMP-bound regulatory subunit. This binary complex is required for rapid dissociation of the bound cAMP and is probably responsible for the observed reduction in cAMP-binding affinity for the type I holoenzyme in the presence of MgATP.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We have reconstituted the holoenzyme of the human mitochondrial DNA polymerase from cloned and overexpressed catalytic and accessory subunits. We have examined the polymerization activity of the catalytic subunit alone and of the holoenzyme to establish the function of the accessory subunit in this two subunit enzyme. The accessory subunit associates with the catalytic subunit with a dissociation constant of 35 +/- 16 nM as measured by the concentration dependence of its effect in stimulating maximal DNA binding and polymerization. At saturating concentrations, the accessory subunit contributes to every kinetic parameter examined to facilitate tighter binding of DNA and nucleotide and faster replication. The accessory protein makes the DNA binding 3.5-fold tighter (K(d) of 9.9 +/- 2.1 nM compared to 39 +/- 10 nM for the catalytic subunit alone) without significantly affecting the DNA dissociation rate (0.02 +/- 0.001 compared to 0.03 +/- 0.001 s(-)(1)). The ground-state nucleotide binding is improved from 4.7 +/- 2.0 to 0.78 +/- 0.065 microM, and the maximum DNA polymerization rate is increased from 8.7 +/- 1.1 to 45 +/- 1 s(-)(1) by the addition of the accessory protein. This leads to an increase in processivity from an estimated 290 +/- 46 to 2250 +/- 162. Although the accessory protein has been described as a "processivity factor" because of its effect on the ratio of rate constants defining processivity, this terminology falls short of adequately describing the profound effects of the small subunit on nucleotide-binding and incorporation catalyzed by the large subunit. By using the complete holoenzyme, we can now proceed with a comprehensive analysis of the structural and mechanistic determinants of enzyme specificity that govern toxicity of nucleoside analogues used in the treatment of viral infections such as AIDS.  相似文献   

14.
The purified catalytic subunit (C) of cAMP-dependent protein kinase produced a 2-fold activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase in crude microsomes (P-2 pellet) of rat adipocytes. This activation was C subunit concentration-dependent, ATP-dependent, blocked by a specific peptide inhibitor, and lost if the C subunit was first heat denatured. The concentration of ATP necessary for half-maximal activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase was 4.50 +/- 1.1 microM, which was nearly the same as the known Km of C subunit for ATP (3.1 microM) using other substrates. The concentration of C subunit producing half-maximal activation of phosphodiesterase was 0.22 +/- 0.04 microM, slightly less than the measured concentration of total C subunit in adipocytes (0.45 microM). The activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase by C subunit was specific, since on an equimolar basis, myosin light chain kinase, cGMP-dependent protein kinase, or Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II did not activate the enzyme. The percent stimulation of phosphodiesterase by C subunit was about the same as that produced by incubation of adipocytes with a cAMP analog, and the enzyme first activated in vivo with the analog was not activated to the same extent (on a percentage basis) by in vitro treatment with C subunit. Treatment of the crude microsomes with trypsin resulted in transfer of phosphodiesterase catalytic activity from the particulate to the supernatant fraction, but the enzyme in the supernatant was minimally activated by C subunit, suggesting either loss or dislocation of the regulatory component. The C subunit-mediated activation of phosphodiesterase was preserved after either transfer of phosphodiesterase activity to the supernatant fraction by nonionic detergents or partial purification of the transferred enzyme. The present findings are consistent with the suggestion that protein kinase regulates the concentration of cAMP through phosphodiesterase activation and provide direct evidence that the mechanism of activation involves phosphorylation.  相似文献   

15.
G Vereb  F Erd?di  B Tóth  G Bot 《FEBS letters》1986,197(1-2):139-142
The dissociated regulatory subunit (RII) of autophosphorylated cAMP-dependent protein kinase II was dephosphorylated by the catalytic subunits of protein phosphatase-1 and -2A (phosphatase-1c and -2Ac) and by a high-Mr polycation-dependent form of phosphatase-2A (2Ao) with Km values of 5, 0.3 and 1 microM, respectively. Dissociation of protein kinase by cAMP preferentially increased the dephosphorylation of RII by phosphatase-1c, whereas polycations (histone Hl or polybrene) markedly stimulated phosphatase-2Ac and -2Ao even in the absence of cAMP. Thiophosphorylated RII inhibited the dephosphorylation of phosphorylase a by these phosphatases with half-maximum inhibitory concentrations of 0.1-0.36 microM.  相似文献   

16.
Glycogen phosphorylase, a dimer of identical subunits, is activated by phosphorylase kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of one serine residue in each subunit. In this paper, the effect of the phosphorylation of one subunit on the phosphorylation of the other subunit was examined. The three forms of phosphorylase, phosphorylase b (nonphosphorylated), phosphorylase ab (one subunit phosphorylated), and phosphorylase a (both subunits phosphorylated), were separated by anion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Purified phosphorylase ab was found to be stable under the conditions of the phosphorylase kinase assay. Initial rate kinetics showed that phosphorylase kinase had a lower KM for phosphorylase ab (3.9 +/- 0.24 microM) than for phosphorylase b (14.9 +/- 2.6 microM). Using the HPLC separation as a simultaneous assay for the three forms of phosphorylase during the phosphorylase kinase reaction, it was found that the pseudo-first-order rate constant for the second phosphorylation step (k2) was 3.7 times greater than that for the first step (k1). The activator AMP reduced the ratio k2/k1 from 3.7 without AMP to 1.4. When the monomeric gamma delta complex of phosphorylase kinase subunits was used as the enzyme, the ratio k2/k1 was 2.1, compared to 3.7 with the multimeric holophosphorylase kinase. One explanation for these data is that phosphorylation of one subunit of phosphorylase b causes conformational changes that make the other subunit a better substrate for the kinase. In this context, the effect of AMP is to reduce the conformational differences between phosphorylases b and ab, and the gamma delta complex is less sensitive to the conformational differences between the two forms of phosphorylase.  相似文献   

17.
Biorn AC  Bartleson C  Graves DJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(51):15887-15894
Glycogen phosphorylase is found in resting muscle as phosphorylase b, which is inactive without AMP. Phosphorylation by phosphorylase kinase (PhK) produces phosphorylase a, which is active in the absence of AMP. PhK is the only kinase that can phosphorylate phosphorylase b, which in turn is the only physiological substrate for PhK. We have explored the reasons for this specificity and how these two enzymes recognize each other by studying site-directed mutants of glycogen phosphorylase. All mutants were assayed for changes in their interaction with a truncated form of the catalytic subunit of phosphorylase kinase, gamma(1-300). Five mutations (R69K, R69E, R43E, R43E/R69E, and E501A), made at sites that interact with the amino terminus in either phosphorylase b or a, showed little difference in phosphorylation by gamma(1-300) compared to wild-type phosphorylase b. Five mutations, made at three sites in the amino-terminal tail of phosphorylase (K11A, K11E, I13G, R16A, and R16E), however, produced decreases in catalytic efficiency for gamma(1-300), compared to that for phosphorylase b. R16E was the poorest substrate for gamma(1-300), giving a 47-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency. The amino terminus, and especially Arg 16, are very important factors for recognition of phosphorylase by gamma(1-300). A specific interaction between Lys 11 of phosphorylase and Glu 110 of gamma(1-300) was also confirmed. In addition, I13G and R16A were able to be phosphorylated by protein kinase A, which does not recognize native phosphorylase.  相似文献   

18.
Glycogen-bound protein phosphatase G from rat liver was transferred from glycogen to beta-cyclodextrin (cycloheptaamylose) linked to Sepharose 6B. After removal of the catalytic subunit and of contaminating proteins with 2 M NaCl, elution with beta-cyclodextrin yielded a single protein on native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and two polypeptides (161 and 54 kDa) on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Several lines of evidence indicate that the latter polypeptides are subunits of the protein phosphatase G holoenzyme. First, these polypeptides were also present, together with the catalytic subunit, in the extensively purified holoenzyme. Also, polyclonal antibodies against these polypeptides were able to bind the holoenzyme. Further, while bound to cyclodextrin-Sepharose, the polypeptides were able to recombine with separately purified type-1 (AMD) catalytic subunit, but not with type-2A (PCS) catalytic subunit. The characteristics of the reconstituted enzyme resembled those of the nonpurified protein phosphatase G. At low dilutions, the spontaneous phosphorylase phosphatase activity of the reconstituted enzyme was about 10 times lower than that of the catalytic subunit, but it was about 1000-fold more resistant to inhibition by the modulator protein (inhibitor-2). In contrast with the free catalytic subunit, the reconstituted enzyme co-sedimented with glycogen, and it was able to activate purified liver glycogen synthase b. Also, the synthase phosphatase activity was synergistically increased by a cytosolic phosphatase and inhibited by physiological concentrations of phosphorylase alpha and of Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphorylase kinase activity is renatured and detected in situ following electrophoresis of the denatured holoenzyme in a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel containing phosphorylase b that has been included in the gel polymerization according to the method of R. L. Geahlen et al. [(1986) Anal. Biochem. 153, 151-158]. Among the enzyme's four subunits, only gamma is catalytically active. When extract of rabbit muscle is electrophoresed and renatured in a similar manner, the phosphorylase-conversion activity is also associated only with a protein band that comigrates with the gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase. This suggests that the gamma subunit of phosphorylase kinase may be the sole activity in rabbit muscle responsible for the phosphorylation of phosphorylase b. In an alternative method for the renaturation of activity from conventional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, the subunits of the enzyme are visualized using 2.5 M KCl, excised from the gel, and eluted by diffusion into buffer containing sodium dodecyl sulfate, which is subsequently removed by acetone precipitation of the eluted subunits. Catalytic activity is recovered when the acetone precipitate of the extracted gamma subunit is dissolved in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride and diluted 50-fold into an activity assay. Inclusion of eluted alpha and beta subunits in the assay inhibits the activity of the gamma subunit, which supports our previous finding that the alpha and/or beta subunits suppress the activity of the catalytic gamma subunit [H. K. Paudel and G. M. Carlson (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11912-11915].  相似文献   

20.
The luciferase secreted by the deep-sea shrimp Oplophorus consists of 19 and 35kDa proteins. The 19-kDa protein (19kOLase), the catalytic component of luminescence reaction, was expressed in Escherichia coli using the cold-shock inducted expression system. 19kOLase, expressed as inclusion bodies, was solubilized with 6M urea and purified by urea-nickel chelate affinity chromatography. The yield of 19kOLase was 16 mg from 400 ml of cultured cells. 19kOLase in 6M urea could be refolded rapidly by dilution with 50mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.8)-10mM EDTA, and the refolded protein showed luminescence activity. The luminescence properties of refolded 19kOLase were characterized, in comparison with native Oplophorus luciferase. Luminescence intensity with bisdeoxycoelenterazine as a substrate was stimulated in the presence of organic solvents. The 19kOLase is a thermolabile protein and is 98 % inhibited by 1muM Cu2+. The cysteine residue of 19kOLase is not essential for catalysis of the luminescence reaction.  相似文献   

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