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1.
Skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase (PhK) is a 1.3-MDa hexadecameric complex that catalyzes the phosphorylation and activation of glycogen phosphorylase b. PhK has an absolute requirement for Ca(2+) ions, which couples the cascade activation of glycogenolysis with muscle contraction. Ca(2+) activates PhK by binding to its nondissociable calmodulin subunits; however, specific changes in the structure of the PhK complex associated with its activation by Ca(2+) have been poorly understood. We present herein the first comparative investigation of the physical characteristics of highly purified hexadecameric PhK in the absence and presence of Ca(2+) ions using a battery of biophysical probes as a function of temperature. Ca(2+)-induced differences in the tertiary and secondary structure of PhK measured by fluorescence, UV absorption, FTIR, and CD spectroscopies as low resolution probes of PhK's structure were subtle. In contrast, the surface electrostatic properties of solvent accessible charged and polar groups were altered upon the binding of Ca(2+) ions to PhK, which substantially affected both its diffusion rate and electrophoretic mobility, as measured by dynamic light scattering and zeta potential analyses, respectively. Overall, the observed physicochemical effects of Ca(2+) binding to PhK were numerous, including a decrease in its electrostatic surface charge that reduced particle mobility without inducing a large alteration in secondary structure content or hydrophobic tertiary interactions. Without exception, for all analyses in which the temperature was varied, the presence of Ca(2+) rendered the enzyme increasingly labile to thermal perturbation.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphorylase kinase (PhK), a 1.3-MDa (alphabetagammadelta)(4) hexadecameric complex, is a Ca(2+)-dependent regulatory enzyme in the cascade activation of glycogenolysis. PhK comprises two arched (alphabetagammadelta)(2) octameric lobes that are oriented back-to-back with overall D(2) symmetry and joined by connecting bridges. From chemical cross-linking and electron microscopy, it is known that the binding of Ca(2+) by PhK perturbs the structure of all its subunits and promotes redistribution of density throughout both its lobes and bridges; however, little is known concerning the interrelationship of these effects. To measure structural changes induced by Ca(2+) in the PhK complex in solution, small-angle X-ray scattering was performed on nonactivated and Ca(2+)-activated PhK. Although the overall dimensions of the complex were not affected by Ca(2+), the cation did promote a shift in the distribution of the scattering density within the hydrated volume occupied by the PhK molecule, indicating a Ca(2+)-induced conformational change. Computer-generated models, based on elements of the known structure of PhK from electron microscopy, were constructed to aid in the interpretation of the scattering data. Models containing two ellipsoids and four cylinders to represent, respectively, the lobes and bridges of the PhK complex provided theoretical scattering profiles that accurately fit the experimental data. Structural differences between the models representing the nonactivated and Ca(2+)-activated conformers of PhK are consistent with Ca(2+)-induced conformational changes in both the lobes and the interlobal bridges.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphorylase kinase (PhK), a Ca(2+)-dependent regulatory enzyme of the glycogenolytic cascade in skeletal muscle, is a 1.3 MDa hexadecameric oligomer comprising four copies of four distinct subunits, termed alpha, beta, gamma, and delta, the last being endogenous calmodulin. The structures of both nonactivated and Ca(2+)-activated PhK were determined to elucidate Ca(2+)-induced structural changes associated with PhK's activation. Reconstructions of both conformers of the kinase, each including over 11,000 particles, yielded bridged, bilobal structures with resolutions estimated by Fourier shell correlation at 24 A using a 0.5 correlation cutoff, or at 18 A by the 3sigma (corrected for D(2) symmetry) threshold curve. Extensive Ca(2+)-induced structural changes were observed in regions encompassing both the lobes and bridges, consistent with changes in subunit interactions upon activation. The relative placement of the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta subunits in the nonactivated three-dimensional structure, relying upon previous two-dimensional localizations, is in agreement with the known effects of Ca(2+) on subunit conformations and interactions in the PhK complex.  相似文献   

4.
For over four decades free Mg2+ ions, that is, those in excess of MgATP, have been reported to affect a wide variety of properties of phosphorylase kinase (PhK), including its affinity for other molecules, proteolysis, chemical crosslinking, phosphorylation, binding to certain monoclonal antibodies, and activity, which is stimulated. Additionally, for over three decades Mg2+ has been known to act synergistically with Ca2+, another divalent activator of PhK, to affect even more properties of the enzyme. During all of this time, however, no study has been performed to determine the overall effects of free Mg2+ ions on the physical properties of PhK, even though the effects of Ca2+ ions on PhK's properties are well documented. In this study, changes in the physicochemical properties of PhK induced by Mg2+ under nonactivating (pH 6.8) and activating (pH 8.2) conditions were investigated by circular dichroism spectroscopy, zeta potential analyses, dynamic light scattering, second derivative UV absorption, negative stain electron microscopy, and differential chemical crosslinking. The effects of the activator Mg2+ on some of the properties of PhK measured by these techniques were found to be quite different at the two pH values, and displayed both differences and similarities with the effects previously reported to be induced by the activator Ca2+ (Liu et al., Protein Sci 2008;17:2111–2119). The similarities may reflect the fact that both cations are activators, and foremost among their similarities is the dramatically less negative zeta potential induced by their binding to PhK.  相似文献   

5.
Ca(2+)- and Mg(2+)-induced association of phosphorylase kinase (PhK) from rabbit skeletal muscle has been studied at the magnitudes of the ionic strength close to the physiological values (40 mM Hepes, pH 6.8, containing 0.1 M NaCl, 0.1 mM Ca(2+), 10 mM Mg(2+); 25 degrees C) and under the molecular crowding conditions produced by high concentrations (1 M) of the natural osmolyte, trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO). In the presence of 0.1 M NaCl two forms of PhK were registered, namely the "basic form" and "highly associated form", suggesting that PhK association may be treated as an example of cooperative association. According to the data on dynamic light scattering the average hydrodynamic radii of these forms were 16 and 144 nm. The addition of 1 M TMAO produces the time dependent increase in the light scattering intensity caused by the conversion of the basic form into the highly associated form. According to the data of the sedimentation analysis the basic form of PhK comprises a hexadecamer (M(r)=1320 kDa) and its small associates. The removal of Ca(2+) by addition of EGTA results in the reverse conversion of the highly associated form into the basic form suggesting reversibility of self-association of PhK. FAD, the ligand that is specifically bound to PhK, blocks the conversion of the basic form of PhK into the highly associated form.  相似文献   

6.
The sensitivity of store-operated Ca(2+)-entry to changes in the extra- and intracellular pH (pH(o) and pH(i), respectively) was investigated in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. The intracellular Ca(2+)-stores were depleted either with 1 mM carbachol (CCH) or with 2 microM thapsigargin (TG). Extracellular acidification suppressed both the CCH- and TG-mediated Ca(2+)-entry while external alkalinization augmented both the CCH- and the TG-induced Ca(2+)-influx. Mn(2+)-quenching experiments revealed that the rates of Ca(2+)-entry at the thapsigargin- or carbachol-induced plateau were both accelerated at pH(o) 8.2 and slowed down at pH(o) 6.8 with respect to the control at pH(o) 7.4. Alteration of pH(o) between 6.8 and 8.2 did not have any significant prompt effect on pH(i) and changes in pH(i) left the CCH-induced Ca(2+)-entry unaffected. These findings demonstrate that physiologically relevant changes in pH(o) affect the store-operated Ca(2+)-entry in SH-SY5Y cells and suggest that endogenous pH(o) shifts may regulate cell activity in situ via modulating the store-operated Ca(2+)-entry.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Extracellular pH (pH(o)) influences vasoconstriction partly by modulating Ca(2+) influx through voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels in the vasculature. The mechanism of this effect of pH(o) is, however, controversial. Using the whole cell voltage-clamp technique, we examined the influence of pH(o) on L-type Ca(2+) channel currents in isolated human mesenteric arterial myocytes. Acidification to pH 6.2 and alkalinization to 8.2 from 7.2 decreased by approximately 50% and increased by 25-30%, respectively, the peak amplitude of Ca(2+) and Ba(2+) currents (1.5 and 10 mM), with an apparent pK(a) of 6.8. Activation and inactivation of Ca(2+) and Ba(2+) currents were shifted toward positive membrane voltages during acidification and in the opposite direction during alkalinization. The relationship between the current amplitude and shifts in the gating parameters in solutions of different pH(o) conformed closely to that predicted by the Gouy-Chapman model, in which the divalent cation concentration at the outer surface of the membrane varies with the extent to which protons neutralize the membrane surface potential.  相似文献   

9.
We previously show the expression of transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) in primary synoviocytes from collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) rats. Capsaicin and lowered extracellular pH from 7.4 to 5.5 induce cell death through TRPV1-mediated Ca(2+) entry and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. However, under the pathological condition in rheumatoid arthritis, the synovial fluid is acidified to a moderate level (about pH 6.8). In the present study, we examined the effects of pH 6.8 on the TRPV1-mediated cell death. Our finding is different or even opposite from what was observed at pH 5.5. We found that the moderate extracellular acidification (from pH 7.4 to 6.8) inhibited the capsaicin-induced Ca(2+) entry through attenuating the activity of TRPV1. In the mean time, it triggered a phospholipse C (PLC)-related Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores. The nuclear translocation of NF-κB was found at pH 6.8, and this also depends on PLC activation. Moreover, the capsaicin-evoked massive ROS production and cell death were depressed at pH 6.8, both of which are dependent on the activation of PLC and NF-κB. Taken together, these results suggested that the moderate extracellular acidification inhibited the capsaicin-induced synoviocyte death through regulating Ca(2+) mobilization, activating NF-κB nuclear translocation and depressing ROS production.  相似文献   

10.
Chemical cross-linking as a probe of conformation has consistently shown that activators, including Ca(2+) ions, of the (alphabetagammadelta)(4) phosphorylase kinase holoenzyme (PhK) alter the interactions between its regulatory alpha and catalytic gamma subunits. The gamma subunit is also known to interact with the delta subunit, an endogenous molecule of calmodulin that mediates the activation of PhK by Ca(2+) ions. In this study, we have used two-hybrid screening and chemical cross-linking to dissect the regulatory quaternary interactions involving these subunits. The yeast two-hybrid system indicated that regions near the C termini of the gamma (residues 343-386) and alpha (residues 1060-1237) subunits interact. The association of this region of alpha with gamma was corroborated by the isolation of a cross-linked fragment of alpha containing residues 1015-1237 from an alpha-gamma dimer that had been formed within the PhK holoenzyme by formaldehyde, a nearly zero-length cross-linker. Because the region of gamma that we found to interact with alpha has previously been shown to contain a high affinity binding site for calmodulin (Dasgupta, M., Honeycutt, T., and Blumenthal, D. K. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 17156-17163), we tested the influence of Ca(2+) on the conformation of the alpha subunit and found that the region of alpha that interacts with gamma was, in fact, perturbed by Ca(2+). The results herein support the existence of a Ca(2+)-sensitive communication network among the delta, gamma, and alpha subunits, with the regulatory domain of gamma being the primary mediator. The similarity of such a Ca(2+)-dependent network to the interactions among troponin C, troponin I, and actin is discussed in light of the known structural and functional similarities between troponin I and the gamma subunit of PhK.  相似文献   

11.
Trivalent lanthanide ions and Cd2+ were found to mimic effectively the stimulatory action of Ca2+ on rabbit muscle phosphorylase kinase. In the range of concentrations tested, Cd2+ and lanthanides (Tb3+, Gd3+, Pr3+, Ce3+) could substitute for Ca2+ in activating the enzyme to about 60% and 70% respectively of the maximal level seen with Ca2+, at pH 8.2. The effect induced by Cd2+ was biphasic (stimulation followed by inhibition with increasing metal cation concentration). Similar results were obtained at pH 6.8. Cd2+ and Tb3+ were also able to replace Ca2+ required for the stimulation of phosphorylase kinase activity at pH 8.2 by exogenous calmodulin. Maximal stimulation induced by calmodulin in presence of Cd2+ was significantly higher than that in presence of Ca2+ or Tb3+.  相似文献   

12.
The main kinetic parameters for purified phosphorylase kinase from chicken skeletal muscle were determined at pH 8.2: Vm = 18 micromol/min/mg; apparent Km values for ATP and phosphorylase b from rabbit muscle were 0.20 and 0.02 mM, respectively. The activity ratio at pH 6.8/8.2 was 0.1-0.4 for different preparations of phosphorylase kinase. Similar to the rabbit enzyme, chicken phosphorylase kinase had an absolute requirement for Ca2+ as demonstrated by complete inhibition in the presence of EGTA. Half-maximal activation occurred at [Ca2+] = 0.4 microM at pH 7.0. In the presence of Ca2+, the chicken enzyme from white and red muscles was activated 2-4-fold by saturating concentrations of calmodulin and troponin C. The C0.5 value for calmodulin and troponin C at pH 6.8 was 2 and 100 nM, respectively. Similar to rabbit phosphorylase kinase, the chicken enzyme was stimulated about 3-6-fold by glycogen at pH 6.8 and 8.2 with half-maximal stimulation occurring at about 0.15% glycogen. Protamine caused 60% inhibition of chicken phosphorylase kinase at 0.8 mg/ml. ADP (3 mM) at 0.05 mM ATP caused 85% inhibition with Ki = 0.2 mM. Unlike rabbit phosphorylase kinase, no phosphorylation of the chicken enzyme occurred in the presence of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Incubation with trypsin caused 2-fold activation of the chicken enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase (PhK) is an (alphabetagammadelta) 4 hetero-oligomeric enzyme complex that phosphorylates and activates glycogen phosphorylase b (GP b) in a Ca (2+)-dependent reaction that couples muscle contraction with glycogen breakdown. GP b is PhK's only known in vivo substrate; however, given the great size and multiple subunits of the PhK complex, we screened muscle extracts for other potential targets. Extracts of P/J (control) and I/lnJ (PhK deficient) mice were incubated with [gamma- (32)P]ATP with or without Ca (2+) and compared to identify potential substrates. Candidate targets were resolved by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and phosphorylated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectroscopy. In vitro studies showed GAPDH to be a Ca (2+)-dependent substrate of PhK, although the rate of phosphorylation is very slow. GAPDH does, however, bind tightly to PhK, inhibiting at low concentrations (IC 50 approximately 0.45 microM) PhK's conversion of GP b. When a short synthetic peptide substrate was substituted for GP b, the inhibition was negligible, suggesting that GAPDH may inhibit predominantly by binding to the PhK complex at a locus distinct from its active site on the gamma subunit. To test this notion, the PhK-GAPDH complex was incubated with a chemical cross-linker, and a dimer between the regulatory beta subunit of PhK and GAPDH was formed. This interaction was confirmed by the fact that a subcomplex of PhK missing the beta subunit, specifically an alphagammadelta subcomplex, was unable to phosphorylate GAPDH, even though it is catalytically active toward GP b. Moreover, GAPDH had no effect on the conversion of GP b by the alphagammadelta subcomplex. The interactions described herein between the beta subunit of PhK and GAPDH provide a possible mechanism for the direct linkage of glycogenolysis and glycolysis in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

14.
The regulation of the activity of blowfly flight-muscle phosphorylase b kinase by P(i) and Ca(2+) was studied, and the actions of these effectors on the kinases from insect flight and rabbit leg muscles were compared. Preincubation of blowfly kinase with P(i) increased activity severalfold. The effect was concentration-dependent, with an apparent K(m) of about 20mm, and time-dependent, requiring at least 10min for maximal activation. Neither ATP nor cyclic AMP was needed, suggesting that a protein kinase may not be involved. Maximal activation of the insect kinase required Mg(2+) in addition to P(i). The apparent K(m) for Mg(2+) was 3mm. Rabbit leg-muscle phosphorylase b kinase was slightly inhibited, rather than stimulated, by P(i), and was strongly inhibited by K(+), Na(+) and Li(+). At physiological concentrations, Ca(2+) activated the phosphorylase b kinases from both blowfly flight and rabbit leg muscles. However, the responses to Ca(2+) of the enzymes from the two tissues were different. The mammalian kinase had virtually no activity in the absence of Ca(2+), and showed a large increase in activity over a narrow range of Ca(2+) concentrations. Flight-muscle kinase had appreciable activity in the absence of Ca(2+), and had a smaller increase over a wide range of Ca(2+) concentration. The concentrations of Ca(2+) required for half-activation were 0.1 and 1mum for the blowfly and rabbit enzymes respectively. The pH-activity profiles of the non-activated, phosphate- and Ca(2+)-activated kinase revealed considerable enhancement of activity with little, if any, increase in the ratio of activities at pH6.8 to those at 8.2. These results are discussed in relation to the mechanism coupling contraction to glycogenolysis and to the biochemical distinction between asynchronous and synchronous types of muscle.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Formation of isoaspartyl residues is one of several processes that damage proteins as they age. Protein L-isoaspartate (D-aspartate) O-methyltransferase (PIMT) is a conserved and nearly ubiquitous enzyme that catalyzes the repair of proteins damaged by isoaspartyl formation. RESULTS: We have determined the first structure of a PIMT from crystals of the T. maritima enzyme complexed to S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) and refined it to 1.8 A resolution. Although PIMT forms one structural unit, the protein can be divided functionally into three subdomains. The central subdomain closely resembles other S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent methyltransferases but bears a striking alteration of topological connectivity, which is not shared by any other member of this family. Rather than arranged as a mixed beta sheet with topology 6 upward arrow7 downward arrow5 upward arrow4 upward arrow1 upward arrow2 upward arrow3 upward arrow, the central sheet of PIMT is reorganized to 7 upward arrow6 downward arrow5 upward arrow4 upward arrow1 upward arrow2 upward arrow3 upward arrow. AdoHcy is largely buried between the N-terminal and central subdomains by a conserved and largely hydrophobic loop on one rim of the binding cleft, and a conserved Ser/Thr-rich beta strand on the other. The Ser/Thr-rich strand may provide hydrogen bonds for specific interactions with isoaspartyl substrates. The side chain of Ile-206, a conserved residue, crosses the cleft, restricting access to the donor methyl group to a deep well, the putative isoaspartyl methyl acceptor site. CONCLUSIONS: The structure of PIMT reveals a unique modification of the methyltransferase fold along with a site for specific recognition of isoaspartyl substrates. The sequence conservation among PIMTs suggests that the current structure should prove a reliable model for understanding the repair of isoaspartyl damage in all organisms.  相似文献   

16.
Calcium accumulation by human erythrocyte inside-out vesicles was linear for at least 30 min in the presence of ATP. In untreated inside-out vesicles, 3.76 +/- 1.44 nmol of calcium/min/unit of acetylcholinesterase were transported, compared with 10.57 +/- 2.05 (+/- S.D.; n = 11) in those treated with calmodulin. The amount of calmodulin necessary for 50% activation of Ca2+ accumulation was 60 +/- 22 ng/ml (+/- S.D.; n = 4). The Km (Ca2+) for calmodulin-stimulated accumulation was 0.8 +/- 0.05 microM (+/- S.D.; n = 5) using Ca2+ /ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) buffers, or 25 microM with direct addition of unbuffered calcium. In the absence of calmodulin, these values were 0.4 and 60 microM, respectively, Km (ATP) values of 90 and 60 microM in the presence and absence of calmodulin, respectively, were measured at constant magnesium concentration (3 mM). In the presence of calmodulin, a broad pH profile is exhibited from pH 6.6 to 8.2. Maximal calcium accumulation occurs at pH 7.8. In the absence of calmodulin, the pH profile exhibits a linear upward increase from pH 7.0 to 8.2. The (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase activity, measured under identical conditions, was 2.40 +/- 0.72 nmol of Pi/min/unit of acetylcholinesterase in the untreated vesicles and 11.29 +/- 2.87 nmol of Pi/min/unit of acetylcholinesterase (+/- S.D.; n = 4) in calmodulin-treated vesicles. A stoichiometry of 1.6 Ca2+/ATP hydrolyzed was determined in the absence of calmodulin; in the presence of calmodulin, this ratio was decreased to 0.94 Ca2+/ATP hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

17.
Homogeneous alpha and beta subunits were isolated for the first time in preparative amounts in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Analysis by analytical polyacrylamide electrophoresis, sedimentation velocity, and immunoprecipitation with monospecific antibodies indicated homogeneity. The apparent molecular masses of the purified subunits as determined electrophoretically in the presence of dodecyl sulfate are: alpha = 140.2 +/- 2.1 kDa and beta = 123 +/- 1.8 kDa. Amino acid analyses show that per 100 mol amino acid the alpha-subunit has a higher serine content (Ser alpha/Ser beta = 1.32, Ser alpha/Ser gamma = 1.42) and a lower aspartic acid/asparagine (Asx) content (AsX alpha/Asx beta = 0.76, Asx alpha/Asx gamma = 0.90) than the beta and gamma subunits. Monospecific antibodies against the purified alpha, beta and gamma subunits were produced in sheep [J. Immunol. Methods (1984) 70, 193-209] and their action on the catalytic activity of non-activated phosphorylase kinase assayed. It can be shown that certain antibody fractions of anti-alpha, anti-beta and anti-gamma inhibit the Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent activity at pH 6.8 as well as at pH 8.2. Other antibody fractions against the beta and gamma subunits however activate the Ca2+-dependent activity at pH 6.8 threefold to fourfold, although they inhibit the activity at pH 8.2. These antibodies lead to a ca. five fold increase in the pH 6.8/8.2 activity ratio. Activating anti-beta can even overcome the inhibitory action of anti-alpha at pH 6.8. A kinetic analysis shows that inhibition is the result of a mixed type mechanism whereas activation is due to a fivefold to tenfold increase in V for phosphorylase b. The results illustrate the importance of possibly large, concerted conformational changes of phosphorylase kinase. It appears that activation or inhibition can be triggered by the antibody binding to conformational determinants of a single subunit type leading to a structural alteration of the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The influence of ATP on complex formation of phosphorylase kinase (PhK) with glycogen in the presence of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) has been studied. The initial rate of complex formation decreases with increasing ATP concentration, the dependence of the initial rate on the concentration of ATP having a cooperative character. Formation of the complex of PhK with glycogen in the presence of ATP occurs after a lag period, which increases with increasing ATP concentration. The dependence of the initial rate of complex formation (v) on the concentration of non-hydrolyzed ATP analogue, beta,gamma-methylene-ATP, follows the hyperbolic law. A correlation between PhK-glycogen complex formation and (32)P incorporation catalyzed by PhK itself and by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase has been shown. For ADP (the product and allosteric effector of the PhK reaction) the dependence of v on ADP concentration has a complicated form, probably due to the sequential binding of ADP at two allosteric sites on the beta subunit and the active site on the gamma subunit.  相似文献   

20.
We examined the acid-facilitated yielding properties of cell walls of soybean hypocotyls and the effects of Ca(2+) upon the properties by stress-strain analyses using glycerinated hollow cylinders (GHCs) from the elongating regions of the hypocotyls. Stress-extension rate curves of native GHCs showed characteristic changes with pH, all indicating the existence of yield threshold tension (y) as well as wall extensibility (phi), i.e. a downward shift of y and an increase in phi with wall acidification. The acid-induced downward shift of y was inhibited by boiling of GHCs. In contrast, a considerable increase in phi with acidification remained even after boiling. This indicates that phi consists of two components, i.e. heat-sensitive and heat-resistant, both being pH sensitive. A Ca(2+) chelator (Quin 2) dramatically increased phi at a neutral pH. Subsequent addition of Ca(2+) or ruthenium red suppressed the chelator-induced increase in phi. These findings suggest that wall Ca(2+) plays an important role in the regulation of wall extensibility during the acid-induced wall extension by reacting with carboxyl groups of wall pectin.  相似文献   

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