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1.
The Ca2+-regulated lipid-binding properties of the H- and L-forms of calelectrin present in the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata have been compared. Binding of H-calelectrin required Ca2+ in millimolar concentrations, whereas that of L-calelectrin occurred in the micromolar range. Dissociation of H-calelectrin previously bound to lipids in the presence of 2 mM Ca2+ took place only when the Ca2+ concentration was reduced to micromolar concentrations. Binding was most effective to acidic phospholipids such as phosphatidylserine. Both forms of calelectrin promoted the aggregation of membrane vesicles in the presence of Ca2+.Mg2+, Na+ and K+ inhibited the Ca2+-induced binding to phospholipid, decreasing in effectiveness in that order. Binding was also inhibited by high pH. The surface activity and hydrophobicity index showed that H-calelectrin is a hydrophilic molecule. It may represent a less active, more highly phosphorylated "down-regulated" form of L-calelectrin. The role of calcium in H-calelectrin binding to lipid appeared to be consistent with the formation of a ternary complex of the protein, an acidic lipid and Ca2+, rather than with a direct interaction of lipid with hydrophobic sequences in H-calelectrin whose accessibility is Ca2+-regulated.  相似文献   

2.
Annexins II, V, and VI are major components of matrix vesicles (MV), i.e. particles that have the critical role of initiating the mineralization process in skeletal tissues. Furthermore, types II and X collagen are associated with MV, and these interactions mediated by annexin V stimulate Ca(2+) uptake and mineralization of MV. However, the exact roles of annexin II, V, and VI and the interaction between annexin V and types II and X collagen in MV function and initiation of mineralization are not well understood. In this study, we demonstrate that annexin II, V, or VI mediate Ca(2+) influx into phosphatidylserine (PS)-enriched liposomes, liposomes containing lipids extracted from authentic MV, and intact authentic MV. The annexin Ca(2+) channel blocker, K-201, not only inhibited Ca(2+) influx into fura-2-loaded PS-enriched liposomes mediated by annexin II, V, or VI, but also inhibited Ca(2+) uptake by authentic MV. Types II and X collagen only bound to liposomes in the presence of annexin V but not in the presence of annexin II or VI. Binding of these collagens to annexin V stimulated its Ca(2+) channel activities, leading to an increased Ca(2+) influx into the liposomes. These findings indicate that the formation of annexin II, V, and VI Ca(2+) channels in MV together with stimulation of annexin V channel activity by collagen (types II and X) binding can explain how MV are able to rapidly take up Ca(2+) and initiate the formation of the first crystal phase.  相似文献   

3.
A sensitive method which utilizes fluorescence energy transfer to assay Ca2+ -or Mg2+ -mediated fusion of phospholipid vesicles is reported. More than 85% quenching results when phosphatidylserine vesicles labelled with dansyl phosphatidylethanolamine (donor) are fused with vesicles labelled with rhodamine phosphatidylethanolamine (acceptor) in the presence of 5 mM CaCl2 or 10 mM MgCl2. Higher concentrations of divalent cations are required to obtain maximal quenching when phosphatidylserine is partially replaced with phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine. The rate of vesicle fusion is dependent upon the concentrations of both cation and vesicles. Maximum quenching occurs within 5 min using phosphatidylserine vesicles and 5 mM Ca2+, but quenching is incomplete even after 20 h with 0.8--2 mM Ca2+. This probably reflects the heterogeneous size distribution of these vesicles, since the extent of fusion was found to correlated with vesicle size. Binding of antibody to membrane-localized phenobarbital hapten effectively blocks Ca2+ -mediated vesicle fusion. This effect can be inhibited by preincubation of the antibody with phenobarbital. Leakage of tempocholine from intact vesicles induced by 5 mM Ca2+ occurs even when fusion is prevented by bound antibody. This demonstrates that fusion is not a necessary requirement for Ca2+ -induced leakage.  相似文献   

4.
Protamine is a unique substrate of protein kinase C for its Ca2+-independent phosphorylation. The interaction between protein kinase C and protamine and the effect of DNA on the interaction was studied. Protein kinase C was retained in a protamine-immobilized Sepharose 4B column, even in the absence of Ca2+ and was eluted with ammonium sulfate or L-arginine. The eluted enzyme was fully activated by phosphatidylserine alone, when protamine was used as substrate. When DNA was included in the assay system, the activity elicited by phosphatidylserine alone was inhibited. The DNA effect on the activity in the presence of both Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine was much lower than on the activity elicited by phosphatidylserine alone, thereby demonstrating the Ca2+ sensitivity of protamine phosphorylation.  相似文献   

5.
Interaction of protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) was investigated by monitoring the changes in the intrinsic fluorescence of the enzyme, the kinase activity, and phorbol ester binding. Incubation of PKC I, II, and III with PIP2 resulted in different rates of quenching of PKC fluorescence and different degrees of inactivation of these enzymes. Other inositol-containing phospholipids such as phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate also caused differential rates of quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence of these enzymes. These latter two phospholipids were, however, less potent in the inactivation of PKCs than PIP2. The IC50 of PIP2 were 2, 4, and 11 microM for PKC I, II, and III, respectively. Inactivation of PKCs by PIP2 cannot be reversed by extensive dilution of PIP2 with Nonidet P-40 nor by digestion of PIP2 with phospholipase C. Interaction of PIP2 with the various PKC isozymes was greatly facilitated in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+ as evidenced by the accelerated quenching of the PKC fluorescence, however, these divalent metal ions protected PKC from the PIP2-induced inactivation. Binding of PIP2 to PKC in the absence of divalent metal ion also caused a reduction of [3H]phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate binding as a result of reducing the affinity of the enzyme for phorbol ester. Based on gel filtration chromatography, it was estimated that one molecule of PKC interacted with one PIP2 micelle with an aggregation number of 80-90. The PIP2-bound PKC could further interact with phosphatidylserine in the presence of Ca2+ to form a larger complex. Binding of PKC to both PIP2 and phosphatidylserine in the presence of Ca2+ was also evident by changes in the intrinsic fluorescence of PKC. As the interaction of PKC with PIP2, but not with phosphatidylserine, could be enhanced by millimolar concentrations of Mg2+, we propose that PIP2 may be a component of the membrane anchor for PKC under basal physiological conditions when [Ca2+]i is low and Mg2+ is plentiful. Under the in vitro assay conditions, PIP2 could stimulate PKC activity to a level approximately 10-20% of that by diacylglycerol. The stimulatory effect of PIP2 on PKC apparently is not due to binding to the same site recognized by diacylglycerol or phorbol ester, because PIP2 cannot effectively compete with phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate in the binding assay.  相似文献   

6.
Calphobindins (CPBs, placental annexins) are intracellular Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent proteins like protein kinase C [EC 2.7.1.37]. We investigated the inhibitory effects of calphobindins on the protein kinase C activity in vitro. CPB I inhibited the protein kinase C activity for both histone phosphorylation and lipocortin phosphorylation, but CPB II and CPB III inhibited only the protein kinase C activity for histone phosphorylation. In the case of histone phosphorylation, all CPBs inhibited the protein kinase C activity in a concentration-dependent manner, and the IC50 (concentration required for 50% inhibition) value of CPB I was 70 nM. The inhibition of protein kinase C by CPB I was Ca(2+)-dependent, and did not disappear upon increasing the concentration of phosphatidyl-serine. Kinetic analysis by double-reciprocal plots indicated that CPB I interacted not only with phosphatidylserine but also with protein kinase C. Although CPB I partially interacts with phospholipid, it is conceivable that the inhibitory action of CPB I on protein kinase C results from direct interaction of CPB I with protein kinase C. Since CPBs are mainly present under the plasma membrane, it is presumed that CPB I is an endogenous inhibitor of protein kinase C, and according to intracellular circumstances, CPB II and CPB III may also be endogenous inhibitors.  相似文献   

7.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLC-kinase) was rapidly phosphorylated in vitro by the autophosphorylated form of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM-kinase II) to a molar stoichiometry of 2.77 +/- 0.15 associated with a threefold increase in the concentration of calmodulin (CaM) required for half-maximal activation of MLC-kinase. Binding of CaM to MLC-kinase markedly reduced the phosphorylation stoichiometry to 0.21 +/- 0.05 and almost completely inhibited phosphorylation of sites in two peptides (32P-peptides P1 and P2) with reduced phosphorylation of peptide P3. By analogy, cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated MLC-kinase to a stoichiometry of 3.0 or greater in the absence of CaM with about a threefold decrease in the apparent affinity of MLC-kinase for CaM. Binding of CaM to MLC-kinase inhibited the phosphorylation to 0.84 +/- 0.13. Complete tryptic digests contained two major 32P-peptides as reported previously. One of the peptides, whose phosphorylation was inhibited in the presence of excess calmodulin, appeared to be the same as P2. Automated Edman sequence analysis suggested that both CaM-kinase II and cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated this peptide at the second of the two adjacent serine residues located at the C-terminal boundary of the CaM-binding domain. However, the other peptide phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, regardless of whether CaM was bound, was different from P1 and P3. Thus, MLC-kinase has a regulatory phosphorylation site(s) that is phosphorylated by the autophosphorylated form of CaM-kinase II and is blocked by Ca2+/CaM-binding.  相似文献   

8.
Protein kinase C (PKC) activity (phosphorylation increased by addition of Ca2+/phosphatidylserine or Ca2+/phosphatidylserine/phorbol ester) was found in both a synaptic plasma membrane (SPM) and a postsynaptic density (PSD) fraction. The SPM fraction had as endogenous substrates 87K-, 60K-, 50K-, and 20K-Mr proteins, whereas the PSD fraction had only the 20K-Mr protein. The PKC activity was also detected using histone III-S as a substrate, in SPM but much less in PSD. Phosphorylations of histone and the endogenous substrates of PKC, assayed in the absence of Ca2+, were enhanced in the SPM prepared after treatment of brain homogenate with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (TPA), but very little enhancement was found in PSD after such treatment. The SPM PKC activity (both for endogenous substrate proteins and for histone), which was enhanced by TPA treatment of brain homogenate, was inhibited by calcium (IC50, 3 x 10(-7) M). The phosphorylations of the 20K-Mr protein in PSD, and in SPM prepared with and without TPA treatment, were all inhibited by H-7. The 20K-Mr protein in the PSD fraction is also phosphorylated by a PSD Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. The evidence indicates that both SPM and PSD fractions contain a PKC activity. Detergent treatment of SPM, to produce a purified PSD fraction, results in a PSD fraction that has lost most of the endogenous substrates, lost the TPA-induced enhanced activity assayed in the absence of Ca2+, and lost the inhibitory effect of low Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

9.
An anticoagulant protein was purified from the EDTA extract of human placental tissue. The purified protein had a molecular weight of 73,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under both reducing and non-reducing conditions. Because this protein had the ability to bind phospholipids such as phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol, and cardiolipin in the presence of Ca2+, this protein was designated as calphobindin II (CPB-II). CPB-II prolonged the clotting time of normal plasma when coagulation was induced by tissue factor, cephalin and ellagic acid or recalcification, but did not affect thrombin-initiated fibrin formation. CPB-II also inhibited the activation of prothrombin by the complete prothrombinase complex or factor Xa-phospholipid-Ca2+ but not that by phospholipid-free factor Xa. In addition, CPB-II had an inhibitory activity against phospholipase A2.  相似文献   

10.
Binding of human factor VIII to phospholipid vesicles   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Factor VIII, a protein cofactor involved in blood coagulation, functions in vitro on a phospholipid membrane surface to greatly increase the rate of factor X activation by factor IXa. Using gel filtration, rapid sedimentation, and resonance energy transfer we have studied the interaction of recombinant-derived human factor VIII with small and large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles composed of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine. Resonance energy transfer, from intrinsic fluorophores in factor VIII to dansyl-phosphatidylethanolamine incorporated into vesicles, has been adapted for quantitative equilibrium measurements. Factor VIII binds rapidly and reversibly to small and large vesicles. At 8 degrees C the interaction of factor VIII with small vesicles fits a simple bimolecular model with a KD of 2 nM and a phospholipid binding site defined by 180 phospholipid monomers. At 25 degrees C the binding of factor VIII to small vesicles containing 20% phosphatidylserine can be described by an apparent KD of 4 nM; the phospholipid/protein ratio at saturation was 170. Binding to large vesicles was demonstrated with a KD of 2 nM and a phospholipid/protein ratio at saturation of 385. Binding was dependent upon the phosphatidylserine mole fraction and was nonlinear from 0 to 30% phosphatidylserine content. A direct comparison of factor VIII and factor V binding indicated that the affinity of factor V to phospholipid vesicles was equivalent to that of factor VIII and that the phosphatidylserine requirement was lower. A model is proposed to explain the nonlinear phosphatidylserine dependence of binding for factor VIII.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of Ca2+-dependent (peak I) and Ca2+-independent (peak II) phosphodiesterases from the heart by various fatty acyl esters and phospholipids were studied. DL-Palmitoylcarnitine stimulated the basal activity (in the absence of Ca2+) of peak I enzyme, while non-competitively inhibiting peak II enzyme with respect to cyclic AMP. It had no effect on other species of Ca2+-independent phosphodiesterases, including cyclic AMP- and cyclic GMP-specific enzymes from the lung, and cyclic CMP enzyme from the liver Palmitoyl-CoA and phosphatidylserine also stimulated the basal activity of peak I enzyme, but they were without effect on peak II enzyme. In comparison, DL-palmitoylcarnitine inhibited Ca2+-dependent activity of cardiac myosin light chain kinase, whereas phosphatidylserine was without effect. It is conceivable that differential regulation of phosphodiesterases by these lipids could profoundly alter the levels or effects, or both, of cyclic nucleotides and Ca2+ in the myocardium.  相似文献   

12.
A calcium-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) was purified to near homogeneity from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes and shown to be identical to bovine protein kinase C. The Ca2+ activation of the enzyme was studied and the Ca2+ concentrations required to activate the enzyme were compared to free cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations in resting and activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes. The free calcium concentrations in the cytosol and in the enzyme assay mixture were determined using the calcium indicator quin 2. The enzyme activity was almost totally dependent upon phosphatidylserine and could be strongly activated by Ca2+ concentrations in the micromolar range, but was not activated by phosphatidylserine at Ca2+ concentrations corresponding to the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration under resting conditions. However, at similar Ca2+ concentrations (less than 2.5 X 10(-7) M) the enzyme was highly activated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) or diolein in the presence of phosphatidylserine. It was demonstrated that PMA stimulation of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes did not induce any increase in the level of the intracellular free calcium concentration. It was concluded that PMA activation of protein kinase C occurred independently of a rise in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. K0.5 (half-maximal activation) for the PMA activation of purified protein kinase C was shown to be equivalent to the K0.5 for PMA stimulation of superoxide (O-2) production in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes, suggesting that protein kinase C is involved in activation of the NADPH oxidase. The presumed intracellular Ca2+ antagonist TMB-8 inhibited the PMA-induced superoxide production, but neither by an intracellular Ca2+ antagonism nor by a direct inhibition of protein kinase C activity.  相似文献   

13.
J W Orr  A C Newton 《Biochemistry》1992,31(19):4667-4673
The roles of specific and nonspecific interactions in the regulation of protein kinase C by lipid have been examined. Binding and activity measurements reveal two mechanisms by which protein kinase C interacts with membranes: (1) a specific binding to the activating lipid phosphatidylserine and (2) a nonspecific binding to nonactivating, acidic lipids. The specific interaction with phosphatidylserine is relatively insensitive to ionic strength, surface charge, and the presence of nonactivating lipids. The two second messengers of the kinase, diacylglycerol and Ca2+, increase markedly the affinity of the kinase for phosphatidylserine. In contrast, the nonspecific interaction is sensitive to ionic strength and surface charge, and is unaffected by diacylglycerol. These results suggest that electrostatic interactions promote the binding of protein kinase C to membranes but the cooperative and selective binding of phosphatidylserine is the dominant driving force in a productive protein-lipid interaction.  相似文献   

14.
Lipocortin I, a Ca2(+)-and phospholipid-binding protein without EF-hand structures, has many biological effects in vitro. Its actual role in vivo, however is unknown. We obtained and characterized five monoclonal antibodies to lipocortin I. Two of these monoclonal antibodies (L2 and L4-MAbs) reacted with the Ca(+)-bound form of lipocortin I, but not with the Ca2(+)-free form, both in vivo and in vitro. Lipocortin I required greater than or equal to 10 microM-Ca2+ to bind the two antibodies, and this Ca2+ requirement was not affected by phosphatidylserine. L2-MAb abolished the phospholipase A2 inhibitory activity of lipocortin I and inhibited its binding to Escherichia coli membranes and to phosphatidylserine in vitro. L4-MAb abolished the phospholipase A2 inhibitory activity of lipocortin I, but did not affect its binding to E. coli membranes or to phosphatidylserine. These findings indicated that the inhibition of phospholipase A2 by lipocortin I was not simply due to removal or capping of the substrates in E. coli membranes. Furthermore, an immunofluorescence study using L2-MAb showed the actual existence of Ca2(+)-bound form of lipocortin I in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
CP-46,665-1, an antineoplastic lipoidal amine, was found to inhibit phospholipid/Ca2+-dependent protein kinase (PL/Ca-PK, or protein kinase C), with an IC50 (concentration causing a 50% inhibition) of 10 microM. Its inhibition of the enzyme was reversed by phosphatidylserine, but not by Ca2+. The agent also inhibited the enzyme activity which was further augmented by 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), mezerein or diolein. Phosphorylation of endogenous proteins from HL-60 cells by the enzyme, with or without being further augmented by TPA, was inhibited by CP-46,665-1 as well as by alkyllysophospholipid (an antineoplastic agent). CP-46,665-1, while without effect on cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, also inhibited myosin light chain kinase (a calmodulin/Ca2+-dependent protein kinase). The present findings suggest that inhibition of the Ca2+-effector enzymes may be related in part to the antimetastatic activity of the lipoidal amine.  相似文献   

16.
Monoclonal antibodies (8/1, 10/10, and 25/3) against rat brain type II protein kinase C were used for the immunochemical characterization of this kinase. These antibodies immunoprecipitated the type II protein kinase C in a dose-dependent manner but did neither to the type I nor III isozyme. Immunoblot analysis of the tryptic fragments from protein kinase C revealed that all three antibodies recognized the 27-38-kDa fragments, the phospholipid/phorbol ester-binding domain, but not the 45-48-kDa fragments, the kinase catalytic domain. The immune complexes of the kinase and the antibodies retained 70-80% of the kinase activity which was dependent on Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine and further activated by diacylglycerol or tumor-promoting phorbol ester. With antibody 8/1, the kinetic parameters with respect to Km for ATP and histone and K alpha for phosphatidylserine and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate were not significantly influenced. However, the antibody causes variable effects on the K alpha for Ca2+ under different assay conditions. When determined in the presence of phosphatidylserine, the K alpha for Ca2+ was reduced by an order of magnitude (37 +/- 8 to 2.0 +/- 1.8 microM); in the presence of phosphatidylserine and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate, the K alpha for Ca2+ was not significantly altered; and in the presence of phosphatidylserine and dioleoylglycerol, the kinase became an apparently Ca2+-independent enzyme. The effects of antibody 8/1 on the kinetic parameters of the enzyme for phorbol ester binding were different from those for kinase activity. This antibody causes a 20-30% reduction in phorbol ester binding and a 2-fold increase (1.9 +/- 0.2 to 3.9 +/- 0.3 micrograms/ml) in the concentration of phosphatidylserine required for half-maximal binding, but is without significant influence on those parameters for Ca2+ and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate. The differential effects of antibody 8/1 on kinase activity and phorbol ester binding with respect to the kinetic parameter of phosphatidylserine suggest that the roles of this phospholipid in supporting phorbol ester binding and kinase activation are different. In the presence of the antibody, the autophosphorylations of the phospholipid/phorbol ester-binding domain and the kinase domain were reduced; the reduction was more pronounced for the former than for the latter. These results suggest that the epitope for antibody 8/1 is localized within the phospholipid/phorbol ester-binding domain at the region adjacent to the kinase domain so that the autophosphorylations of both domains are affected.  相似文献   

17.
Chemical modification of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 according to the procedure of D. J. Welsch and G. L. Nelsestuen (1988) [Biochemistry 27, 4946-4952 and ealier papers] provided a series of fragment 1 derivatives in which various nitrogen-containing side chains were N-acetylated and/or N-2,4,6-trinitrophenylated. In addition the des-[Ala-1,Asn-2]- and des-[Ala-1,Asn-2,Lys-3]-fragment 1 derivatives were prepared by limited enzymatic hydrolysis of fragment 1 using cathepsin C and plasmin, respectively. Quantitative studies on the Ca(II) binding of these proteins have been accomplished using 45Ca(II) equilibrium dialysis. Binding of these fragment 1 derivatives to phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (PS/PC) vesicles (25:75) in the presence of Ca(II) ions has been studied using the light-scattering technique. Acylation of the 5 lysine residues of fragment 1 by the action of acetic anhydride (500-fold molar excess) in the presence of 75 mM Ca(II), pH 8.0, results in loss of positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding (Scatchard plot) and an increase in the number of Ca(II) ions bound. The Ca(II)-dependent PS/PC binding of the acylated protein is reduced. Removal of 2 and 3 residues from the amino terminus likewise leads to loss of positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding and reduced binding affinity to PS/PC vesicles. The important role of the amino-terminal 1-10 sequence is discussed. We conclude that positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding is not a prerequisite for the Ca(II)-dependent binding of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 to PS/PC vesicles.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the importance of the physical state of phospholipids for activation of protein kinase C, we have used short chain phospholipids, which, depending on their concentration, can exist as either monomers or micelles. We previously reported that short chain phosphatidylcholines (PC) can activate protein kinase C at concentrations that correlate with the critical micelle concentration of the activating lipid (Walker, J. M., and Sando, J. J. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 4537-4540). We have now expanded this work to short chain phosphatidylserine (PS) systems in order to examine the role of Ca2(+)-phospholipid interactions in the activation process. Short chain PS were synthesized from corresponding PC and purified by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Use of the short chain system has revealed significant differences in the activation of type II and type III protein kinase C isozymes. The type II isozyme required Ca2+ in the presence of long chain PS vesicles; in the presence of the short chain phospholipid micelles (PC or PS), most of the activity was Ca2+ independent. Addition of diacylglycerol caused a small increase in type II activity in all phospholipid systems. In contrast, type III protein kinase C was Ca(+)-dependent in all of the lipid systems. The concentration of Ca2+ required to activate type III protein kinase C was independent of the phospholipid type despite large differences in the ability of these lipids to bind Ca2+. This isozyme required diacylglycerol only in the PC micelle system or with vesicles composed of long chain saturated PS. The presence of short chain PS micelles or long chain PS with unsaturated fatty acyl chains rendered this Ca2(+)-dependent protein kinase C virtually diacylglycerol independent. These results are consistent with a model in which type II protein kinase C requires Ca2+ primarily for membrane association, a requirement which is bypassed with the micelle system, whereas type III protein kinase C has an additional Ca2+ requirement for activity that does not involve Ca2(+)-phospholipid interactions.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase from rabbit retina was partially purified. Vitamin A acid (retinoic acid) stimulated this protein kinase in the presence of Ca2+, while other metabolites of vitamin A such as retinol or retinal were less effective. The order of the extent of phosphorylation of the various substrate proteins by this protein kinase was identical in the presence of vitamin A acid or phosphatidylserine. The major spots of the 32P labeled peptide from histone H1 phosphorylated in the presence of vitamin A acid by this protein kinase did not differ from those obtained from histone H1 phosphorylated in the presence of phosphatidylserine. Retinol caused a further enhancement of the enzymatic activity, whereas the addition of retinal inhibited the activation by vitamin A acid. Thus, vitamin A and its metabolites may play an important role in the regulation of Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase activity in the retina.  相似文献   

20.
K Hong  V D Vacquier 《Biochemistry》1986,25(3):543-549
Lysin, a protein of Mr 16 000 from the acrosome granule of the abalone, is responsible for the dissolution of the egg vitelline layer. The primary structure of this cationic protein projects some hydrophobic domains in the secondary structure. Lysin was found to associate nonselectively with phospholipid bilayers and cause a spontaneous release of encapsulated carboxyfluorescein in liposomes. The association of lysin with phosphatidylcholine liposomes suggests that there is a hydrophobic interaction between lysin and lipid bilayers. Binding of lysin to phospholipid resulted in the aggregation of phosphatidylserine-containing liposomes, but aggregation was not observed in neutral phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Resonance energy transfer and dequenching of fluorescent 1-palmitoyl-2-cis-parinaroylphosphatidylcholine were both used to determine the fusogenic activity of lysin in aggregated liposomes. Results from both assays are consistent. Lysin-induced fusion was observed in all the phosphatidylserine-containing liposomes, and the general trend of fusion susceptibility was phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (1:2) approximately equal to phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine (1:1:1) greater than phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine (1:2). Cholesterol up to 30% did not affect the intrinsic fusion susceptibility. A hydrophobic penetration by protein molecules and the packing of phospholipid bilayers are used to interpret the fusion susceptibility. Lysin-induced liposome aggregation was highly independent of the state of self-association of lysin in ionic medium. However, the fusogenic activity of self-associated lysin was found to be much less than the monodispersed one. Liposomes preincubated with Ca2+ did not fuse initially as readily as those without Ca2+ treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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