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1.
A calpain (Ca(2+)-activated neutral protease) activator was purified from human platelets by ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel-filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, followed by heat-treatment. The purified calpain activator with a Mr of 47.5 kDa was a heat-stable protein as demonstrated in other cells. The calpain activator did not change the Ca2+ sensitivity of calpain but activated calpain activity about 2-fold. This calpain activator may play an important role in the activation of the protease system leading to the Ca(2+)-mediated physiological process of platelets.  相似文献   

2.
A Ca2+-activated proteolytic enzyme that partially degrades myofibrils was isolated from hind limb muscles of normal rabbits and rabbits undergoing rapid muscle atrophy as a result of vitamin E deficiency. Extractable Ca2+-activated protease activity was 3.6 times higher in muscle tissue from vitamin E-deficient rabbits than from muscle tissue of control rabbits. Ultrastructural studies of muscle from vitamin E-deficient rabbits showed that the Z disk was the first myofibrillar structure to show degradative changes in atrophying muscle. Myofibrils prepared from muscles from vitamin E-deficient rabbits showed partial or complete loss of Z-disk density. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the amount of troponin-T (37 000 daltons) and alpha-actinin (96 000 daltons) was reduced in myofibrils from atrophying muscle as compared to myofibrils prepared from control muscle. In vitro treatment of purified myofibrils with purified Ca2+-activated proteolytic enzyme produced alterations in myofibrillar ultrastructure that were identical to the initial alterations occurring in myofibrils from atrophying muscle (i.e. weakening and subsequent removal of Z disks). Additonally the electrophoretic banding pattern of Ca2+-activated proteolytic enzyme-treated myofibrils is very similar to that of myofibrils prepared from muscles atrophying as a result of nutritional vitamin E deficiency. The possible role of Ca2+-activated proteolytic enzyme in disassembly and degradation of the myofibril is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The Ca2+ -activated neutral protease can proteolyze both Ca2+ -dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase. Ca2+ -dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from rat brain was converted to the Ca2+ -independent active form by Ca2+ -activated protease. The proteolytic effects on myosin light chain kinase of Ca2+-activated protease differed in the presence and absence of the Ca2+-calmodulin (CaM) complex. In the presence of bound CaM, myosin light chain kinase (130k dalton) was degradated to a major fragment of 62 kDa, which had Ca2+/CaM-dependent enzyme and CaM-binding activity. When digestion occurred in the absence of bound CaM, myosin light chain kinase cleaved to a fragment of 60 kDa. This peptide had no enzymatic activity in the presence or absence of the Ca2+-CaM complex. Available evidence suggests that the Ca2+-activated proteases may recognize the conformational change of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase induced by Ca2+-CaM complex.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium-dependent proteolysis occurs during platelet aggregation   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Control and stimulated platelets were analyzed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to determine whether proteins are altered during platelet activation. Platelets were stimulated with thrombin, collagen, or the calcium ionophore A23187, and aggregation was brought about by stirring in the presence of Ca2+. These activated platelets contained at least three polypeptides not found in control platelets: 1) Mr = 200,000, pI between 6.2 and 6.4; 2) Mr = 100,000, pI = 6.3; and 3) Mr = 91,000, pI = 6.1. An additional polypeptide, polypeptide 4, with Mr = 97,000 and pI = 5.9, was present only in platelets activated by thrombin. When aggregation was prevented, either by adding 5 mM ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) to the platelet suspension or by incubating the platelet suspension without stirring, polypeptides 1-3 were not formed. Partial hydrolysis of polypeptides 2 and 4 with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease yielded distinct sets of peptide hydrolytic fragments. These differed from those produced by the hydrolysis of alpha-actinin, a major platelet protein, which has a molecular weight similar to polypeptides 2 and 4. Polypeptides 1-3 were also produced during incubation of platelet lysates in the presence of Ca2+. Generation of these polypeptides in lysates was prevented either by chelation of Ca2+ with EGTA or by the addition of N-ethylmaleimide, leupeptin, or mersalyl, inhibitors of the calcium-dependent protease. These data show that the calcium-dependent protease is activated during aggregation of platelets by physiological agents and suggest that this protease could have a role in platelet response to stimulation.  相似文献   

5.
Ca2+ influx through the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA)-type glutamate receptor triggers activation and postsynaptic accumulation of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII). CaMKII, calmodulin, and alpha-actinin directly bind to the short membrane proximal C0 domain of the C-terminal region of the NMDA receptor NR1 subunit. In a negative feedback loop, calmodulin mediates Ca2+-dependent inactivation of the NMDA receptor by displacing alpha-actinin from NR1 C0 upon Ca2+ influx. We show that Ca2+-depleted calmodulin and alpha-actinin simultaneously bind to NR1 C0. Upon addition of Ca2+, calmodulin dislodges alpha-actinin. Either the N- or C-terminal half of calmodulin is sufficient for Ca2+-induced displacement of alpha-actinin. Whereas alpha-actinin directly antagonizes CaMKII binding to NR1 C0, the addition of Ca2+/calmodulin shifts binding of NR1 C0 toward CaMKII by displacing alpha-actinin. Displacement of alpha-actinin results in the simultaneous binding of calmodulin and CaMKII to NR1 C0. Our results reveal an intricate mechanism whereby Ca2+ functions to govern the complex interactions between the two most prevalent signaling molecules in synaptic plasticity, the NMDA receptor and CaMKII.  相似文献   

6.
The metabolism of the redox-active quinone, menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone), in human platelets was associated with superoxide anion production, oxidation and depletion of intracellular glutathione, and modification of protein thiols. The cytoskeletal fraction extracted from menadione-treated platelets exhibited a dose-dependent increase in the amount of cytoskeleton-associated protein and a concomitant loss of protein thiols. These alterations were associated with oxidative modifications of actin, including beta-mercaptoethanol-sensitive crosslinking of actin to form dimers, trimers, and high-molecular-weight aggregates which also contained other cytoskeletal proteins, i.e., alpha-actinin and actin-binding protein. In addition, analysis of the cytoskeletal fraction from platelets treated with high concentrations (greater than or equal to 100 microM) of menadione by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions revealed a net decrease in the relative abundance of the individual cytoskeletal polypeptides. Under the same incubation conditions the platelets exhibited a sustained increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. The presence of glucose, or the omission of Ca2+ from the incubation medium, prevented both the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ and the decrease in the relative amounts of cytoskeletal proteins. The latter effect was also largely prevented in platelets loaded with Quin-2 tetraacetoxymethyl ester to buffer the menadione-induced elevation of cytosolic Ca2+. Finally, the presence of a protease inhibitor, leupeptin, in the incubation medium prevented the menadione-induced decrease in the amount of actin-binding protein but not the decrease in the other cytoskeletal proteins. Our findings demonstrate that the multiple effects of oxidative stress on the platelet cytoskeleton are mediated by oxidative as well as by Ca2+-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
Recent studies have suggested a role for Ca2+-dependent proteolysis in the regulation of microfilament disassembly by high molecular weight actin-binding protein. A Ca2+-activated protease similar to myofibrillar Ca2+-activated protease has been described in platelets. To explore the role of Ca2+-activated proteolysis of actin-binding protein in platelet function, we have examined the effects of platelet aggregating agents on platelet Ca2+-activated protease-like activity. The hydrolysis of actin-binding protein by Ca2+-activated protease was determined electrophoretically. The calcium ionophore, A23187, produced a dose-dependent stimulation of Ca2+-activated protease-like activity in the presence of exogenous calcium but had no effect in the absence of external calcium. Both normal and thrombasthenic platelets generated Ca2+-activated protease-like activity in response to A23187. Ionophore-induced stimulation of Ca2+-activated protease-like activity was not affected by prior incubation of platelets with 8-bromo cyclic GMP, 8-bromo cyclic AMP, prostaglandin E1, prostaglandin I2, indomethacin or tetracaine, but was inhibited by the sulfhydryl inhibitor N-ethylmaleimide. These results confirm the presence of Ca2+-activated protease in platelets and indicate that the source of calcium important in Ca2+-activated protease stimulation is in part extracellular. Other aggregating agents, thrombin, epinephrine, and ADP, were not accompanied by hydrolysis of actin-binding protein, indicating that the alteration in ionic calcium that occurs during aggregation by these other agents is insufficient to generate Ca2+-activated protease-like activity as measured by the present analytical technique.  相似文献   

8.
Treatment of isolated myofibrils with Ca2+-activated neutral proteinase (CANP) results in specific removal of Z-line and of alpha-actinin. To investigate the ionic requirement for these processes, we measured Z-line removal by phase-contrast and interference microscopy and alpha-actinin removal by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoretic analysis of myofibrillar proteins. The proteolytic digestion of native purified proteins was measured directly on polyacrylamide gels and by the fluorescamine technique. We found that the removal of Z-line and alpha-actinin as well as the release of proteolytic degradation products from isolated myofibrils by CANP occur only in the presence of Ca2+; Sr2+, Ba2+, Mn2+, Mg2+, Co2+ and Zn2+ are all ineffective. In contrast with this stringent requirement for Ca2+, the proteolytic activity of CANP measured with denatured casein, native and denatured haemoglobin, native actin and tropomyosin also occurs in the presence of other bivalent cations, in the following order: Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+. These data suggest that only Ca2+ can produce the conformational change in myofibrils that renders them susceptible to the action of CANP, whereas its proteolytic activity is stimulated by several bivalent ions.  相似文献   

9.
The noted loss of alpha-actinin from the Z-line of myofibrils during post-mortem autolysis, probably following the action of calcium-activated protease, has previously been attributed to its release without degradation. This report shows that in isolated myofibrils alpha-actinin is proteolysed in a Ca2+-sensitive manner presumably via the action of calcium-activated protease.  相似文献   

10.
A Ca2+-activated neutral protease was purified to homogeneity from an aquatic Phycomycete fungus, Allomyces arbuscula. It requires millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ for activation (1.8 to 2 mM for 50% activation). Sr2+ can replace Ca2+ but at higher concentrations (4 mM for 50% activation). The enzyme is a dimer of 40-kilodalton subunits and contains six cysteine residues, three of which are revealed only after the addition of micromolar concentrations of Ca2+; the other three are free. Enzyme activity is strongly inhibited by SH-group inhibitors and some trypsin inhibitors (leupeptin and alpha-N-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone). The enzyme lacks general trypsinlike specificity, since substrates containing tryptic cleavage sites are not cleaved nor is enzyme activity inhibited by other trypsin inhibitors. The enzyme has many functional similarities to the extensively characterized mammalian and avian Ca2+-activated neutral proteases but differs in its substrate specificity, inhibition by alpha-N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone, and subunit structure. It is, nevertheless, presumed that this enzyme has a similar high order of specificity and is involved in the regulation of a specific growth function.  相似文献   

11.
Dictyostelium alpha-actinin is a Ca(2+)-regulated F-actin cross-linking protein. To test the inhibitory function of the two EF hands, point mutations were introduced into either one or both Ca(2+)-binding sites. After mutations, the two EF hands were distinguishable with respect to their regulatory activities. Inactivation of EF hand I abolished completely the F-actin cross-linking activity of Dictyostelium discoideum alpha-actinin but Ca2+ binding by EF hand II was still observed in a 45Ca2+ overlay assay. In contrast, after mutation of EF hand II the molecule was still active and inhibited by Ca2+; however, approximately 500-fold more Ca2+ was necessary for inhibition and 45Ca2+ binding could not be detected in the overlay assay. These data indicate that EF hand I has a low affinity for Ca2+ and EF hand II a high affinity, implying a regulatory function of EF hand I in the inhibition of F-actin cross-linking activity. Biochemical data is presented which allows us to distinguish two functions of the EF hand domains in D. discoideum alpha-actinin: (a) at the level of the EF- hands, the Ca(2+)-binding affinity of EF hand I was increased by EF hand II in a cooperative manner, and (b) at the level of the two subunits, the EF hands acted as an on/off switch for actin-binding in the neighboring subunit. To corroborate in vitro observations in an in vivo system we tried to rescue the abnormal phenotype of a mutant (Witke, W., M. Schleicher, A. A. Noegel. 1992. Cell. 68:53-62) by introducing the mutated alpha-actinin cDNAs. In agreement with the biochemical data, only the molecule modified in EF hand II could rescue the abnormal phenotype. Considering the fact that the active construct is "always on" because it requires nonphysiological, high Ca2+ concentrations for inactivation, it is interesting to note that an unregulated alpha-actinin was able to rescue the mutant phenotype.  相似文献   

12.
Our previous research has shown that the Ca2+-dependent protease within platelets is activated when platelets aggregate, resulting in the production of three polypeptides (Mr = 200,000, 100,000, and 91,000). We have now shown that these three polypeptides arise from the hydrolysis of actin-binding protein. An antibody against actin-binding protein raised in rabbits was shown to be specific for actin-binding protein on immunoblots of total platelet proteins. This antibody reacted with additional polypeptides of Mr = 200,000, 100,000, and 91,000 on immunoblots of the proteins of thrombin-activated platelets. Actin-binding protein was purified from fresh, human platelet concentrate and hydrolyzed with platelet-derived Ca2+-dependent protease; hydrolysis resulted in the appearance of three polypeptides with molecular weights and isoelectric points identical to those of the three polypeptides generated within intact, aggregating platelets. Production of these polypeptides was inhibited by leupeptin and by the chelation of Ca2+. Hydrolysis of actin-binding protein was observed at micromolar Ca2+ concentrations, demonstrating that the level of Ca2+ in aggregated platelets is sufficient to account for the hydrolysis of actin-binding protein by the Ca2+-dependent protease. P235 was also purified and tested for its susceptibility to the protease. It was hydrolyzed by the Ca2+-dependent protease, and two polypeptides (Mr = 200,000 and 46,000) were produced. Antibodies against P235 raised in rabbits reacted only with P235 on immunoblots of total platelet proteins. These antibodies also reacted with polypeptides of Mr = 200,000 and 46,000 on immunoblots of thrombin-activated platelets. These data show that both actin-binding protein and P235 are cleaved during thrombin-induced platelet aggregation and suggest that the activation of the Ca2+-dependent protease may permit reorganization of the platelet cytoskeleton in aggregating platelets.  相似文献   

13.
Soluble extracts of rat ventral prostate contain a calcium-dependent, neutral thiol protease which is separated from an endogenous inhibitor by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The Ca2+-dependent protease had a high calcium requirement (half maximal activation at 0.19 mM CaCl2), a pH optimum in the neutral range (pH 7-8), and it was inhibited by increased ionic strength (30% inhibition at 0.2 M NaCl). Leupeptin and antipain were strong inhibitors of the enzyme. Ca2+-activated protease activities of the coagulating gland (anterior prostate) were about 40% of those of the ventral prostate and were not detectable in the dorsolateral prostatic lobe. There was no difference in specific activities of this enzyme in chromatographed extracts of prostatic lobes from young sexually mature adults and 12 month old retired breeders. In addition, Ca2+-dependent protease activity was not detectable in chromatograms of rat ventral prostate and coagulating gland secretions. Therefore, the Ca2+-activated protease does not appear to be a secretory protein and probably acts at some intracellular site(s).  相似文献   

14.
Identification of calpain II in porcine sperm   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The role that proteolytic enzymes may play in membrane-associated phenomena of sperm has been the subject of extensive investigation. In the present study, we have examined the possibility that a Ca2+-activated, neutral protease, calpain II, may be associated with sperm membranes. Using indirect immunofluorescence with primary antibodies, which are polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies directed against the 80 kDa subunit of calpain II, we have established the presence of this antigen in porcine sperm. Staining by anticalpain II (80 kDa subunit) of the apical segment of the acrosomal cap and basal body (centriolar) region was seen consistently. Variable staining of the sperm tail was also observed. These observations, combined with our positive identification of a 80 kDa protein in acrosomal membranes (via immunoblot), document the association of this protease with sperm membranes. The proximity of calpain II to the acrosome suggests a potential role for the protease in the Ca2+-mediation of the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Ca2+-activated protein phosphatase activity was demonstrated in mouse pancreatic acinar cytosol with alpha-casein and skeletal-muscle phosphorylase kinase as substrates. This phosphatase activity preferentially dephosphorylated the alpha subunit of phosphorylase kinase. After DEAE-cellulose chromatography, the Ca2+-activated phosphatase activity became dependent on exogenous calmodulin for maximal activity. Half-maximal activation was achieved at 0.5 +/- 0.1 microM-Ca2+. Trifluoperazine completely inhibited Ca2+-activated phosphatase activity, with half-maximal inhibition occurring at 8.5 +/- 0.6 microM. Mn2+, but not Mg2+, at 1 mM concentration could substitute for Ca2+ in eliciting full enzyme activation. The apparent Mr of the phosphatase as determined by Sephadex G-150 chromatography was 93000 +/- 1000. Submitting active fractions obtained after Sephadex chromatography to calmodulin affinity chromatography resulted in the resolution of a major protein of Mr 55500 +/- 300. In conclusion, Ca2+-activated protein phosphatase activity has been identified in exocrine pancreas and has several features in common with Ca2+-activated calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatases previously isolated from brain and skeletal muscle. It is possible that this Ca2+-activated phosphatase may utilize as substrates certain acinar-cell phosphoproteins previously shown to undergo dephosphorylation in response to Ca2+-mediated secretagogues.  相似文献   

16.
A nearly full-length cDNA clone for the large subunit of high-Ca2+-requiring Ca2+-activated neutral protease (mCANP) from human tissues has been isolated. The deduced protein, determined for the first time as an mCANP, has essentially the same structural features as those revealed previously for the large subunits of the low-Ca2+-requiring form (muCANP) [Aoki, K., Imajoh, S., Ohno, S., Emori, Y., Koike, M., Kosaki, G., & Suzuki, K. (1986) FEBS Lett. 205, 313-317] and chicken CANP [Ohno, S., Emori, Y., Imajoh, S., Kawasaki, H., Kisaragi, M., & Suzuki, K. (1984) Nature (London) 312, 566-570]. Namely, the protein, comprising 700 amino acid residues, is characterized by four domains, containing a cysteine protease like domain and a Ca2+-binding domain. The overall amino acid sequence similarities of the mCANP large subunit with those of human muCANP and chicken CANP are 62% and 66%, respectively. These values are slightly lower than that observed between muCANP and chicken CANP (70%). Local sequence similarities vary with the domain, 73-78% in the cysteine protease like domain and 48-65% in the Ca2+-binding domain. These results suggest that CANPs with different Ca2+ sensitivities share a common evolutionary origin and that their regulatory mechanisms are similar except for the Ca2+ concentrations required for activation.  相似文献   

17.
A Ca(2+)-activated thiol protease was purified from Drosophila melanogaster. The procedure involves Phenyl-Sepharose, Reactive Red-Agarose and Q-Sepharose fast flow (or MonoQ) chromatographic steps. The enzyme eluting from Q-Sepharose fast flow seems to be homogeneous as judged by silver staining on SDS-PAGE: it consists of a single polypeptide chain of M(r),app = 94K and pI = 5.46. The proteolytic activity of the purified enzyme is absolutely Ca(2+)-dependent, characterized by 0.6 mM free Ca2+ at half-maximal activity. Ca2+ ions cannot be replaced effectively by the divalent cations Mg2+, Mn2+, Zn2+, Ba2+, and Cd2+. The enzyme shows the inhibitor pattern of thiol proteases. Human recombinant calpastatin (domain I) completely inhibits the enzyme at a nearly 1:1 molar ratio. Several of these properties resemble those of vertebrate calpain II. However, various attempts to detect a small subunit of M(r) approximately 30K, common with vertebrate calpains, remained unsuccessful. We suggest that the Drosophila enzyme is a novel calpain II-like protease.  相似文献   

18.
Canine and feline cardiac Z-lines and Z-rods were examined by electron microscopy before and after digestion of muscle fibers with Ca2+-activated protease (CAF). Removal by CAF of electron-dense material which covers Z-lines and Z-rods exposed interdigitating longitudinal filaments (6-7 nm in diameter) apparently continuous with thin filaments of the respective I-bands. The newly exposed longitudinal filaments of CAF-treated Z-lines and of CAF-treated Z-rods bound heavy meromyosin and therefore are actin. The width of Z-lines and length of Z-rods are determined by the amount of overlap of actin filaments of opposite polarity. The oblique filaments in Z-lines and Z-rods are responsible for the perpendicular periodicity of Z-lines and Z-rods, and are attributed to alpha-actinin.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of the Ca2+-activated cysteine proteinase, the rat trypsin-like serine proteinase and bovine trypsin on myofibrillar proteins from rabbit skeletal muscle are compared. 2. Myofibrils that had been treated at neutral pH with the Ca2+-dependent proteinase and with the rat enzyme were (a) analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and (b) examined in the electron microscope. Treatment with each proteinase resulted in the loss of the Z-discs, but the rat enzyme caused much more extensive disruption of the ultrastructure and degraded more of the myofibrillar proteins. 3. Purified F-actin was almost totally resistant to the proteinases, whereas G-actin was degraded by the rat trypsin-like proteinase at a rate approx. 15 times faster than was obtained with bovine trypsin. 4. Similar results were obtained with alpha-actinin, whereas tropomyosin was degraded more readily by bovine trypsin than by the rat trypsin-like proteinase. 5. The implications of these findings for the non-lysosomal breakdown of myofibrillar proteins in vivo are considered.  相似文献   

20.
We studied the properties of actinogelin, a Ca2+-regulated actin cross-linking protein isolated from Ehrlich tumor cells or rat liver. Chicken gizzard alpha-actinin was used as a Ca2+-insensitive control. Actinogelin, which has very high gelation activity under low Ca2+ conditions, was found using electron microscopic or fluorescence studies to induce formation of a characteristic structure in which actin filaments and bundles radiate to (or converge from) all directions from spot-like core structures. A similar structure was induced with actinogelin, even in the presence of 0.7 saturation of tropomyosin. No such structure was detected with actinogelin under high Ca2+ conditions, and only a few were found with gizzard alpha-actinin. Because reconstituted structures are similar to those observed intracellularly, actinogelin may be important in the formation of similar microfilament organization in the cells. It seems also important that these structures are reconstituted with only two purified protein components, i.e., actinogelin and actin. Immunocompetition studies showed that actinogelin and gizzard alpha-actinin partially shared antigenicity, and their molecular shape and peptide maps were similar. Their amino acid compositions [Kuo et al., 1982], subunit and domain structures, and binding sites on actin [Mimura and Asano, 1987] are also very similar. Therefore, it is concluded that actinogelin belongs to alpha-actinin superfamily proteins. Furthermore, the presence of functionally different subfamilies concerned with Ca2+ sensitivity, gelation-efficiency, and others is discussed. Actinogelin, which induces networks of actin filaments, may be classified as high gelation type.  相似文献   

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