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Calcium/Ganglioside-Dependent Protein Kinase Activity in Rat Brain Membrane
Authors:James R. Goldenring  Laura C. Otis  Robert K. Yu  Robert J. DeLorenzo
Affiliation:Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Abstract:The effects of gangliosides on phosphorylation were studied in rat brain membrane. Gangliosides stimulated phosphorylation only in the presence of Ca2+ with major phosphoproteins of 45,000, 50,000, 60,000, and 80,000 daltons and high-molecular-weight species. In addition, gangliosides inhibited the phosphorylation of three proteins with molecular weights of 15,000, 20,000, and 78,000 daltons. The two low-molecular-weight proteins comigrated with rat myelin basic proteins. Ganglioside stimulation was dependent on the formation of a Ca2+-ganglioside complex since the calcium salt of gangliosides stimulated phosphorylation maximally. Disialo and trisialo gangliosides were more potent stimulators of kinase activity than the monosialo GM1 X GD1a was the most potent activator tested. Asialo-GM1, cerebroside, sialic acid, neuraminyllactose, sulfatide, and the acidic phospholipids phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol did not stimulate kinase activity. The Ca2+-dependent, ganglioside-stimulated phosphorylation was qualitatively similar to the pattern for calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation. However, while calmodulin-dependent kinase activity was inhibited with an IC50 of 10 microM trifluoperazine, ganglioside-stimulated kinase was inhibited with an IC50 of 200 microM trifluoperazine. These results indicate that gangliosides have complex effects on membrane-associated kinase activities and suggest that Ca2+-ganglioside complexes are potent stimulators of membrane kinase activity.
Keywords:Ganglioside-stimulated phosphorylation    Calcium    Kinase activity
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