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Hormone-sensitive cAMP phosphodiesterase in liver and fat cells
Authors:Sharron H. Francis  Tetsuro Kono
Affiliation:(1) Dept. of Physiology, School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, 37232 Nashville, TN, USA
Abstract:Summary The enzymatic characteristics and the mode of hormone-dependent stimulation of cAMP phosphodiesterase are reviewed. The hormone-sensitive phosphodiesterase is a low Km enzyme, which has been found in liver and fat cells. The fat cell enzyme is mostly associated with the endoplasmic reticulum. The liver cell enzyme is also associated with certain subcellular structures.The hormone-sensitive phosphodiesterase appears to have catalytic and regulatory domains and is thought to be attached to subcellular structures at the regulatory portion of the enzyme. The catalytic domain of the fat cell enzyme can be obtained in a soluble form from the microsomal preparation by mild proteolysis or by dithiothreitol treatment at 0–4 °C. The catalytic domain of the liver enzyme can be solubilized by either hypotonic treatment or mild trypsin digestion. The catalytic domains solubilized from the basal and hormonally activated forms of the enzyme are apparently identical.The membrane-bound basal enzyme from adipocytes is activated in a concentrated salt solution without being solubilized. On the other hand, the plus-insulin activity is deactivated in a low salt solution or by a short dithiothreitol treatment at 37°, apparently without suffering any changes in the catalytic domain. In contrast, p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate seems to inactivate the enzyme by interacting with SH-groups in the catalytic domain. Although the liver enzyme is not similarly affected by salt concentrations, its catalytic activity is blocked by p-chloromercuribenzoate.The adipocyte enzyme can be solubilized with a mixture of Lubrol WX and Zwittergent 3–14. The apparent Stokes radius of the basal enzyme is approximately 87 A, while that of the hormone-stimulated enzyme is approximately 94 A.Apparently, the same species of phosphodiesterase is activated by both insulin and epinephrine in fat cells and by insulin and glucagon in liver, possibly being mediated by reactions involving phosphorylation. However, it is yet to be ascertained how phosphorylation is involved and how the apparent Stokes radius of the adipocyte enzyme is increased as a result of stimulation.
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