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Soluble precursor of membrane-associated protein kinase in uterine smooth muscle cells
Authors:JFrederick Krall  Stanley G Korenman
Institution:1. Molecular Endocrinology Laboratory, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Sepulveda, California 91343, USA;2. The Department of Medicine, UCLA-San Ferando Valley Medical Program, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024 USA
Abstract:Incubation of smooth muscle strips from rat uterus with isoproterenol resulted in redistribution of protein kinase activity between the cytosol and a 20,000 to 50,000g membrane fraction. Similarities in the elution properties of the cytosolic and membrane-associated forms of the enzyme on DEAE-cellulose ion exchange chromatography further suggested the two forms were the same. The nature of membrane binding of the soluble enzyme was investigated using smooth muscle microsomal and cytosol fractions. Membranes readily bound the soluble enzyme when the two subcellular compartments were reconstituted and incubated at 30 °C for 10 min. The extent of binding was proportional to the ratio of membranes to cytosol and was characterized by the inhibition of soluble enzyme activity toward exogenous substrates in a Triton X-100 reversible manner. In marked contrast to the binding of soluble protein kinase to heart particulate fractions, binding of the cytosol enzyme to smooth muscle cell membranes was unaffected by ionic strength or cAMP. The latter property indicated holoenzyme was bound in a manner similar to the free catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and suggested the enzyme was bound by association between the membrane and the catalytic subunit. Binding of cytosol protein kinase to the membranes rendered the enzyme insensitive to trypsin digestion and the capacity of the smooth muscle cell membranes to bind the soluble enzyme exceeded that of other rat tissue fractions. Resistance to salt extraction and proteolysis, as well as its detergent dependence, suggested the soluble enzyme became an integral or intrinsic membrane protein following association with the membrane. The ability of membranes to incorporate γ-32P]ATP into phosphoprotein was lost on detergent extraction of protein kinase and restored in an apparently specific manner when extracted and washed membranes were reconstituted with soluble enzyme. The intrinsic nature of membrane protein kinase and the apparent specificity with which the soluble enzyme was hound by membranes further indicated that, in myometrium. hormone-induced translocation of protein kinase is an important mechanism by which enzyme activity is increased in the vicinity of its in situ substrates.
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