Abstract: | Calf thymocytes were isolated and incubated with concanavalin A. The effect of the mitogen on the enzyme activity of membrane-bound lysolecithin acyltransferase (acyl-CoA:1-acylglycero-3-phosphorylcholine-O-acyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.23) was determined as also the binding of 125I-labelled concanavalin A to intact cells and isolated membranes. The lysolecithin acyltransferase was found to be activated three times in microsomal membranes. The activation occurred directly after binding of concanavalin A and was temperature independent, since similar activities were found in cells treated with concanavalin A at 0 and 37 degrees C. The acyltransferase activation using increasing concentrations of concanavalin A revealed a different behaviour, as compared to the binding of concanavalin A. While the binding of concanavalin A to intact cells expressed a normal hyperbolic saturation function the activation process of the acyltransferase described a sigmoidal relationship. Correspondingly, the interaction coefficients for both functions were different (Sips coefficient for binding = 1.0 and Hill coefficient of the enzyme activation = 1.8). These results indicate that the acyltransferase activation is due to a cooperative interaction between the ligand-receptor complex and the enzyme. |