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Dual mechanisms involved in development of diverse biological activities of islet-activating protein,pertussis toxin,as revealed by chemical modification of lysine residues in the toxin molecule
Authors:Katsumi Nogimori  Makoto Tamura  Motoyuki Yajima  Kiyoshi Ito  Tsutomu Nakamura  Norio Kajikawa  Yohichi Maruyama  Michio Ui
Institution:1. Kyoto Research Laboratories, Kaken Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Yamashina, Kyoto 607, Japan;2. Department of Physiological Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060, Japan
Abstract:Islet-activating protein (IAP), pertussis toxin, is an oligomeric protein composed of an A-protomer and a B-oligomer. There seem to be at least two molecular mechanisms by which IAP exerts its various effects in vivo and in vitro. On the one hand, some of the effects were not significantly affected by acetamidination of the ε-amino groups of the lysine residues in the molecule. These include the activities in vitro (1) catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of one of the membrane proteins directly, (2) enhancing membrane adenylate cyclase activity in C6 cells, (3) reversing receptor-mediated inhibition of insulin or glycerol release from pancreatic islets of adipocytes, respectively, and the activities in vivo (4) inhibiting epinephrine-induced hyperglycemia, (5) potentiating glucose-induced hyperinsulinemia, (6) reducing hypertension and increasing the heart rate in genetically hypertensive rats. These activities are concluded to develop as a result of ADP-ribosylation catalyzed by the A-protomer which is rendered accessible to its intramembrane substrate thanks to the associated B-oligomer moiety. Thus, neither the enzymic activity of the A-protomer nor the transporting activity of the B-oligomer needs free amino groups of the lysine residues in the IAP molecule. On the other hand, additional effects of IAP, such as (1) mitogenic, (2) lymphocytosis-promoting, (3) histamine-sensitizing, (4) adjuvant and (5) vascular permeability increasing, were markedly suppressed by acetamidination of the intrapeptide lysine residues. The free ε-amino group of lysine would play an indispensable role in the firm (or divalent) attachment of the B-oligomer of IAP to the cell surface that is responsible for development of these activities.
Keywords:Islet-activating protein  Pertussis toxin  Chemical modification  Lysine residue  IAP  islet-activating protein  LPF  lymphocytosis-promoting factor  HSF  histamine-sensitizing factor  HA  hemagglutinin  PCA  passive cutaneous anaphylaxis  Hepes  4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid  EGTA  IgE  immunoglobin E
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