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1.
Interferon-induced 2',5'-oligoadenylates are transiently produced during viral infection and are believed to play a role in the interferon-mediated inhibition of replication of at least some viruses. 2',5'-Oligoadenylates must be catabolized but are resistant to degradation by most known ribonucleases. A 2'-phosphodiesterase that degrades 2',5'-oligoadenylates was purified 1500-fold from a low speed homogenate of bovine spleen by precipitation at pH 5.2, ammonium sulfate fractionation, differential ultrafiltration, and successive chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, hydroxylapatite, and a fast protein liquid chromatography Mono P column. No other 2-5A-degrading activity was observed during the purification procedure. The molecular mass of the enzyme estimated by gel filtration and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is 65,000. The enzyme is distinct from bovine spleen phosphodiesterase II. The 2'-phosphodiesterase cleaves 2',5'- and 3',5'-linked oligonucleotides, as well as branched oligoadenylate, A(2'pA)(3'pA), but appears to be most active on 3',5'-oligoribonucleotides. The enzyme cleaves 5'-AMP from the 2' terminus of 2',5'-oligoadenylates and appears to require a free 2' terminus and a 3'-oxygen on the penultimate nucleotide. Substrate length, 5'-phosphorylation, and base composition do not appear to be critical factors in determining enzyme activity. The effects of pH, Mg2+, Mn2+, EDTA, phosphate, 2-mercaptoethanol, and N-ethylmaleimide are also described. This enzyme may be involved in the catabolism of the interferon-induced 2',5'-oligoadenylates and other 2',5'-linked RNAs in the cell.  相似文献   

2.
A novel protein kinase which phosphorylates a synthetic peptide substrate (RRPDAHRTPNRAF) has been purified approximately 200,000-fold from bovine brain. This peptide contains the consensus sequence for phosphorylation by the p34cdc2 kinase. The purification procedure took advantage of the phenomenon that this novel brain kinase, in partially purified extracts, chromatographed on a gel filtration column as a high molecular weight complex which dissociated in buffer containing 1 M NaCl. The purified native enzyme was estimated to be approximately 63,000, and displayed two bands of M(r) = 33,000 and 25,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. On Western immunoblot, the M(r) = 33,000 peptide reacted strongly with antibodies specific for a conserved amino-terminal sequence, weakly with antibodies to the conserved PSTAIRE sequence, and not at all with antibodies to the carboxyl terminus, of HeLa cell p34cdc2. The brain kinase and p34cdc2 were similar in displaying good activity toward the parent peptide substrate, but no activity toward peptide analogues in which the -T-P- motif was substituted with either -T-G- or -T-A-. Both kinases showed marked preference in phosphorylating a peptide derived from H1 histone (KTPKKAKKPKTPKKAKKL), and both kinases could be phosphorylated by the src-family tyrosine kinase, p56lyn, purified from bovine spleen. However, the brain kinase did not co-purify with a subunit having a molecular weight corresponding to known cyclins, nor did it undergo specific interaction with p13suc1 beads, suggesting that this enzyme is distinct from p34cdc2.  相似文献   

3.
A cytosolic protein-tyrosine kinase has been highly purified from porcine spleen using [Val5]angiotensin II as a substrate. The purification procedure involves sequential column chromatographies on phosphocellulose, Sephacryl S-200, casein-Sepharose 4B, heparin-Sepharose CL-6B and anti-(4-aminobenzyl phosphonic acid)--Sepharose 4B. Analysis of the most highly purified preparation by SDS/PAGE revealed a major silver-stained band of molecular mass 40 kDa. The 40-kDa cytosolic protein-tyrosine kinase was purified approximately 10,000-fold with an overall yield of about 7%. It had autophosphorylation activity which was carried out by intramolecular catalysis. The stoichiometry of phosphate incorporation was about 1 mol phosphate/mol enzyme. In the autophosphorylation reaction, the apparent Km value for ATP was relatively low, 0.35 microM; Mn2+ was slightly preferred to Mg2+ as divalent cation. [Val5]Angiotensin II phosphorylation activity of the 40-kDa kinase increased with the amount of phosphate incorporated into the enzyme. A phosphate exchange reaction was observed during the autophosphorylation. These results suggest that the 40-kDa kinase described here is a different type of protein-tyrosine kinase than the enzymes so far reported.  相似文献   

4.
A protein-tyrosine kinase has been isolated from a soluble extract of bovine thymus based on its ability to phosphorylate the tyrosine-containing peptide angiotensin I. The purification procedure employs sequential chromatography on columns of DEAE-cellulose, heparin-agarose, casein-agarose, butyl-agarose, and Sephadex G-75. The purified enzyme (p40) is a monomer of Mr = 40,000. The p40 kinase contains an ATP-binding site as determined by photoaffinity labeling experiments and catalyzes an intramolecular autophosphorylation reaction that leads to its modification on tyrosine. Of several proteins tested only the cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte band 3 protein serves as a good substrate for p40 (Km = 12 microM). Increasing concentrations of NaCl stimulate the phosphorylation of angiotensin I, inhibit the phosphorylation of band 3, and have no effect on the autophosphorylation of p40. At low concentrations of NaCl, Mn2+ is the preferred divalent cation. Peptide mapping experiments indicate that p40 is distinct from pp60src and from the major phosphotyrosine containing proteins of T and B lymphocyte membranes.  相似文献   

5.
A calmodulin-dependent protein kinase has been purified from rat spleen. The enzyme showed a remarkably similar substrate specificity and kinetic parameters to those of rat brain calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, and exhibited cross-reactivity to a monoclonal antibody against rat brain calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, indicating that the enzyme might be a calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II isozyme. The sedimentation coefficient was 13.9S, the Stokes radius was 67 A, and the molecular weight was calculated to be 380,000. The purified enzyme gave five polypeptides bands, corresponding to molecular weights of 51,000, 50,000, 21,000, 20,000, and 18,000, on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Incubation of the purified enzyme with Ca2+, calmodulin, and ATP under phosphorylating conditions induced the phosphorylation of all five polypeptides. When the logarithm of the velocity of the phosphorylation was plotted against the logarithm of the enzyme concentration (van't Hoff plot), slopes of 0.89, 0.94, and 1.1 were obtained for the phosphorylation of the 50/51-kDa doublet, 20/21-kDa doublet, and 18-kDa polypeptide, respectively. These results indicate that the phosphorylation of the five polypeptides is an intramolecular process, and further indicate that all five polypeptides are subunits of this enzyme. Of the five polypeptides, only the 50- and 51-kDa polypeptides bound to [125I]calmodulin, the other polypeptides not binding to it. A number of isozymic forms of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II so far demonstrated in various tissues are known to be composed of subunits with molecular weights of 50,000 to 60,000 which can bind to calmodulin. Thus a new type of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II was demonstrated in the present study.  相似文献   

6.
A calcium-unresponsive, phorbol ester/phospholipid-activated protein kinase was purified to apparent homogeneity from a Triton X-100 extract of an EGTA/EDTA-preextracted particulate fraction of porcine spleen by chromatography on S-Sepharose Fast Flow, phenyl-Sepharose Fast Flow, protamine-agarose, and Superdex 200. The enzyme had a Mr of 76,000, as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (p76-kinase). A similar value (78,000) was obtained by gel filtration. The purified p76-kinase proved to be much more stable than the enzyme in crude preparations. Storage in a buffer containing 50 mM mercaptoethanol and 20% glycerol at -20 degrees C for at least 4 months caused less than 20% loss in enzyme activity. The enzyme exhibited a pH optimum of 8.3. The affinity of the novel enzyme for substrates and cofactors differed to some extent from that of conventional alpha, beta, gamma protein kinase C (PKC). p76-kinase did not respond to calcium, had a lower requirement for magnesium, and a higher affinity for histone III-S than PKC. Both the p76-kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of histone III-S and the autophosphorylation of the enzyme could be activated by the phorbol ester TPA (or diacylglycerol) plus phosphatidyl serine, but not by calcium plus phosphatidyl serine. The stoichiometry of autophosphorylation suggested that fully phosphorylated p76-kinase contained two phosphoserine residues and one phosphothreonine residue. Like PKC, p76-kinase bound TPA with high affinity (KD = 9.6 nM). In the absence of TPA, various unsaturated fatty acids, particularly arachidonic acid, were more potent as activators of the enzyme than phosphatidyl serine. The p76-kinase was recognized by an antiserum raised against a delta PKC-specific peptide, but not by an alpha, beta, gamma PKC-specific antiserum. The previously described p82-kinase of mouse epidermis and spleen exhibiting the same properties as the p76-kinase did also react with the p76-kinase-specific antiserum.  相似文献   

7.
Protein kinase C (PKC) from bovine neutrophils was purified 1420-fold. Subcellular fractionation analysis of bovine neutrophil homogenate in the presence of EGTA indicated that more than 95% of the PKC activity was present in the soluble fraction. The purification procedure from cytosol involved sequential chromatographic steps on DE-52 cellulose, Mono Q, and phenyl-Sepharose. Whereas bovine brain PKC could be resolved into four isoenzymatic forms by chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column, bovine neutrophil PKC was eluted in a single peak, suggesting that it corresponded to a single isoform. The apparent molecular weight of bovine neutrophil PKC was 82,000, as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. By filtration on Sephadex G-150, a molecular weight of 85,000 was calculated, indicating that bovine neutrophil PKC in solution is monomeric. Its isoelectric point was 5.9 +/- 0.1. Bovine neutrophil PKC was autophosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP, provided that the medium was supplemented with Mg2+, Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, and diacylglycerol; phorbol myristate acetate could substitute for diacylglycerol. Autophosphorylated PKC could be cleaved by trypsin to generate two radiolabeled peptides of Mr 48,000 and 39,000. The labeled amino acids were serine and threonine. During the course of the purification procedure of bovine neutrophil PKC, a protein of Mr 23,000, which was abundant in the cytosolic fraction of the homogenate, was found to exhibit a strong propensity to PKC-dependent phosphorylation in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP, Mg2+, Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, and diacylglycerol. This protein was recovered together with PKC in one of the two active peaks eluted from the Mono Q column at the second step of PKC purification.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
A particulate form of protein-phosphotyrosine phosphatase was solubilized and purified over 2,000-fold from the particulate fraction of rat spleen. Phosphorylated poly(Glu, Tyr), a random copolymer of glutamic acid and tyrosine, was used as substrate for measuring protein-phosphotyrosine phosphatase activity. Nonionic detergents like Triton X-100 increased the protein-phosphotyrosine phosphatase activity of the particulate fraction (but not of the soluble fraction) by 4-8-fold. Chromatography of the Triton extract of the particulate fraction on DEAE-Sephacel gave three peaks of protein-phosphotyrosine phosphatase activity. The major peak of activity was further purified on Bio-Gel HTP, Sephadex G-75, and phosphocellulose columns. On polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of Na-dodecyl-SO4 the purified enzyme showed a major protein band of Mr 36,000 which comigrated with enzyme activity on the phosphocellulose column. The apparent Vmax and Km for phosphorylated poly(Glu,Tyr) were 6,150 nmol min-1 mg-1 and 1.6 microM, respectively. This enzyme was strongly inhibited by microM concentrations of orthovanadate and zinc acetate. Fluoride (50 mM) inhibited this enzyme only by 30-40%. Divalent metal ions Ca2+, Mg2+, and Mn2+ were inhibitory at 1-10 mM concentration. EDTA had no effect on the activity of the purified enzyme. This phosphatase could dephosphorylate and inactivate the phosphorylated form of a tyrosine-specific protein kinase (TK-I) previously purified from rat spleen. Dephosphorylation and inactivation of TK-I by purified phosphatase were inhibited by orthovanadate. After dephosphorylation and inactivation by phosphatase, TK-I could be rephosphorylated and reactivated on incubation with ATP. These results suggest that this protein-phosphotyrosine phosphatase may be involved in the regulation of the kinase activity of TK-I.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase in extracts of bovine aortic tissue eluted from DEAE-cellulose ion-exchange resins as two distinct peaks of activity. This elution pattern was preserved when the peaks were combined, precipitated with ammonium sulfate, dialyzed, and rechromatographed. Proteolysis did not appear to account for the two forms of kinase because (i) aging of the extract did not cause interconversion of the two forms, and (ii) both forms retained cGMP sensitivity unlike the proteolytically formed monomer. In addition, treatment with saturating concentrations of cGMP (10 microM) did not cause interconversion of the two forms. The first peak of cGMP-dependent protein kinase eluting from DEAE-cellulose (form 1) had a slightly greater mobility on gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels than the second peak (form 2). On native, nondenaturing gradient polyacrylamide gels, however, form 2 displayed the greater electrophoretic mobility. Furthermore, form 1, when bound to cAMP-agarose, appeared to exchange more rapidly with cGMP than form 2 when subjected to affinity chromatography. Peptide maps generated from the two forms by protease treatment were very similar, although trypsin produced a unique peptide in form 1 and Streptomyces griseus protease gave rise to unique peptides in forms 1 and 2. Phosphorylation did not appear to account for the physical differences because both enzymes could be phosphorylated to similar extents and dephosphorylation using alkaline phosphatase did not result in the conversion of one form to the other. These results suggest that either differences in primary structure or post-translational modification, other than phosphorylation, are responsible for the presence of two forms of cGMP-dependent protein kinase in aortic tissue.  相似文献   

10.
Purification and characterization of a protein kinase from pine pollen   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A kinase phosphorylating casein and phosvitin has been purified from pine pollen by a three-step procedure involving DEAE-cellulose chromatography, affinity chromatography on casein-Sepharose and Sephadex G-100. A purification of about 2000 fold was obtained by this procedure. The kinase is affected neither by cyclic nucleotides nor by Ca2+-calmodulin, whereas it is strongly inhibited by heparin. Using this purification procedure, we have isolated protein kinase exhibiting phosphorylating activity towards casein in the pollen of many other Pinaceae species.  相似文献   

11.
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (Ca2+/CaM kinase I), which phosphorylates site I of synapsin I, has been highly purified from bovine brain. The physical properties and substrate specificity of Ca2+/CaM kinase I were distinct from those of all other known Ca2+/CaM kinases. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the purified enzyme preparation consisted of two major polypeptides of Mr 37,000 and 39,000 and a minor polypeptide of Mr 42,000. In the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin (CaM), all three polypeptides bound CaM, were autophosphorylated on threonine residues, and were labeled by the photoaffinity label 8-azido-ATP. Peptide maps of the three autophosphorylated polypeptides were very similar. The Stokes radius and the sedimentation coefficient of the enzyme were, respectively, 31.8 A and 3.25 s. A molecular weight of 42,400 and a frictional ratio of 1.38 were calculated from the above values, suggesting that Ca2+/CaM kinase I is a monomer. It is possible that the polypeptides of lower molecular weight are derived from the polypeptide of Mr 42,000 by proteolysis; alternatively, the polypeptides may represent isozymes of Ca2+/CaM kinase I. Synapsin I (site I) was the best substrate tested (Km, 2-4 microM) for Ca2+/CaM kinase I. Of many additional proteins tested, only protein III (a phosphoprotein related to synapsin I) and smooth muscle myosin light chain were phosphorylated. Ca2+/CaM kinase I was found in highest concentration in brain, where it showed widespread regional and subcellular distributions. In addition, the enzyme had a widespread and predominantly cytosolic tissue distribution. The widespread neuronal and tissue distribution of Ca2+/CaM kinase I suggests that other substrates might exist for this enzyme in both neuronal and non-neuronal tissues.  相似文献   

12.
Incubation of a highly purified bovine spleen protein tyrosine kinase with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+ resulted in a gradual radioactive labeling of the protein kinase (50 kDa) with no change in the protein kinase activity toward angiotensin II. On the other hand, treatment of the protein tyrosine kinase with an immobilized alkaline phosphatase caused essentially complete loss in the kinase activity, which could be restored by incubation of the enzyme with ATP and Mg2+. By using the alkaline phosphatase-treated kinase, time courses of the protein phosphorylation and the enzyme activation were demonstrated to correlate closely. These results indicate that this protein tyrosine kinase relies on autophosphorylation for activity and that the purified enzyme usually exists in a fully phosphorylated state. The radioactive labeling of the purified kinase during incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP resulted from a phosphate exchange reaction: the exchange of [gamma-32P]phosphate of ATP with the protein bound phosphate as previously suggested (Kong, S.K., and Wang, J.H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2597-2603). It could be shown that the autophosphorylation of phosphatase-treated tyrosine kinase was strongly inhibited by the substrate angiotensin II, whereas the exchange reaction carried out with untreated tyrosine kinase was not. Autophosphorylation is suggested to be an intermolecular reaction since its initial rate is proportional to the square of the protein concentration.  相似文献   

13.
Burkitt lymphoma cells and their counterpart of normal origin contain proteins with associated tyrosine protein, kinase activity. These proteins were isolated by affinity chromatography and Fast Pressure Liquid Chromatography. Proteins with enzyme activity had an app. M. W. of 47 KDa. This protein in extracts of Burkitt lymphoma cells differed by overall charge and phosphorylation from the 47 KDa protein isolated from B lymphocytes of normal origin. Before and after purification the 47 KDa protein of Burkitt lymphoma cells reacted with an antibody directed against the dodecapeptide Arg-Arg-Leu-Ile-Glu-Asp-Asn-Glu-Tyr-Thr-Ala-Arg (conserved region of pp60src), the 47 KDa protein from B cells of normal origin did not; the same protein from both cell lines reacted with anti-pp60src antibody. These results suggest that a tyrosine protein kinase, related to the products of the src family of oncogenes, is modified in Burkitt lymphoma cells.  相似文献   

14.
A cytosolic protein-tyrosine kinase has been highly purified from bovine platelets using [Val5]angiotensin II as a substrate. The purification procedure involves sequential column chromatography on phosphocellulose, Sephacryl S-200, poly(L-lysine)-agarose, casein-Sepharose 4B and 2',5'-ADP-Sepharose 4B. Analysis of the most highly purified preparations by SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a major silver-stained band of molecular mass 71 kDa. This molecular mass was consistent with results obtained from sucrose density gradient centrifugation, indicating that the enzyme exists as a monomer. The purified kinase, called CPTK 71, efficiently phosphorylated tubulin and p36 (calpactin 1 heavy chain). However, it did not phosphorylate H1 histone. Half-maximal enzyme activity was observed at 2.2 microM ATP, and Mn2+, Co2+ and Mg2+ were effective divalent metal ions for the expression of activity. Insulin, epidermal growth factor, and platelet-derived growth factor had little or no effect on the kinase activity of CPTK 71. CPTK 71 had no immunological cross-reactivity with pp60src. These results suggest that CPTK 71 is a novel type of protein-tyrosine kinases among the enzymes so far reported.  相似文献   

15.
The zeta isoform of protein kinase C (PKC zeta) was purified to near homogeneity from the cytosolic fraction of bovine kidney by successive chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, heparin-Sepharose, phenyl-5PW, hydroxyapatite, and Mono Q. The purified enzyme had a molecular mass of 78 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The protein was recognized by an antibody raised against a synthetic oligopeptide corresponding to the deduced amino acid sequence of rat PKC zeta. The enzymatic properties of PKC zeta were examined and compared with conventional protein kinase C purified from rat brain. The activity of PKC zeta was stimulated by phospholipid but was unaffected by phorbol ester, diacylglycerol, or Ca2+. PKC zeta did not bind phorbol ester, and autophosphorylation was not affected by phorbol ester. Unsaturated fatty acid activated PKC zeta, but this activation was neither additive nor synergistic with phospholipid. These results indicate that regulation of PKC zeta is distinct from that of other isoforms and suggest that hormone-stimulated increases in diacylglycerol and Ca2+ do not activate this isoform in cells. It is possible that PKC zeta belongs to another enzyme family, in which regulation is by a different mechanism from that for other isoforms of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

16.
A protein kinase was isolated from spinach thylakoid membranes by solubilization with octyl glucoside and cholate. The enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration, and sucrose density centrifugation, followed by affinity chromatography on either Affi-Gel blue (yielding denatured enzyme) or on histone cross-linked to Sepharose (yielding active enzyme). Electrophoresis on denaturing polyacrylamide gels, followed by staining with silver, revealed the kinase as a single band corresponding to an apparent molecular mass of 64 kDa. The active enzyme underwent autophosphorylation and could be detected by autoradiography following incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+ ion. The specific phosphotransferase activity of purified kinase was approximately 30 nmol of phosphate min-1 (mg protein)-1 with lysine-rich histone (III-S or V-S) as substrate; casein was phosphorylated at approximately 30% of this rate. The physiological substrate for the kinase is presumed to be light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex. In solubilized form, this was phosphorylated at approximately 10% of the rate observed with histone III-S as substrate, or 10-100 times slower than the estimated rate of phosphorylation of the light-harvesting complex in situ. Possible reasons for this shortfall are considered. The kinase is proposed as the principal effector of thylakoid protein phosphorylation and associated State transition phenomena.  相似文献   

17.
A novel calcium-dependent protein kinase (CDPK) previously reported to be activated by the direct binding of Ca2+, and requiring neither calmodulin nor phospholipids for activity [Harmon, A.C., Putnam-Evans, C.L., & Cormier, M.J. (1987) Plant Physiol. 83, 830-837], was purified to greater than 95% homogeneity from suspension-cultured soybean cells (Glycine max, L. Wayne). Purification was achieved by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, phenyl-Sepharose, Sephadex G-100, and Blue Sepharose. The purified enzyme (native molecular mass = 52,200 Da) resolved into two immunologically related protein bands of 52 and 55 kDa on 10% SDS gels. Enzyme activity was stimulated 40-100-fold by micromolar amounts of free calcium (K0.5 = 1.5 microM free calcium) and was dependent upon millimolar Mg2+. CDPK phosphorylated lysine-rich histone III-S and chicken gizzard myosin light chains but did not phosphorylate arginine-rich histone, phosvitin, casein, protamine, or Kemptide. Phosphorylation of histone III-S, but not autophosphorylation, was inhibited by KCl. CDPK displayed a broad pH optimum (pH 7-9), and kinetic studies revealed a Km for Mg2(+)-ATP of 8 microM and a Vmax of 1.7 mumol min-1 mg-1 with histone III-S (Km = 0.13 mg/mL) as substrate. Unlike many other protein kinases, CDPK was able to utilize Mg2(+)-GTP, in addition to Mg2(+)-ATP, as phosphate donor. The enzyme phosphorylated histone III-S exclusively on serine; however, CDPK autophosphorylated on both serine and threonine residues. These properties demonstrate that CDPK belongs to a new class of protein kinase.  相似文献   

18.
A rat liver cAMP-independent protein kinase that phosphorylates peptide b of ATP-citrate lyase (Ramakrishna, S., Pucci, D. L., and Benjamin, W. B. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 4950-4956) has been purified to apparent homogeneity. The molecular weight, determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, sucrose density gradient, and by gel filtration, was found to be 36,000. This protein kinase phosphorylates in vitro ATP-citrate lyase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and glycogen synthase and does not phosphorylate phosphorylase, phosphorylase kinase, histone, phosvitin, and casein. It has Fa (activity factor) activity stimulating the ATP X Mg-dependent phosphatase and is therefore named a multifunctional protein kinase. This kinase differs from glycogen synthase kinase-3 with regard to substrate specificity, kinetic parameters, and physicochemical properties.  相似文献   

19.
Although such solubility is uncommon among proteins generally, several bovine brain proteins were found to be soluble in 2.5% perchloric acid, and many of them were in vitro substrates for protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme). Two of the perchloric acid-soluble brain proteins were purified, p43 and p17. P43 and p17 could be phosphorylated by protein kinase C only in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipids and neither was a substrate for protein kinase II. P43 was subsequently identified as the neurospecific, calmodulin-binding protein, neuromodulin (also designated P-57, GAP43, B50, or F1) (Alexander, K. H., Wakim, B. T., Doyle, G. S., Walsh, K. A., and Storm, D. R. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7544-7549). A rapid purification method for neuromodulin was developed taking advantage of its newly discovered property, solubility in 2.5% perchloric acid, and of its previously recognized calmodulin-binding property. Evidence was obtained that neuromodulin isolated from cytosolic extract exists as a mixture of molecular forms and that the Ca2+-binding S100 protein-beta discriminates among the different neuromodulin isoforms in forming covalent complexes via disulfide bridges; this discrimination may be explained by analogous differences observed between the NH2-terminal amino acid sequences of p57 and F1. Solubility in 2.5% perchloric acid was demonstrated for another rat brain protein kinase C substrate, p87. We suggest that perchloric acid solubility might be a common property of protein kinase C substrates.  相似文献   

20.
Li H  Roux SJ 《Plant physiology》1992,99(2):686-692
Almost all the polyamine-stimulated protein kinase activity associated with the chromatin fraction of nuclei purified from etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) plumules is present in a single enzyme that can be extracted from chromatin by 0.35 molar NaCl. This protein kinase can be further purified over 2000-fold by salt fractionation and anion-exchange and casein-agarose column chromatography, after which it is more than 90% pure. The purified kinase has a specific activity of about 650 nanomoles per minute per milligram protein in the absence of polyamines, with either ATP or GTP as phosphoryl donor. Spermidine can stimulate its activity fourfold, with half-maximal activation at about 2 millimolar. Spermine and putrescine also stimulate activity, although somewhat less effectively. This kinase has a tetrameric alpha 2 beta 2 structure with a native molecular weight of 130,000, and subunit molecular weights of 36,000 for the catalytic subunit (alpha) and 29,000 for the regulatory subunit (beta). In western blot analyses, only the alpha subunit reacts strongly with polyclonal antibodies to a Drosophila casein kinase II. The pea kinase can use casein and phosvitin as artificial substrates, phosphorylating both the serine and threonine residues of casein. It has a pH optimum near 8.0, a Vmax of 1.5 micromoles per minute per milligram protein, and a Km for ATP of approximately 75 micromolar. Its activity can be almost completely inhibited by heparin at 5 micrograms per milliliter, but is relatively insensitive to concentrations of staurosporine, K252a, and chlorpromazine that strongly antagonize Ca(2+) -regulated protein kinases. These results are discussed in relation to recent findings that casein kinase 2-type kinases may phosphorylate trans-acting factors that bind to light-regulated promoters in plants.  相似文献   

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