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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (
protein kinase
)
81,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcium transport into sarcoplasmic reticulum fragments isolated from dog cardiac and mixed skeletal muscle (quadriceps) and from mixed fast (tibialis), pure fast (caudofemoralis) and pure slow (soleus) skeletal muscles from the cat was studied. Cyclic AMP-dependent
protein kinase
and
phosphorylase b kinase
stimulated the rate of calcium transport although some variability was observed. A specific protein kinase inhibitor prevented the effect of
protein kinase
but not of
phosphorylase b kinase
. The addition of cyclic AMP to the sarcoplasmic reticulum preparations in the absence of
protein kinase
had only a slight stimulatory effect despite the presence of endogenous
protein kinase
. Cyclic AMP-dependent
protein kinase
catalyzed the phosphorylation of several components present in the sarcoplasmic reticulum fragments; a 19000 to 21 000 dalton peak was phosphorylated with high specific activity in sarcoplasmic reticulum preparations isolated from heart and from slow skeletal muscle, but not from fast skeletal muscle. Phosphorylase b kinase phosphorylated a peak of molecular weight 95000 in all of the preparations. Cyclic AMP-dependent
protein kinase
-stimulated phosphorylation was optimum at pH 6.8;
phosphorylase b kinase
phosphorylation had a biphasic curve in cardiac and slow skeletal muscle with optima at pH 6.8 and 8.0. The addition of exogenous
phosphorylase b kinase
or
protein kinase
increased the endogenous level of phosphorylation 25-100%. All sarcoplasmic reticulum preparations contained varying amounts of adenylate cyclase, phosphorylase b and a (b:a = 30.1), "debrancher" enzyme and glycogen (0.3 mg/mg protein), as well as varying amounts of
protein kinase
and
phosphorylase b kinase
which were responsible for a significant endogenous phosphorylation. Thus, the two phosphorylating enzymes stimulated calcium uptake in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of a variety of muscles possessing different physiologic characteristics and different responses to drugs. In addition, the phosphorylation catalyzed by these enzymes occurred at two different protein moieties which make physiologic interpretation of the role of phosphorylation difficult. While the role phosphorylation in these mechanisms is complex, the presence of a glycogenolytic enzyme system may be an important link in this phenomenon. The sarcoplasmic reticulum represents a new substrate for
phosphorylase b kinase
.
...
PMID:The rate of calcium uptake into sarcoplasmic reticulum of cardiac muscle and skeletal muscle. Effects of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and phosphorylase b kinase. 0 25
Homogeneous rabbit liver phosphorylase phosphatase (Brandt, H., Capulong, Z. L., and Lee, E. Y. C. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 8038-8044) also dephosphorylates glycogen synthase b. During purification, phosphorylase phosphatase and glycogen synthase phosphatase co-purified with a constant ratio of activities. The two activities co-migrated on disc gel electrophoresis. Both substrates competed with each other for the phosphatase, and both phosphatase activities were inhibited by lysine ethyl ester. It is concluded that liver phosphorylase phosphatase and glycogen synthase phosphatase have a common identity and that coordinate regulation of the phosphatase-catalyzed activation of glycogen synthase and inactivation of phosphorylase occurs in vivo. This provides a parallel and opposing mechanism to that mediated by adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate-dependent
protein kinase
, which coordinately inactivates glycogen synthase and, via
phosphorylase kinase
, activates phosphorylase. Maximal glycogen synthase phosphatase activity was observed near neutrality. Mg2+ and glucose-6-P activated the glycogen synthase phosphatase reaction and this activation was pH-dependent. The Km for glycogen synthase b was 0.12 muM.
...
PMID:Evidence for the coordinate control of activity of liver glycogen synthase and phosphorylase by a single protein phosphatase. 0 46
Sarcoplasmic reticulum fragments isolated from dog cardiac muscle possess a calcium-accumulating system associated with a series of enzymes linked to glycogenolysis. These enzymes include: adenylate cyclase,
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
,
phosphorylase b kinase
, phosphorylase (b/a, 30/1),"debrancher" enzyme, and glycogen (0.3 to 0.7 mg/mg of protein). The sarcoplasmic reticulum preparation produced glucose 1-phosphate and glucose from either endogenous or exogenous glycogen. Both the calcium-accumulating and glycogenolytic enzymes sediment in a single peak at 33% sucrose on a linear continous sucrose density gradient, and the complex remains intact throughout repeated washing. Glycogen particles appear to be associated with the sarcoplasmic reticulum in situ as well as in the isolated microsomal fraction. The sarcoplasmic reticulum-glycogenolytic complex, monitored by a linked enzyme spectrophotometric assay, shows several features: (a) activation of phosphorylase activity to peak rate occurs over a very rapid time course which cannot be duplicated using combinations of purified enzymes; (b) activation is inhibited by protein kinase inhibitor; (c) phosphorylase b functions as in the purified form with respect to AMP (Km, 0.3 mM); (d) in the presence of limiting amounts of glycogen, optimal phosphorylase b activity in the sarcoplasmic reticulum requires the presence of debrancher, and the activity is sensitive to inhibitors of that enzyme such as Tris, which suggests the possiblity that the enzymes bear a specific structual relationship to the glycogen present. Phosphorylase b leads to a activation in the sarcoplasmic reticulum was completely resistant to ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl either)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Inhibition of calcium accumulation by or release of bound calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum by X537A (RO 2-2985) did not alter the EGTA resistance. These results suggest that cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum is a complex organelle containing functions that may be related to excitation-contraction coupling and intermediary metabolism.
...
PMID:Association of gylcogenolysis with cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. 0 55
The effect of an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase (ACI) was measured on some enzymes associated with cyclic nucleotide-regulated metabolism. Soluble guanylate cyclase was inhibited; both soluble and particulate cyclic GMP-phosphodiesterases were stimulated. Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases were unaffected. In contrast, the activities of Na, K-ATPase,
protein kinase
,
phosphorylase kinase
, glycogen synthetase and a number of glycosidases were not altered by equipotent amounts of the inhibitor. It is concluded that this substance acts as a modulator of both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP metabolism in heart and other tissues.
...
PMID:The effect of adenylate cyclase inhibitor (ACI) on guanylate cyclase, phosphodiesterase and other enzymes in heart. 1 79
When crude rat liver preparations were incubated at 30degrees C, a gradual loss of
phosphorylase kinase
(ATP:phosphorylase b phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.38) activity was observed. This inactivation was Mg2+ dependent and was partially inhibited by sodium fluoride. Addition of Mg2+ ATP to the liver preparations, at any time throughout the incubation, caused a reactivation of the
phosphorylase kinase
and this was accelerated by micromolar concentrations of cyclic AMP. The reactivation process could be completely abolished by the addition of a heat stable protein kinase inhibitor, implicating cyclic AMP dependent
protein kinase
in the activation reaction. Both the low and the high activity forms of the enzyme required micromolar quantities of Ca2+ for full activity (KA = 0.6 micronM). The two forms exhibit quite different pH dependencies and at the physiological pH of liver (pH 7.4) their activities differed by a factor of 5-10. Conversion of the lower activity form into the higher seems to affect only the V - Km for muscle phosphorylase b (EC 2.4.1.1) was about 1 mg/ml for both enzyme forms.
...
PMID:Inactivation and reactivation of liver phosphorylase b kinase. 1 9
Addition of 10 micron of the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine to polymorphonuclear leukocytes suspended in glucose-free Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer (pH 6.7) activated phosphorylase, inactivated glycogen synthase R maximally within 30 s, and resulted in glycogen breakdown. Phenylephrine increased 45Ca efflux relative to control of 45Ca prelabelled cells, but did not affect cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) concentration. The effects of phenylephrine were blocked by 20 micron phentolamine and were absent in cells incubated at pH 7.4. The same unexplained dependency of extracellular pH was observed with 2.5 nM--2.5 micron glucagon, which activated phosphorylase and inactivated synthase-R, but in addition caused a 30-s burst in cAMP formation. 25 nM glucagon also increased 45Ca efflux. The activation of phosphorylase by phenylephrine and possibly also by glucagon are thought mediated by an increased concentration of cytosolic Ca2+ activating
phosphorylase kinase
. The effects of 5 micron isoproterenol or 5 micron epinephrine were independent of extracellular pH 6.7 and 7.4 and resulted in a sustained increase in cAMP, an activation of phosphorylase and inactivation of synthase-R within 15 s, and in glycogenolysis. The effects of both compounds were blocked by 10 micron propranolol, whereas 10 micron phentolamine had no effect on the epinephrine action. The efflux of 45Ca was not affected by either isoproterenol or epinephrine. The beta-adrenergic activation of phosphorylase is consistent with the assumption of a covalent modification of
phosphorylase kinase
by the cAMP dependent
protein kinase
. Phosphorylation of synthase-R to synthase-D can thus occur independently of increase in cAMP, but the evidence is inconclusive with respect to the cAMP dependent
protein kinase
also being active in this phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Effects of catecholamines and glucagon on glycogen metabolism in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 2 35
Phosphorylase b kinase from rabbit muscle phosphorylates glycogen synthase purified from the same tissue. The reaction is markedly stimulated by Ca2+ and results in a decrease in the synthase %I activity. Phosphorylase b kinase action leads to the incorporation of phosphate (0.6 to 0.8 mol/mol of subunit) preferentially into a single cyanogen bromide fragment of synthase (fragment III). Cyclic AMP-independent synthase kinase also shows a specificity for the site(s) contained in fragment III whereas the
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
exerts a preference for the site(s) located in a distinct cyanogen bromide fragment (fragment II). A Ca2+-stimulated endogenous kinase also results in the phosphorylation of fragment III and can be attributed to the presence of
phosphorylase b kinase
. The finding of a Ca2+-stimulated phosphorylation of glycogen synthase has important implications for the regulation of glycogen metabolism and particularly those processes thought to be controlled by cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration.
...
PMID:Ca2+-stimulated phosphorylation of muscle glycogen synthase by phosphorylase b kinase. 10 68
Phosphorylation of skeletal muscle glycogen synthase catalyzed by a
protein kinase
is stimulated up to 10-fold by the calcium-dependent regulator (CDR) protein. Half-maximal stimulation requires about 1 microgram of CDR/ml. Phosphorylation by the CDR-dependent synthase kinase is more rapid at pH 8.6 than at pH 6.8 and is blocked by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl-ether)N,N'-tetraacetic acid and trifuloperazine. Approximately 60 to 70% of the phosphate is incorporated into the trypsin-insensitive region of glycogen synthase resulting in conversion of the a form to the b form of the enzyme. The CDR-dependent synthase kinase is not myosin light chain kinase, as this enzyme does not phosphorylate glycogen synthase. Furthermore, synthase phosphorylation by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit is not affected by CDR. The possibility that CDR-dependent synthase kinase may be
phosphorylase kinase
is being investigated.
...
PMID:Stimulation of glycogen synthase phosphorylation by calcium-dependent regulator protein. 10 93
If the degree of substitution of Sepharose 4 B with alpha-alkylamines is varied gels of different hydrophobicity are produced. Proteins can be adsorbed when a critical hydrophobicity (ca. 10-12 alkyl residues/Sepharose sphere) is reached. The enzymes
phosphorylase kinase
, phosphorylase phosphatase, 3',5'-cAMP dependent
protein kinase
, glycogen synthetase, and phosphorylase b are successively adsorbed as the hydrophobicity of the Sepharose is increased. The capacity of the gels for these enzymes and protein in general increases exponentially reaches plateau values as a function of the degree of substitution. There is no indication of a restriction of the hydrophobic centers for a given protein. The critical hydrophobicity needed to adsorb proteins can either be otained in the above manner or by elongation of the employed alkylamine at a constant degree of substitution. Additonally, as the hydrophobicity of a gel is increased higher binding forces result and desorption of proteins requires an augmentation of the salt concentration in the elution buffer. Elution of proteins from a hydrophobic matrix can be described in terms of salting-in phenomena since desorption is dependent on the type of salt employed and not on the ionic strength alone. This also rules out ionic interactions as a major factor in adsorption per se. By rationally controlling the hydrophobicity of a Sepharose gel the adsorption and elution of a protein may be thus establised that its purification or elimination can be optimally performed.
...
PMID:General aspects of hydrophobic chromatography. Adsorption and elution characteristics of some skeletal muscle enzymes. 16 42
The interaction between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and the convertible serine of glycogen phosphorylase has been investigated by using: specific interconverting enzymes,
phosphorylase kinase
and phosphorylase phosphatase; effectors, glucose and glucose 6-phosphate; and a
protein kinase
and trypsin. Both
phosphorylase kinase
and phosphorylase phosphatase utilized the native protein while having little influence on the apoprotein. Removal of a peptide containing the critical serine residue gave phosphorylase b' from which the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in phosphorylase has an important effect on enzymic interconversion.
...
PMID:Pyridoxal phosphate-dependent conformational states of glycogen phosphorylase as probed by interconverting enzymes. 16 24
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