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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)
A heparin-activated
protein kinase
has been identified in rabbit skeletal muscle. The enzyme, which had a native molecular mass of 70 kDa as judged by gel filtration, was stimulated 3- to 5-fold by heparin, half-maximally at 3 micrograms/ml heparin. The stimulation by heparin was not reproduced by other polyanions such as polyaspartate and polyglutamate. The
protein kinase
was detected by its ability to phosphorylate glycogen synthase; it was ineffective in phosphorylating caseins, phosvitin, histone, or phosphorylase.
Glycogen synthase
was phosphorylated to a stoichiometry of 0.7-0.8 phosphates/subunit, exclusively at serine residues located in the COOH-terminal CNBr-fragment of the subunit, with a corresponding reduction in the -/+ glucose-6P activity ratio from 0.96 to 0.43. The activity of the
protein kinase
was unaffected by the presence of Ca2+ and/or phospholipid, cyclic AMP or heat-stable inhibitor protein of
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
. The enzyme was inhibited about 60% by the presence of glycogen, half-maximal effect at 25 micrograms/ml. The heparin-activated
protein kinase
is clearly distinguishable from other known glycogen synthase kinases.
...
PMID:Novel heparin-activated protein kinase activity in rabbit skeletal muscle. 396 6
Glycogen synthase
kinase-3 was isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle by an improved procedure. The purification was estimated to be 67000-fold and 0.2 mg of enzyme was isolated from 5000 g muscle, corresponding to an overall yield of 7%. The preparation was homogeneous by ultracentrifugal and electrophoretic criteria. The enzyme had a relative molecular mass of 47 kDa by sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation and 51 kDa by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These values demonstrate that
glycogen synthase kinase
-3 is monomeric. The Stokes radius of 37 nm suggests the molecule to be asymmetric. The activating factor of the Mg-ATP dependent form of protein phosphatase-1 coeluted with
glycogen synthase kinase
-3 activity at the final step, establishing that these two activities reside in the same protein.
Glycogen synthase
kinase-3 phosphorylates glycogen synthase at sites-3, while
casein kinase
-II phosphorylates site-5, just C-terminal to sites-3 (Picton, C., Aitken, A., Bilham, T. and Cohen, P. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 124, 37-45). The basis for the substrate specificities of these protein kinases was investigated using chymotryptic peptides that contain the sites phosphorylated by each enzyme. These studies showed that efficient phosphorylation of sites-3, required the presence of phosphate in site-5 and a region of polypeptide more than 20 residues C-terminal to site-5. In contrast, efficient phosphorylation by
casein kinase
-II does not require this C-terminal region, and the results are consistent with the view that the enzyme recognises acidic residues immediately C-terminal to site-5.
...
PMID:Multisite phosphorylation of glycogen synthase. Molecular basis for the substrate specificity of glycogen synthase kinase-3 and casein kinase-II (glycogen synthase kinase-5). 608 11
The phosphorylation sites in liver synthase were studied using gel filtration and high performance liquid chromatography of 32P-labeled tryptic peptides. Phosphorylase b kinase, calmodulin-dependent
glycogen synthase kinase
and
glycogen synthase kinase
4 from liver phosphorylated the same low Mr tryptic peptide.
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
mainly phosphorylated the low Mr tryptic peptide, but also incorporated phosphate into two other peptides.
Glycogen synthase
kinase 5 phosphorylated a single tryptic peptide, whereas glycogen synthase kinase 3 phosphorylated several tryptic peptides. Calcium-phospholipid-dependent
protein kinase
phosphorylated two tryptic peptides, the major one of which had the same chromatographic properties as the low Mr peptide described above. These findings confirm that liver glycogen synthase undergoes multi-site phosphorylation and suggest that the topography of the sites is generally similar to that in muscle glycogen synthase.
...
PMID:Multiple phosphorylation of rat-liver glycogen synthase by protein kinases. 608 94
The Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent
protein kinase
(protein kinase C) has been found to phosphorylate and inactivate glycogen synthase. With muscle glycogen synthase as a substrate, the reaction was stimulated by Ca2+ and by phosphatidylserine. The tumor-promoting phorbol esters 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate was also a positive effector, half-maximal activation occurring at 6 nM. Phosphorylation of glycogen synthase, but not histone, was partially inhibited by glycogen, half-maximally at 0.05 mg/ml, probably via a substrate-directed mechanism. The rate of glycogen synthase phosphorylation was approximately half that for histone; the apparent Km for glycogen synthase was 0.25 mg/ml. Protein kinase C also phosphorylated casein, the preferred substrate among the individual caseins being alpha s1-casein.
Glycogen synthase
was phosphorylated to greater than 1 phosphate/subunit with an accompanying reduction in the -glucose-6-P/+glucose-6-P activity ratio from 0.9 to 0.5. Phosphate was introduced into serine residues in both the NH2-terminal and COOH-terminal CNBr fragments of the enzyme subunit. The two main tryptic phosphopeptides mapped in correspondence with the peptides that contain site 1a and site 2. Lesser phosphorylation in an unidentified peptide was also observed. Rabbit liver and muscle glycogen synthases were phosphorylated at similar rates by protein kinase C. The above results are compatible with a role for protein kinase C in the regulation of glycogen synthase as was suggested by a recent study of intact hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of glycogen synthase by the Ca2+- and phospholipid-activated protein kinase (protein kinase C). 623 16
Studies of rat skeletal glycogen metabolism carried out in a perfused hindlimb system indicated that epinephrine activates phosphorylase via the cascade of phosphorylation reactions classically linked to the beta-adrenergic receptor/adenylate cyclase system. The beta blocker propranolol completely blocked the effects of epinephrine on cAMP,
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
, phosphorylase, and glucose-6-P, whereas the alpha blocker phentolamine was totally ineffective. Omission of glucose from the perfusion medium did not modify the effects of epinephrine.
Glycogen synthase
activity in control perfused and nonperfused muscle was largely glucose-6-P-dependent (-glucose-6-P/+glucose-6-P activity ratios of 0.1 and 0.2, respectively). Epinephrine perfusion caused a small decrease in the enzyme's activity ratio (0.1 to 0.05) and a large increase in its Ka for glucose-6-P (0.3 to 1.5 mM). This increase in glucose-6-P dependency correlated in time with
protein kinase
activation and was totally blocked by propranolol and unaffected by phentolamine. Comparison of the kinetics of glycogen synthase in extracts of control and epinephrine-perfused muscle with the kinetics of purified rat skeletal muscle glycogen synthase a phosphorylated to various degrees by
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
indicated that the enzyme was already substantially phosphorylated in control muscle and that epinephrine treatment caused further phosphorylation of synthase, presumably via
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
. These data provide a basis for speculation about in vivo regulation of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Epinephrine regulation of skeletal muscle glycogen metabolism. Studies utilizing the perfused rat hindlimb preparation. 624 74
Exogenous purified rabbit skeletal-muscle glycogen synthase was used as a substrate for adipose-tissue phosphoprotein phosphatase from fed and starved rats in order to (1) compare the relationship between phosphate released from, and the kinetic changes imparted to, the substrate and (2) ascertain if decreases in adipose-tissue phosphatase activity account for the apparent decreased activation of endogenous glycogen synthase from starved as compared with fed rats. Muscle glycogen synthase was phosphorylated with [gamma-(32)P]ATP and
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
alone, or in combination with a cyclic AMP-independent
protein kinase
, to 1.7 or 3mol of phosphate per subunit. Adipose-tissue phosphatase activity determined with phosphorylated skeletal-muscle glycogen synthase as substrate was decreased by 35-60% as a consequence of starvation. This decrease in phosphatase activity had little effect on the capacity of adipose-tissue extracts to activate exogenous glycogen synthase (i.e. to increase the glucose 6-phosphate-independent enzyme activity), although there were marked differences in the activation profiles for the two exogenous substrates.
Glycogen synthase
phosphorylated to 1.7mol of phosphate per subunit was activated rapidly by adipose-tissue extracts from either fed or starved rats, and activation paralleled enzyme dephosphorylation.
Glycogen synthase
phosphorylated to 3mol of phosphate per subunit was activated more slowly and after a lag period, since release of the first mol of phosphate did not increase the glucose 6-phosphate-independent activity of the enzyme. These patterns of enzyme activation were similar to those observed for the endogenous adipose-tissue glycogen synthase(s): the glucose 6-phosphate-independent activity of the endogenous enzyme from fed rats increased rapidly during incubation, whereas that of starved rats, like that of the more highly phosphorylated muscle enzyme, increased only very slowly after a lag period. The observations made here suggest that (1) changes in glucose 6-phosphate-independent glycogen synthase activity are at best only a qualitative measure of phosphoprotein phosphatase activity and (2) the decrease in glycogen synthase phosphatase activity during starvation is not sufficient to explain the differential glycogen synthase activation in adipose tissue from fed and starved rats. However, alterations in the phosphorylation state of glycogen synthase combined with decreased activity of phosphoprotein phosphatase, both as a consequence of starvation, could explain the apparent markedly decreased enzyme activation.
...
PMID:Dephosphorylation and activation of exogenous glycogen synthase by adipose-tissue phosphatase. 625 May 40
Glycogen synthase
kinase was isolated from rat skeletal muscle. This kinase, which is cyclic nucleotide-independent and calcium-independent, was separated from phosphorylase kinase,
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
and phosvitin kinase by phosphocellulose chromatography. Gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 resolved the
glycogen synthase kinase
into two fractions with apparent molecular weights of 68 000 (peak I) and 52 000 (peak II). This step also separated
glycogen synthase kinase
from the catalytic subunit of the
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
, which had an apparent molecular weight of 39 000. Peak II
glycogen synthase kinase
activity was not affected by the addition of calcium, EGTA or a number of cyclic nucleotides. In addition to ATP, dATP would serve as the phosphate donor. Other trinucleotides tested were either poor or ineffective substrates. Activity was about 5-fold greater with Mg2+ than with Mn2+. Glycogen stimulated activity about 25%. Modifications of the methods of Soderling et al. ((1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 6317--6328) and Nimmo et al. ((1976) Eur. J. Biochem. 68, 21--30) were developed for purification of glycogen synthease (UDPglucose:glycogen 4-alpha D-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.11) to specific activity of 35 units/mg of protein. Using this preparation of glycogen synthase as substrate, the phosphorylation and inactivation catalyzed by
glycogen synthase kinase
was compared to that catalyzed by
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
or phosphorylase kinase. Each of the kinases had different specificities for phosphorylation sites on glycogen synthase.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of cyclic AMP-independent glycogen synthase kinase from rat skeletal muscle. 625 90
Glycogen synthase
I, purified from bovine heart, had a specific activity of 33 units/mg and gave a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis with a subunit molecular weight of 86,000. The enzyme was phosphorylated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit, also isolated from heart. With 10 microM ATP, only one phosphate group was incorporated per subunit of glycogen synthase. The phosphorylation decreased the per cent of glycogen synthase I from 0.95 to 0.50 when activity was determined by assays with Na2SO4 and glucose 6-phosphate.
Glycogen synthase
containing one phosphate per subunit was designated GS-1. One additional phosphate was incorporated per synthase subunit when ATP was increased to 0.5 mM and the percent glycogen synthase I decreased from 0.50 to < 0.05. This enzyme form was designated GS-1,2. Conversion of GS-1 to Gs-1,2 gave cooperative kinetics with ATP concentration and a half-maximal stimulation at approximately 40 microM. Phosphorylation of GS-1 could also be achieved by adding other non-substrate nucleotide triphosphates such as ITP and UTP along with 10 microM ATP. Glucose-6-P and Na2SO4 were without effect on this phosphorylation reaction. Two separate peptides were obtained after CNBr cleavage of 32P-labeled GS-1,2 and only one from GS-1. Both enzyme forms contained a single phosphorylated peptide in common. Thus, heart glycogen synthase may be phosphorylated specifically in either of two different sites using appropriate concentrations of ATP. ATP acts as a substrate for the
protein kinase
and also affects the availability of a second site to phosphorylation by
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of heart glycogen synthase by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Regulatory effects of ATP. 625 72
The MgATP-dependent phosphorylase phosphatase was found to have a broad substrate specificity. Its activity against all phosphoproteins tested was dependent upon preincubation with the activating factor FA and MgATP. The enzyme dephosphorylated and inactivated phosphorylase kinase and inhibitor 1, and dephosphorylated and activated glycogen synthase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase.
Glycogen synthase
was dephosphorylated at similar rates whether it had been phosphorylated by cyclic-AMP-dependent
protein kinase
, phosphorylase kinase or glycogen synthase kinase 3. The enzyme also catalysed the dephosphorylation of ATP citrate lyase, initiation factor eIF-2, and troponin I. The properties of the MgATP-dependent protein phosphatase from either dog liver or rabbit skeletal muscle showed a remarkable similarity to highly purified preparations of protein phosphatase 1 from rabbit skeletal muscle. The relative activities of the two enzymes against all phosphoproteins tested was very similar. Both enzymes dephosphorylated the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase 40-fold faster than the alpha-subunit, and both enzymes were inhibited by identical concentrations of the two proteins termed inhibitor 1 and inhibitor 2, which inhibit protein phosphatase 1 specifically. These results demonstrate that the MgATP-dependent protein phosphatase is a type-1 protein phosphatase, and is distinct from type-2 protein phosphatases which dephosphorylate the alpha-subunit of phosphorylase kinase and are unaffected by inhibitor 1 and inhibitor 2. The possibility that the MgATP-dependent protein phosphatase is an inactive form of protein phosphatase 1 and that both proteins share the same catalytic subunit is discussed.
...
PMID:The MgATP-dependent protein phosphatase and protein phosphatase 1 have identical substrate specificities. 626 81
Glycogen synthase
I from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes was phosphorylated with cAMP dependent
protein kinase
, synthase kinase or phosvitin kinase prepared from these cells. Limited tryptic hydrolysis released four phosphopeptides (t-A, t-B, t-C, t-D). Subsequent alpha-chymotryptic hydrolysis of the trypsin resistant core released three phosphopeptides (c-A, c-B, c-C). The kinetic changes of glycogen synthase were compared with the phosphorylation of the peptides. Equivalent kinetic changes (Kc equals 0.2-0.3 mM Glc-6-P) were obtained when 1 Pi/subunit was introduced by cAMP dependent
protein kinase
, 0.5 Pi/subunit by synthase kinase and 0.8 Pi/subunit by both kinases. Initially, cAMP dependent
protein kinase
phosphorylated peptides c-A and t-C in parallel and somewhat later also t-B, whereas synthase kinase initially phosphorylated only c-A. The ultimate effect of the two kinases on c-A was additive. It was concluded that the initial kinetic changes were dependent on phosphorylation of c-A, which contained two sites, one for each kinase. The same kinetic changes were induced by phosphorylation on each of the sites. In the subsequent phosphorylation the kinases, separately or together, phosphorylated peptide c-C indicating one non-specific phosphorylatable site in this peptide. The cAMP dependent
protein kinase
alone phosphorylated t-C maximally, whereas both kinases were required for an equal phosphorylation of t-A and t-B. It is suggested that the cAMP dependent
protein kinase
phosphorylated t-A and t-C, whereas the data did not allow a similar suggestion for t-B. The kinetic changes occurring during the later stages of phosphorylation were an increase in Kc for Glc. 6-P to 4-5 mM at 1.85 Pi/subunit and to 20 mM at 3.3 Pi/subunit, but the changes could not be assigned to phosphorylation of any specific peptide. Phosphorylation of the peptides t-D and c-B were insignificant, but c-B may be phosphorylated under other experimental conditions (25). The phosvitin kinase phosphorylated glycogen synthase extremely slowly to an extent of 0.8 Pi/subunit, mainly in peptide c-C.
Glycogen synthase
would appear without physiological importance as substrate for this kinase. Phosphorylase kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle incorporated 0.7 Pi/subunit, mainly in peptide c-A causing a decrease in RI to 0.3, which upon further incubation remained constant. The rate of decrease in RI in 0.5 was unaffected by several synthase modifiers, including Glc-6-P, but was inhibited by ADP and Pi. The rate of phosphorylation by cAMP dependent
protein kinase
and synthase kinase was diversely affected in different buffers, however, without affecting the ultimate phosphorylation pattern.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of glycogen synthase I from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 626 29
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