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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (
calcineurin
)
17,112
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The response of a reaction network composed of protein kinase A,
calpain
, and
protein phosphatase
to transient cAMP and Ca2+ signals was studied. An essential feature of signal convergence is that the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dissociated protein kinase A undergoes limited proteolysis by the Ca(2+)-activated proteinase
calpain
. A dynamic model of this system based on kinetic differential equations was built and simulated by computer. The system shows analogies to typical features of associative learning such as acquisition, contiguity detection, extinction, and memory decay, suggesting that these biochemical reactions may be part of the molecular mechanism of learning in Drosophila.
...
PMID:Signal convergence on protein kinase A as a molecular correlate of learning. 164 32
To identify the protein kinase that is responsible for catalyzing phosphorylation of actin-binding protein (ABP) in platelets, we have examined the effects of protein kinase C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase on this process. We found that purified platelet protein kinase C from platelets was unable to phosphorylate ABP in vitro. However, a crude platelet kinase preparation phosphorylated ABP in the presence of cAMP, but not in the presence of Ca2+/phosphatidylserine. Fresh platelet plasma membranes incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP phosphorylated ABP in the presence of cAMP and the process was blocked by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor; ABP phosphorylation induced by prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) appeared to be reduced by the subsequent addition of thrombin. These results strongly suggest that in situ ABP is phosphorylated by activated cAMP-dependent protein kinase when platelet function is inhibited by PGE1. Furthermore, in the PGE1-treated platelets, ABP was proteolyzed at a slower rate than in control platelets when they were lysed with Triton in the absence of EGTA. Partially purified ABP was proteolyzed by
calpain
in vitro at a slower rate as well. It was demonstrated that ABP from PGE1-treated platelets recovered its sensitivity to
calpain
after ABP was incubated with a
protein phosphatase
that had been purified from platelets. We postulate that ABP is stabilized against proteolysis in response to cAMP-elevating agents and that this blocks cytoskeleton reorganization.
...
PMID:In situ phosphorylation of platelet actin-binding protein by cAMP-dependent protein kinase stabilizes it against proteolysis by calpain. 254 93
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-stimulated phosphatase from bovine brain, was hydrolyzed by
calpain
I from human erythrocytes. In the absence of calmodulin,
calpain
rapidly transformed the 60-kilodalton (kDa) catalytic subunit of
calcineurin
into a transient 57-kDa fragment and thereafter a 43-kDa limit fragment. In the presence of calmodulin, the 60-kDa subunit was sequentially proteolyzed to a 55-kDa fragment and then a 49-kDa fragment. Upon proteolysis in the absence or presence of calmodulin, the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity (assayed in the presence of calmodulin) was increased by 300%. The 43- and the 49-kDa fragments were found to (i) remain associated with the small subunit (17 kDa), (ii) have lost the ability to bind and to be activated by calmodulin, and (iii) have phosphatase activity that was still stimulated by Mn2+ or Ni2+. The 43- + 17-kDa form had similar Km values for various substrates, but the Vmax values were increased compared with the native enzyme. It is proposed that (i) a 43-kDa core segment of the 60-kDa subunit of
calcineurin
contained the catalytic domain, the small subunit-binding domain, and the metal ion (Mn2+ and (or) Ni2+) binding site; and (ii) two distinct types of inhibitory domains exist near the end(s) of the large subunit, one of which is calmodulin regulated, while the other is calmodulin independent.
...
PMID:Characterization of the fragmented forms of calcineurin produced by calpain I. 255 62
A calmodulin-dependent
protein phosphatase
(
calcineurin
) was converted to an active, calmodulin-independent form by a Ca2+-dependent protease (
calpain
I). Proteolysis could be blocked by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, leupeptin, or N-ethylmaleimide, but other protease inhibitors such as phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, aprotinin, benzamidine, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, and trypsin inhibitor were ineffective. Phosphatase proteolyzed in the absence of calmodulin was insensitive to Ca2+ or Ca2+/calmodulin; the activity of the proteolyzed enzyme was greater than the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated activity of the unproteolyzed enzyme. Proteolysis of the phosphatase in the presence of calmodulin proceeded at a more rapid rate than in its absence, and the proteolyzed enzyme retained a small degree of sensitivity to Ca2+/calmodulin, being further stimulated some 15-20%. Proteolytic stimulation of phosphatase activity was accompanied by degradation of the 60-kilodalton (kDa) subunit; the 19-kDa subunit was not degraded. In the absence of calmodulin, the 60-kDa subunit was sequentially degraded to 58- and 45-kDa fragments; the 45-kDa fragment was incapable of binding 125I-calmodulin. In the presence of calmodulin, the 60-kDa subunit was proteolyzed to fragments of 58, 55 (2), and 48 kDa, all of which retained some ability to bind calmodulin. These data, coupled with our previous report that the human platelet calmodulin-binding proteins undergo Ca2+-dependent proteolysis upon platelet activation [Wallace, R. W., Tallant, E. A., & McManus, M. C. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2766-2773], suggest that the Ca2+-dependent protease may have a role in the platelet as an irreversible activator of certain Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent reactions.
...
PMID:Activation of a calmodulin-dependent phosphatase by a Ca2+-dependent protease. 283 85
The expressed catalytic activity of liver microsomal HMG CoA reductase, the limiting enzyme in cholesterol synthesis, is reversibly diminished by phosphorylation in vitro. In intact hepatocytes the expressed activity of HMG CoA reductase is enhanced by incubation of cells with insulin, and diminished by treatment with glucagon or with mevalonate. In the latter situations the level of total reductase activity falls following initial inactivation (phosphorylation) of the enzyme. This observation suggested that the phosphorylated form of HMG CoA reductase is more sensitive to proteolysis. HMG CoA reductase is a 97,000 dalton (97 K) integral protein of the endoplasmic reticulum with a cytosolic domain that includes the catalytic site and serine residues that may be reversibly phosphorylated. In vitro the Ca2+-activated proteolytic enzyme,
calpain
, generates two catalytically-active fragments: a membrane bound 62 K and a soluble 53 K form of the enzyme which are quantified by specific immunoblot procedures. Cleavage of the native 97 K HMG CoA reductase is enhanced by pretreatment (inactivation) of microsomes with ATP (Mg2+) and liver reductase kinase compared to microsomes pretreated with
protein phosphatase
. This is reflected in a loss of 97 K reductase and an increase in the soluble 53 K form of the enzyme. Degradation of HMG CoA reductase in hepatocytes is partially blocked by lysosomotropic agents and insulin. A steady state model for the turnover of proteins subject to reversible phosphorylation has been developed which recognizes fractional degradative rate constants for the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated species.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation state of HMG CoA reductase affects its catalytic activity and degradation. 302 50
Conversion of native, 97-100 kDa rat liver microsomal HMG CoA reductase to membrane-bound 62 kDa and soluble 52-56 kDa catalytically active forms was catalyzed in vitro by the calcium-dependent, leupeptin- and calpastatin-sensitive protease
calpain
-II purified from rat liver cytosol. Cleavage of the native 97-100 kDa reductase was enhanced by pretreatment (inactivation) of microsomes with ATP(Mg2+) and liver reductase kinase (compared to
protein phosphatase
-pretreated controls). This was reflected in a loss of the 97-100 kDa species and an increase in the soluble 52-56 kDa species (total enzyme activity and specific immunoblot recovery).
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of microsomal HMG CoA reductase increases susceptibility to proteolytic degradation in vitro. 609 45
The association/dissociation of ezrin, a microvillar membrane-cytoskeleton linker, was studied to search for the initial step leading to anoxia-induced brush-border breakdown in a rabbit proximal tubule suspension. Electron microscopy studies display time-dependent damage to the microvilli during anoxia; immunoblots demonstrate the dissociation of ezrin from the cytoskeleton, reflected by the significant decrease in Triton X-100-insoluble ezrin from control (91%) to 39% after 30 min. Simultaneously, Triton X-100-soluble and extracellular ezrin increased with no change in total ezrin, Triton X-100 solubility of actin, or total intracellular protein. Parallel immunocytochemistry studies show diffusion of ezrin from the brush border, where ezrin is highly colocalized with F-actin during normoxia into the cytoplasm. Thirty minutes of reoxygenation following 30 min of anoxia causes recovery of the microvillar structure and reassociation of ezrin to the cytoskeleton and the brush border. Application of ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (4 mM) or inhibition of intracellular
calpain
or
calcineurin
do not prevent the dissociation of ezrin during anoxia. We conclude that ezrin-cytoskeletal dissociation may initiate microvillar breakdown during anoxia via calcium-independent mechanisms.
...
PMID:Cytoskeletal dissociation of ezrin during renal anoxia: role in microvillar injury. 794 7
The Ca(2+)-dependent protease,
calpain
II, isolated from vascular smooth muscle was found to be a substrate for Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) in vitro. Phosphorylation was dependent upon prior autolysis of the regulatory subunit of
calpain
II. The stoichiometry of phosphorylation of native, unautolyzed
calpain
II was 0.02 +/- 0.01 mol PO4/mol enzyme while for autolyzed
calpain
, the stoichiometry was 1.04 +/- 0.15 mol PO4/mol enzyme. All phosphate was incorporated into the 76 kDa catalytic subunit of
calpain
II. A single serine residue in domain III of the catalytic subunit was identified as the phosphate acceptor: RGS*TAGGCR. Phosphorylation doubled enzyme activity measured both as proteolysis of an exogenous substrate (alpha-casein) as well as by intermolecular catalytic subunit autolysis. The effects of phosphorylation could be reversed by dephosphorylation using a type IIA
phosphoprotein phosphatase
. These results demonstrate that
calpain
II possesses a latent CaM kinase II phosphorylation site that is unmasked by autolysis.
...
PMID:Identification of a latent Ca2+/calmodulin dependent protein kinase II phosphorylation site in vascular calpain II. 818 34
Calcium-evoked secretion generally requires the presence of millimolar concentrations of Mg-ATP. We investigated the role of Mg-ATP in the secretion of serotonin from electropermeabilized bovine platelets. The secretion of serotonin was lost within 5 minutes when the Mg-ATP concentration was diluted to less than 0.1 mM, but was maintained when ATP-gamma S (adenosine 5'-O-3-thiotriphosphate) was used instead of ATP. Okadaic acid, a potent inhibitor of
protein phosphatase
, could also maintain the exocytotic activity even when ATP was diluted. Decrease in the secretory activity was paralleled by a decrease in phosphorylation level of four proteins after dilution of ATP, but the activity was maintained when the thiophosphorylation level of these proteins was maintained. Two of these proteins were digested by a protease,
calpain
, which has been shown to lead to a loss in the exocytotic activity. Electron microscopic studies showed that calcium did not induce the formation of distinct bridge-like structures between the granule membrane and the plasma membrane in Mg-ATP-diluted cells, previously shown as the structure transiently formed prior to fusion of the two membranes. Anchorage of the secretory dense granules to the plasma membrane and the presence of the amorphous structures between the granules and the plasma membrane were unchanged by dilution of ATP. These results indicate that ATP is not required for the anchorage itself, but is required to prime anchored granules for calcium-triggered secretion. Maintenance of the phosphorylated state of proteins by ATP enables the calcium trigger to form the bridge-like structures preceding membrane fusion events.
...
PMID:ATP is required in platelet serotonin exocytosis for protein phosphorylation and priming of secretory vesicles docked on the plasma membrane. 883 96
Calpains, the thiol proteinases of the calcium-dependent proteolytic system, are regulated by a natural inhibitor, calpastatin, which is present in brain tissue in two forms. Although both calpastatins are highly active on human erythrocyte
calpain
, only one form shows a high inhibitory efficiency with both rat brain
calpain
isozymes. The second calpastatin form is almost completely inactive against homologous proteinases and can be converted into an active one by exposure to a
phosphoprotein phosphatase
, also isolated from rat brain. Phosphorylation of the active calpastatin by protein kinase C and protein kinase A promotes a decrease in its inhibitory efficiency. The interconversion between the two inhibitor forms seems involved in the adjustment of the level of intracellular calpastatin activity on specific cell requirements.
...
PMID:Modulation of rat brain calpastatin efficiency by post-translational modifications. 927 42
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