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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)
This article focuses on the role of protein phosphorylation, especially that mediated by protein kinase C (PKC), in neurotransmitter release. In the first part of the article, the evidence linking PKC activation to neurotransmitter release is evaluated. Neurotransmitter release can be elicited in at least two manners that may involve distinct mechanisms: Evoked release is stimulated by
calcium
influx following chemical or electrical depolarization, whereas enhanced release is stimulated by direct application of phorbol ester or fatty acid activators of PKC. A markedly distinct sensitivity of the two pathways to PKC inhibitors or to PKC downregulation suggests that only enhanced release is directly PKC-mediated. In the second part of the article, a framework is provided for understanding the complex and apparently contrasting effects of PKC inhibitors. A model is proposed whereby the site of interaction of a PKC inhibitor with the enzyme dictates the apparent potency of the inhibitor, since the multiple activators also interact with these distinct sites on the enzyme. Appropriate PKC inhibitors can now be selected on the basis of both the PKC activator used and the site of inhibitor interaction with PKC. In the third part of the article, the known nerve terminal substrates of PKC are examined. Only four have been identified, tyrosine hydroxylase, MARCKS, B-50, and dephosphin, and the latter two may be associated with neurotransmitter release. Phosphorylation of the first three of these proteins by PKC accompanies release. B-50 may be associated with evoked release since antibodies delivered into permeabilized synaptosomes block evoked, but not enhanced release. Dephosphin and its PKC phosphorylation may also be associated with evoked release, but in a unique manner. Dephosphin is a phosphoprotein concentrated in nerve terminals, which, upon stimulation of release, is rapidly dephosphorylated by a
calcium
-stimulated phosphatase (possibly
calcineurin
[CN]). Upon termination of the rise in intracellular
calcium
, dephosphin is phosphorylated by PKC. A priming model of neurotransmitter release is proposed where PKC-mediated phosphorylation of such a protein is an obligatory step that primes the release apparatus, in preparation for a
calcium
influx signal. Protein dephosphorylation may therefore be as important as protein phosphorylation in neurotransmitter release.
...
PMID:The role of protein kinase C and its neuronal substrates dephosphin, B-50, and MARCKS in neurotransmitter release. 168 57
We investigated whether calmodulin mediates the stimulating effect of
Ca2+
on nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol of porcine aortic endothelial cells. Nitric oxide was quantified by activation of a purified soluble guanylate cyclase. The Ca2(+)-sensitivity of nitric oxide synthase was lost after anion exchange chromatography of the endothelial cytosol and could only be reconstituted by addition of calmodulin or heat-denatured endothelial cytosol. The Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol was inhibited by the calmodulin-binding peptides/proteins melittin, mastoparan, and
calcineurin
(IC50 450, 350 and 60 nM, respectively), but not by the calmodulin antagonist, calmidazolium. In contrast, Ca2(+)-calmodulin-reconstituted nitric oxide synthase was inhibited with similar potency by melittin and calmidazolium. The results suggest that the Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells is mediated by calmodulin.
...
PMID:Calcium-dependent nitric oxide synthesis in endothelial cytosol is mediated by calmodulin. 169 82
The effects of divalent metals, metal chelators (EDTA, EGTA) and sodium dodecyl sulfate were investigated on the phosphatase activity of isolated bovine brain
calcineurin
assayed in the absence (called intrinsic) and presence of calmodulin. Intrinsic phosphatase was increased by Mn2+, was unaffected by Mg2+,
Ca2+
, and Ba2+, and was markedly inhibited by Ni2+, Fe2+, Zn2+ and Cu2+. When assayed in the presence of calmodulin, many divalent metals (Ni2+, Zn2+, Pb2+, Cd2+), besides Mn2+, increased modestly the phosphatase activity at low concentrations (10-100 microM) and inhibited it markedly at high concentrations. Ca2(+)-calmodulin stimulated phosphatase activity was antagonized by Ni2+, Zn2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, Pb2+, at low concentrations (50 microM), and by Ba2+, Cd2+ at slightly higher concentrations (greater than 100 microM); Mn2+ and Co2+ (50 microM to 1 mM) in fact augmented it. EDTA and EGTA in a concentration and time dependent fashion inhibited the intrinsic phosphatase activity, particularly that of trypsinized
calcineurin
. SDS in low concentrations (0.005%) augmented the phosphatase activity and inhibited it at high concentrations. Mn2+ (+/- calmodulin) and
Ca2+
only with calmodulin present increased the phosphatase activity assayed with low concentrations of SDS. The EDTA dependent inhibition of intrinsic phosphatase was almost abolished in assays containing SDS. Prior exposure of
calcineurin
to Mn2+ led to a high activity conformation state of
calcineurin
that was 'long-lived' or 'pseudo-irreversible'. Such Mn2(+)-activated state of
calcineurin
exhibited no discernible change in the affinity towards myelin basic protein or its inhibition by trifluoperazine. At alkaline pH, Mg2+ supported the intrinsic phosphatase activity, although to a lesser degree than Mn2+. The latter cation, compared to Mg2+ and Ni2+, was also a more powerful stimulator of the
calcineurin
phosphatase assayed with histone (III-S) and myosin light chain as substrates.
...
PMID:Divalent cation effects on calcineurin phosphatase: differential involvement of hydrophobic and metal binding domains in the regulation of the enzyme activity. 170 Oct 13
Endothelium-derived relaxing factor/nitric oxide (EDRF/NO) synthesized by bovine aortic endothelial cells and subcellular fractions thereof was assayed by its stimulating effect on soluble guanylyl cyclase of rat fetal lung fibroblasts (RFL-6 cells). The release of EDRF/NO by intact endothelial cells could be stimulated with bradykinin, thrombin, or ADP and was abolished in Ca2(+)-free medium. When subcellular fractions were analyzed, some EDRF/NO-synthesizing activity was found in the cytosolic fraction, but most of the activity was associated with the particulate fraction. Both enzyme activities required L-arginine and NADPH for EDRF/NO synthesis, both were inhibited by NG-nitro-L-arginine and NG-methyl-L-arginine, and hemoglobin or methylene blue abolished the effect of the EDRF/NO produced by both enzymes. Both enzymes were highly sensitive to
Ca2+
; the major increase in activity occurred between 100 and 500 nM free
Ca2+
. Exposure of the particulate enzyme activity to 1 M KCl removed 39% of the protein and reduced total activity by 46%, but the activity was restored when exogenous calmodulin (CaM) was added. Further KCl washes caused little further loss of protein or EDRF/NO synthase activity. The KCl-washed particulate enzyme could be solubilized with the detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate. The CaM antagonists calmidazolium and trifluoperazine as well as the CaM-binding protein
calcineurin
inhibited the EDRF/NO synthesis by both the cytosolic and the particulate enzyme. These effects were partially reversed with exogenous CaM. Partial purification of the cytosolic and solubilized particulate enzymes by affinity chromatography on adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate-Sepharose resulted in EDRF/NO synthase activities dependent on exogenous CaM. We conclude that endothelial cells contain both cytosolic and particulate enzymes that synthesize EDRF/NO. Both enzymes are regulated by free
Ca2+
and, at least in part, by CaM.
...
PMID:Calmodulin-dependent endothelium-derived relaxing factor/nitric oxide synthase activity is present in the particulate and cytosolic fractions of bovine aortic endothelial cells. 170 8
We investigated the molecular mechanisms whereby
Ca2+
enters the endothelial cytosol and regulates endothelial nitric oxide synthesis L-arginine-dependent nitric oxide synthesis by isolated endothelial cytosol as quantified by activation of a purified soluble guanylate cyclase was concentration-dependently enhanced by free
Ca2+
(EC50 0.3 microM). The Ca(2+)-dependent activation was inhibited by the calmodulin antagonists mastoparan, melittin, and
calcineurin
(IC50 450, 350, and 60 nM, respectively) in a calmodulin-reversible manner. After removal of endogenous calmodulin the Ca(2+)-dependency of endothelial NO synthase was lost, but could be reconstituted with exogenous calmodulin. The results indicate that Ca(2+)-calmodulin directly activates the endothelial nitric oxide synthase, thereby transducing agonist-induced increases in intracellular free
Ca2+
concentration to nitric oxide formation from L-arginine, K(+)-induced depolarization of the endothelial cells markedly inhibited the sustained, but not initial phase of the intracellular
Ca2+
response to bradykinin, indicating that K(+)-induced depolarization depresses the transmembrane
Ca2+
influx. On the contrary, the K+ channel activator Hoe 234 which elicits hyperpolarization of the endothelial cell membrane, augmented the sustained phase of the agonist-induced intracellular
Ca2+
signal, but not the resting intracellular
Ca2+
level. The effects of K+ and Hoe 234 on the agonist-induced Ca(2+)-response were reflected by corresponding changes in agonist-induced EDRF/NO release. From these data, we suggest that the endothelial membrane potential may play an important role for the extent of agonist-induced
Ca2+
influx and, thereby, the endothelial EDRF/NO synthesis.
...
PMID:Cellular mechanisms controlling EDRF/NO formation in endothelial cells. 171 54
Protein kinase C (PKC) is routinely assayed, after it is partially purified over DEAE-cellulose chromatography to eliminate any interfering protein kinases and phosphatases, by measuring the transfer of gamma-phosphate of [gamma-32P]ATP to H1 histone. Recently, it has been shown that a synthetic peptide, comprising residues 4-14 of myelin basic protein (MBP4-14), is a very selective PKC substrate which is not phosphorylated effectively by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, casein kinase I and II,
Ca2+
/calmodulin dependent protein kinase II or phosphorylase kinase [Yasuda, I., Kishimoto, A., Tanaka, S-I., Tominaga, M., Sakurai, A. and Nishizuka, Y. (1990) BBRC 166, 1220-1227]. We report here that once MBP4-14 is phosphorylated, it is not dephosphorylated by okadaic acid-sensitive phosphatases (protein phosphatases 1, 2A and 3) or other protein phosphatases such as
calcineurin
and/or PP 2C present in hippocampal homogenates. Therefore, MBP4-14 can be used for PKC assay in crude extracts of neural tissue.
...
PMID:A phosphatase resistant substrate for the assay of protein kinase C in crude tissue extracts. 171 69
Calcineurin (
calcium
- and calmodulin-stimulated phosphatase) alpha subunit purified from bovine brain was found to be composed of two polypeptides, 61 KDa (alpha 1) and 59 KDa (alpha 2). The two peptides were separated and extracted from polyacrylamide gel. The immuno-peptide mapping of the purified peptides by partial proteolysis showed that the 59-KDa polypeptide was not a degradative product of the 61-KDa polypeptide. The interaction of the enzyme with two monoclonal antibodies, Vj6 and Vd3, raised against bovine brain
calcineurin
revealed that the 61-KDa polypeptide was recognized by both Vj6 and Vd3, whereas the 59-KDa one was recognized only by Vj6. These results indicate that there are at least two isoforms of
calcineurin
alpha subunits in bovine brain.
...
PMID:Identification of two calcineurin alpha isoforms in bovine brain by two different monoclonal antibodies. 172 95
Effects of troponin phosphorylation on Ca2(+)-stimulated MgATPase activity of bovine cardiac actomyosin were examined. Phosphorylation by protein kinase C of troponin I and troponin T subunits in troponin or troponin-tropomyosin complex resulted in a decreased Ca2(+)-stimulated MgATPase activity in reconstituted actomyosin, and this effect was reversed by subsequent dephosphorylation by
protein phosphatase
1. It was further observed that protein kinase C phosphorylation of either troponin I or troponin T subunits led to a similar inhibition of Ca2(+)-stimulated actomyosin MgATPase activity. In all cases, EC50 values (concentrations causing 50% stimulation) for
Ca2+
were not appreciably affected by troponin phosphorylation by protein kinase C. Data from phosphorylation site analysis suggests that phosphorylation of threonine 144 in troponin I and possibly threonine 280 or threonine 199 in troponin T might be important for the observed decrease of Ca2(+)-stimulated actomyosin MgATPase. It is suggested that inhibition of actomyosin MgATPase caused by protein kinase C phosphorylation of troponin I and/or troponin T represents a new mechanism that can account for in part the reported negative inotropic effect of phorbol esters on various cardiac preparations.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C phosphorylation of cardiac troponin I or troponin T inhibits Ca2(+)-stimulated actomyosin MgATPase activity. 182 28
Phosphorylation of the nervous system-specific growth cone protein GAP-43 by kinase C in vivo occurs exclusively in growth cones and distal axons, and the onset of this phosphorylation is delayed relative to the onset of axonogenesis, with the delay predicted on the time needed for axons to reach the vicinity of their targets (Meiri et al., 1991). We have used a subcellular fraction of intact growth cones (IGCs) to investigate whether this induction of GAP-43 phosphorylation can be influenced by target-derived substances, and show here that increased phosphorylation of GAP-43 can be both stimulated and maintained by NGF at concentrations of 2 x 10(-10) M. This low concentration of NGF and the subsequent phosphorylation of GAP-43 are both consistent with the interpretation that phosphorylation is due to the binding of NGF to a biologically active high-affinity receptor. Second, we used the monoclonal antibody 2G12 to show that the NGF-stimulated phosphorylation of GAP-43 occurs on serine, the kinase C phosphorylation site, consistent with the results seen in vivo. Levels of phosphorylated GAP-43 in the intact IGCs are also modulated by
calcium
-stimulated dephosphorylation that could be inhibited by EGTA but not okadaic acid and that therefore resembled the
calcineurin
-stimulated dephosphorylation reported in vitro. The results suggest that the spatial and temporal regulation of GAP-43 phosphorylation that occurs during axonogenesis in vivo can be regulated by target-derived neurotropic molecules, specifically NGF.
...
PMID:Nerve growth factor stimulation of GAP-43 phosphorylation in intact isolated growth cones. 183 9
Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation are involved in regulation of cell growth. We tested the hypothesis that the growth inhibitory effect of transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) involves activation of protein phosphatases. Exposure of human keratinocytes in culture to 400 pM TGF-beta 1 for 48 h led to 80% inhibition of DNA synthesis as measured by nuclear labeling. Incubation of cultured keratinocytes with 400 pM TGF-beta 1 rapidly activated (within 30 min) protein serine/threonine phosphatase, measured using phosphorylase as a substrate. Based on several criteria, including neutralization of activity with specific antibodies and inhibitor-2, TGF-beta 1-activated phosphorylase phosphatase was identified as
protein phosphatase
1. TGF-beta 1 did not have rapid effects on protein serine/threonine phosphatase activity (type 2A) measured with histone phosphorylated by protein kinase C or on protein tyrosine phosphatase activity. However, protein tyrosine phosphatase was activated at 48 h, coincident with growth arrest. Differentiation, induced by the combination of TGF-beta 1 plus
calcium
or by serum, was not accompanied by further serine/threonine or tyrosine phosphatase activation. We conclude that induction of growth arrest in keratinocytes by TGF-beta 1 involves acute activation of
protein phosphatase
1, while activation of protein tyrosine phosphatase may represent an additional mechanism for maintaining cells in a growth-arrested state.
...
PMID:Growth arrest induced by transforming growth factor beta 1 is accompanied by protein phosphatase activation in human keratinocytes. 184 73
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