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Query: UNIPROT:P56851 (
epididymal
)
11,273
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Earlier studies have shown that exposure of fat-cells to insulin results in the rapid increased phosphorylation of an acid-soluble 22 kDa protein and that increases in phosphorylation were also evident in cells exposed to adrenaline [Belsham & Denton (1980) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 8, 382-383; Belsham, Brownsey, Hughes & Denton (1980) Diabetologia 18, 307-312]. 2. The effects of adrenaline are shown to be brought about through beta-adrenergic receptors and to be mimicked by other agents which increase cell cyclic AMP concentrations. The maximum extent of phosphorylation is about 60% of that observed with insulin. Increased phosphorylation is also observed in fat-cells exposed to vasopressin, oxytocin and phorbol esters, but not to alpha-adrenergic agonists. 3. No changes in the phosphorylation of the protein are evident in
epididymal
fat-pads from fat-fed, starved or starved/refed animals, despite the large changes in protein composition of fat-cells which accompany these nutritional alterations. This suggests that the protein is not closely involved in lipogenesis or associated metabolic pathways, but rather that it may play a more general regulatory role. 4. The 22 kDa protein migrates as a doublet on SDS/PAGE even after purification to apparent homogeneity by sequential use of Mono Q chromatography, SDS/PAGE and h.p.l.c. The amino acid compositions of the two components are very similar and share features in common with a number of proteins, including inhibitor-1,
inhibitor-2
, dopamine- and cyclic-AMP-regulated phosphoprotein (DARPP-32), and G-substrate, which may be involved in the regulation of protein phosphatase activity. 5. Phosphopeptide mapping and phosphoamino acid analysis reveals that insulin increases the phosphorylation of two distinct peptides within the protein (in one peptide insulin increases the amount of phosphothreonine, whereas in the other the hormone increases the amounts of phosphothreonine and phosphoserine). Both components of the doublet exhibit similar changes in phosphorylation, and hence the differences in migration are not the result of differences in phosphorylation, as suggested previously [Blackshear, Nemenoff & Avruch (1983) Biochem. J. 214, 11-19]. The pattern of phosphorylation observed with the beta-adrenergic agonist isoprenaline was similar to that observed with insulin. 6. The possible role and regulation of the 22 kDa protein are discussed.
...
PMID:Comparison of the effects of insulin and adrenergic agonists on the phosphorylation of an acid-soluble 22 kDa protein in rat epididymal fat-pads and isolated fat-cells. 134 72
Goat cauda-
epididymal
intact sperm ecto [32P] proteins phosphorylated in presence of exogenous [gamma-32P]ATP by an endogenous ecto-cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase (CIK), have been found to lose 32P when the labelled cells are incubated at 37 degrees C in a modified Ringer's solution. Analysis of the 32P-labelled products of the turnover of the ecto-phosphoproteins show that 32Pi rather than 32P-labelled peptides, is released from the cell-surface phosphoproteins indicating that the turnover of the ecto-phosphoproteins is mediated by an endogenous sperm outer-surface
phosphoprotein phosphatase
(ecto-PPase). The ecto-PPase is not a non-specific phosphatase since unlabelled p-nitrophenyl phosphate, beta-glycerophosphate or ATP at a relatively high concentration (1 mM each) has no appreciable effect on the dephosphorylation of the cell-surface proteins. The intact-sperm ecto-proteins phosphorylated and then dephosphorylated by the endogenous ecto-CIK and PPase respectively, undergo rephosphorylation by the cell-surface CIK. The data are consistent with the view that sperm external surface possesses a novel coupled-ecto-CIK and PPase enzyme system that regulates the phosphorylated states of the intact-sperm ecto-proteins by a cyclic mechanism of protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation.
...
PMID:Occurrence of a coupled-enzyme system on the intact-sperm outer surface that phosphorylates and dephosphorylates ecto-proteins. 216 95
Studies of in vitro models demonstrate that a forward motility protein (FMP) is required for the initiation of forward motility in the immature
epididymal
spermatozoa. FMP is a heat-stable glycoprotein derived from
epididymal
plasma. During the
epididymal
maturation of spermatozoa in vivo, there is a marked increase of intrasperm pH and level of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). Several studies suggest that exogenous FMP in concert with elevated intrasperm pH and level of cAMP initiates flagellar motility during the
epididymal
transit of sperm. cAMP activates sperm cytosolic cAMP-dependent protein kinases, which in turn phosphorylate multiple intrasperm phosphoproteins that may regulate flagellar motility. Exogenous calcium ion activates intact sperm motility, although it inhibits motility of demembranated cells on reactivation. Occurrence of cAMP-dependent type I and II protein kinases, a novel cAMP-independent protein kinase, and a
phosphoprotein phosphatase
has been demonstrated on the external surface of spermatozoa. The sperm surface has a coupled-enzyme system: ecto-cAMP-independent protein kinase and
phosphoprotein phosphatase
that regulate the phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of endogenous sperm ectophosphoproteins. The specific activities of these ecto-enzymes increase markedly during forward progression, suggesting that they may have a role in regulating flagellar motility.
...
PMID:Biochemical parameters of initiation and regulation of sperm motility. 219 32
Intact spermatozoa from goat cauda epididymis possess
phosphoprotein phosphatase
activity that causes dephosphorylation of externally added [32p]histones. The enzymic reaction was linear with time for at least 15 min and there was little uptake of [32p]histones by these cells. The activity of the enzyme of the whole spermatozoa was not due to contamination of the broken cells or
epididymal
plasma and leakage of the intracellular enzymic activity during incubation. The activity of the
phosphoprotein phosphatase
was strongly inhibited by the thiol reagent: p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid, which is believed not to enter the cells. There was no appreciable loss of the enzymic activity from the cells when washed with EDTA (2.0 mM) or a hyperosmotic medium. These data are consistent with the view that the observed activity of the enzyme is located on the spermatozoal external surface. Studies with unlabelled p-nitrophenyl phosphate and beta-glycerophosphate indicate that the sperm ecto-enzyme is not a non-specific phosphatase.
...
PMID:Occurrence of an ecto-phosphoprotein phosphatase in goat epididymal spermatozoa. 299 Apr 77
Protein kinase activity in high-speed supernatant fractions prepared from rat
epididymal
adipose tissue previously incubated in the absence or presence of insulin was investigated by following the incorporation of 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP into phosphoproteins separated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electro-phoresis. Incorporation of 32P into several endogenous proteins in the supernatant fractions from insulin-treated tissue was significantly increased. These included acetyl-CoA carboxylase and ATP citrate lyase (which exhibit increased phosphorylation within fat-cells exposed to insulin), together with two unknown proteins of subunit Mr 78000 and 43000. The protein kinase activity increased by insulin was distinct from cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, was not dependent on Ca2+ and was not appreciably affected by dialysis or gel filtration. The rate of phosphorylation of added purified fat-cell acetyl-CoA carboxylase and ATP citrate lyase was also increased by 60-90% in high-speed-supernatant fractions prepared from insulin-treated tissue. No evidence for any persistent changes in
phosphoprotein phosphatase
activity was found. It is concluded that insulin action on acetyl-CoA carboxylase, ATP citrate lyase and other intracellular proteins exhibiting increased phosphorylation involves an increase in cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase activity in the cytoplasm. The possibility that the increase reflects translocation from the plasma membrane, perhaps after phosphorylation by the protein tyrosine kinase associated with insulin receptors, is discussed.
...
PMID:Studies on insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, ATP citrate lyase and other proteins in rat epididymal adipose tissue. Evidence for activation of a cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase. 614 4
A
phosphoprotein phosphatase
has been partially purified from rat
epididymal
fat pads by a procedure utilizing ammonium sulfate and ethanol precipitations and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-50. The phosphatase was eluted from Sephadex G-75 columns with an apparent molecular weight of 28 000. The
phosphoprotein phosphatase
catalyzed the reversible deactivation of protein kinase activated chicken adipose tissue hormone-sensitive triglyceride lipase. Phosphatase activity measured with activated triglyceride lipase as substrate was completely dependent upon the presence of metal ions (Mg2+, Ca2+, or Mn2+) and was inhibited by inorganic phosphate and adenine nucleotides. The fat pad phosphatase increased the rate of activation of glycogen synthase in rat adipose tissue infranatant fractions from fed and 24-h fasted rats but had little or no effect on synthase activity in infranatant fractions from rats fasted for 48 h. Fasting had no effect on rat fat pad phosphatase activity measured with triglyceride lipase as substrate, but phosphatase activity was decreased in preparations from diabetic rats.
...
PMID:Properties of a phosphoprotein phosphatase from rat epididymal fat pads: deactivation of hormone-sensitive triglyceride lipase and activation of glycogen synthase in adipose tissue. 624 77
Immotile bovine caput
epididymal
sperm contain levels of protein phosphatase activity twofold higher than do mature motile caudal sperm. Comparison of the inhibition profiles of endogenous phosphatase activities detected by okadaic acid (OA) and calyculin A (CA) revealed a pattern consistent with the predominance of a type 1 protein phosphatase (PP1). Immunoblot analysis identified PP1 gamma 2 (the testis-specific isoform of PP1) as the only PP1 isoform in sperm and showed little protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). In addition, of the known PP1 inhibitors, i.e., DARPP-32, inhibitor 1 (I1), and
inhibitor 2
(I2), only I2-like activity was detected in sperm. Inhibition of PP1 by the heat-stable I2-like activity purified from sperm could be reversed with purified glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3). Furthermore, sperm extracts contain an inactive complex of PP1 and I2 (termed PP1I) that could also be activated by purified GSK-3. The presence of GSK-3 in sperm was demonstrated by activation of purified PP1I, and quantitation revealed that immotile caput sperm contained sixfold higher GSK-3 activity than motile caudal sperm. Immunoblot analysis confirmed the expression of GSK-3 in sperm and revealed the occurrence of both the alpha and beta isoforms. Our findings suggest that the higher PP1 activity measured in immotile sperm, presumably due to higher GSK-3 activity, is responsible for holding motility in check. This conclusion was supported by the observation that the phosphatase inhibitors OA and CA, at micromolar and nanomolar levels, respectively, were able to induce motility in completely immotile bovine caput
epididymal
sperm and to stimulate the kinetic activity of mature caudal sperm. The intrasperm levels of cAMP, pH, and calcium were unaltered by treatment with these inhibitors. The results suggest a biochemical basis for the development and regulation of sperm motility and a possible physiological role for the PP1/I2/GSK-3 system.
...
PMID:Sperm motility development in the epididymis is associated with decreased glycogen synthase kinase-3 and protein phosphatase 1 activity. 883 95
Human and monkey ejaculated sperm contain protein phosphatase-1 (PP1), PP1
inhibitor 2
(12), and glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3). Inhibition of ejaculated human sperm protein phosphatase (PP) activity with calyculin-a (CL-A) significantly stimulates motility, implicating protein dephosphorylation in motility regulation. The present experiments were conducted to characterize and compare PP and GSK-3 activity in monkey caput and caudal
epididymal
sperm, to determine the cellular distribution of these enzymes, and to test the thesis that
epididymal
sperm PP activity is inversely related to motility. Caput
epididymal
sperm populations, (8.8% motile) contained levels of PP activity that were >3 times as high as those of caudal spermatozoa. This PP activity was further identified by inhibitor response profiles as PP1. In both caput and caudal sperm, the majority of this PP1 activity was localized in 100,000 x g soluble fractions. Western blot analysis indicated that a portion of this difference was the result of elevated amounts of PP1 in caput compared with caudal
epididymal
sperm. The presence of GSK-3 activity was undetectable in 100,000 x g insoluble fractions of
epididymal
sperm, whereas both caput and caudal sperm soluble fractions contained GSK-3 activity, which was approximately threefold higher in caput sperm compared with caudal populations. Treatment of caput
epididymal
sperm from the rhesus macaque with the PP inhibitor CL-A resulted in a significant, dose-dependent increase from 8 to 38% motile cells (without any effect on their path velocity). In contrast, CL-A had no significant influence on either percent motility or path velocity of caudal
epididymal
sperm. Cytosolic PP1 and GSK-3 activities appear to be inversely related to the motility of monkey
epididymal
sperm and may have a regulatory role in the development of the potential for motility in
epididymal
sperm.
...
PMID:Motility potential of macaque epididymal sperm: the role of protein phosphatase and glycogen synthase kinase-3 activities. 1010 Apr 73
A
phosphoprotein phosphatase
(PPase M-I) that dephosphorylates serine and threonine residues of histones was isolated from the goat cauda-
epididymal
sperm plasma membrane and partially characterized. The PPase was solubilized from the sperm membrane by treating it with 0.1 N NaOH at pH 11.4 and the solubilized enzyme was partially purified by concanavalin A-sepharose affinity chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), revealing it to be a 520-kDa protein. The PPase gave a single protein band in native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), but in the presence of SDS it resolved into multiple proteins (35-170 kDa) showing that the isolated enzyme contained a few contaminating proteins. The enzyme is a glycoprotein because it binds with high affinity to concanavalin A. It was maximally active at pH 8.0 and its activity was not dependent on bivalent metal ions. The enzyme is a specific phosphatase as it displayed higher affinity for dephosphorylation of large molecular weight phosphate esters. The PPase showed broad substrate specificity for the dephosphorylation of a variety of proteins. The membrane-associated PPase was strongly (70-80%) inhibited by detergents (0.5%) such as Nonidet P-40, Lubrol PX, Triton X-100 and Tween-20. Pyrophosphate (5 mm) and orthovanadate (400 microM) had no significant effect on the activity of the isolated PPase whereas polyamines such as spermine (10 mM) and spermidine (10 mM) slightly inhibited (20%) the enzymatic activity. Inorganic phosphate (10 mM) and NaF (10 mM), the well-known inhibitors of the cytosolic PPases, had no appreciable effect on the activity of PPase M-I, indicating that the membrane-bound PPase is distinct from the cytosolic PPases. The enzyme was radiolabelled when the intact spermatozoa were subjected to lactoperoxidase-mediated radioiodination reaction. The results show that the PPase M-I is an ecto-enzyme that may play an important role in sperm physiology by causing the dephosphorylation of the sperm outer surface phosphoproteins.
...
PMID:Partial purification and characterization of a phosphoprotein phosphatase from sperm plasma membrane. 1097 6
Previous studies from our laboratory have identified MPS, a 100-kDa protein, as the major phosphoprotein substrate of caprine sperm ecto-cyclic AMP independent protein kinase. In this study the isolated (32)P-labelled MPS has been incorporated into mature caprine (Capra indicus) cauda-
epididymal
spermatozoa with the help of cell electroporation technique to investigate the effect of MPS on sperm flagellar motility. The optimum conditions for electroporation of sperm cells consisted of exposure of 0.2 ml of sperm cells (2 x 10(8)/ml) to external electric field of intensity 1.5 kV/cm and capacitation of 25 microF at 4 degrees C and post-pulse incubation at 37 degrees C for 1 hr. when nearly 50% of the cells lost motility. Scanning electron micrographs (SEM) demonstrate the formation of micro-pores and local osmotic swelling in the electroporated spermatozoa. MPS incorporation was maximal when its concentration was 30 microg/ml (300 pmol) in the medium and when the post-pulse incubation time was 60 min. At maximum (75%) MPS incorporation, total and forward motility increments were also maximum: 34% (P < 0.01) and 32% (P < 0.01), respectively. The subcellular fractionation data show that major portion of the introduced MPS was bound to the plasma-membrane of spermatozoa. The 32P-labelled electrophoresed intact spermatozoa lost radioactivity due to the action of the endogenous ecto-
phosphoprotein phosphatase
. Therefore MPS is primarily localised on the sperm external surface leaving its phosphate group(s) oriented in the extracellular medium. The data provided further evidence to strengthen the view that MPS is an ecto-phosphoprotein and that it plays an important role in the regulation of sperm flagellar motility.
...
PMID:Role of the major ecto-phosphoprotein in sperm flagellar motility using a cell electroporation method. 1819 70
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