Ontogeny of cyclic AMP-dependent protein phosphokinase during hepatic development of the rat
- PMID: 169902
- DOI: 10.1016/0304-4165(75)90257-3
Ontogeny of cyclic AMP-dependent protein phosphokinase during hepatic development of the rat
Abstract
The ontogeny of protein kinase (ATP: protein phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.37) and cyclic AMP-binding activity in subcellular fractions of liver was examined during prenatal and postnatal development of the male rat. 1. Protein kinase activity and cyclic AMP-binding activity were found in the nuclear, microsomal, lysosomal-mitochondrial, and soluble liver fractions. 2. The protein kinase activity of the soluble (105 000 X g supernatant) fraction measured with histone F1 as substrate was stimulated by cyclic AMP. Cyclic AMP did not stimulate the protein kinase activity of the particulate fractions. 3. The protein kinase activity of all subcellular fractions increased rapidly from the activity observed in prenatal liver (3-4 days before birth) to reach maximal activity in 2-day-old rats. Thereafter, the protein kinase activity declined more slowly and regained the prenatal levels at 10 days after birth. 4. Considerable latent protein kinase activity was associated with liver microsomal fractions which could be activated by treatment of microsomes with Triton X-100. The latent microsomal protein kinase activity was highest in prenatal liver, at the time of birth, and 2 days after birth. During the subsequent postnatal development the latent microsomal protein kinase activity gradually declined to insignificantly low levels. 5. During the developmental period examined (4 days before birth to age 60-90 days) marked alterations of the cyclic AMP-binding activity were determined in all subcellular fractions of rat liver. In general, cytosol, microsomal, and lysosomal-mitochondrial cyclic AMP-binding activity was highest in 10-11 day-old rats. Nuclear cyclic AMP-binding activity was highest 3-4 days before birth and declined at birth and during the postnatal period. There was no correlation between the developmental alteration of cyclic AMP-binding activity and cyclic AMP dependency of the protein kinase activity in any of the subcellular fractions. This suggests that the measured cyclic AMP-binding activity does not reflect developmental alterations of the cyclic AMP-binding regulatory subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.
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