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Comparative Study
. 1985 Dec;180(3):488-96.
doi: 10.3181/00379727-180-42207.

A new heat-stable regulatory factor is associated with aortic polycation-modulated (PCM)-phosphatase

Comparative Study

A new heat-stable regulatory factor is associated with aortic polycation-modulated (PCM)-phosphatase

J Di Salvo et al. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med. 1985 Dec.

Abstract

An aortic phosphatase which dephosphorylates several proteins including phosphorylase a and the 20-kDa myosin light chains is subject to modulation in vitro by polycationic effectors such as lysine-rich histone-H1 and polylysine. This study was based on the hypothesis that polycationic modulation of expressed enzymic activity involves interactions between the effectors and a regulatory site associated with the polycation-modulated (PCM)-phosphatase. Basal PCM-phosphatase activity expressed against myocardial myosin light chains (MLC, 1258 nmole/min/mg) was about eightfold greater than activity expressed against phosphorylase a (149 nmole/min/mg). However, dephosphorylation of phosphorylase a was stimulated four- to sevenfold by low concentrations of polylysine (Mr = 13,000; 0.01-0.1 microM), whereas MLC phosphatase activity was virtually abolished. Higher concentrations of polylysine inhibited dephosphorylation of either substrate. Interestingly, a heat-stable fraction prepared from the PCM-phosphatase reversed the stimulatory effect of polylysine on phosphorylase phosphatase activity and the inhibitory effect on dephosphorylation of MLC. No reversal of the modulatory effects of polylysine occurred when protein phosphatase inhibitor 1 or inhibitor 2 was substituted for the heat-stable factor derived from the PCM-phosphatase. Sucrose density centrifugation of the enzyme yielded a single peak (Mr = 63,000) exhibiting polycation-modulated activity against phosphorylase a and MLC. Moreover, heating each of the gradient fractions showed the presence of a heat-stable factor which reversed the modulatory effects of polylysine on dephosphorylation of either phosphorylase a or MLC. These results show that a specific heat-stable factor, which differs from both inhibitor 1 and 2, is associated with the PCM-phosphatase. The results suggest that polycationic modulation of expressed PCM-phosphatase activity may involve interactions between the polycationic effector and the enzyme-associated regulatory factor.

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