Cyclic nucleotide- and calcium-independent phosphorylation of proteins in rat brain polyribosome: effects of ACTH, spermine, and hemin
- PMID: 6095130
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00973039
Cyclic nucleotide- and calcium-independent phosphorylation of proteins in rat brain polyribosome: effects of ACTH, spermine, and hemin
Abstract
The incorporation of [gamma-32P]ATP into proteins of rat brain polyribosomes was studied in vitro. The effects of cyclic nucleotides, calcium, hemin, ACTH, GTP, and spermine were examined. The incorporation of phosphate into proteins increased with time and phosphatase activity was very low; thus, the extent of phosphorylation was predominantly a reflection of protein kinase activity. Phosphorylation of proteins was not sensitive to Ca2+ in the presence or absence of either calmodulin or phosphatidylserine. Phosphorylation was also unaffected by cyclic nucleotides in the absence of exogenous enzymes. However, addition of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase together with cAMP resulted in a stimulation of the incorporation of phosphate into 4 phosphoproteins (pp70, pp58, pp43, and pp32); phosphorylation of pp32 was completely dependent on the addition of the kinase. ACTH (1-24), (11-24), and spermine inhibited the endogenous phosphorylation of one protein band (pp30). The phosphorylation of this 30 kD band was also selectively increased by hemin (5 microM). Higher concentrations of hemin exerted an inhibitory effect on the majority of the phosphoproteins. Protein phosphatase activity was not influenced by ACTH or spermine. The specific inhibition of pp30 phosphorylation by ACTH or spermine is most probably explained by an interaction with a cyclic nucleotide- and Ca2+ -independent protein kinase.
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