calcimycin has been researched along with methylamine* in 17 studies
17 other study(ies) available for calcimycin and methylamine
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Human PAD4 regulates histone arginine methylation levels via demethylimination.
Methylation of arginine (Arg) and lysine residues in histones has been correlated with epigenetic forms of gene regulation. Although histone methyltransferases are known, enzymes that demethylate histones have not been identified. Here, we demonstrate that human peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4) regulates histone Arg methylation by converting methyl-Arg to citrulline and releasing methylamine. PAD4 targets multiple sites in histones H3 and H4, including those sites methylated by coactivators CARM1 (H3 Arg17) and PRMT1 (H4 Arg3). A decrease of histone Arg methylation, with a concomitant increase of citrullination, requires PAD4 activity in human HL-60 granulocytes. Moreover, PAD4 activity is linked with the transcriptional regulation of estrogen-responsive genes in MCF-7 cells. These data suggest that PAD4 mediates gene expression by regulating Arg methylation and citrullination in histones. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Arginine; Blotting, Western; Calcimycin; Cell Line, Tumor; Citrulline; Gene Expression Regulation; Genes, Reporter; Histones; HL-60 Cells; Humans; Hydrolases; Ionophores; Membrane Proteins; Methylamines; Methylation; Molecular Sequence Data; Presenilin-2; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Protein-Arginine Deiminase Type 4; Protein-Arginine Deiminases; Protein-Arginine N-Methyltransferases; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Recombinant Proteins | 2004 |
Glucocorticoids activate the ATP-ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic system in skeletal muscle during fasting.
Glucocorticoids are essential for the increase in protein breakdown in skeletal muscle normally seen during fasting. To determine which proteolytic pathway(s) are activated upon fasting, leg muscles from fed and fasted normal rats were incubated under conditions that block or activate different proteolytic systems. After food deprivation (1 day), the nonlysosomal ATP-dependent process increased by 250%, as shown in experiments involving depletion of muscle ATP. Also, the maximal capacity of the lysosomal process increased 60-100%, but no changes occurred in the Ca(2+)-dependent or the residual energy-independent proteolytic processes. In muscles from fasted normal and adrenalectomized (ADX) rats, the protein breakdown sensitive to inhibitors of the lysosomal or Ca(2+)-dependent pathways did not differ. However, the ATP-dependent process was 30% slower in muscles from fasted ADX rats. Administering dexamethasone to these animals or incubating their muscles with dexamethasone reversed this defect. During fasting, when the ATP-dependent process rises, muscles show a two- to threefold increase in levels of ubiquitin (Ub) mRNA. However, muscles of ADX animals failed to show this response. Injecting dexamethasone into the fasted ADX animals increased muscle Ub mRNA within 6 h. Thus glucocorticoids activate the ATP-Ub-dependent proteolytic pathway in fasting apparently by enhancing the expression of components of this system such as Ub. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Adrenalectomy; Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; Dexamethasone; Fasting; Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases; Lysosomes; Male; Methylamines; Muscle Contraction; Muscle Proteins; Muscles; Rats; RNA; RNA, Messenger; Ubiquitins | 1993 |
Secretion of the baby hamster kidney 30-kDa galactose-binding lectin from polarized and nonpolarized cells: a pathway independent of the endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi complex.
A carbohydrate-binding protein of molecular weight 30 kDa (CBP30) isolated from baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells binds polylactosamine glycans present prominently on extracellular matrix glycoproteins of oncofetal origin, such as Engelbroth-Holm-Swarm (EHS) tumor laminin and amniotic fluid fibronectin, and inhibits attachment and spreading of BHK cells to EHS laminin substrata mediated by integrin(s) suggesting an extracellular function for the lectin (S. Sato and R. C. Hughes (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 6983-6990). Here we show that CBP30 shares amino acid sequence homologies with other lectins of similar size, e.g., murine CBP35, Mac2 antigens, and rat IgE-binding protein. Unlike most secreted proteins these lectins contain no signal sequence and we report that drugs, such as brefeldin A and monensin, which inhibit the intracellular transport of classical secretory (glyco)proteins do not block secretion of CBP30 from BHK cells. Secretion is inhibited by methylamine and serum starvation and is increased by heat shock and calcium ionophore A23187, treatments known to block or stimulate exocytosis, respectively. Immunofluorescence and biochemical analysis shows that CBP30 is distributed throughout the cytoplasm of subconfluent BHK cells where it turns over with a half-life of about 30 h, and small amounts are also deposited on the cell surface and substratum. At confluency, the CBP30 assembles into patches that eventually appear to underlie the plasma membrane and extracellular deposits become more numerous. In filter-grown confluent monolayers of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells the lectin is secreted from and expressed at the apical domain of the polarized cells whereas laminin is secreted from the basal domain and becomes incorporated into the matrix between cells and substratum. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding Sites; Calcimycin; Cell Membrane; Cell Polarity; Cells, Cultured; Cricetinae; Exocytosis; Galactose; Galectins; Hemagglutinins; Kidney; Laminin; Methylamines; Mice; Molecular Sequence Data; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid | 1993 |
Apical secretion of a cytosolic protein by Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Evidence for polarized release of an endogenous lectin by a nonclassical secretory pathway.
In the classical secretory pathway proteins containing a signal peptide are translocated from the cytoplasm of the cell into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). From the ER they are transported to the Golgi apparatus and finally to the plasma membrane (PM) where they are released into the extracellular compartment. However, some proteins are synthesized without a signal peptide and maintain a predominantly cytosolic distribution until they are released from the cell. As a marker for this nonclassical secretory pathway we have chosen L-29, a soluble lectin of M(r) about 29,000, that has affinity for lactose and other beta-galactoside containing glycoconjugates. We were interested in determining if cultured epithelial cells secrete L-29 and if they do so in a polarized fashion. Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK)-II cells were found to express large quantities of L-29 (about 1% of the detergent soluble protein). The lectin was diffusely distributed in the cytosol, with little or none in vesicular compartments. The polarity of L-29 secretion, when analyzed in pulse-chase experiments, was selectively into the apical compartment of filter-grown MDCK cells. This secretion was not inhibited by brefeldin A or monensin, drugs that are known to inhibit protein transport through the ER-Golgi-PM pathway. Secretion of L-29 was augmented 3-5-fold by the calcium ionophore A23187 and by increasing the temperature to 42 degrees C, whereas lowering the temperature to 20 degrees C or addition of nocodazole prevented secretion. These results demonstrate the polarized secretion of a cytosolic protein by a nonclassical secretory pathway. Topics: Animals; Brefeldin A; Calcimycin; Cell Line; Chromatography, Affinity; Cyclopentanes; Cysteine; Cytosol; Dogs; Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel; Immunohistochemistry; Kidney; Kinetics; L-Lactate Dehydrogenase; Lectins; Methionine; Methylamines; Molecular Weight; Monensin; Nocodazole; Sulfur Radioisotopes; Temperature; Verapamil | 1993 |
Regulatory phosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in protoplasts from Sorghum mesophyll cells and the role of pH and Ca2+ as possible components of the light-transduction pathway.
The light-dependent phosphorylation of the photosynthetic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PyrPC) was shown to occur in protoplasts from Sorghum mesophyll cells. It was accompanied by an increase in PyrPC protein-serine-kinase activity and conferred the target-specific functional properties, i.e. an increase in Vmax and apparent Ki for L-malate, as previously found with the whole leaf. The light-dependent regulatory phosphorylation of PyrPC was (a) specifically promoted by the weak bases NH4Cl and methylamine (agents which increase cytosolic pH), but not by KNO3, (b) inhibited by the cytosolic protein-synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, thus confirming that protein turnover is a component of the signal-transduction cascade, as reported in [4], (c) found to moderately decrease in the presence of EGTA and to be strongly depressed when the Ca(2+)-selective ionophore A23187 was added to the incubation medium together with EGTA. Addition of Ca2+, but not of Mg2+, to the Ca(2+)-depleted protoplasts partially, but significantly, relieved the inhibition. Calcium deprivation apparently affected the in-situ light-activation of the PyrPC protein kinase. These data indicated that both Ca2+ and an increase in cytosolic pH are required for the induction of PyrPC protein kinase activity/PyrPC phosphorylation in illuminated protoplasts from Sorghum mesophyll cells. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Ammonium Chloride; Calcimycin; Calcium; Cycloheximide; Egtazic Acid; Enzyme Activation; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Light; Methylamines; Molecular Sequence Data; Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxylase; Phosphorylation; Plants; Protein Kinases; Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases; Protoplasts; Signal Transduction | 1992 |
Endocytosis and degradation of ovine prolactin by Nb2 lymphoma cells: characterization and effects of agents known to alter prolactin-induced mitogenesis.
Rat Nb2 node lymphoma cells proliferate in response to lactogens, but the signal transduction mechanism involved remains unclear. Specific binding, internalization, and degradation of ovine PRL (oPRL) were examined under a variety of experimental conditions to characterize the metabolism of receptor-bound hormone by these cells. Stationary-phase cells were incubated with [125I]oPRL in Fischer's medium containing horse serum. Cell suspensions were centrifuged, and the cell pellets were assayed to determine specific cell-associated radioactivity. Internalized ligand was measured by exposing the cells to an acidic buffer before centrifugation to dissociate hormone from plasma membrane receptors, and cell-surface ligand was calculated by subtracting internalized hormone from the total [125I]oPRL bound by the cells. Hormone degradation was assessed by measuring the radioactivity in an acid-soluble fraction prepared from the incubation medium. Endocytosis of [125I]oPRL was observed within 30 min at 37 C, and the internalized component accounted for approximately 50% of the bound hormone under steady-state conditions. Hormone degradation was detectable within 1 h at 37 C and continued at a relatively linear rate thereafter; by 4 h, 8% of the added [125I]oPRL was acid soluble. Chloroquine (0.2 mM), methylamine (20 mM) and monensin (20 microM) prevented [125I]oPRL degradation and elevated both cell-surface and intracellular hormone 2-fold during a 4-h incubation. Leupeptin (0.2 mM) decreased degradation by only 15% under the same conditions. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 20 nM), a comitogen for lactogen-stimulated Nb2 cells, increased cell-surface hormone by 20% and decreased intracellular hormone by a corresponding amount 1 h after administration. Calcium ionophore A23187 (1 microM) produced similar changes, and a synergistic effect was noted when cells were exposed to both agents for 4 h. Amiloride (125 microM), an inhibitor of Nb2 cell mitogenesis, decreased [125I]oPRL degradation by 25% during a 4-h incubation. This response was abolished when the cells were exposed simultaneously to PMA. These experiments demonstrate that receptor-bound oPRL is rapidly internalized and extensively degraded via the endosome-lysosome pathway when Nb2 cells are maintained at 37 C. The inhibitory effect of PMA on oPRL internalization may help to explain the comitogenic action of this phorbol on Nb2 cells. Since amiloride also produced major changes in oPRL metabolism, pos Topics: Amiloride; Animals; Calcimycin; Cell Division; Cell Membrane; Chloroquine; Endocytosis; Kinetics; Leupeptins; Lymphoma; Methylamines; Mitosis; Monensin; Prolactin; Rats; Receptors, Prolactin; Sheep; Signal Transduction; Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate; Tumor Cells, Cultured | 1990 |
Different mechanisms of increased proteolysis in atrophy induced by denervation or unweighting of rat soleus muscle.
Mechanisms of accelerated proteolysis were compared in denervated and unweighted (by tail-cast suspension) soleus muscles. In vitro and in vivo proteolysis were more rapid and lysosomal latency was lower in denervated than in unweighted muscle. In vitro, lysosomotropic agents (eg, chloroquine, methylamine) did not lessen the increase in proteolysis caused by unweighting, but abolished the difference in proteolysis between denervated and unweighted muscle. Leucine methylester, an indicator of lysosome fragility, lowered latency more in denervated than in unweighted muscle. 3-Methyladenine, which inhibits phagosome formation, increased latency similarly in all muscles tested. Mersalyl, a thiol protease inhibitor, and 8-(diethylamino)octyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride (TMB-8), which antagonizes sarcoplasmic reticulum release of Ca2+, reduced accelerated proteolysis caused by unweighting without diminishing the faster proteolysis due to denervation. Calcium ionophore (A23187) increased proteolysis more so in unweighted than control muscles whether or not Ca2+ was present. Different mechanisms of accelerated proteolysis were studied further by treating muscles in vivo for 24 hours with chloroquine or mersalyl. Chloroquine diminished atrophy of the denervated but not the unweighted muscle, whereas mersalyl prevented atrophy of the unweighted but not of the denervated muscle, both by inhibiting in vivo proteolysis. These results suggest that (1) atrophy of denervated, but not of unweighted, soleus muscle involves increased lysosomal proteolysis, possibly caused by greater permeability of the lysosome, and (2) cytosolic proteolysis is important in unweighting atrophy, involving some role of Ca2(+)-dependent proteolysis and/or thiol proteases. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Calcimycin; Calcium; Chloroquine; Female; Gallic Acid; Lysosomes; Mersalyl; Methylamines; Muscle Denervation; Muscle Proteins; Muscles; Muscular Atrophy; Peptide Hydrolases; Protease Inhibitors; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Sarcoplasmic Reticulum | 1990 |
Na+/H+ exchange modulates the production of leukotriene B4 by human neutrophils.
Human neutrophils produce various compounds of the 5-lipoxygenase pathway, including (5S)-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid, leukotriene B4, its 6-trans isomers and omega-oxidation metabolites of LTB4, when the cells are stimulated with the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. The elevation in the extracellular pH (pHo) facilitated the cytoplasmic alkalinization induced by the ionophore as determined fluorometrically using 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)carboxyfluorescein and enhanced the production of all the 5-lipoxygenase metabolites. The production decreased when the alkalinization was blocked by the decrease in the pHo, the removal of the extracellular Na+ or the addition of specific inhibitors of the Na+/H+ exchange, such as 5-(NN-hexamethylene)amiloride, 5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)amiloride and 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride. The alkalinization of the cytoplasm with methylamine completely restored the production suppressed by the removal of Na+ from the medium. These findings suggest that the change in the cytoplasmic pH (pHi) mediated by the Na+/H+ exchange regulates the production of the lipoxygenase metabolites. The site of the metabolism controlled by the pHi change seemed to be the 5-lipoxygenase, because the production of all the metabolites decreased in parallel and the release of [3H]arachidonic acid from the neutrophils in response to the ionophore was not affected by the pHi change. Furthermore, the production of the 5-lipoxygenase metabolites stimulated by A23187 with or without exogenous arachidonic acid showed a similar pHo-dependence and the production induced by N-formylmethionyl-leucylphenylalanine (chemotactic peptide) with exogenous arachidonic acid also decreased when the cytoplasmic alkalinization was inhibited. Topics: Arachidonate 5-Lipoxygenase; Arachidonic Acid; Arachidonic Acids; Calcimycin; Humans; Hydrogen; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Leukotriene B4; Methylamines; Neutrophils; Sodium | 1989 |
Calcium regulation of lysosomal proteolysis in skeletal muscle.
Topics: Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; Calmodulin; Dopamine Antagonists; Female; Insulin; Ionophores; Leupeptins; Lysosomes; Methylamines; Muscle Proteins; Muscle, Skeletal; Protease Inhibitors; Rats; Trifluoperazine | 1986 |
Evidence that Na+/H+ exchange regulates receptor-mediated phospholipase A2 activation in human platelets.
Data in the previous paper suggest that epinephrine can mobilize a small pool of arachidonic acid via an enzymatic pathway distinct from phospholipase C and that this pathway is blocked by perturbations that block Na+/H+ exchange. The present studies demonstrate that epinephrine and ADP stimulate a phosphatidylinositol-hydrolyzing phospholipase A2 activity in human platelets. This occurs even when measurable phospholipase C activation, platelet secretion, and secondary aggregation are blocked with the thromboxane A2 receptor antagonist SQ29548. Furthermore, perturbants of Na+/H+ exchange diminish lysophosphatidylinositol production in response to epinephrine, ADP, and thrombin, but not to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Artificial alkalinization of the platelet interior with methylamine reverses the effect of the Na+/H+ antiporter inhibitor, ethylisopropylamiloride, on thrombin-stimulated lysolipid production, suggesting that the alkalinization of the platelet interior which would occur secondary to activation of Na+/H+ exchange might play an important role in phospholipase A2 activation. In addition, treatment of platelets with methylamine increases the sensitivity of phospholipase A2 to activation by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187, suggesting that changes in pH and Ca2+ may regulate phospholipase A2 activity synergistically. Finally, epinephrine causes a prompt decrease in platelet-chlortetracyclin fluorescence even in the presence of cyclooxygenase inhibitors, suggesting that epinephrine is able to mobilize membrane-bound Ca2+ independent of phospholipase C activation. Taken together, the data suggest that epinephrine-provoked stimulation of phospholipase A2 activity may occur as a result of Ca2+ mobilization and a concomitant intraplatelet alkalinization resulting from accelerated Na+/H+ exchange. Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate; Arachidonic Acid; Arachidonic Acids; Blood Platelets; Calcimycin; Carrier Proteins; Chlortetracycline; Enzyme Activation; Epinephrine; Humans; Kinetics; Lysophospholipids; Methylamines; Phosphates; Phosphatidylinositols; Phospholipases; Phospholipases A; Phospholipases A2; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers | 1986 |
Matrix magnesium and the permeability of heart mitochondria to potassium ion.
Isolated beef heart mitochondria were treated with A23187 in the presence of different concentrations of Mg2+ or EDTA to establish varying levels of total mitochondrial Mg2+. The Mg2+ content was related to the rate of passive swelling of the mitochondria in potassium acetate and other potassium salts in which swelling is presumed to depend on K+ entry via an endogenous K+/H+ antiport. Swelling in these salts does not commence until Mg2+ has been depleted from an initial value of 36 nmol X mg-1 of protein to 8 nmol/mg-1, or less. Below this level, swelling increases linearly with decreasing Mg2+ to a maximum rate at 2 nmol of Mg2+ X mg-1. Rotenone-treated heart mitochondria suspended in 75 mM potassium acetate at pH 7.80 show no delta pH by 5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione distribution. Distribution of methylamine also shows essentially no delta pH under these conditions when allowance is made for binding of [14C]methylamine by mitochondrial membranes under these conditions. Addition of A23187 results in a small and transient delta pH (delta pH less than 0.14, acid interior) as measured by methylamine distribution. Estimation of the maximum matrix free Mg2+ concentration from the maximum delta pH observed and the external free Mg2+ concentration at equilibrium with A23187 shows that swelling is not initiated until matrix free Mg2+ is decreased to below 150 microM. An independent estimate of free Mg2+ using a null-point procedure gives a lower, but quite similar value (50 microM) for maximum matrix free Mg2+ when swelling commences. The large depletion of total and free Mg2+ that is required to activate swelling in potassium acetate (and presumably K+/H+ antiport activity) does not appear to be compatible with previous indications that free Mg2+ acts as a "carrier brake" to regulate K+ extrusion from the mitochondrion on such an antiport (Garlid, K. D. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 11273-11279). The removal of a tightly bound component of mitochondrial Mg2+ is closely related to increased K+ permeability and increased passive swelling in potassium salts. This Mg2+ appears to play a role in the maintenance of mitochondrial membrane structure and integrity. Topics: Animals; Calcimycin; Carbonyl Cyanide m-Chlorophenyl Hydrazone; Carrier Proteins; Cattle; Edetic Acid; Magnesium; Mathematics; Methylamines; Mitochondria, Heart; Permeability; Potassium; Potassium-Hydrogen Antiporters; Valinomycin | 1986 |
The activation of protein degradation in muscle by Ca2+ or muscle injury does not involve a lysosomal mechanism.
By use of different inhibitors, we distinguished three proteolytic processes in rat skeletal muscle. When soleus muscles maintained under tension were exposed to the calcium ionophore A23187 or were incubated under no tension in the presence of Ca2+, net protein breakdown increased by 50-80%. Although leupeptin and E-64 inhibit this acceleration of protein breakdown almost completely, other agents that prevent lysosomal function, such as methylamine or leucine methyl ester, did not inhibit this effect. A similar increase in net proteolysis occurred in muscle fibres injured by cutting, and this response was also inhibited by leupeptin, but not by methylamine. In contrast, all these inhibitors markedly decreased the 2-fold increase in protein breakdown induced by incubating muscles without insulin and leucine, isoleucine and valine. In addition, the low rate of proteolysis seen in muscles under passive tension in complete medium was not affected by any of these inhibitors. Thus the basal degradative process in muscle does not involve lysosomes or thiol proteinases, and muscle can enhance protein breakdown by two mechanisms: lack of insulin and nutrients enhances a lysosomal process in muscle, as in other cells, whereas Ca2+ and muscle injury activate a distinct pathway involving cytosolic thiol proteinase(s). Topics: Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; In Vitro Techniques; Leupeptins; Lysosomes; Male; Methylamines; Muscle Contraction; Muscle Proteins; Muscles; Protease Inhibitors; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains | 1986 |
The stoichiometry of the exchange catalysed by the mitochondrial calcium/sodium antiporter.
Rat heart mitochondria respiring on succinate in the presence of Ruthenium Red (to inhibit uptake on the Ca2+ uniporter) released Ca2+ on the calcium/sodium antiporter until a steady state was reached. Addition of the ionophore A23187 (which catalyses Ca2+/2H+ exchange) did not perturb this steady state. Thermodynamic analysis showed that if a Ca2+/nNa+ exchange with any value of n other than 2 was at equilibrium, addition of A23187 would cause an obvious change in extramitochondrial free [Ca2+]. Therefore the endogenous calcium/sodium antiporter of mitochondria catalyses electroneutral Ca2+/2Na+ exchange. Topics: Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; Carrier Proteins; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; In Vitro Techniques; Membrane Proteins; Methylamines; Mitochondria, Heart; Onium Compounds; Rats; Sodium; Sodium-Calcium Exchanger; Thermodynamics; Trityl Compounds | 1985 |
Regulation of protein degradation in muscle by calcium. Evidence for enhanced nonlysosomal proteolysis associated with elevated cytosolic calcium.
Calcium-dependent regulation of intracellular protein degradation was studied in isolated rat skeletal muscles incubated in vitro in the presence of a large variety of agents known to affect calcium movement and distribution. A23187, KC1, sucrose, and 8-(diethylamino)octyl-3,4, 5-trimethoxybenzoate hydrochloride increase proteolysis while tetracaine, verapamil, and low extracellular calcium caused significant decreases. Additionally, dantrolene decreases proteolysis in the presence of depolarizing levels of potassium, while it has no effect on degradation in normal media. The dose dependence of calcium ionophore A23187 on proteolysis and contracture tension are parallel. Furthermore, excess KC1 and hypertonic solutions increased protein degradation at doses reported to cause tension. Thus, the parallel increase in proteolysis and tension in response to various agents supports the hypothesis that protein degradation in muscle is regulated by calcium. To determine the responsible proteolytic systems involved in calcium-dependent degradation, the effect of different classes of protease inhibitors was tested. Addition of the inhibitors leupeptin and E-64-c blocked the A23187-induced increase in degradation. Since proteases sensitive to these agents are present in both the sarcoplasm and lysosomes, known lysosomotropic agents, methylamine and chloroquine, as well as 3-methyladenine, a specific autophagy inhibitor, were used in combination with A23187. These agents did not inhibit calcium ionophore-induced proteolysis, although these three agents selectively inhibited enhanced degradation seen in the absence of insulin, demonstrating an autophagic/lysosomal pathway in these muscles. Thus, our results suggest that nonlysosomal leupeptin- and E-64-c-sensitive proteases are responsible for calcium-dependent proteolysis in muscle. Topics: Adenine; Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; Calcium Channel Blockers; Cytosol; Dantrolene; Female; Gallic Acid; In Vitro Techniques; Mersalyl; Methylamines; Muscle Proteins; Muscles; Potassium Chloride; Prostaglandins; Protease Inhibitors; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains | 1985 |
Regulation of myofibrillar accumulation in chick muscle cultures: evidence for the involvement of calcium and lysosomes in non-uniform turnover of contractile proteins.
The effect of calcium on myofibrillar turnover in primary chick leg skeletal muscle cultures was examined. Addition of the calcium ionophore A23187 at subcontraction threshold levels (0.38 microM) increased significantly rates of efflux of preloaded 45Ca+2 but had no effect on total protein accumulation. However, A23187 as well as ionomycin caused decreased accumulation of the myofibrillar proteins, myosin heavy chain (MHC), myosin light chain 1f (LC1f), 2f (LC2f), alpha-actin (Ac), and tropomyosin (TM). A23187 increased the degradation rate of LC1f, LC2f, and TM after 24 h. In contrast, the calcium ionophore caused decreased degradation of Ac and troponin-C and had no effect on the degradation of MHC, troponin-T, troponin-I, or alpha, beta-desmin (Dm). In addition, A23187 did not alter degradation of total myotube protein. The ionophore had little or no effect on the synthesis of total myotube proteins, but caused a marked decrease in the synthesis of MHC, LC1f, LC2f, Ac, TM, and Dm after 48 h. The mechanisms involved in calcium-stimulated degradation of the myofibrillar proteins were also investigated. Increased proteolysis appeared to involve a lysosomal pathway, since the effect of the Ca++ ionophore could be blocked by the protease inhibitor leupeptin and the lysosomotropic agents methylamine and chloroquine. The effects of A23187 occur in the presence of serum, a condition in which no lysosomal component of overall protein degradation is detected. The differential effect of A23187 on the degradative rates of the myofibrillar proteins suggests a dynamic structure for the contractile apparatus. Topics: Animals; Calcimycin; Calcium; Cells, Cultured; Chickens; Chloroquine; Contractile Proteins; Leupeptins; Lysosomes; Methylamines; Muscle Proteins; Muscles; Myosins; Tropomyosin; Troponin | 1985 |
Role of Ca2+ for protein turnover in isolated rat hepatocytes.
Experiments with bivalent-cation chelators (EGTA and EDTA), a Ca2+ ionophore (A23187) and a Ca2+-channel blocker (verapamil) indicate that Ca2+ is required for the lysosomal degradation of endogenous protein in hepatocytes. A distinction is made between lysosomal and non-lysosomal degradation by using the lysosomotropic agent methylamine. As Ca2+ does not appear to be required for the lysosomal degradation of endocytosed asialo-fetuin, the Ca2+-dependence for the degradation of endogenous protein is probably connected with the formation of autophagic vacuoles or the fusion of autophagic vacuoles with lysosomes. EGTA and EDTA had a slight inhibitory effect on the non-lysosomal degradation. This effect could be due to the activity of non-lysosomal Ca2+-dependent thiol proteinases. Together with previous experiments with thiol-proteinase inhibitors, the present experiments indicate that these proteinases have a very limited impact on the bulk protein degradation in the isolated hepatocytes. Topics: alpha-Fetoproteins; Animals; Asialoglycoproteins; Calcimycin; Calcium; Edetic Acid; Egtazic Acid; Fetuins; In Vitro Techniques; Liver; Lysosomes; Male; Methylamines; Proteins; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains | 1983 |
The use of drugs to dissect the pathway for secretion of the glycoprotein hormone chorionic gonadotropin by cultured human trophoblastic cells.
Agents that affect intracellular cation and pH gradients and inhibit energy production have been tested for their ability to modulate the processing and secretion of the free alpha subunit and the alpha beta dimer of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) by cultured human trophoblastic cells (JAR). Incubation of JAR cells with monensin or nigericin, monovalent cation ionophores that produce equilibration of Na+ and K+ across cellular membranes, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, an agent that inhibits intracellular membrane ATPases, and methylamine, which neutralizes intracellular pH gradients, produced similar effects on hCG processing and secretion. All these agents inhibited the processing of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharide chains of free alpha subunit and the alpha and beta subunits contained in the hCG dimer. Moreover, after treatment of JAR cells with these agents, there was an intracellular accumulation of precursor forms and an inhibition of secretion of "mature" forms of hCG. Monensin affected the processing and secretion of hCG subunits differently at different concentrations. At 5 X 10(-7) M, monensin inhibited the processing of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides of hCG without altering the rate-limiting step in the secretory pathway or blocking hCG secretion. The intracellular hCG subunit precursors in both control and monensin-treated cells contained a similar array of high mannose oligosaccharides, predominantly of the Man8GlcNAc2 and Man9GlcNAc2 types. However, monensin-treated cells secreted hCG subunits that contained endo H-sensitive oligosaccharides of the high mannose (mostly Man5GlcNAc2) and hybrid types rather than the endo H-resistant complex chains synthesized by control cells. Nevertheless, a full complement of serine-linked oligosaccharides was added to the hCG-beta subunit in monensin-treated cells. These results indicate that the intracellular movement of hCG from the rough endoplasmic reticulum to the cell surface was not inhibited by monensin at a concentration that impaired Golgi-localized steps in the processing of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides. At 5 X 10(-6) M, monensin significantly inhibited secretion of hCG and created a new rate-limiting step in the processing pathway. hCG subunits bearing Man5GlcNAc2 units accumulated intracellularly, suggesting that the equilibration of intracellular Na+/K+ pools blocked oligosaccharide processing at an intra-Golgi point, perhaps by inhibiting movement of the glycoprotein hormone Topics: Calcimycin; Carbonyl Cyanide p-Trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone; Cells, Cultured; Chorionic Gonadotropin; Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide; Female; Glycoside Hydrolases; Humans; Mannosyl-Glycoprotein Endo-beta-N-Acetylglucosaminidase; Methylamines; Monensin; Oligomycins; Trophoblasts | 1983 |