Abstract

A sudden increase in adenylate cyclase activity occurs during the chemotaxis and aggregation of Dictyostelium discoideum. Preincubation of extracts from the pre-aggregation stage, in which adenylate cyclase activity was low, with post-aggregation stages, in which the increase in activity occurred, resulted in the demonstration of a heat-stable inhibitor of adenylate cyclase (ACI) that was present only during the early stages of development. Cellular fractionation studies showed that ACI was present in both the 100 000 g pellet and supernatant fractions. The inhibitor was not inactivated by proteases or protease inhibitors. A heat-treated preparation of the inhibitor was dialysable. The effect of ACI was dependent upon a pre-incubation treatment, with notable inhibition occurring only after a 20 min pre-incubation period. The apparent inhibition was not artifactual, due to the degradation of the substrate, ATP, or to the loss of the reaction product, cAMP. Additionally, the inhibitor was specific for adenylate cyclase, as it had no effect on the activity of several other enzymes, including cAMP phosphodiesterase.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call