Abstract

The activities of three components of the cyclic AMP system were compared in erythrocyte ghost membranes prepared from the blood of rats at various ages from 1.5 to 15 months. The apparent number of β-adrenergic receptor sites, adenylate cyclase activity and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity all declined about 50% in the membranes from the older animals (>5 months) as compared to the 1.5 month ones. The soluble erythrocyte phosphodiesterase also declined with age, but the decline did not parallel that of the membrane-associated activity. In contrast, there was no age-related change in the number of β-adrenergic receptors in membranes from the brains of the same animals. In erythrocyte ghosts, both the ratio of isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity to basal activity and the ratio of sodium fluoride-stimulated activity to basal were constant with age. Neither the dissociation constant for the β-adrenergic receptor nor the Michaelis constant for the phosphodiesterase changed as a function of age. Together with other data in the literature, these results suggest a close functional association of the components of the cyclic AMP system in the mature erythrocyte membrane, and support a physiological role for the cyclic AMP mediated β-adrenergic effects in the red blood cell.

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