Abstract

The effects of various inhibitors on the activity of calcium-independent and calcium-dependent phosphodiesterases from rat cerebral cortex were examined. While the agents varied greatly in their relative potency, each was found to be approximately equipotent in inhibiting the calcium-dependent hydrolysis of either cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP. In contrast, the inhibitors displayed a marked substrate specificity for the calcium-independent enzyme with ratios of IC50 values for inhibition of cyclic GMP hydrolysis when compared to cyclic AMP hydrolysis in decreasing order being: ZK 62711 (much greater than 100) greater than Ro 20-1724 (much greater than 25) papaverine (13) greater than 7-benzyl IBMX (4) greater than quercetin and kaempferol (2). The differential selectivity of the inhibitors for the two enzymes was most pronounced for ZK 62711 and Ro 20-1724 which were at least 25-100-times more potent in inhibiting the calcium-independent hydrolysis of cyclic AMP when compared to the calcium-dependent hydrolysis of cyclic AMP. In contrast, 7-benzyl IBMX, kaempferol and quercetin were 8-100-times more effective as inhibitors of cyclic GMP hydrolysis by the calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase while 7-benzyl IBMX and trimazosin displayed a similar enzyme selectivity using cyclic AMP as substrate. With the exception of papaverine, all agents were competitive inhibitors of the calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase. The type of inhibition observed with the calcium-independent enzyme was dependent on the substrate employed. The specificity of potassium ions in inhibiting the activity of the calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase and deoxycyclic AMP in inhibiting the calcium-independent enzyme was found to provide a convenient means to assess the effects of agents on these activities in crude extracts of cerebral cortex.

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