Abstract
Bovine adrenocortical calmodulin was purified and its general properties were examined. The latter were similar to those of bovine brain calmodulin. When added to a cytochrome P-450(11)beta-reconstituted system in the presence of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, calmodulin decreased the rate of aldosterone production from corticosterone from 0.8 to 0.1 nmol/(min X nmol P-450), while it increased the rate of 18-hydroxycorticosterone production from 1.8 to 4.6 nmol/(min X nmol P-450). This effect of calmodulin on steroid production was maximum at a concentration of 1 microM, when 1 microM cytochrome P-450(11)beta was used. The effect was dependent on the presence of Ca2+, and maximal response was observed at less than 1 microM Ca2+. There was essentially no difference in the effect when bovine brain calmodulin was used. Calmodulin induced a change in the activity of cytochrome P-450(11)beta in the presence of a wide concentration range of corticosterone as a substrate. As for 18-hydroxycorticosterone production, calmodulin increased both the maximal activity and the apparent Km for corticosterone, but it decreased the apparent Km for adrenodoxin. Adrenodoxin at a concentration of less than 20 microM did not fully abolish the effect of calmodulin. A small type I difference spectrum appeared when calmodulin was added to cytochrome P-450(11)beta. The difference spectrum increased significantly in the presence of both Ca2+ and adrenodoxin. These results suggest that calmodulin interacts with cytochrome P-450(11)beta in the presence of adrenodoxin and then modulates the activity of aldosterone synthesis catalyzed by cytochrome P-450(11) beta.
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