Abstract
Phosphoinositide hydrolysis was studied in a washed membrane preparation of 1321N1 astrocytoma cells prelabeled with [3H]inositol. GTP gamma S stimulated the formation of [3H]inositol mono-, bis-, and trisphosphate ([3H]InsP, [3H]InsP2, and [3H]InsP3) with a half-maximal effect on [3H]InsP formation at 5 microM. Carbachol increased the accumulation of [3H]inositol phosphates only in the presence of added guanine nucleotide. Calcium increased [3H]InsP3 accumulation over a range of concentrations (10 nM-3 mM free calcium). When 1321N1 cells were treated with phorbol ester (100 nM 4 beta-phorbol 12 beta-myristate 13 alpha-acetate (PMA)) prior to preparation of the membranes, the maximal [3H]InsP formation induced by GTP gamma S or GTP gamma S plus carbachol was decreased by 50-75%. In contrast, the response to a maximal calcium concentration presumed to activate phospholipase C directly was minimally inhibited (approximately 15%). PMA treatment did not affect muscarinic receptor affinity for carbachol or the effect of GTP on agonist binding. PMA treatment was also without effect on the breakdown of exogenous [3H]InsP3 in homogenates, permeabilized cells, and membranes, indicating that the InsP3-phosphatase was not the site of phorbol ester action. PMA treatment inhibited [3H] InsP3 formation only in membranes and not in cytosol prepared from the same cells, suggesting a membrane site of PMA action. Membranes were also required to demonstrate GTP gamma S-stimulated [3H]InsP3 formation although calcium-stimulated [3H]InsP3 formation was demonstrable in both membranes and cytosol. The addition of purified protein kinase C to the membranes mimicked the effect of PMA treatment to decrease GTP gamma S-stimulated [3H]InsP3 production. These data indicate that the effect of PMA on phosphoinositide metabolism is demonstrable in a cell-free system and that it can be mimicked by protein kinase C. We suggest that the ability of PMA to block GTP gamma S-stimulated formation of [3H]InsP3 results from inhibition of the G protein interaction with phospholipase C.
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