Abstract
Gossypol, a polyphenolic binaphthalene-dialdehyde extracted from cotton plants which possesses male antifertility action in mammals, is a potent inhibitor of phospholipid-sensitive Ca 2+-dependent protein kinase from pig testis. Gossypol inhibited Ca 2+-dependent activity of the enzyme without affecting its basal activity. The IC 50 value (concentration causing 50% inhibition) was 31 μM when lysine-rich histone was used as substrate. Kinetic analysis indicated that the compound inhibited the enzyme non-competitively with respect to ATP ( K i = 31 μM) or lysine-rich histone ( K i = 30 μM), and competitively with respect to phosphatidylserine ( K i = 2.1 μM). With Ca 2+, irrespective of the presence or absence of 1,3-diolein, the compound lowered V max and increased the apparent K a for Ca 2+. The compound also inhibited phosphorylation by the enzyme of high-mobility-group 1 protein (one of the endogenous substrate in the testis for the enzyme located in nucleosome), with an IC 50 value of 88 μM. These results suggested that a phospholipid-sensitive Ca 2+-dependent protein phosphorylation system in the testis is involved in the regulation of spermatogenesis.
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