Abstract

Bovine heart contains multiple phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PIC) activities separable by ion-exchange chromatography. One PIC activity was purified to apparent homogeneity and migrated as a single band of Mr 85,000 on SDS-PAGE. The purified PIC was characterized with sonicated suspensions of either pure phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) or phosphatidylinositol (PI) as substrates. At pH 7, apparent Vmax and Km values were higher for PIP2 than for PI, but the value of Vmax/Km was similar for the two substrates. PIC required Ca2+ for the hydrolysis of either PI or PIP2, and increasing free Ca2+ concentrations from 20 to 300 nM saturated PIC activity. The requirement of Ca2+ for PIC activity and the sensitivity of PIC to Ca2+ concentrations in the physiological range suggested the ion may be a cofactor. The PIC reaction mechanism was determined by two-substrate kinetic analysis; the data fit a model in which PIC contained single sites for Ca2+ and phosphoinositide, and utilized a rapid-equilibrium, random-order ternary mechanism for phosphoinositide hydrolysis. The KCa value for either PI or PIP2 hydrolysis was approximately 30 nM, suggesting resting intracellular free Ca2+ concentrations are sufficient to saturate the Ca2+ site of PIC. La3+ was used as a calcium analogue to modulate PIC activity. Low concentrations of LaCl3 (0.01-0.3 microM) inhibited PIC activity competitively with respect to calcium, consistent with a Ca2+ binding site on the enzyme.

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