Abstract

The hormonal control of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) activity has been studied by using as a model the isoproterenol stimulation of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in C6 glioma cells. A 2-fold increase in cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase specific activity was observed in homogenates of isoproterenol-treated cells relative to control. This increase reached a maximum 3 h after addition of isoproterenol, was selective for cyclic AMP hydrolysis, was reproduced by incubation with 8-Br cyclic AMP but not with 8-Br cyclic GMP and was limited to the soluble enzyme activity. The presence of 0.1 mM EGTA did not alter the magnitude of the increase in phosphodiesterase activity. Moreover, the calmodulin content in the cell extracts was not changed after isoproterernol. DEASE-Sephacel chromatography of the 100 000× g supernatant resolved two peaks of phosphodiesterase activity. The first peak hydrolyzed both cyclic nucleotides and was activated by Ca 2+ and purified calmodulin. The second peak was specific for cyclic AMP but it was Ca 2+- and calmodulin-insensitive. Isoproterenol selectively increased the specific activity of the second peak. Kinetic analysis of the cyclic AMP hydrolysis by the induced enzyme reveled a non-linear Hofstee plot with apparent K m values of 2–5 μM. Cyclic GMP was not hydrolyzed by this enzyme in the absence or presence of calmodulin and failed to affect the kinetics of the hydrolysis of cyclic AMP. Gel filtration chromatography of the induced DEASE-Sephacel peak resolved a single peak of enzyme activity with an apparent molecular weight of 54 000.

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