Abstract
The effects of various lipolytic and antilipolytic compounds on the phosphorylation of specific proteins, on lipolysis, and on cyclic AMP levels have been studied in isolated intact fat cells of rats. Norepinephrine (NE), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), and monobutyryl cyclic AMP (MBcAMP) each increased the incorporation of [ 32P] into three proteins, with apparent molecular weights of approximately 130,000 (protein A), 69,000 (protein B), and 47,000 (protein C), as determined by gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (DodSO 4 −). The concentrations of lipolytic agents necessary to obtain a half-maximal increase in phosphorylation of these proteins were similar to the concentrations necessary to obtain a half-maximal stimulation of lipolysis. Propranolol, a β-adrenergic blocking agent, blocked the effects of NE both on protein phosphorylation and on lipolysis, but did not modify the effects of ACTH, IBMX, or MBcAMP on these parameters. When the NE-induced increase in phosphorylation of proteins B and C was maximal, addition of propranolol resulted in a rapid dephosphorylation of these proteins and a rapid cessation of lipolysis; under the same experimental conditions, propranolol had almost no effect on the dephosphorylation of protein A. Concentrations of insulin that prevented or reversed the actions of NE and ACTH on lipolysis also prevented or reversed the NE- and ACTH-induced increase in [ 32P] incorporation into proteins B and C. Insulin did not modify the effects of IBMX or MBcAMP either on lipolysis or on [ 32P] incorporation into proteins B and C. Insulin increased the incorporation of [ 32P] into a protein which, by several criteria, appeared to be protein A. Under a variety of experimental conditions in which lipolytic and antilipolytic hormones were studied, the rate of lipolysis correlated well with the level of phosphorylation of proteins B and C, but not with the level of cyclic AMP.
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