Abstract

The effect of calcium-binding protein regucalcin on phosphatase activity in the brain cytosol of rats with different ages was investigated. The presence of regucalcin (10 −8 and 10 −7 M) in the enzyme reaction mixture caused a significant increase of neutral p -nitrophenylphosphatase activity in the brain cytosol obtained from 5- and 50-week-old rats. This increase was seen in the absence or presence of calmodulin (2 μg/mL) and calcium chloride (100 μM). Brain cytosolic phosphatase activity was not significantly altered by S-100A (10 −6 M) or calbindin (10 −7 M), which is a calcium-binding protein. Regucalcin-increased phosphatase activity was clearly decreased by N -ethylmaleimide, a modifying reagent of thiol(SH)-group, suggesting that regucalcin acts on the SH-group of the enzyme. Moreover, the presence of anti-regucalcin monoclonal antibody (50–200 ng/mL) in the reaction mixture caused a significant decrease of brain cytosolic phosphatase activity, suggesting that the endogenous regucalcin has a stimulatory effect on the enzyme activity. These results suggest that regucalcin plays a role in the regulation of protein phosphatase in rat brain cytosol.

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