Abstract

Ontogenic relationships between levels of cyclic AMP-binding activity and protein kinase activity were examined in subcellular fractions of the cerebellum during the first 3 weeks of neonatal life. A progressive increase in cyclic AMP levels was paralleled by an increase in cyclic AMP bindign by the nuclear and cytosol fractions, but not by the mitochondrial or microsomal fractions. Utilization of heat-stable protein kinase inhibitor permtited distinction of the cyclic AMP-dependent from the cyclic AMP-independent form of the protein kinase population. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase increased between days 4 and 20 to represent a progressively greater proportion of the protein kinase population. In all subcellular fractions alterations of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase during neonatal development paralleled changes in binding of cyclic AMP to protein in these fractions. In both the nuclear and cytosol fractions cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity increased progressively between days 4 and 20, i.e. 64 ± 6 to 176 ± 16 and 79 ± 12 to 340 ± 12 pmol/min per mg protein, respectively. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity in the mitochondrial fraction declined during the postnatal period studied, and in the microsomal fraction it rose to a non-sustained peak at 14 days and fell thereafter. Unlike the cyclic AMP-dependent form, cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase activity did not follow the ontogenetic pattern of cyclic AMP-binding activity. The specific activity of nuclear cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase did not change during days 4–20, and a non-sustained rise of cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase activity in both cytosol and microsomal fractions during the 7th–12th day tended to parallel more closely known patterns of postnatal proliferative growth. The findings reported herein indicate that the ontogenic pattern of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase varies between different subcellular fractions of the neonatal cerebellum, that these patterns parallel the changes in cyclic AMP-bidign activity, and suggest that the component parts of the cyclic AMP system may develop as a functional unit.

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