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JBC, Vol. 250, Issue 21, 8449-8456, Nov, 1975
D. L. Garbers and R. A. Johnson
Metal (Me) and MeATP interactions with adenylate cyclases associated with
rabbit ventricular particles and with a detergent-dispersed preparation
from rat cerebellum have been studied. data were simulated to fit kinetic
models in which an inhibitor (HATP or ATP) is added in constant proportion
to the variable substrate (MeATP). The specific models considered were that
the enzyme binds (a) MeATP as the substrate; (b) MeATP as the substrate and
HATP or ATP as an inhibitor; (c) MeATP as the substrate and free Me as an
activator; and (d) MeATP as the substrate, free Me as an activator, and
HATP or ATP as an inhibitor. Both equilibrium-ordered and random (rapid
equilibrium assumption) types of sequential kinetic models were considered.
The various models were tested using cardiac particulate adenylate cyclase
in the presence of either a phosphoenolpyruvate-pyruvate kinase or a
creatine phosphate-creatine kinase ATP-regeneration system. Although the
enzyme with either system appeared to bind Mg2+ as an activator, one or
both ATP-regeneration systems also seemed to interact directly with
adenylate cyclase, making clear interpretations difficult. With the
phosphoenolpyruvate-pyruvate kinase system, kinetic patterns on double
reciprocal plots were linear as a function of MgATP, but with creatine
phosphate-creatine kinase, kinetic patterns were concave downward. The
kinetic models were further tested using the detergent-dispersed cerebellar
enzyme, a preparation with low adenosine triphosphatase activity and not
requiring the addition of an ATP-regeneration system. Reciprocal plots were
linear and intersecting as a function of either MeATP or Me (Me = Mg2+ or
Mn2+), and secondary replots of slopes and intersecting as function of
either MeATP or Me (Me = Mg2+ or Mn2+), and secondary replots of slopes and
intercepts also were linear. These data indicate that the brain
detergent-dispersed enzyme conforms to a bireactant, sequential mechanism
where free cation is a required activator and free ATP is not a potent
inhibitor.
Metal and metal-ATP interactions with brain and cardiac adenylate cyclases
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