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JBC, Vol. 251, Issue 23, 7304-7312, Dec, 1976
A. A. White, K. M. Crawford, C. S. Patt and P. J. Lad
A 37,000 X g supernatant fraction prepared from fat lung homogenate
demonstrated a 2- to 3-fold increase in guanylate cyclase activity after
incubation at 30 degrees for 30 min (preincubation). Treatment of the
supernatant fraction with Triton X-100 increased activity to approximately
the same extent as preincubation, but would not increase the activity after
preincubation. By chromatography on Sepharose 2B, before and after
preincubation, it was demonstrated that the increase in activity was only
associated with the soluble guanylate cyclase, and not the particulate
enzyme. Activation by preincubation required O2. It was completely
inhibited by thiols such as 2-mercaptoethanol, and by bovine serum albumin,
KCN, and sodium diethyldithiocarbamate. These inhibitors suggested a copper
requirement for activation, and this was confirmed by demonstrating that 20
to 60 muM CuCl2 could relieve the inhibition by 0.1 mM sodium
diethyldithiocarbamate. 2-Mercaptoethanol inhibition could also be reversed
by removal of the thiol on a Sephadex G-25 column, however, this treatment
partially activated the enzyme. Addition of 2-mercaptoethanol to a
preincubated preparation would not reverse the activation. H2O2 was found
to activate guanylate cyclase, either by its generation in the lung
supernatant with glucose oxidase and glucose, or by its addition to a
preparation in which the catalase was inhibited with KCN. KCN or bovine
serum albumin was able to partially inhibit activation by glucose oxidase
plus glucose, however, larger amounts of glucose oxidase could overcome
that inhibition, indicating a catalytic role for Cu2+ at low H2O2
concentrations. No direct evidence for H2O2 formation during preincubation
could be found, however, indirect evidence was obtained by the
spectrophotometric detection of choleglobin formation from hemoglobin
present in the lung supernatant fluid. The H2O2 is believed to result from
the reaction of oxyhemoglobin with ascorbate.
Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase from rat lung by incubation or by hydrogen peroxide
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