J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 3, 1415-1422, 02, 1984
Purification and characterization of a cAMP- and Ca2+-calmodulin- independent glycogen synthase kinase from porcine renal cortex
SJ Beebe, EM Reimann and KK Schlender
We recently reported the partial purification of a cAMP-independent and
Ca2+-calmodulin-independent glycogen synthase kinase from porcine renal
cortex (Schlender, K. K., Beebe, S. J., and Reimann, E. M. (1981) Cold
Spring Harbor Conf. Cell Proliferation, 389-400). Subsequent purification
indicated that the enzyme preparation consisted of at least three forms of
glycogen synthase kinase which could be resolved by ATP gradient elution
from aminoethylphosphate-agarose (AEP-agarose). The predominant form of
glycogen synthase kinase, which eluted from AEP- agarose between 2 and 6 mM
ATP, was purified approximately 800-fold and is designated GSK-A1. It had a
molecular weight of 45,000-50,000 as determined by gel filtration and
sucrose density gradient centrifugation. It catalyzed the transfer of 1 mol
of 32P/mol of synthase subunit into a low molecular weight (10,000) CNBr
peptide which was tentatively identified as Ser-7 (site 2) by high
performance liquid chromatography. This phosphorylation decreased the
activity ratio (activity in the absence of glucose-6-P divided by activity
in the presence of 7.2 mM glucose-6-P) from 0.95 to about 0.55. GSK-A1
appeared to be specific for and had low s0.5 values for both substrates,
ATP (13 microM) and glycogen synthase (0.3-0.4 microM). The enzyme could
not use GTP as the phosphate donor. GSK-A1 was not affected by the protein
kinase inhibitor, cAMP, cGMP, Ca2+-calmodulin, EGTA, or trifluoperazine and
had a broad pH optimum (pH 7.0-8.5). A second form, GSK-A2, was eluted from
AEP-agarose between 7 and 9 mM ATP. GSK-A2 could transfer a 2nd mol of
32P/mol of synthase subunit and decreased the activity ratio to 0.30. The
interrelation among these multiple forms is not clear, but the data suggest
that multiple kinases are required to form the highly inactivated glycogen
synthase in renal tissues.