Volume 270,
Number 39,
Issue of September 29, pp. 23155-23158, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Stimulation of a
Ca
-Calmodulin-activated Histone 3 Arginine Kinase in
Quiescent Rat Heart Endothelial Cells Compared to Actively Dividing
Cells
(Received for publication, July 13,
1995; and in revised form, July 25, 1995)
Bassam T.
Wakim
,
Patricia S.
Grutkoski
,
Andrew T. M.
Vaughan
,
Gary L.
Engelmann
A Ca
-calmodulin-activated histone 3 kinase was
partially purified from nuclear extracts of dividing and quiescent rat
heart endothelial cells. The histone 3 phosphorylating activity was
20-100-fold higher in quiescent than in dividing cells. Base
hydrolysis followed by amino acid analysis revealed that histone 3 was
phosphorylated on arginine. Further investigations were conducted to
determine whether phosphorylation of histone 3 also occurred in
vivo. Cells were incubated for 3 h in a phosphate-free medium
supplemented with [
P]phosphoric acid. It was
observed that the nuclear content of arginine-phosphorylated histone 3
was considerably higher in quiescent than in dividing rat heart
endothelial cells. The histone 3 arginine kinase is a component of a
complex containing a Ca
-dependent calmodulin-binding
protein of apparent molecular mass of 85 kDa. Using polyclonal
antibodies to an 85-kDa protein, also the major
Ca
-dependent calmodulin-binding component of the
histone 3 arginine kinase from calf thymus, an immunoreactive protein
of identical apparent molecular mass was found to be present in equal
amounts both in dividing and quiescent cells. We propose that the
85-kDa protein is either the histone 3 arginine kinase or one of its
subunits and that phosphorylation of histone 3 is involved with cell
cycle exit in eukaryotes.