Costa M
J Cyclic Nucleotide Res. 1977 Aug;3(4):283-91.
The cAMP-dependent protein kinase from various tissues was more thermally sensitive when activated by cAMP than the non-activated enzyme. For example, when the activity ratio (the activity of protein kinase assayed -cAMP/+cAMP) was 0.40, 80% and 76% of total hepatic cAMP dependent protein kinase activity was recoverable after incubations at 45 degrees C for 15 and 30 minutes, respectively. However, when the activity ratio was elevated to about 0.80 - 0.90 by increasing cAMP levels in vivo or adding exogenous cAMP to soluble liver extracts, the total protein kinase activity recoverable after incubations at 45 degrees C for 15 minutes was 34-44% and 19-22%, respectively. This observation was used to estimate the degree of activation of the enzyme in vivo and in vitro, since the loss of enzyme activity at 45 degrees C was directly related to the degree of activation of the enzyme in tissue extracts. The regulatory-catalytic form of cAMP-dependent protein kinase was thermally resistant at 45 degrees C unless activated by incubation with exogenous cAMP, histones or NaCl, while the catalytic form of the enzyme was highly thermally sensitive at this same temperature. These data describe a new property of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase and suggest an alternative method which measure the degree of activation of the enzyme.