Walker J M, Homan E C, Sando J J
Department of Pharmacology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville 22908.
J Biol Chem. 1990 May 15;265(14):8016-21.
To investigate the importance of the physical state of phospholipids for activation of protein kinase C, we have used short chain phospholipids, which, depending on their concentration, can exist as either monomers or micelles. We previously reported that short chain phosphatidylcholines (PC) can activate protein kinase C at concentrations that correlate with the critical micelle concentration of the activating lipid (Walker, J. M., and Sando, J. J. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 4537-4540). We have now expanded this work to short chain phosphatidylserine (PS) systems in order to examine the role of Ca2(+)-phospholipid interactions in the activation process. Short chain PS were synthesized from corresponding PC and purified by reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Use of the short chain system has revealed significant differences in the activation of type II and type III protein kinase C isozymes. The type II isozyme required Ca2+ in the presence of long chain PS vesicles; in the presence of the short chain phospholipid micelles (PC or PS), most of the activity was Ca2+ independent. Addition of diacylglycerol caused a small increase in type II activity in all phospholipid systems. In contrast, type III protein kinase C was Ca(+)-dependent in all of the lipid systems. The concentration of Ca2+ required to activate type III protein kinase C was independent of the phospholipid type despite large differences in the ability of these lipids to bind Ca2+. This isozyme required diacylglycerol only in the PC micelle system or with vesicles composed of long chain saturated PS. The presence of short chain PS micelles or long chain PS with unsaturated fatty acyl chains rendered this Ca2(+)-dependent protein kinase C virtually diacylglycerol independent. These results are consistent with a model in which type II protein kinase C requires Ca2+ primarily for membrane association, a requirement which is bypassed with the micelle system, whereas type III protein kinase C has an additional Ca2+ requirement for activity that does not involve Ca2(+)-phospholipid interactions.
为了研究磷脂的物理状态对蛋白激酶C激活的重要性,我们使用了短链磷脂,其根据浓度可作为单体或胶束存在。我们之前报道过,短链磷脂酰胆碱(PC)能在与激活脂质的临界胶束浓度相关的浓度下激活蛋白激酶C(沃克,J.M.,和桑多,J.J.(1988年)《生物化学杂志》263卷,4537 - 4540页)。我们现在将这项工作扩展到短链磷脂酰丝氨酸(PS)系统,以研究Ca2 + -磷脂相互作用在激活过程中的作用。短链PS由相应的PC合成,并通过反相高压液相色谱法纯化。短链系统的使用揭示了II型和III型蛋白激酶C同工酶激活方面的显著差异。II型同工酶在长链PS囊泡存在时需要Ca2 +;在短链磷脂胶束(PC或PS)存在时,大部分活性不依赖Ca2 +。添加二酰基甘油在所有磷脂系统中使II型活性略有增加。相比之下,III型蛋白激酶C在所有脂质系统中都依赖Ca(+)。激活III型蛋白激酶C所需的Ca2 +浓度与磷脂类型无关,尽管这些脂质结合Ca2 +的能力有很大差异。这种同工酶仅在PC胶束系统中或与由长链饱和PS组成的囊泡一起时需要二酰基甘油。短链PS胶束或带有不饱和脂肪酰链的长链PS的存在使这种依赖Ca2(+)的蛋白激酶C几乎不依赖二酰基甘油。这些结果与一个模型一致,其中II型蛋白激酶C主要需要Ca2 +用于膜结合,胶束系统可绕过这一需求,而III型蛋白激酶C对活性有额外的Ca2 +需求,且不涉及Ca2(+) -磷脂相互作用。