Characteristics of the β-adrenergic adenylate cyclase system of developing rabbit bone-marrow erythroblasts
- 15 February 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 210 (2) , 559-566
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2100559
Abstract
After fractionation of rabbit bone marrow into dividing (early) and non-dividing (late) erythroid cells, the adenylate cyclase activity of membrane ghosts was assayed in the presence of guanine nucleotides ((GTP and its analogue p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5′-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate))), the beta-adrenergic agonist L-isoprenaline (L-isoproterenol) and the antagonist L-propranolol. Both GTP and p[NH]ppG increased the adenylate cyclase activity of early and late erythroblasts, whereas the stimulating effect of the beta-adrenergic drug L-isoprenaline was limited to the immature dividing bone-marrow cells. The effect of L-isoprenaline was completely inhibited by the antagonist L-propranolol, confirming that the response was due to stimulation of beta-adrenergic receptors on the plasma membrane. The lack of response of non-dividing erythroblasts to beta-adrenergic stimuli is not due to loss of beta-receptors, since both dividing and non-dividing cells bind the selective ligand [125I]iodohydroxybenzylpindolol with almost equal affinities, the apparent dissociation constants, Kd, being 0.91 × 10(-8)M and 1.0 × 10(-8) M respectively. The number of beta-adrenergic receptors per cell was 2-fold higher in the dividing cells. No significant change in binding affinity for GTP and p[NH]ppG during erythroblast development was observed: the dissociation constants of both guanine nucleotides were almost identical with early and late erythroblast membrane preparations [2-3 (X 10(-7) M]. With dividing cells, however, in the presence of L-isoprenaline the dissociation constants of GTP and p[NH]ppG were lower (6 × 10(-8) M). The dose-response curves for isoprenaline competition in binding of [125I]iodohydroxybenzylpindolol by dividing cells showed that the EC50 (effective concentration for half maximum activity) value for isoprenaline was higher in the presence of p[NH]ppG. With non-dividing cells the EC50 value for isoprenaline was equal in the presence and in the absence of p[NH]ppG and similar to that observed with dividing-cell membranes in the presence of the nucleotide. Thus differentiation of rabbit bone-marrow erythroid cells seems to be accompanied by uncoupling of the beta-adrenergic receptors from the adenylate cyclase catalytic protein as well as by a decrease in the number of receptors per cell, but not by changes in the catecholamine and guanine-nucleotide-binding affinities.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Agonist-induced increase in apparent β-adrenergic receptor sizeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1978
- Age-related parallel decline in beta-adrenergic receptors, adenylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase activity in rat erythrocyte membranesLife Sciences, 1977
- Modulation of in vitro erythropoiesis. The influence of beta-adrenergic agonists on erythroid colony formation.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1977
- MODULATION OF IN VITRO ERYTHROPOIESIS: ENHANCEMENT OF ERYTHROID COLONY GROWTH BY CYCLIC NUCLEOTIDESCell Proliferation, 1977
- ROLE OF GUANYL NUCLEOTIDES IN EXPRESSION OF CATECHOLAMINE-RESPONSIVE ADENYLATE-CYCLASE DURING MATURATION OF RAT RETICULOCYTE1977
- Age-related decline in the activitities of erythrocyte membrane adenylate cyclase and protein kinaseArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1976
- Independent variation of β-adrenergic receptor binding and catecholamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in rat erythrocytesLife Sciences, 1976
- AGONIST-SPECIFIC EFFECT OF GUANINE NUCLEOTIDES ON BINDING TO BETA-ADRENERGIC-RECEPTOR1976
- The effect of catecholamines and prostaglandins upon human and rat erythrocytesBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1975
- A persistent active state of the adenylate cyclase system produced by the combined actions of isoproterenol and guanylyl imidodiphosphate in frog erythrocyte membranes.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1975