ATP stimulates proteolysis in reticulocyte extracts by repressing an endogenous protease inhibitor.
- 1 June 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 80 (12) , 3577-3580
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.80.12.3577
Abstract
An endogenous inhibitor of the reticulocyte ATP-dependent proteolytic system was purified partially by ammonium sulfate precipitation from rabbit reticulocyte and erythrocyte extracts. Inhibitor-free protease rapidly degrades 21-40% of the substrate [14C]methyl-.alpha.-casein/h, resembling ATP-dependent activity in reticulocyte extracts. This proteolytic activity is not stimulated by ATP and does not respond to ubiquitin. Adding back the inhibitory fraction to reticulocyte inhibitor-free protease result in a significant decrease (65-75% in proteolysis, both in the presence and absence of ATP. In contrast, inhibition is represssed when both ATP and the ubiquitin-containing fraction are present, resulting in an 80-350% stimulation of proteolysis by these components. ATP, in the presence of ubiquitin, may act in releasing the protease(s) from its endogenous inhibitor. Erythrocyte extracts, unlike reticulocyte extracts, exhibit low levels of ATP-dependent proteolytic activity. However, ion-exchange chromatography reveals that erythrocytes contain levels of proteolytic activity that are comparable to the reticulocyte''s inhibitor-free protease. Addition of ubiquitin and inhibitor to erythrocyte protease results in a highly ATP-dependent activity that resembles levels of ATP-dependence (3- to 4-fold) seen in reticulocyte extracts. Thus, the proteolytic and inhibitory components of the ATP-dependent proteolytic system appear to be retained with reticulocyte maturation. However, some other component(s) of the system are lost or modified with maturation so that the protease remains inactive.Keywords
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