| Literature DB >> 1650314 |
A A Alousi1, J R Jasper, P A Insel, H J Motulsky.
Abstract
Little is known about the relative stoichiometry of guanine nucleotide-binding (G) proteins relative to the effector systems to which they link. We addressed this question for the stimulatory G protein (Gs) linked to adenylate cyclase. Forskolin stimulates the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase (C), but it has a higher efficacy and potency when C also interacts with the G protein Gs. Accordingly, we measured high-affinity [3H]forskolin binding to intact cells to assay alpha s-C complexes. No high-affinity specific binding occurred with unstimulated cells. The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol promoted the binding of [3H]forskolin to about 3000 sites per cell, suggesting that each receptor on average activates at least several Gs molecules. Activating Gs directly with cholera toxin maximally promoted [3H]forskolin binding to a similar number of sites, suggesting that this is the maximal number of alpha s-C complexes formed per cell. We conclude that each cell likely contains only a few thousand functional copies of C, and that the availability of C (rather than Gs, which exists in more than 100,000 copies per cell) is likely to be limiting for agonist stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1650314 DOI: 10.1096/fasebj.5.9.1650314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191