Correction of cell-cell communication defect by introduction of a protein kinase into mutant cells.
The cell-to-cell permeability of the junctions of various cultured mammalian cell types depends on the concentration of intracellular cyclic AMP [( cAMP]i). The permeability rises when the cells are supplied with exogenous cyclic AMP or when their cyclic AMP synthesis is stimulated with choleragen or hormones; it falls when [cAMP]i is lowered by application of serum or due to increase in cell density. The rise and fall in permeability take several hours to develop (the rise is protein synthesis-dependent) and they occur concurrently with the rise and fall in the number of intramembrane particles of the gap junctions, which probably embody the cell-to-cell channels. Is this permeability regulation mediated by phosphorylating protein kinase? In many eukaryotes, the cyclic AMP receptor is a protein kinase consisting of a pair of regulatory subunits and a pair of catalytic subunits. The latter dissociate from the holoenzyme as the cyclic AMP binds to the regulatory subunits and, in this dissociated form, catalyse the phosphorylation of the target. The regulatory subunit occurs in two isoenzyme forms, I and II. The catalytic subunit seems invariant; subunits from different isoenzymes can substitute for each other. We show here that a mutant cell lacking the isoenzyme I is deficient in permeable junctions, and that this junctional defect is corrected when the mutant is supplied with exogenous catalytic subunit.[1]References
- Correction of cell-cell communication defect by introduction of a protein kinase into mutant cells. Wiener, E.C., Loewenstein, W.R. Nature (1983) [Pubmed]
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