scholarly journals The properties of a cloned human high-molecular-mass cytosolic phospholipase A2 investigated using a continuous fluorescence displacement assay: evidence for enzyme clustering on phospholipid vesicles

1995 ◽  
Vol 306 (3) ◽  
pp. 857-864 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Creaney ◽  
D J Masters ◽  
M B Needham ◽  
R D Gordon ◽  
R Mott ◽  
...  

The 85 kDa human cytosolic phospholipase A2 has been cloned and expressed in insect Sf21 cells. The pure enzyme has been investigated using a fluorescence displacement assay that provides a continuous record of phospholipid hydrolysis [Wilton (1990) Biochem. J. 266, 435-439]. The unusual kinetic properties of this enzyme, previously described using radioactive assays, were readily demonstrated using the continuous fluorescence assay and were examined in detail. It is proposed that the enzyme clusters on the surface of a fixed number of substrate vesicles during the initial stages of catalysis and that the characteristic burst phase of hydrolysis represents the hydrolysis of these vesicles. This clustering produced a molar ratio of total phospholipid substrate to enzyme of about 450:1 at vesicle saturation with enzyme. Under limiting substrate conditions, the lower secondary rate that is observed results eventually in almost complete hydrolysis of the phospholipid; this was confirmed using radioactive substrate. Evidence is presented that during the initial burst phase, equivalent to hydrolysis of the outer monolayer of the vesicle, the enzyme remains tightly bound but is released as the reaction proceeds towards complete hydrolysis of the phospholipid substrate. In the presence of excess substrate, about 370 mol of fatty acid are released per mol of enzyme during the burst phase and it is calculated that this value also approximates to hydrolysis of the outer monolayer of the vesicle. It is proposed that the formation of a stable enzyme-vesicle complex during the burst phase of phospholipid hydrolysis may be due, at least in part, to protein-protein interactions between adjacent enzyme molecules in order to account for the clustering phenomenon.

1996 ◽  
Vol 318 (3) ◽  
pp. 797-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc PETERS-GOLDEN ◽  
Keli SONG ◽  
Teresa MARSHALL ◽  
Thomas BROCK

Cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) is a good candidate for mediating the agonist-stimulated release of arachidonic acid (AA) from membrane phospholipids. This enzyme undergoes a Ca2+-dependent translocation from the cytosol to a membrane site in a variety of cell types, and this site has recently been identified as the nuclear envelope in leucocytes. The functional correlate of this finding has not yet been established. The present study was therefore undertaken to determine whether translocation of cPLA2 to the nuclear envelope was associated with localized phospholipid hydrolysis at this site. Rat alveolar epithelial cells, previously shown to contain cPLA2, were prelabelled with [3H]AA and stimulated with the model agonist, ionophore A23187. Ionophore-induced AA release exhibited characteristics typical of a cPLA2-mediated response, in that it was Ca2+-dependent, sn-2 AA-selective, and inhibited by arachidonyl trifluoromethyl ketone. As determined by indirect immunofluorescence microscopic analysis as well as subcellular fractionation with immunoblotting, ionophore treatment resulted in a translocation of cPLA2 protein from the cytoplasm to the nuclear envelope. To determine whether the nuclear membrane was indeed the source of released AA, prelabelled cells were incubated in the presence or absence of A23187, after which the phospholipid radioactivity was quantified in nuclear and non-nuclear membrane fractions. [3H]AA was distributed in both nuclear and non-nuclear membrane phospholipids. Following A23187 stimulation, the loss of [3H]AA from nuclear membrane phospholipids accounted for 88.1±5.8% of the total loss from phospholipids and for 92.9±2.3% of the total [3H]AA released into the medium. These results demonstrate for the first time that agonist-stimulated translocation of cPLA2 to the nuclear envelope is associated with phospholipid hydrolysis which is preferentially localized to that site.


2001 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 716-724
Author(s):  
Yan J. Jiang ◽  
Grant M. Hatch ◽  
David Mymin ◽  
Thomas Dembinski ◽  
Edwin A. Kroeger ◽  
...  

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