We investigated the effects of conditions that induce Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores and Ca2+ influx into hepatocytes on the expressed and total (fully dephosphorylated) activities of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase. Vasopressin and phenylephrine when added alone had small or negligible effects on the phosphorylation state of the enzyme, as judged from the expressed/total activity ratio. However, when added in combination with glucagon, they elicited appreciable increases in the phosphorylation of the enzyme. Glucagon on its own had no effect either on phosphorylation state or on total HMG-CoA reductase activity during 40 min of incubation. Under conditions of sustained Ca2+ influx (i.e. vasopressin or phenylephrine plus glucagon), there was a marked loss of total HMG-CoA reductase activity. This effect was more pronounced when vasopressin was used; 50% of the enzyme activity was lost within 40 min. The involvement of Ca2+ in these effects was verified directly by the use of ionophore A23187. Its addition to hepatocytes resulted both in a very pronounced increase in the phosphorylation state of the enzyme and in the loss of 50% of the total activity within 30 min. There was no correlation between the ability of any set of conditions to increase the phosphorylation of the enzyme and the subsequent loss of total HMG-CoA reductase activity. The latter parameter appeared to be directly related, however, to the maintenance of prolonged Ca2+ influx, as indicated by the continued activation of glycogen phosphorylase, measured in the same cells. The lack of a causal relationship between increased phosphorylation and loss of total activity was demonstrated directly by studies in which okadaic acid was used to induce phosphorylation of HMG-CoA reductase in hepatocytes by inhibition of phosphatase 1 and 2A activities. This was not accompanied by any loss of total enzyme activity. Neither did okadaic acid enhance the loss of reductase induced by A23187 when the two agents were added together. It is concluded that altered Ca2+ fluxes in hepatocytes in vivo, under conditions of acute or chronic stress (such as may be associated with trauma or diabetes respectively), may be involved in the regulation of the expression of HMG-CoA reductase activity through alteration of enzyme concentration in the liver.
The mechanism of activation of mitochondrial overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I) by treatment of hepatocytes with okadaic acid (OA) was investigated. Activation was observed when cells were permeabilized with digitonin, but not when a total membrane fraction was obtained by sonication. Both cell disruption methods preserved the activation of phosphorylase observed in OA-treated hepatocytes. Activation of CPT I was also observed in crude homogenates of OA-treated hepatocytes, but it was lost upon subsequent isolation of mitochondria from such homogenates. In all experiments, any activation observed did not depend on the presence or absence of fluoride ions in the permeabilization/homogenization media. When hepatocytes were permeabilized in the absence of fluoride and further incubated with exogenous phosphatases 1 and 2A, the OA-induced activation of CPT was not reversed, whereas the activation of glycogen phosphorylase in the same cells was rapidly reversed. Treatment of hepatocytes with OA, followed by permeabilization and incubation before assay of CPT I, demonstrated that OA had no short-term effect on the sensitivity of CPT I to malonyl-CoA, although the difference in sensitivity between cells isolated from fed and starved rats was fully preserved. Incubation of isolated mitochondria or purified mitochondrial outer membranes with cyclic AMP-dependent or AMP-activated protein kinases, under phosphorylating conditions, did not affect the activity of CPT I or its sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition. Under the same conditions, the use of [32P]ATP resulted in the labelling of several outer-membrane proteins but, unlike [3H]etomoxir-labelled CPT I, none of them was specifically removed from membrane extracts by a specific polyclonal antibody to the enzyme. We conclude that the increase in overt CPT activity observed in permeabilized hepatocytes is not due to direct phosphorylation of CPT I, but may involve interactions between the mitochondrial outer membrane and other membranous or soluble cytosolic components of the cell.
The roles of protein kinase C, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and AMP-activated protein kinase in the phosphorylation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase induced by Ca2(+)-mobilizing conditions in isolated hepatocytes were investigated. Only partial evidence for the involvement of AMP-activated kinase was found. Antagonism of calmodulin action prolonged the decrease in expressed/total activity ratio induced by vasopressin plus glucagon. Protease inhibitors active against Ca2(+)-dependent cytosolic proteases or lysosomal proteolysis did not attenuate the loss of total HMG-CoA reductase induced by glucagon plus vasopressin, but calmodulin antagonists largely prevented this effect.
The mechanisms through which Ca2+ mobilization in rat hepatocytes results in the loss of total activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase [Zammit & Caldwell (1990) Biochem. J. 269, 373-379] were investigated. The loss of total activity was shown to be paralleled by an equal loss of immunoreactive HMG-CoA reductase protein after exposure of hepatocytes to optimal concentrations of vasopressin plus glucagon for 40 min. This loss of enzyme protein was due to an inhibition of enzyme synthesis; the rate of degradation was unaffected. Other Ca(2+)-mobilizing conditions (phenylephrine, glucagon, vasopressin added singly and A23187) also resulted in graded inhibition of synthesis of HMG-CoA reductase. These effects were accentuated by omission of Ca2+ from the cell incubation medium, suggesting that it is the depletion of an intracellular InsP3-sensitive pool of Ca2+ to which synthesis of HMG-CoA reductase is sensitive. In agreement with this we found that t-butylhydroxybenzoquinone, which inhibits the activity of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of the endoplasmic-reticular membrane, mimicked the action of Ca(2+)-mobilizing hormones. However, taurolithocholate, which transiently mobilizes Ca2+ from the same pool, was ineffective. All these effects on HMG-CoA reductase were accompanied by parallel inhibition of 35S incorporation from [35S]methionine into total protein, suggesting that inhibition of reductase synthesis formed part of a generalized response of the hepatocyte to Ca2+ mobilization. Inhibition of the rate of synthesis of HMG-CoA reductase was, however, more responsive to Ca2+ mobilization in the absence of added Ca2+ from the extracellular medium. The concentrations of vasopressin required to elicit the inhibition of synthesis of HMG-CoA reductase were of the same order as those that elicited activation of glycogen phosphorylase in hepatocytes.
Increased phosphorylation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase has been suggested to target the protein towards an increased rate of degradation. Our previous observations [Zammit & Caldwell (1990) Biochem. J. 269, 373-379] suggested that, although Ca(2+)-mobilizing hormones and other effectors can alter both the phosphorylation state of the enzyme and its total activity in isolated rat hepatocytes, there appears to be no causal correlation between the two parameters. In the present paper we set out to make direct measurements of the specific rate of degradation of 35S-labelled HMG-CoA reductase in hepatocytes treated with agents that produced very marked and prolonged increases in the degree of phosphorylation of the protein, through different mechanisms. Okadaic acid (which inhibits phosphatases 1 and 2A), fructose (which increases cellular AMP through its metabolism to fructose 1-phosphate) and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 (which also raises cellular AMP through an unknown mechanism) were all unable to alter the rate of HMG-CoA reductase degradation. We conclude that the basal rate of degradation of HMG-CoA reductase is unaffected by its phosphorylation state and that a transiently increased degree of phosphorylation cannot be the mechanism through which mevalonate increases the rate of degradation of the enzyme in rat hepatocytes and other cell types.
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