Abstract— Homogenates of bovine neural lobe tissue were fractionated by differential centrifugation at 20°C or at 4°C and the distribution of activities of vasopressin and oxytocin among the fractions was compared. The ratio of total hormone to protein (mg) in the homogenate was similar at the two temperatures. At 20°C a much smaller proportion of the total hormone was recovered in the soluble fraction (100,000 gav supernatant), than at 4°C with a corresponding increase in recovery in the nerve‐ending fraction (800–3000 g sediment).
Nerve endings isolated at 4°C did not, when incubated, release hormone in response to changes in temperature. Nerve endings isolated at 20°C released hormone when the temperature was reduced below 15°C. Gradual reduction in temperature led to hormone release unaccompanied by lactate dehydrogenase release. Incubation of nerve endings for 10 min at 10°C increased the release of vasopressin and of neurophysin without any increase in lactate dehydrogenase. These results demonstrate that release of vasopressin by cold stimulation occurs by way of exocytosis.
1. Homogenates of neural lobes of bovine pituitary glands were fractionated by differential ultracentrifugation. 2. Neurosecretory vesicles were isolated by sucrose-gradient ultracentrifugation and membranes were obtained after hypo-osmotic lysis of the particles. 3. A method is described for the isolation of a preparation of purified neuronal plasma membranes by using a fraction enriched in nerve endings as a starting material. 4. The purity of the subcellular fractions was estimated by enzyme assays and by examination with the electron microscope. 5. On the basis of the results it was estimated that neuronal plasma membranes constitute more than 30% of the protein of the nerve endings and neurosecretory vesicles more than 45% of the total amount of protein in the homogenate. 6. The proteins of membranes of neurosecretory vesicles and of plasma membranes were solubilized by means of sodium dodecyl sulphate. Polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of such preparations showed that both membranes contained a large number of proteins, including three glycoproteins.
The cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) activities were studied in a nerve ending fraction from bovine neural lobes. Most of the activity was particulate and unaffected by calcium. Lineweaver-Burk plots for this fraction showed negative cooperativity with apparent Km values for cyclic AMP of 11 microM and for cyclic GMP of 4 microM. The soluble activities for both cyclic nucleotides were activated by calcium and inhibited by calmodulin-binding drugs (trifluoperazine and calmidazolium). The apparent Km values were 50 microM for cyclic AMP and 20 microM for cyclic GMP for the soluble activities. Sucrose density gradients resolved the soluble activities into two peaks. The activity with the higher sedimentation rate (MW 122,000 daltons) hydrolysed both cyclic nucleotides and was calcium-calmodulin-dependent. The other peak (MW 47,000 daltons) had a higher affinity for cyclic AMP than for cyclic GMP and was calcium-independent. Solubilized particulate activities gave two main peaks on the density gradient, both calcium-independent. One was mainly for cyclic AMP (MW 47,000 daltons) and the other mainly for cyclic GMP (MW 133,000 daltons). The function of PDEs in relation to secretion was discussed.
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