Yovell_1992_J.Neurochem_59_1736

Reference

Title : A quantitative study of the Ca2+\/calmodulin sensitivity of adenylyl cyclase in Aplysia, Drosophila, and rat - Yovell_1992_J.Neurochem_59_1736
Author(s) : Yovell Y , Kandel ER , Dudai Y , Abrams TW
Ref : Journal of Neurochemistry , 59 :1736 , 1992
Abstract :

Studies in Aplysia and Drosophila have suggested that Ca2+/calmodulin-sensitive adenylyl cyclase may act as a site of convergence for the cellular representations of the conditioned stimulus (Ca2+ influx) and unconditioned stimulus (facilitatory transmitter) during elementary associative learning. This hypothesis predicts that the rise in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration produced by spike activity during the conditioned stimulus will cause an increase in the activity of adenylyl cyclase. However, published values for the Ca2+ sensitivity of Ca2+/calmodulin-sensitive adenylyl cyclase in mammals and in Drosophila vary widely. The difficulty in evaluating whether adenylyl cyclase would be activated by physiological elevations in intracellular Ca2+ levels is in part a consequence of the use of Ca2+/EGTA buffers, which are prone to several types of errors. Using a procedure that minimizes these errors, we have quantified the Ca2+ sensitivity of adenylyl cyclase in membranes from Aplysia, Drosophila, and rat brain with purified species-specific calmodulins. In all three species, adenylyl cyclase was activated by an increase in free Ca2+ concentration in the range caused by spike activity. Ca2+ sensitivity was dependent on both calmodulin concentration and Mg2+ concentration. Mg2+ raised the threshold for adenylyl cyclase activation by Ca2+ but also acted synergistically with Ca2+ to activate maximally adenylyl cyclase.

PubMedSearch : Yovell_1992_J.Neurochem_59_1736
PubMedID: 1402918

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Citations formats

Yovell Y, Kandel ER, Dudai Y, Abrams TW (1992)
A quantitative study of the Ca2+\/calmodulin sensitivity of adenylyl cyclase in Aplysia, Drosophila, and rat
Journal of Neurochemistry 59 :1736

Yovell Y, Kandel ER, Dudai Y, Abrams TW (1992)
Journal of Neurochemistry 59 :1736