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Plant Physiology 96:720-727 (1991)
© 1991 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Partial Purification and Characterization of a Ca2+-Dependent Protein Kinase from Pea Nuclei 1

Haimin Li, Marianne Dauwalder and Stanley J. Roux

Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78713

Almost all the Ca2+-dependent protein kinase activity in nuclei purified from etiolated pea (Pisum sativum, L.) plumules is present in a single enzyme that can be extracted from chromatin by 0.3 molar NaCl. This protein kinase can be further purified 80,000-fold by salt fractionation and high performance liquid chromatography, after which it has a high specific activity of about 100 picomoles per minute per microgram in the presence of Ca2+ and reaches half-maximal activation at about 3 x10–7 molar free Ca2+, without calmodulin. It is a monomer with a molecular weight near 90,000. It can efficiently use histone III-S, ribosomal S6 protein, and casein as artificial substrates, but it phosphorylates phosvitin only weakly. Its Ca2+-dependent kinase activity is half-maximally inhibited by 0.1 millimolar chlorpromazine, by 35 nanomolar K-252a and by 7 nanomolar staurosporine. It is insensitive to sphingosine, an inhibitor of protein kinase C, and to basic polypeptides that block other Ca2+-dependent protein kinases. It is not stimulated by exogenous phospholipids or fatty acids. In intact isolated pea nuclei it preferentially phosphorylates several chromatin-associated proteins, with the most phosphorylated protein band being near the same molecular weight (43,000) as a nuclear protein substrate whose phosphorylation has been reported to be stimulated by phytochrome in a calcium-dependent fashion.


1 Supported in part by the National Science Foundation grant DCB-8716572.




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Copyright © 1991 by the American Society of Plant Biologists