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    J Biol Chem. 1994 May 13;269(19):14123-9.

    Identification of CRAC, a cytosolic regulator required for guanine nucleotide stimulation of adenylyl cyclase in Dictyostelium.

    Lilly PJ, Devreotes PN.

    Department of Biological Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.

    As previously reported, guanine nucleotide regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity in the Dictyostelium mutant synag 7 can be restored in vitro by addition of a high-speed supernatant prepared from wild-type cells (Theibert, A., and Devreotes, P. N. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15121-15125). We have designated this activity CRAC, for cytosolic regulator of adenylyl cyclase. Trypsinization of partially purified material demonstrated that this activity contains a protein. We report here a 50,000-fold purification of this protein using Q and S Sepharose fast flow and P11 cellulose chromatography, followed by sucrose gradient centrifugation and separation on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Purification of wild-type and mutant supernatants in parallel allowed identification of an 88-kDa protein required for reconstituting activity. A polyclonal antibody was raised against this protein; it stains a band in unfractionated wild-type, but not mutant, supernatants. Immunoblots of fractions from each purification step show that activity and the immunostaining band cochromatograph. We have determined a short N-terminal sequence of the 88-kDa CRAC polypeptide, which matches a portion of the deduced N terminus of a gene, dagA, isolated from a mutant similar to synag 7. Expression of the dagA cDNA in synag 7 cells restores both the 88 kDa band and CRAC activity.

    PMID: 8188693 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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