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  • Article
    Gardner EA, Thompson WJ, Strada SJ, Stancel GM.
    Biochemistry. 1978 Jul 25;17(15):2995-3000.
    Soluble cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase of rat uterus displays distinct structural and regulatory properties. Like phosphodiesterases from many mammalian sources the soluble uterine enzyme system exhibits nonlinear Lineweaver--Burk kinetics with cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP) as substrate (apparent Kms congruent to 3 and 20 micron) and linear kinetics with cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cGMP) as substrate (apparent Km congruent to 3 micron). Unlike most other mammalian phosphodiesterases, however, numerous separation procedures reveal only a single form of uterine phosphodiesterase which catalyzes the hydrolysis of both cAMP and cGMP. A single form of the enzyme is observed upon sucrose gradient centrifugation (7.9 S), agarose gel filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography at either pH 8.0 OR 6.0. Heat denaturation (50 degrees C) of soluble uterine phosphodiesterase causes the loss of both cAMP and cGMP hydrolytic activities at the same rate. Isoelectric focusing reveals major (pI = 5.2) and minor forms (pI = 5.8) of phosphodiesterase which both catalyze the hydrolysis of the two cyclic nucleotide substrates. In vivo administration of estradiol produces identical decreases in the activities of cAMP and cGMP phosphodiesterase. These results raise the possibility that the uterus contains a single form of soluble phosphodiesterase which catalyzes the hydrolysis of both cAMP and cGMP.
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