Polyamines alter the substrate preference of nuclear protein kinase NII

Abstract
An investigation of the effects of polyamines on substrate specificity of [rat liver] cAMP independent nuclear protein kinase NII showed that the substrate preference of NII was drastically altered in the presence of polyamines. When casein was used as a substrate, spermine stimulated the enzyme activity 7.3-fold at 2 mM, and a 6.5-fold stimulation was observed with 6 mM spermidine. Putrescine was also slightly effective at higher concentrations. With phosvitin as the substrate, however, 2 mM spermine and 4 mM spermidine strongly inhibited the activity by 93% and 80%, respectively, while putrescine showed a weak stimulatory effect. Steady-state kinetics and binding studies suggested that both stimulatory and inhibitory effects of polyamines on NII enzyme activity are probably due to substrate protein-polyamine interactions. The circular dichroism spectrum of phosvitin was apparently altered by spermine, whereas no significant change was observed with casein.