Abstract
The last few years have provided evidence that beside the familiar and partially well characterized stimulation of the adenylate cyclase the enzyme is also subject to a hormone and neurotransmitter-induced inhibition serving as a general information-transfer system. Similar to hormonal stimulation, the coupling of the inhibitory hormone receptors to adenylate cyclase is mediated by a GTP-dependent process. In some membrane systems, the inhibitory coupling is additionally amplified by sodium ions. Inhibitory hormones stimulate a high affinity GTPase in plasma membranes. The observed correlation suggests that there is a close connection between the hormone-induced adenylate cyclase inhibition and GTPase stimulation. Several lines of evidence are presented suggesting that the guanine nucleotide-dependent component apparently involved in adenylate cyclase inhibition and apparently exhibiting GTPase activity is at least partially different from that involved in adenylate cyclase stimulation by hormones.