首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 141 毫秒
1.
The kinetic properties of the activation by monovalent cations of the amidolytic activity of bovine des-1-41 light chain activated protein C have been examined. With the cations Cs+, K+, Li+, and Tl+, a single cation site, or class of sites, has been found to be responsible for the stimulation observed, with kinetic Ka values of 98-110, 180-210, 300-310, and 14-16 mM, respectively. The mechanism proposed for participation of these cations in the enzyme reaction involves an ordered addition, with the binding of cation preceding the binding of the amide substrate. On the other hand, the kinetic properties of this same activation by Na+ are consistent with either two cation sites, or classes of sites, of importance. Once again, however, the mechanism of the reaction appears to be of the ordered type, with cation binding occurring prior to substrate binding.  相似文献   

2.
Effect of temperature, pH and univalent cation on kinetics of self-activation of B12-dependent glycerol dehydratase (GD) from Aerobacter aerogenes with Co alpha-[alpha-(5,6-dimethylbenzimidazolyl]-Co beta-adenosylcobamide (AdoCbl) was investigated. The activation energy of the process of GD inactivation is found to be 3.9 kkal/M, the effect of pH on GD inactivation being insignificant. Monovalent cation is not required for the formation of GD-AdoCbl complex, but it protects the complex from selfinactivation. The rate of GD inactivation greatly depends on concentration of monovalent cations. Effect of K+, Rb+, Cs+, Tl+ and NH4+ cations, which are enzyme cofactors, qualitatively differs from the effect of Na+ and Li+, which are inactive in a catalytic reaction. The presence of at least two cation-binding sites in GD molecule is suggested. Possible mechanism of the effect of environmental factors in self-inactivation of GD-AdoCbl complex is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase requires divalent cations (Mg2+, Mn2+, or Zn2+) for catalysis, but a diverse set of monovalent cations (K+, Tl+, Rb+, or NH(4)(+)) will further enhance enzyme activity. Here, the interaction of Tl+ with fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase is explored under conditions that support catalysis. On the basis of initial velocity kinetics, Tl+ enhances catalysis by 20% with a K(a) of 1.3 mm and a Hill coefficient near unity. Crystal structures of enzyme complexes with Mg2+, Tl+, and reaction products, in which the concentration of Tl+ is 1 mm or less, reveal Mg2+ at metal sites 1, 2, and 3 of the active site, but little or no bound Tl+. Intermediate concentrations of Tl+ (5-20 mm) displace Mg2+ from site 3 and the 1-OH group of fructose 6-phosphate from in-line geometry with respect to bound orthophosphate. Loop 52-72 appears in a new conformational state, differing from its engaged conformation by disorder in residues 61-69. Tl+ does not bind to metal sites 1 or 2 in the presence of Mg2+, but does bind to four other sites with partial occupancy. Two of four Tl+ sites probably represent alternative binding sites for the site 3 catalytic Mg2+, whereas the other sites could play roles in monovalent cation activation.  相似文献   

4.
Previous work suggests that noncompetitive inhibitor (NCI) ligands and channel permeant cations bind to sites within the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ion channel. We have used ethidium as a fluorescent probe of the NCI site to investigate interactions between NCI ligands and channel permeant cations. We found that ethidium can be completely displaced from the receptor by a variety of inorganic monovalent and divalent cations. The rank order of monovalent cation affinities was found to be Tl+ greater than Rb+ greater than or equal to K+ greater than Cs+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+. The monovalent cation Kd values vary markedly over a 40-fold range, from 3 to 121 mM. The Kd values and rank order correspond to values determined previously from electrophysiological data. Hill plots of the back titrations yield slopes of 1.0 for all monovalent cations, indicating a single class of independent sites, as shown previously for NCI ligands. Scatchard analysis of ethidium binding in the presence of Tl+ reveals a reduction in affinity and no changes in the maximal number of sites. In the presence of agonist the kinetics of ethidium dissociation induced by the addition of phencyclidine or cations alone or the simultaneous addition of both are nearly identical. The ethidium dissociation rate induced by either phencyclidine or cations is regulated by the occupation of the agonist sites in a similar manner. These results indicate that the effect of cations on NCI ligand binding occurs by mutually exclusive competition. We suggest that NCIs can regulate cation binding at a physiological cation recognition site that is likely part of the cation permeation path through the receptor channel.  相似文献   

5.
The paramagnetic effect of Mn2+ on the longitudinal relaxation rate (T1)-1 of 205Tl+, when both cations are bound to des-1-41-light chain bovine plasma protein C (GDPC) and its activation product, des-1-41-light chain-activated bovine plasma protein C (GDAPC), has been assessed by 205Tl+ NMR spectroscopy. A substantial shortening of the T1 for Tl+ bound to either protein was observed in the presence of Mn2+, an effect not noted upon substitution of Mn2+ with the diamagnetic cation Ca2+, which is known to bind to these proteins in a similar fashion to Mn2+. This paramagnetic effect was employed to estimate distances between the monovalent and divalent cation sites in these proteins, approximately 6.7 +/- 0.2 A with GDPC and 8.3 +/- 0.2 A in GDAPC. These data suggest that a conformational alteration occurs upon activation of GDPC which leads to an increase in the distance between the monovalent and divalent cation sites.  相似文献   

6.
Locating monovalent cations in the grooves of B-DNA   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Here we demonstrate that monovalent cations can localize around B-DNA in geometrically regular, sequence-specific sites in oligonucleotide crystals. Positions of monovalent ions were determined from high-resolution X-ray diffraction of DNA crystals grown in the presence of thallium(I) cations (Tl(+)). Tl(+) has previously been shown to be a useful K(+) mimic. Tl(+) positions determined by refinement of model to data are consistent with positions determined using isomorphous F(Tl) - F(K) difference Fouriers and anomalous difference Fouriers. None of the observed Tl(+) sites surrounding CGCGAATTCGCG are fully occupied by Tl(+) ions. The most highly occupied sites, located within the G-tract major groove, have estimated occupancies ranging from 20% to 35%. The occupancies of the minor groove sites are estimated to be around 10%. The Tl(+) positions in general are not in direct proximity to phosphate groups. The A-tract major groove appears devoid of localized cations. The majority of the observed Tl(+) ions interact with a single duplex and so are not engaged in lattice interactions or crystal packing. The locations of the cation sites are dictated by coordination geometry, electronegative potential, avoidance of electropositive amino groups, and cation-pi interactions. It appears that partially dehydrated monovalent cations, hydrated divalent cations, and polyamines compete for a common binding region on the floor of the G-tract major groove.  相似文献   

7.
Glutamine synthetase (GS) catalyzes the ATP-dependent condensation of ammonia and glutamate to yield glutamine, ADP, and inorganic phosphate in the presence of divalent cations. Bacterial GS is an enzyme of 12 identical subunits, arranged in two rings of 6, with the active site between each pair of subunits in a ring. In earlier work, we have reported the locations within the funnel-shaped active site of the substrates glutamate and ATP and of the two divalent cations, but the site for ammonia (or ammonium) has remained elusive. Here we report the discovery by X-ray crystallography of a binding site on GS for monovalent cations, Tl+ and Cs+, which is probably the binding site for the substrate ammonium ion. Fourier difference maps show the following. (1) Tl+ and Cs+ bind at essentially the same site, with ligands being Glu 212, Tyr 179, Asp 50', Ser 53' of the adjacent subunit, and the substrate glutamate. From its position adjacent to the substrate glutamate and the cofactor ADP, we propose that this monovalent cation site is the substrate ammonium ion binding site. This proposal is supported by enzyme kinetics. Our kinetic measurements show that Tl+, Cs+, and NH4+ are competitive inhibitors to NH2OH in the gamma-glutamyl transfer reaction. (2) GS is a trimetallic enzyme containing two divalent cation sites (n1, n2) and one monovalent cation site per subunit. These three closely spaced ions are all at the active site: the distance between n1 and n2 is 6 A, between n1 and Tl+ is 4 A, and between n2 and Tl+ is 7 A. Glu 212 and the substrate glutamate are bridging ligands for the n1 ion and Tl+. (3) The presence of a monovalent cation in this site may enhance the structural stability of GS, because of its effect of balancing the negative charges of the substrate glutamate and its ligands and because of strengthening the "side-to-side" intersubunit interaction through the cation-protein bonding. (4) The presence of the cofactor ADP increases the Tl+ binding to GS because ADP binding induces movement of Asp 50' toward this monovalent cation site, essentially forming the site. This observation supports a two-step mechanism with ordered substrate binding: ATP first binds to GS, then Glu binds and attacks ATP to form gamma-glutamyl phosphate and ADP, which complete the ammonium binding site. The third substrate, an ammonium ion, then binds to GS, and then loses a proton to form the more active species ammonia, which attacks the gamma-glutamyl phosphate to yield Gln. (5) Because the products (Glu or Gln) of the reactions catalyzed by GS are determined by the molecule (water or ammonium) attacking the intermediate gamma-glutamyl phosphate, this negatively charged ammonium binding pocket has been designed naturally for high affinity of ammonium to GS, permitting glutamine synthesis to proceed in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

8.
Magnesium (Mg2+) increases binding of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) to membrane-bound receptors and increases adenylyl cyclase activity. We examined the effects of divalent and monovalent cations on FSH binding to receptors in granulosa cells from immature porcine follicles. Divalent and monovalent cations increased binding of [125I]iodo-porcine FSH (125I-pFSH). The divalent cations Mg2+, calcium (Ca2+) and manganese, (Mn2+) increased specific binding a maximum of 4- to 5-fold at added concentrations of 10 mM. Mg2+ caused a half-maximal enhancement of binding at 0.6 mM, whereas Ca2+ and Mn2+ had half-maximal effects at 0.7 mM and 0.8 mM, respectively. The monovalent cation potassium (K+) increased binding a maximum of 1.5-fold at an added concentration of 50 mM, whereas the monovalent cation (Na+) did not increase binding at any concentration tested. The difference between K+ and Na+ suggested that either enhancement of binding was not a simple ionic effect or Na+ has a negative effect that suppresses its positive effect. Ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, a chelator of Mg2+, prevented binding of 125I-pFSH only in the presence of Mg2+, whereas pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin, a competitor with FSH for the receptor, prevented binding in both the absence and the presence of Mg2+. Guanyl-5-ylimidodiphosphate (Gpp[NH]p) inhibited binding of 125I-pFSH in the absence or presence of Mg2+, but only at Gpp(NH)p concentrations greater than 1 mM. We used Mg2+ to determine if divalent cations enhanced FSH binding by increasing receptor affinity or by increasing the apparent number of binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Currents generated by the endogenous Na+/K+ pump in the oocytes of Xenopus laevis were determined under voltage-clamp as currents activated by different K+ congeners. The voltage dependence of the pump current reflects voltage-dependent steps in the reaction cycle. The decrease of K(+)-activated pump current at positive potentials has been attributed to voltage-dependent stimulation by the external K+ (Rakowski, Vasilets, LaTona and Schwarz (1991) J. Membr. Biol. 121, 177-187). In Na(+)-free solution, activation of the pump by external cations seems to be the dominating voltage-dependent and rate-determining step in the reaction cycle. Under these conditions, the voltage dependence of apparent Km values for pump activation can be analyzed. The dependence suggests voltage-dependent binding of extracellular cations assuming that an effective charge of about 0.4 of an elementary charge is moved in the electrical field during a step associated with the cation binding. The apparent Km values at 0 mV differ for various cations that stimulate pump activity. The values are in mM: 0.10 for Tl+, 0.63 for K+, 0.71 for Rb+, 9.3 for NH4+, and 12.9 for Cs+. The corresponding apparent affinities follow the same sequence as the cation permeability of the K(+)-selective delayed rectifier channel of nerve cells. The results are compatible with the interpretation that the cations have to pass an ion-selective access channel to reach their binding sites in the pump molecule.  相似文献   

10.
Monovalent and divalent cations competitively displace tetrodotoxin and saxitoxin (STX) from their binding sites on nerve and skeletal muscle Na channels. Recent studies of cloned cardiac (toxin-resistant) and brain (toxin-sensitive) Na channels suggest important structural differences in their toxin and divalent cation binding sites. We used a partially purified preparation of sheep cardiac Na channels to compare monovalent and divalent cation competition and pH dependence of binding of [3H]STX between these toxin-resistant channels and toxin-sensitive channels in membranes prepared from rat brain. The effects of several chemical modifiers of amino acid groups were also compared. Toxin competition curves for Na+ in heart and Cd2+ in brain yielded similar KD values to measurements of equilibrium binding curves. The monovalent cation sequence for effectiveness of [3H]STX competition is the same for cardiac and brain Na channels, with similar KI values for each ion and slopes of -1. The effectiveness sequence corresponds to unhydrated ion radii. For seven divalent cations tested (Ca2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cd2+, and Zn2+) the sequence for [3H]STX competition was also similar. However, whereas all ions displaced [3H]STX from cardiac Na channels at lower concentrations, Cd2+ and Zn2+ did so at much lower concentrations. In addition, and by way of explication, the divalent ion competition curves for both brain and cardiac channels (except for Cd2+ and Zn2+ in heart and Zn2+ in brain) had slopes of less than -1, consistent with more than one interaction site. Two-site curves had statistically better fits than one-site curves. The derived values of KI for the higher affinity sites were similar between the channel types, but the lower affinity KI's were larger for heart. On the other hand, the slopes of competition curves for Cd2+ and Zn2+ were close to - 1, as if the cardiac Na channel had one dominant site of interaction or more than one site with similar values for KI. pH titration of [3H]STX binding to cardiac channels showed a pKa of 5.5 and a slope of 0.6-0.9, compared with a pKa of 5.1 and slope of 1 for brain channels. Tetramethyloxonium (TMO) treatment abolished [3H]STX binding to cardiac and brain channels and STX protected channels, but the TMO effect was less dramatic for cardiac channels. Trinitrobenzene sulfonate preferentially abolished [3H]STX binding to brain channels by action at an STX protected site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
In aqueous media, muscle pyruvate kinase is highly selective for K+ over Na+. We now studied the selectivity of pyruvate kinase in water/dimethylsulfoxide mixtures by measuring the activation and inhibition constants of K+ and Na+, i.e. their binding to the monovalent and divalent cation binding sites of pyruvate kinase, respectively [Melchoir J.B. (1965) Biochemistry 4, 1518-1525]. In 40% dimethylsulfoxide the K0.5 app for K+ and Na+ were 190 and 64-fold lower than in water. Ki app for K+ and Na+ decreased 116 and 135-fold between 20 and 40% dimethylsulfoxide. The ratios of Ki app/K0.5 app for K+ and Na+ were 34-3.5 and 3.3-0.2, respectively. Therefore, dimethylsulfoxide favored the partition of K+ and Na+ into the monovalent and divalent cation binding sites of the enzyme. The kinetics of the enzyme at subsaturating concentrations of activators show that K+ and Mg2+ exhibit high selectivity for their respective cation binding sites, whereas when Na+ substitutes K+, Na+ and Mg2+ bind with high affinity to their incorrect sites. This is evident by the ratio of the affinities of Mg2+ and K+ for the monovalent cation binding site, which is close to 200. For Na+ and Mg2+ this ratio is approximately 20. Therefore, the data suggest that K+ induces conformational changes that prevent the binding of Mg2+ to the monovalent cation binding site. Circular dichroism spectra of the enzyme and the magnitude of the transfer and apparent binding energies of K+ and Na+ indicate that structural arrangements of the enzyme induced by dimethylsulfoxide determine the affinities of pyruvate kinase for K+ and Na+.  相似文献   

12.
The structure of the binding site for the monovalent cation activator of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthetase from Escherichia coli has been characterized by 205Tl NMR of enzyme-bound Tl+. The chemical shift of the enzyme-Tl+ complex is 176 ppm downfield from aquo Tl+, a shift which is typical only of Tl+ complexes with solely oxygen ligands. The 205Tl resonance shifts upfield to 85 ppm in the enzyme-Mg(II)-Tl+ complex, to 38 ppm in the enzyme-Tl+-AdoMet complex and to 34 ppm in the enzyme-Tl+-AdoMet-Mg(II) complex. The 205Tl chemical shift of enzyme-bound Tl+ was not altered by binding of either methionine, or the Mg(II)-ATP analog Mg(II)-adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate, or Mg(II)-pyrophosphate to the enzyme-Tl+-Mg(II) complex. The NMR data suggest that the substrates or products of the enzyme do not coordinate to the monovalent cation activator and imply that monovalent cation activation results from alterations in protein conformation.  相似文献   

13.
Many RNAs, including the ribosome, RNase P, and the group II intron, explicitly require monovalent cations for activity in vitro. Although the necessity of monovalent cations for RNA function has been known for more than a quarter of a century, the characterization of specific monovalent metal sites within large RNAs has been elusive. Here we describe a biochemical approach to identify functionally important monovalent cations in nucleic acids. This method uses thallium (Tl+), a soft Lewis acid heavy metal cation with chemical properties similar to those of the physiological alkaline earth metal potassium (K+). Nucleotide analog interference mapping (NAIM) with the sulfur-substituted nucleotide 6-thioguanosine in combination with selective metal rescue of the interference with Tl+ provides a distinct biochemical signature for monovalent metal ion binding. This approach has identified a K+ binding site within the P4-P6 domain of the Tetrahymena group I intron that is also present within the X-ray crystal structure. The technique also predicted a similar binding site within the Azoarcus group I intron where the structure is not known. The approach is applicable to any RNA molecule that can be transcribed in vitro and whose function can be assayed.  相似文献   

14.
The rat mesenteric vasculature contains high affinity binding sites specific for [3H]Arg8-vasopressin which mediate its vasoconstrictor action. We have investigated the in vitro effect of monovalent and divalent cations and guanine nucleotides on the interactions between [3H]Arg8-vasopressin and its receptor in this preparation. Binding was increased by divalent cations from fourfold in the presence of Mg2+ at 5 mM to ninefold in the presence of Mn2+ at 5 mM. The potency order of divalent cations to increase binding was Mn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Ni2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+ approximately equal to control without cations. Addition of Na2+ or other monovalent cations (K+, Li+, and NH4+) in the presence or absence of divalent cations reduced binding significantly. Analysis of saturation binding curves showed a single high affinity site. In the presence of 5 mM Mn2+, binding capacity (Bmax) increased to 139 +/- 23 fmol/mg protein. Receptor affinity was enhanced (KD decreased to 0.33 +/- 0.07 nM). In presence of 5 mM Mg2+ or 150 mM Na+, Bmax and affinity were reduced. The addition of 100 microM GTP or its nonhydrolyzable analogue, Gpp(NH)p, reduced receptor affinity in the presence of Mn2+ + Na+, Mg2+, and Mg2+ + Na+, but not in the presence of Mn2+ alone. Computer modeling of competition binding curves demonstrated that in contrast with saturation studies, the data were best explained by a two-site model with high affinity, low capacity sites and low affinity, high capacity sites. Mn2+ or Mn2+ + Na+ with or without guanine nucleotides resulted in a predominance of high affinity sites. GTP or Gpp(NH)p in the presence of Mg2+ or Mg2+ + Na+ induced a reduction of affinity of the high affinity binding sites and the number of these sites. In the presence of Mg2+ + Na+ and guanine nucleotides, high affinity sites were maximally decreased. An association kinetic study indicated that the association rate constant (K+1) was increased by divalent cations and reduced by guanine nucleotides, without change in the dissociation rate constant (K-1). The equilibrium dissociation constant (KD) calculated with these rate constants (K-1/K+1) was similar to that obtained in saturation experiments at steady state. Dissociation kinetics were biphasic, indicating the presence of two receptor states, one of high and one of low affinity, associated with a slow and a rapid dissociation rate. Cations and guanine nucleotides interact with one or more sites closely associated with vasopressin receptors, including possibly with a GTP-sensitive regulatory protein, to modulate receptor affinity for vasopressin.  相似文献   

15.
We characterized glutathione transport in brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) that were prepared from rabbit small intestine in which gamma-glutamyl transpeptidases (gamma-glutamyltransferases, EC 2.3.2.2) had been inactivated by a specific affinity-labeling reagent (AT125). Intact GSH transport was strongly increased by the presence of Na+, K+, LI+, Ca2+ and Mn2+ and, of all these, the Ca2+ activation effect was prevalent. This cation effect was selective and catalytic but not energetic; Vmax obtained in the presence of both Na+ and Ca2+ was about 6-times higher than it was in their absence, while Km did not change. Moreover, these cations almost completely eliminated GSH binding on the membrane surface. Na+ activation cannot be explained as a stimulation effect on the Na+-H+ antiport system, since a GSH proton-driven transport was excluded. We determined a pH optimum (7.5), while low or high extravesicular pH values diminished the GSH uptake rate. The Ca2+ effect on GSH transport, when an electrical potential difference was imposed across BBMV, was different from that of monovalent cations. Indeed, experiments performed by valinomycin-induced K+ diffusion potential or by anion substitution showed that the GSH transport system was an electroneutral process in the presence of Na+ or K+, but that it was electrogenic in the presence of Ca2+ or in the absence of extravesicular cations. These results suggest that GSH is also cotransported with these cations, without its accumulation inside vesicles. Moreover, since GSH is negatively charged, the effect of pH changes and of cation activation on GSH transport is arguably mediated by changes in the ionization state of certain groups as the carrier site and of GSH itself, indicating the electrostatic nature of GSH binding sites on the transporter. The high Ca2+ activation effect is perhaps also partly due to fluidity changes in the lipoproteic microenvironment of the GSH transporter. Moreover, this transport system has high affinity with GSH, given the low Km value (17 microM) and the fact that it was only inhibited by GSH S-derivatives and by GSH monoethyl ester, which probably share the same transport system.  相似文献   

16.
Free Mg2+ is studied for its effect on the activation kinetics of pig kidney Na+, K+-ATPase by monovalent cations (nH and K0.5 for Na+ and K+ are determined). It is established that at the saturating concentration of complementary ion-activator an increase of free Mg2+ concentration up to 12 mM is accompanied by a rise of nH and K0.5 for Na+ and a fall of K0.5 for K+ without nH changes for this cation. The analysis of inhibition kinetics shows that free Mg2+ is a competitive inhibitor as to Na+ and noncompetitive as to K+. It is concluded that inhibition of Na+, K+-ATPase by free Mg2+ is a complex process including competition with Na+ at its binding sites and the "occluding" of enzyme at the stage, preceding dissociation of cation and also the weakening of subunit interactions in the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
A pre-steady state kinetic analysis of the stimulation by monovalent cations of the activity of bovine activated protein C (APC) and a proteolytic fragment of APC, des-1-41-light chain activated protein C (GDAPC), toward the substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl p-guanidinobenzoate, has been undertaken. With the cations Na+ and Cs+, at least two cation sites, or classes of sites, on APC were found to be important to the kinetic effects observed. For GDAPC, with both monovalent cations investigated, a single cation-binding site, or class of sites, of kinetic importance was discovered. The most general mechanism that fits all kinetic data was a rapid equilibrium type, with the cation(s) (A) and substrate (S) binding to the enzyme in a random fashion. Cations were found to be essential activators, and only formation of the EAS or EA2S complex led to product generation. For each enzyme, stimulation of the reaction rates was found to be chiefly due to a dramatic enhancement by monovalent cations of the rate constant (k2) for acylation of the enzyme since the dissociation constant (Ks) for enzyme-substrate interactions was increased in the presence of cations, and the deacylation rate constant (k3) was not affected by these activators.  相似文献   

18.
1. Gilthead gill 10(-3) M ouabain-inhibited (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and 10(-2) M ouabain-insensitive Na+-ATPase require the optimal conditions of pH 7.0, 160 mM Na+, 20 mM K+, 5 mM MgATP and pH 4.8-5.2, 75 mM Na+, 2.5 mM Mg2+, 1.0 mM ATP, respectively. 2. The main distinctive features between the two activities are confirmed to be optimal pH, the ouabain-sensitivity and the monovalent cation requirement, Na+ plus another cationic species (K+, Rb+, Cs+, NH4+) in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and only one species (Na+, K+, Li+, Rb+, Cs+, NH4+ or choline+) in the Na+-ATPase. 3. The aspecific Na+-ATPase activation by monovalent cations, as well as by nucleotide triphosphates, opposed to the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase specificity for ATP and Na+, relates gilthead gill ATPases to lower organism ATPases and differentiates them from mammalian ones. 4. The discrimination between the two activities by the sensitivity to ethacrynic acid, vanadate, furosemide and Ca2+ only partially agrees with the literature. 5. Present findings are viewed on the basis of the ATPase's presumptive physiological role(s) and mutual relationship.  相似文献   

19.
Cobamide-dependent glyceroldehydrase (GDH) is shown to have an absolute requirement in monovalent cations: K+, NH4+, Tl+, Rb+ and Cs+. Dependencies of initial dehydratation rates of three substrates: glycerol, ethyleneglycol and 1,2-propandiol on the concentration of K+ are studied. Km values for K+, NH4+ and Tl+ are calculated to be 7-10-3, 4-10-3 and 1-10-3 M respectively. Effect of K+ on Km values for glycerol and coenzyme and on maximal reaction rate is investigated. It is shown that the apparent affinity of the substrate to the enzyme does not depend on monovalent cation; the apparent affinity of the coenzyme somewhat changes with the change of K+ concentration. Maximal reaction rate increases with the increase of K+ content. On the basis of kinetic data obtained possible mechanism of the activating effect of monovalent cations in reactions, catalyzed by GDH, is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
General properties of ouabain-sensitive K+ binding to purified Na+,K+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] were studied by a centrifugation method with 42K+. 1) The affinity for K+ was constant at pH values higher than 6.4, and decreased at pH values lower than 6.4. 2) Mg2+ competitively inhibited the K+ binding. The dissociation constant (Kd) for Mg2+ of the enzyme was estimated to be about 1 mM, and the ratio of Kd for Mg2+ to Kd for K+ was 120 : 1. The order of inhibitory efficiency of divalent cations toward the K+ binding was Ba2+ congruent to Ca2+ greater than Zn2+ congruent to Mn2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Ni2+ greater than Mg2+. 3) The order of displacement efficiency of monovalent cations toward the K+ binding in the presence or absence of Mg2+ was Tl+ greater than Rb+ greater than or equal to (K+) greater than NH4+ greater than or equal to Cs+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+. The inhibition patterns of Na+ and Li+ were different from those of other monovalent cations, which competitively inhibited the K+ binding. 4) The K+ binding was not influenced by different anions, such as Cl-, SO4(2-), NO3-, acetate, and glycylglycine, which were used for preparing imidazole buffers. 5) Gramicidin D and valinomycin did not affect the K+ binding, though the former (10 micrograms/ml) inhibited the Na+,K+-ATPase activity by about half. Among various inhibitors of the ATPase, 0.1 mM p-chloromercuribenzoate and 0.1 mM tri-n-butyltin chloride completely inhibited the K+ binding. Oligomycin (10 micrograms/ml) and 10 mM N-ethylmaleimide had no effect on the K+ binding. In the presence of Na+, however, oligomycin decreased the K+ binding by increasing the inhibitory effect of Na+, whether Mg2+ was present or not. 6) ATP, adenylylimido diphosphate and ADP each at 0.2 mM decreased the K+ binding to about one-fourth of the original level at 10 microM K+ without MgCl2 and at 60 microM K+ with 5 mM MgCl2. On the other hand, AMP, Pi, and p-nitrophenylphosphate each at 0.2 mM had little effect on the K+ binding.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号