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1.
The Ca2+-transport system of human erythrocyte membranes was solubilized by deoxycholate in the presence of the nonionic detergent Tween 20 and was purified by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The method yields a functional enzyme, which as compared with the erythrocyte membrane was purified 207-fold based on specific activity, and about 330-fold based on protein content. The activity of the isolated enzyme can be increased about 9-fold by the addition of calmodulin, resulting in a specific activity of 10.1 mumoles/mg . min at 37 degrees C. Triton X-100 and deoxycholate stimulate the calmodulin-deficient Ca2+-ATPase in a concentration dependent manner, which results in a loss of the calmodulin-sensitivity. The Ca2+-transport ATPase could be reconstituted after solubilization of the ATPase by deoxycholate and controlled dialysis near room temperature. The system was reconstituted to form membraneous vesicles capable of energized Ca2+ accumulation. The membrane vesicles showed a protein to lipid ratio (approx. 60% protein and 40% lipid) similar to that of the original erythrocyte membrane. The stimulation by calmodulin of the calmodulin-depleted membrane-bound and partially purified Ca2+-ATPase is strongly time dependent. At a Ca2+-concentration of 40 microM and low calmodulin concentrations, approx. 120 min are required to regain full activity. This time period is decreased to about 15 min in the presence of a high excess of calmodulin. Vice versa, at fixed concentrations of calmodulin, the time necessary for regain of full activity is decreased as the Ca2+ concentrations is increased. The dependence of the Ca2+-ATPase activity on the calmodulin concentration shows strong deviation from Michaelis-Menten kinetics at Ca2+ concentrations below (4--10 microM) and above (200 microM) the optimum concentration of 40 microM. Mathematical analysis of the results at 200 microM Ca2+ leads to the assumption that 4 calmodulin molecules interact with one oligomer of Ca2+-ATPase consisting of 4 identical subunits.  相似文献   

2.
A rise in intracellular Ca2+(Ca2+in) concentration from 1 to 100 microM is accompanied by a 100-fold increase of erythrocyte membrane permeability for k+ (opening of k+-channels) as well as by membrane hyperpolarization. Both effects are partly inhibited by trifluoroperazine and completely by calmidozolium (R24571). The Ca2+-dependencies of erythrocyte permeability for K+ and of Ca2+ binding to calmodulin are in good correlation. Within the same range of Ca2+in concentrations, i.e. 1-100 microM the activity of Na+-pump decreases by 90% despite the presence of trifluoroperazine and R24571. The permeability of erythrocytes for o-phosphate anions diminishes 15-fold after addition of the anionic exchanger SITS inhibitor. The SITS-inhibited component decreases 9-10 times with a rise in Ca2+in from 10 and 100 microM. In the presence of trifluoroperazine and R24571 the sensitivity of the anionic exchanger towards Ca2+ shows a 2-3 increase. The increase in Ca2+in up to 100 microM is concomitant with the activation of 32Pi incorporation into band 4.1 protein. The effect of Ca2+in on the phosphorylation of this protein is inhibited by calmodulin inhibitors. Addition of protein kinase C activator (4 beta-phorbol-12 beta-myristate-13-acetate) also leads to the increased incorporation of 32P into band 4.1 protein, whereas protein kinase A activator (dibutyryl-cAMP) causes 32P incorporation into bands 4.1 and 5 proteins. No effect of protein kinase activators on the activity of Na+-pump as well as on the permeability of erythrocyte membranes for K+ and anions was revealed. The data obtained point to the differences in the mechanisms of Ca2+in involvement in the regulation of the above ion transport systems. Presumably, none of the mechanisms is coupled with modification of the level of cytoskeleton protein phosphorylation. The effect of Ca2+ is mediated by the Ca2+ interaction with calmodulin only in the case of K+-channels.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of Ca2+ and calmodulin on endogenously catalyzed ADP-ribosylation were investigated in adipocyte plasma membranes. Four specific proteins of 70, 65, 61 and 52 kDa were labeled with [32P]ADP-ribose and ADP-ribosylation of the proteins was highly dependent upon the conditions employed. ADP-ribosylation of the 70 kDa protein was observed only in membranes supplemented with Ca2+. Maximal incorporation of [32P] into the protein was achieved with free Ca2+ concentrations of 90 microM. Calcium-stimulated ADP-ribosylation of the 70 kDa protein was inhibited by calmodulin. Half-maximal inhibition was observed in membranes incubated with 1.2 microM calmodulin. The effect of calmodulin was characterized by an inhibition of the incorporation of [32P]ADP-ribose as opposed to a stimulation of its removal. ADP-ribosylation of the 61 kDa protein was not altered by added Ca2+ and/or calmodulin whereas ADP-ribosylation of the 65 kDa protein was partially (50%) inhibited by free Ca2+ concentrations between 10(-6) - 10(-5) M. These results provide evidence that the adipocyte plasma membrane contains ADP-ribosyltransferase activities and demonstrate that ADP-ribosylation of a 70 kDa protein is regulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin.  相似文献   

4.
The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was investigated. The low-salt extract of erythroid membranes, which is mainly composed of spectrin, protein 4.1, and actin, confers a Ca2+ sensitivity on its interaction with F-actin. This Ca2+ sensitivity is fortified by calmodulin and antagonized by trifluoperazine, a potent calmodulin inhibitor. Additionally, calmodulin is detected in the low-salt extract. These results suggest that calmodulin is the sole Ca2(+)-sensitive factor in the low-salt extract. The main target of calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was further examined. Under native conditions, calmodulin forms a stable and equivalent complex with protein 4.1 as determined by calmodulin affinity chromatography, cross-linking experiments, and fluorescence binding assays with an apparent Kd of 5.5 x 10(-7) M irrespective of the free Ca2+ concentration. Domain mapping with chymotryptic digestion reveals that the calmodulin-binding site resides within the N-terminal 30-kDa fragment of protein 4.1. In contrast, the interaction of calmodulin with spectrin is unexpectedly weak (Kd = 1.2 x 10(-4) M). Given the content of calmodulin in erythrocytes (2-5 microM), these results imply that the major target for calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton is protein 4.1. Low- and high-shear viscometry and binding assays reveal that an equivalent complex of calmodulin with protein 4.1 regulates the spectrin/actin interaction in a Ca2(+)-dependent manner. At a low Ca2+ concentration, protein 4.1 potentiates the actin cross-linking and the actin binding activities of spectrin. At a high Ca2+ concentration, the protein 4.1-potentiated actin cross-linking activity but not the actin binding activity of spectrin is suppressed by Ca2+/calmodulin. The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the spectrin/protein 4.1/calmodulin/actin interaction is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A purified preparation of kidney basolateral membrane vesicles is capable of ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake. The reaction has high affinity for Ca2+ (Km about 0.1 microM) and a V of 5.8 nmol Ca2+ X mg-1 protein X min-1 in the predominantly right-side-out vesicular preparation used. It is inhibited by vanadate (K0.5 about 5 microM) and by anti-calmodulin drugs. A stimulatory effect of calmodulin is visible in membranes depleted of the activator. Exposure of basolateral membranes to 125I-azido-modified calmodulin results in the specific labeling of a membrane protein of Mr 141 000, which is tentatively suggested to be the Ca2+-pumping ATPase.  相似文献   

6.
In this study we examined the effect of carnitine and acetylcarnitine on the human erythrocyte membrane stability and membrane deformability. Since erythrocyte membranes are impermeable to these compounds, we resealed erythrocyte ghosts in the presence of different concentrations of carnitine or acetylcarnitine. Resealed ghosts can be adequately studied in their cellular deformability and membrane stability properties by means of ektacytometry. Both carnitine and acetylcarnitine alter the membrane stability but not membrane deformability of the red cell membrane. Resealed ghosts containing 20, 50, 150, and 300 microM carnitine had 1.1, 1.6, 0.9, and 0.7 times the normal stability. While resealed ghosts containing 20, 50, 150, and 300 microM acetylcarnitine had 1.1, 1.5, 1.3, and 1.2 times the normal stability. Such changes were found to be reversible. We also conducted SDS PAGE of cytoskeletal membrane proteins from membrane fragments and residual membranes produced during membrane stability analysis, and unsheared resealed membranes in those samples where we observed an increase or a decrease of membrane stability. No changes in the cytoskeletal membrane proteins were noticed, even when the samples, prior SDS PAGE analysis, were treated with or without dithiothreitol. In addition, fluorescence steady state anisotropy of DPH in the erythrocyte membrane treated with carnitine or acetylcarnitine shows no modification of the lipid order parameter. Our results would suggest that both carnitine and its acetyl-ester, at physiological concentrations, may increase membrane stability in mature erythrocytes, most likely via a specific interaction with one or more cytoskeletal proteins, and that this effect would manifest when the erythrocytes are subjected to high shear stress.  相似文献   

7.
A spectrin-dependent ATPase of the human erythrocyte membrane   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Removal of spectrin from erythrocyte membranes results in the simultaneous loss of a calcium-stimulated, magnesium-dependent ATPase with an apparent KD for Ca2+ of 1 microM. This ATPase activity with high Ca2+ affinity is specifically reconstituted by addition of purified spectrin to spectrin-depleted membranes, and the reconstituted activity is directly proportional to the amount of spectrin that is reassociated with the membranes. Spectrin binding and activation of the high Ca2+ affinity Mg2+-ATPase are proportionally inhibited by thermal denaturation, trypsin digestion, or treatment of the membranes with thiol-reactive reagents. Binding of calmodulin to the Ca2+ pump ATPase requires that calmodulin contains bound ca2+. By contrast, spectrin binding to the erythrocyte membrane is Ca2+-independent. Direct assay of calmodulin is purified spectrin and absence of chlorpromazine inhibition of reconstitution demonstrate that activation of the high Ca2+ affinity ATPase resulting from spectrin binding is not a result of contamination of spectrin by calmodulin. Additional evidence that the spectrin-activated ATPase is an entity separate and distinct from the Ca2+ pump is provided by other characteristics of the activation phenomenon. It is suggested that spectrin constitutes part of an ATPase which may function as a component of the "cytoskeleton" controlling erythrocyte shape and membrane flexibility.  相似文献   

8.
The Ca2+ affinity of (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-ATPase in human red blood cells is regulated by a number of intracellular factors, including the association of the enzyme with the cytosolic Ca2+ binding protein, calmodulin. Ghosts prepared by hypotonic lysis in the presence of 0.1 mM CaCl2, or by a gradual stepwise hemolysis procedure, contain an EDTA-extractable protein whose effects are mimicked by calmodulin, whereas ghosts prepared by extensive washes in the absence of added CaCl2 lack calmodulin and contain only a high molecular weight heat stable activator. Purified calmodulin from human red cells or bovine brain shifts the apparent Ca2+ affinity of (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-ATPase activity in extensively washed ghosts to a high Ca2+ affinity state. The shift was most apparent in ghosts in which the Ca2+ affinity was decreased by EDTA treatment. Calmodulin increased the velocity of (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-ATPase in the EDTA-treated ghosts about 36-fold at a low (1.4 microM) Ca2+ concentration, compared with 6-fold before EDTA treatment. The maximum shift in apparent Ca2+ affinity occurred only in the presence of saturating concentrations of calmodulin. It is concluded that red cell calmodulin confers to the Ca2+ transport ATPase the ability to increase its apparent Ca2+ affinity, as well as its maximum velocity, in response to increases in intracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

9.
Ca2+-stimulated, Mg2+-dependent ATPase in bovine thyroid plasma membranes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An isolated plasma membrane fraction from bovine thyroid glands contained a Ca2+-stimulated, Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase ((Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase) activity which was purified in parallel to (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and adenylate cyclase. The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity was maximally stimulated by approx. 200 microM added calcium in the presence of approx. 200 microM EGTA (69.7 +/- 5.2 nmol/mg protein per min). In EGTA-washed membranes, the enzyme was stimulated by calmodulin and inhibited by trifluoperazine.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied Ca transport and the Ca-activated Mg-ATPase in plasma membrane vesicles prepared from normal human lymphocytes. Membrane vesicles that were exposed to oxalate as a Ca-trapping agent accumulated Ca in the presence of Mg2+ and ATP. ADP, AMP, GTP, UTP, ITP, TTP, or CTP did not substitute for ATP in energizing uptake. The Vmax for Ca uptake was 2.4 pmol of Ca/micrograms of protein/min, and the Km values for Ca and ATP were 1.0 and 80 microM, respectively. One microM A23187, added initially, completely inhibited net Ca uptake and, if added later, caused the release of Ca accumulated previously. Cyanide, oligomycin, ouabain, or varying Na+ or K+ concentrations had no effect on Ca uptake. A Ca-activated ATPase was present in the same membrane vesicles, which had a Vmax of 25 pmol of Pi/micrograms of protein/min at a free Ca concentration of 4-5 microM. This Ca-ATPase had Km values for Ca and ATP of 0.6 and 90 microM, respectively. These kinetic parameters were similar to those observed for uptake of Ca by the vesicles. The Ca-ATPase activity was insensitive to azide, oligomycin, ouabain, or varying Na+ or K+ concentrations. No Ca-activated hydrolysis of GTP or UTP was observed. Both Ca transport and the Ca-ATPase activity of ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid-treated lymphocyte plasma membranes were stimulated 2-fold by a cytoplasmic component (calmodulin) that was purified 500-fold from lymphocyte cytoplasm. Thus, human lymphocyte plasma membranes have both a Ca transport activity and a Ca-stimulated ATPase activity with similar substrate affinities and specificities and similar sensitivities to calmodulin.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of ciliary adenylate cyclase by Ca2+ in Paramecium.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
In the ciliated protozoan Paramecium, Ca2+ and cyclic nucleotides are believed to act as second messengers in the regulation of the ciliary beat. Ciliary adenylate cyclase was activated 20-30-fold (half-maximal at 0.8 microM) and inhibited by higher concentrations (10-20 microM) of free Ca2+ ion. Ca2+ activation was the result of an increase in Vmax., not a change in Km for ATP. The activation by Ca2+ was seen only with Mg2+ATP as substrate; with Mn2+ATP the basal adenylate cyclase activity was 10-20-fold above that with Mg2+ATP, and there was no further activation by Ca2+. The stimulation by Ca2+ of the enzyme in cilia and ciliary membranes was blocked by the calmodulin antagonists calmidazolium (half-inhibition at 5 microM), trifluoperazine (70 microM) and W-7 (50-100 microM). When ciliary membranes (which contained most of the ciliary adenylate cyclase) were prepared in the presence of Ca2+, their adenylate cyclase was insensitive to Ca2+ in the assay. However, the inclusion of EGTA in buffers used for fractionation of cilia resulted in full retention of Ca2+-sensitivity by the ciliary membrane adenylate cyclase. The membrane-active agent saponin specifically suppressed the Ca2+-dependent adenylate cyclase without inhibiting basal activity with Mg2+ATP or Mn2+ATP. The ciliary adenylate cyclase was shown to be distinct from the Ca2+-dependent guanylate cyclase; the two activities had different kinetic parameters and different responses to added calmodulin and calmodulin antagonists. Our results suggest that Ca2+ influx through the voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in the ciliary membrane may influence intraciliary cyclic AMP concentrations by regulating adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
The in vitro stimulation of human and rabbit erythrocyte membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity by physiological concentrations of thyroid hormone has recently been described. To extend these observations to a nucleated cell model, Ca2+-ATPase activity in a membrane preparation obtained from rabbit myocardium has been studied. Activity of 5'-nucleotidase in the preparation was increased 26-fold over that of myocardial homogenate, consistent with enrichment by sarcolemma. Mean basal enzyme activity in membranes from nine animals was 20.8 +/- 3.3 mumol Pi mg membrane protein-1 90 min-1, approximately 20-fold the activity described in rabbit red cell membranes. Exposure of heart membranes in vitro to L-thyroxine (T4) (10(-10)M) increased Ca2+-ATPase activity to 29.2 +/- 3.8 mumol Pi (P less than 0.001). Dose-response studies conducted with T4 showed that maximal stimulatory response was obtained at 10(-10) M). Hormonal stimulation was comparable for L-T4 and triiodo-L-thyronine (T3) (10(-10) M). Tetraiodothyroacetic acid was without biological activity, whereas triiodothyroacetic acid and D-T4, each at 10(-10) M, significantly decreased enzyme activity compared to control (basal) levels. The action of L-T4 on myocardial membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity was inhibited by trifluoperazine (100 microM) and the naphthalenesulfonamide W-7 (50-100 microM), compounds that block actions of calmodulin, the protein activator of membrane-associated Ca2+-ATPase. Radioimmunoassay revealed the presence of calmodulin (1.4 micrograms/mg membrane protein-1) in the myocardial membrane fraction and 0.35 micrograms/mg-1 in cytosol. Myocardial Ca2+-ATPase activity, apparently of sarcolemmal origin, is thus thyroid hormone stimulable. The hormonal responsiveness of this calcium pump-associated enzyme requires calmodulin.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of increasing concentrations of Zn2+ (1 microM-5 mM) on protein phosphorylation was investigated in cytosol (S3) and crude synaptic plasma membrane (P2-M) fractions from rat cerebral cortex and purified calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase II (CMK II). Zn2+ was found to be a potent inhibitor of both protein kinase and protein phosphatase activities, with highly specific effects on CMK II. Only one phosphoprotein band (40 kDa in P2-M phosphorylated under basal conditions) was unaffected by addition of Zn2+. The vast majority of phosphoprotein bands in both basal and calcium/calmodulin-stimulated conditions showed a dose-dependent inhibition of phosphorylation, which varied with individual phosphoproteins. Two basal phosphoprotein bands (58 and 66 kDa in S3) showed a significant stimulation of phosphorylation at 100 microM Zn2+ with decreased stimulation at higher concentrations, which was absent by 5 mM Zn2+. A few Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated phosphoproteins in P2-M and S3 showed biphasic behavior; inhibition at less than 100 microM Zn2+ and stimulation by millimolar concentrations of Zn2+ in the presence or absence of added Ca2+/calmodulin. The two major phosphoproteins in this group were identified as the alpha and beta subunits of CMK II. Using purified enzyme, Zn2+ was shown to have two direct effects on CMK II: an inhibition of Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated autophosphorylation and substrate phosphorylation activity at low concentrations and the creation of a new Zn(2+)-stimulated, Ca2+/calmodulin-independent activity at concentrations of greater than 100 microM that produces a redistribution of activity biased toward autophosphorylation and an alpha subunit with an altered mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-containing gels.  相似文献   

14.
A high degree of ATP hydrolytic activity present in purified rat pancreatic acinar cells was localized to plasma membranes. This activity was stimulated almost equally by Mg2+ or Ca2+. Kinetic analysis revealed that the enzyme had a higher affinity for Ca2+ (Kd = 1.73 microM) than Mg2+ (Kd = 2.98 microM) but a similar maximal rate of activity. A comparison of substrate requirements revealed very similar profiles for the Mg2+- and Ca2+-stimulated activities. Combinations of saturating concentrations of Mg2+ or Ca2+ produced the same degree of maximal activity. Investigation of the partial reactions of the ATPase activity revealed two phosphoprotein intermediates (Mr = 115,000 and 130,000) in the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+. A significant stimulation of the Ca2+-ATPase activity by calmodulin was observed (Kd = 0.7 microM). Calmodulin increased the Ca2+-sensitivity of this enzyme system; Mg2+ appeared to be required for this effect. The Ca2+-ATPase activity was also stimulated by acidic phospholipids. Using an 125I-labeled calmodulin gel overlay technique, calmodulin was shown to bind in a Ca2+-dependent fashion to 133,000- and 230,000-dalton proteins present in the plasma membrane-enriched fraction. Under conditions that favor Ca2+-dependent kinase activity, calmodulin enhanced the phosphorylation of a 30,000- and 19,000-dalton protein. The major ATP hydrolytic activity in pancreatic acinar plasma membranes was present as an ectoenzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The contribution of calmodulin and protein kinases A or C to the activation of membrane Ca-ATPase was studied on saponin-permeabilized rat erythrocytes. In the presence of all endogenous regulators, the dependence of the Ca-ATPase activity of Ca2+ concentration was described by a bell-shaped curve with a maximum at 2-5 microM Ca2+; K0.5 = 0.43 microM Ca2+. Washing of erythrocyte membranes with 5-10 microM Ca2+ maintained up to 75% of the ATPase activity, while washing with EGTA (2 mM) decreased the activity, on the average, 5-fold, and increased K0.5 up to 0.54-0.6 microM Ca2+. An addition of an EGTA extract to washed membranes restored up to 75% of the original ATPase activity, while calmodulin restored about 40% of the original Ca-ATPase activity and decreased K0.5 to 0.23-0.3 microM Ca2+. The calmodulin inhibitor R24571 failed to alter the Ca-ATPase activity in permeabilized erythrocytes but slightly diminished it in reconstituted membranes. The protein kinase C inhibitors H7 and polymyxin increased the Ca-ATPase activity in permeabilized red cells and suppressed it in reconstituted membranes. The data obtained suggest that in native red cell membranes Ca-ATPase is activated by regulator(s) dependent on Ca2+ and protein kinase which are other than calmodulin.  相似文献   

16.
The calmodulin activation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) in human erythrocyte membranes was studied in the range of 1 nM to 40 microM of purified calmodulin. The apparent calmodulin-affinity of the ATPase was strongly dependent on Ca2+ and decreased approx. 1000-times when the Ca2+ concentration was reduced from 112 to 0.5 microM. The data of calmodulin (Z) activation were analyzed by the aid of a kinetic enzyme model which suggests that 1 molecule of calmodulin binds per ATPase unit and that the affinities of the calcium-calmodulin complexes (CaiZ) decreases in the order of Ca3Z greater than Ca4Z greater than Ca2Z greater than or equal to CaZ. Furthermore, calmodulin dissociates from the calmodulin-saturated Ca2+-ATPase in the range of 10(-7)-10(-6) M Ca2+, even at a calmodulin concentration of 5 microM. The apparent concentration of calmodulin in the erythrocyte cytosol was determined to be 3 to 5 microM, corresponding to 50-80-times the cellular concentration of Ca2+-ATPase, estimated to be approx. 10 nmol/h membrane protein. We therefore conclude that most of the calmodulin is dissociated from the Ca2+-transport ATPase in erythrocytes at the prevailing Ca2+ concentration (probably 10(-7)-10(-8) M) in vivo, and that the calmodulin-binding and subsequent activation of the Ca2+-ATPase requires that the Ca2+ concentration rises to 10(-6)-10(-5) M.  相似文献   

17.
A calmodulin inhibitor, trifluoperazine, suppresses ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake into microsomes prepared from bovine aortic smooth muscle. From this microsomal preparation which we expected to contain calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-transport ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3], we purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The protein peak eluted by EDTA had calmodulin-dependent (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase activity. The major band (135,000 daltons) obtained after sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) accounted for about 80% of the total protein eluted. This major band was phosphorylated by [gamma-32P]ATP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. All the 32P incorporated into the major band was released by hydroxylaminolysis. The ATPase reconstituted in soybean phospholipid liposomes showed ATP, calmodulin-dependent Ca2+ uptake. The affinity of the ATPase for Ca2+, Km, was 7 microM and the maximum ATPase activity was 1.4 mumol/mg/min. These values were changed to 0.17 microM and 3.5 mumol/mg/min, respectively by the addition of calmodulin. The activity of the purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase was inhibited by orthovanadate, and the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was about 1.8 microM which is close to that of plasma membrane ATPases. Judging from the effect of orthovanadate and the molecular weight, the purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase was considered to have originated from the plasma membrane not from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

18.
Highly purified plasma membrane (PM) preparations of pig myometrium were found to contain 0.91 +/- 0.22 microgram calmodulin per mg of PM protein. Treatment of membranes with 1 mM EGTA in the presence of 0.2 M NaCl causes the diminution of the calmodulin content down to 3% of the original level. The activity of Ca, Mg-ATPase is thereby decreased by 40%. Exogenous calmodulin restores the enzyme activity up to 1.94 +/- +/- 0.30 mumol Pi/mg protein/hour. The maximal activation of Ca, Mg-ATPase is observed with 10(-7) M calmodulin. Calmodulin increases the total ATPase activity of myometrium PM without affecting the Mg-ATPase activity. Trifluoroperazine (20 microM) diminishes the activating effect of exogenous calmodulin on Ca, Mg-ATPase. Calmodulin stimulates Ca, Mg-ATPase at low concentrations of Ca2+(10(-8)-10(-6) M) by decreasing Km for Ca2+ from 0.4.10(-6) M to 2.10(-8) M as well as by increasing Vmax--from 0,8 to 1.42 mumol Pl/mg protein/hour. It is supposed that the activating effect of calmodulin on Ca, Mg-ATPase is based on electrostatic interactions of Ca2+-free calmodulin with the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate catalyzed by the erythrocyte membrane Ca2+-ATPase is stimulated by low concentrations of the compound 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS), a classic inhibitor of anion transport. Enhancement of the phosphatase activity varies from 2- to 6-fold, depending on the Ca2+ and calmodulin concentrations used. Maximum stimulation of the pNPPase activity in ghosts is reached at 4-5 microM DIDS. Under the same conditions, but with ATP rather than pNPP as the substrate, the Ca2+-ATPase activity is strongly inhibited. Activation of pNPP hydrolysis by DIDS is equally effective for both ghosts and purified enzyme, and therefore is independent of its effect as an anion transport inhibitor. Binding of the activator does not change the Ca2+ dependence of the pNPPase activity. Stimulation is partially additive to the activation of the pNPPase activity elicited by calmodulin and appears to involve a strong affinity binding or covalent binding to sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme, since activation is reversed by addition of dithiothreitol but not by washing. The degree of activation of pNPP hydrolysis is greater at alkaline pH values. DIDS decreases the apparent affinity of the enzyme for pNPP whether in the presence of Ca2+ alone or Ca2+ and calmodulin or in the absence of Ca2+ (with 5 microM DIDS the observed Km shifts from 4.8 +/- 1.4 to 10.1 +/- 2.6, from 3.8 +/- 0.4 to 7.0 +/- 0.8, and from 9.3 +/- 0.7 to 15.5 +/- 1.1 mM, respectively). However, the pNPPase rate is always increased (as above, from 3.6 +/- 0.6 to 11.2 +/- 1.7, from 4.4 +/- 0.5 to 11.4 +/- 0.9, and from 2.6 +/- 0.6 to 18.6 +/- 3.9 nmol mg-1 min-1, in the presence of Ca2+ alone or Ca2+ and calmodulin or in the absence of Ca2+, respectively). ATP inhibits the pNPPase activity in the absence of Ca2+, both in the presence and in the absence of DIDS. Therefore, kinetic evidence indicates that DIDS does more than shift the enzyme to the E2 conformation. We propose that the transition from E2 to E1 is decreased and a new enzyme conformer, denoted E2*, is accumulated in the presence of DIDS.  相似文献   

20.
Short incubation of erythrocyte membranes with oleic acid releases Ca2+-independently bound endogenous calmodulin together with a minor fraction of membrane-associated proteins without destruction of the membranes. The released endogenous calmodulin is similar if not identical to cytosolic calmodulin reversibly bound to ghosts in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The release of endogenous calmodulin proceeds without affecting the activity of Ca2+-ATPase when ghosts are incubated with oleic acid in the presence of Ca2+ plus ATP and thereafter freed from oleic acid by washings with serum albumin. Kinetic parameters of Ca2+-ATPase of ghosts with and without endogenous calmodulin are identical as are amounts of exogenous calmodulin bound to these ghosts. Thus, endogenous calmodulin does not function as an essential part of Ca2+-ATPase.  相似文献   

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