Effects of Cations on (Ca2++ Mg2+)-Activated ATPase from Rat Brain |
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Authors: | Joseph D. Robinson |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology, State University of New York, Upstate Medical Center, Syracuse, New York 13210, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract: With a partially purified, membrane-bound (Ca + Mg)-activated ATPase preparation from rat brain, the K0.5 for activation by Ca2+ was 0.8 p μm in the presence of 3 mm -ATP, 6 mm -MgCl2, 100 mM-KCI, and a calcium EGTA buffer system. Optimal ATPase activity under these circumstances was with 6-100 μm -Ca2+, but marked inhibition occurred at higher concentrations. Free Mg2+ increased ATPase activity, with an estimated K0.5, in the presence of 100 μm -CaCl2, of 2.5 mm ; raising the MgCl2 concentration diminished the inhibition due to millimolar concentrations of CaCl2, but antagonized activation by submicromolar concentrations of Ca2+. Dimethylsulfoxide (10%, v/v) had no effect on the K0.5 for activation by Ca2+, but decreased activation by free Mg2+ and increased the inhibition by millimolar CaCl2. The monovalent cations K+, Na+, and TI+ stimulated ATPase activity; for K+ the K0.5 was 8 mm , which was increased to 15 mm in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide. KCI did not affect the apparent affinity for Ca2+ as either activator or inhibitor. The preparation can be phosphorylated at 0°C by [γ-32P]-ATP; on subsequent addition of a large excess of unlabeled ATP the calcium dependent level of phosphorylation declined, with a first-order rate constant of 0.12 s?1. Adding 10 mm -KCI with the unlabeled ATP increased the rate constant to 0.20 s?1, whereas adding 10 mm -NaCl did not affect it measurably. On the other hand, adding dimethyl-sulfoxide slowed the rate of loss, the constant decreasing to 0.06 s?1. Orthovanadate was a potent inhibitor of this enzyme, and inhibition with 1 μm -vanadate was increased by both KCI and dimethylsulfoxide. Properties of the enzyme are thus reminiscent of the plasma membrane (Na + K)-ATPase and the sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca + Mg)-ATPase, most notably in the K+ stimulation of both dephosphorylation and inhibition by vanadate. |
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Keywords: | Calcium-(Ca + Mg)-ATPase-(Na + K)-ATPase Membrane transport Dimethylsulfoxide Vanadate |
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