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1.
An increase in pH decreases the Na+ concentration (Na+ +K+ = 150 mM) necessary for half-maximum activation of the (Na+ +K+)-ATPase at non-saturating concentrations of ATP just as an increase in the concentration of ATP at a given pH. It also decreases the concentration of Na+ necessary for transformation from the K+-form to the Na+-form at equilibrium conditions (Na+ +K+ = 150 mM). An increase in pH increases the rate of the transformation from the K+-form to the Na+-form of the system and decreases the rate of the reverse reaction. The pH effect on the conformation suggests that the K+-form is a protonated form and the Na+-form a deprotonated one. The similarity between the effect of an increase in pH with non-saturating concentrations of ATP and that of an increase in ATP at a given pH suggests that ATP exerts its effect on the transformation from the K+ - to the Na+-form by a decrease in pK values of the system, i.e., by releasing protons, a Bohr effect. Enzyme modified by reaction with pyridoxal 5-phosphate terminated by NaBH4 behaves at a given pH as if it were non-modified enzyme but at a higher pH. The 'pH effect' is seen after modification by pyridoxal 5-phosphate in the presence of ATP, of Na+ without and with ATP, of K+ with ATP but not in the presence of K+ alone. The modification has also a 'pH effect' on the rate of the transformation from the K+ -form to the Na+ -form and on the reverse reaction. There are at least two different pyridoxal 5-phosphate-reactive groups (amino groups), one which can be protected by ATP and which is of importance for activity and another which is not protected by ATP and which is of importance for the pH effect on the conformation. The effect of a protonation-deprotonation of amino groups on the conformation is explained by an involvement of the amino groups in salt bridge formation in between and inside the polypeptide chains, a hemoglobin-like situation. The protonated K+ -form is then a tense T-structure with a high K+, low Na+ affinity and the deprotonated Na+ -form a relaxed, R-structure with high Na+, low K+ affinity. ATP facilitates deprotonation by decreasing pK values. Oligomycin has 'pH effect' on the K0.5 for Na+ under equilibrium and steady-state conditions, but oligomycin has no effect on the rate of the transformation from the K+ -form to the Na+ -form, but gives a pronounced decrease of the rate of the reverse reaction, indicating that oligomycin does not react with the K+ -form but with the Na+ -form of the system and prevents the protonation, the E1 to E2 transformation.  相似文献   

2.
An increase in pH shifts the equilibrium between the K+-form and the Na+-form of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase towards the Na+-form. pK for the proton effect on the equilibrium is decreased by modification of the enzyme with pyridoxal 5-phosphate. The reactivity of the enzyme towards pyridoxal 5-phosphate is increased by an increase in pH. Modification by pyridoxal 5-phosphate of epsilon-amino groups on lysine, which has a pK of about 8 with the enzyme in the K+-form and of about 7.4 in the Na+-form, shifts the equilibrium between E1Na+ and E2 towards E2, and the equilibrium between E2(K+occ) and E2 towards E2, but has no effect on the overall equilibrium between E1Na+ and E2(K+occ). An additional modification of epsilon-amino groups on lysine, which has a pK of 9.5-10 with the enzyme in the K+-form and of about 7.7 with the enzyme in the Na+-form, shifts the equilibrium between E2(K+occ) and E1Na+ towards E1Na+; this is due to a shift in the equilibrium between E2(K+occ) and E2 towards E2, but with no effect on the equilibrium between E1Na+ and E2. The results show that the transition from the K+-form to the Na+-form decreases the pK of lysine epsilon-amino groups on the enzyme, and that the protonation of these groups influences the equilibrium between the two conformations.  相似文献   

3.
In view of our recent finding of imidazole-activation of the phosphorylation of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and the suggestion by others of an activating role of protons, in lieu of sodium ions, in the overall hydrolytic and phosphorylation processes of the enzyme, we have investigated the effect of pH on the phosphorylation process. No indication of proton activation is found. Rather, phosphorylation at low pH in the absence of Na+ is dependent on the buffer concentration. Imidazole-H+ stimulated phosphorylation at pH 5 reaches the same maximal steady-state level as Na+-stimulated phosphorylation. Low pH also elicits Tris-H+ stimulated phosphorylation, but due to a simultaneous inhibitory effect of this buffer the maximal steady-state level is no more than 50% of the Na+-stimulated phosphorylation level. Protons inhibit rather than activate phosphorylation. Upon decreasing the pH from 7 to 5, we observe for all ligands, whether activating or inhibiting phosphorylation (ATP, Na+, protonated imidazole, Mg2+ and K+), a decrease in affinity (largest for Mg2+) and a decrease in the maximal steady-state phosphorylation capacity. The effects of Na+ and imidazole-H+ on the phosphorylation step have been compared with those on the E2----E1 conformational change, which leads to the phosphorylation step. The different pH-dependence of the affinities for Na+ and protonated buffer in the E2----E1 transition suggests that there are separate activation sites with different pK values for Na+ and the buffer cation. The above findings rule out a role of free protons as a substitution for Na+ in the phosphorylation process.  相似文献   

4.
The rate of the transition from the E2 form to the E1 form of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) has been monitored by the fluorescence changes of eosin. The equilibrium between E1 and E2 is poised towards E2 in the absence of added cations. A stopped-flow tracing of the transition from E2 in the presence of 2 microM K+ (contamination) to E1 (in 150 mM Na+) is multiexponential with a large, rapidly decaying component (t 1/2 about 50 ms) and a smaller component which has a t 1/2 of about 2 s. KCl in microM concentrations decreases the amplitude of the rapidly decaying component and increases the amplitude of the slow component. The stopped-flow tracings can be satisfactorily fitted by a sum of three exponentials. An apparent Kd for K+ of about 5 microM is obtained for the conversion of the rapidly decaying component to the slowly decaying component. The experiments show that the E2 form is a mixture of at least two enzyme conformations. One E2 conformation - without K+ bound, (E2) - is transferred rapidly to the E1 conformation when Na+ is added, whereas the other E2-conformation--with K+ bound with an apparent high affinity, Kocc E2--is transferred slowly to the E1 conformation.  相似文献   

5.
We report a study on the effect of the fluorescent probe eosin on some of the reactions involved in the conformational transitions that lead to the occlusion of the K(+)-congener Rb(+) in the Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase. Eosin decreases the equilibrium levels of occluded Rb(+), this effect being fully attributable to a decrease in the apparent affinity of the enzyme for Rb(+) since the capacity for occlusion remains independent of eosin concentration. The results can be quantitatively described by a model that assumes that two molecules of eosin are able to bind to the Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase, both to the Rb(+)-free and to the Rb(+)-occluded enzyme regardless of the degree of cation occlusion. Concerning the effect on the affinity for Rb(+) occlusion, transient state experiments show that eosin reduces the initial velocity of occlusion, and that, like ATP, it increases the velocity of deocclusion of Rb(+). Interactions between eosin and ATP on Rb(+)-release experiments seem to indicate that eosin binds to the low-affinity site of ATP from which it exerts effects that are similar to those of the nucleotide.  相似文献   

6.
To determine the biochemical events of Na+ transport, we studied the interactions of Na+, Tris+, and K+ with the phosphorylated intermediates of Na,K-ATPase from ox brain. The enzyme was phosphorylated by incubation at 0 degrees C with 1 mM Mg2+, 25 microM [32P]ATP, and 20-600 mM Na+ with or without Tris+, and the dephosphorylation kinetics of [32P]EP were studied after addition of (1) 1 mM ATP, (2) 2.5 mM ADP, (3) 1 mM ATP plus 20 mM K+, and (4) 2.5 mM ADP plus Na+ up to 600 mM. In dephosphorylation types 2-4, the curves were bi- or multiphasic. "ADP-sensitive EP" and "K+-sensitive EP" were determined by extrapolation of the slow phase of the curves to the ordinate and their sum was always larger than Etotal. These results required a minimal model consisting of three consecutive EP pools, A, B, and C, where A was ADP sensitive and both B and C were K+ sensitive. At high [Na+], B was converted rapidly to A (type 4 experiment). The seven rate coefficients were dependent on [Na+], [Tris+], and [K+], and to explain this we developed a comprehensive model for cation interaction with EP. The model has the following features: A, B, and C are equilibrium mixtures of EP forms; EP in A has two to three Na ions bound at high-affinity (internal) sites, pool B has three, and pool C has two to three low-affinity (external) sites. The putative high-affinity outside Na+ site may be on E2P in pool C. The A leads to B conversion is blocked by K+ (and Tris+). We conclude that pool A can be an intermediate only in the Na-ATPase reaction and not in the normal operation of the Na,K pump.  相似文献   

7.
The fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled lamb kidney Na+/K+-ATPase has been used to investigate enzyme function and ligand-induced conformational changes. In these studies, we have determined the effects of two monoclonal antibodies, which inhibit Na+/K+-ATPase activity, on the conformational changes undergone by the FITC-labeled enzyme. Monitoring fluorescence intensity changes of FITC-labeled enzyme shows that antibody M10-P5-C11, which inhibits E1 approximately P intermediate formation (Ball, W.J. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7155-7162), has little effect on the E1 in equilibrium E2 transitions induced by Na+, K+, Mg2+ Pi or Mg2+. ouabain. The M10-P5-C11 epitope, which appears to reside near the ATP-binding site, does not significantly participate in these ligand interactions. In contrast, we find that antibody 9-A5 (Schenk, D.B., Hubert, J.J. and Leffert, H.L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 14941-14951) inhibits both the Na+/K+-ATPase and p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity. Its binding produces a 'Na+-like' enhancement in FITC fluorescence, reduces the ability of K+ to induce the E1 in equilibrium E2 transition and converts E2.K+ to an E1 conformation. Mg2+ binding to the enzyme alters both the conformation of this epitope region and its coupling of ligand interactions. In the presence of Mg2+, 9-A5 binding stabilizes an E1.Mg2+ conformation such that K+-, Pi- and ouabain-induced E1----E2 or E1----E2-Pi transitions are inhibited. Oubain and Pi added together overcome this stabilization. These studies indicate that the 9-A5 epitope participates in the E1 in equilibrium E2 conformational transitions, links Na+-K+ interactions and ouabain extracellular binding site effects to both the phosphorylation site and the FITC-binding region. Antibody-binding studies and direct demonstration of 9-A5 inhibition of enzyme phosphorylation by [32P]Pi confirm the results obtained from the fluorescence studies. Antibody 9-A5 has also proven useful in demonstrating the independence of Mg2+ ATP and Mg2+Pi regulation of ouabain binding. In addition, [3H]ouabain and antibody-binding studies demonstrate that FITC-labeling alters the enzyme's responses to Mg2+ as well as ATP regulation.  相似文献   

8.
The controlling effect of ATP, K+ and Na+ on the rate of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase inactivation by 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-C1) is used for the mathematical modelling of the interaction of the effectors with the enzyme under equilibrium conditions. 1. Of a series of conceivable interaction models, designed without conceptual restrictions to describe the effector control of inactivation kinetics, only one fits the experimental data described in a preceding paper. 2. The model is characterized by the coexistence of two binding sites for ATP and the coexistence of two separate binding sites for K+ and Na+ on the enzyme-ATP complex. On the basis of this model, the effector parameters fitting the experimental data most closely are estimated by means of nonlinear least-squares fits. 3. The apparent dissociation constants for ATP fo the enzyme-ATP complex or of the enzyme-(ATP)2 complex are computed to lie near 0.0024 mM and 0.34 mM, respectively, irrespective of whether K+ and Na+ were absent or K+ and K+ plus Na+, respectively, were present in the experiments. 4. The origin of the high and the low affinity site for binding of ATP to the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase molecule is traced back to the coexistence of two catalytic centres which, although primarily equivalent as to the reactivity of their thiol groups with NBD-C1, are induced into anticooperative communication by ATP binding and thus show an induced geometric asymmetry. 5. On the basis of the interaction model outlined under item 2 the apparent dissociation constant for K+ or Na+ in the (K+ + Na+)-liganded enzyme-ATP complex are computed to be 1.7 mM and 3.5 mM, respectively. 6. The conclusions concerning the coexistence of two primarily equivalent but anticooperatively interacting catalytic centres and the coexistence of two separate ionophoric centres for Na+ and K+ correspond to the appropriate basic postulates of the flip-flop concept of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
The pH optimum for (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) depends on the combination of monovalent cations, on the ATP concentration and on temperature. ATP decreases the Na+ concentration necessary for half maximum activation, K0.5 for Na+ (Na+ + K+ = 150 mM), and the effect is pH and temperature dependent. At a low ATP concentration a decrease in pH leads to an increase in K0.5 for Na+, while at the high ATP concentration it leads to a decrease. K0.5 for ATP for hydrolysis decreases with an increase in pH. The fractional stimulation by K+ in the presence of Na+ decreases with the ATP concentration, and at a low ATP concentration K+ becomes inhibitory, this being most pronounced at 0 degrees C. The results suggest that (a) ATP at a given pH has two different effects: it increases the Na+ relative to K+ affinity on the internal site (K0.5 for ATP at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C, is less than 10 microM); it increases the molar activity in the presence of Na+ + K+ (K0.5 for ATP at pH 7.4, 37 degrees , is 127 microM), (b) binding of the cations to the external as well as the internal sites leads to pK changes (Bohr effect) which are different for Na+ and for K+, i.e. the selectivity for Na+ relative to K+ depends both on ATP and on the degree of protonation of certain groups on the system, (c) ATP involves an extra dissociable group in the determination of the selectivity of the internal site, and thereby changes the effect of an increase in protonation of the system from a decrease to an increase in selectivity for Na+ relative to K+.  相似文献   

10.
Since Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) of pig kidney modified with a fluorescent sulfhydryl reagent, N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl) phenyl]maleimide, at Cys-964 of the alpha-chain showed ATP-dependent, reversible, and dynamic fluorescence changes (Nagai, M., Taniguchi, K., Kangawa, K., Matsuo, S., Nakamura, S., and Iida, S. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 13197-13202), we studied the conformational change during Na+,K+-ATPase reaction using the modified enzyme. The addition of K+ to the enzyme increased the fluorescence intensity to 2% in the presence of 160 mM Na+ and 3 mM Mg2+ (K0.5 = 16.4 mM). Addition of low concentrations of ATP immediately increased the intensity to 3.2% (K0.5 less than 0.1 microM) to accumulate fully K+-bound enzyme in the presence of 43 mM K+ with Na+ and Mg2+, but further addition of higher concentrations of ATP diminished the increase (K0.5 = 120 microM). After exhaustion of ATP, the fluorescence intensity decreased to -0.4% (K0.5 = 0.3 microM) and -2% (K0.5 = 20 microM), respectively, in the presence of low and high concentrations of ADP produced from ATP. High concentrations of ATP accelerated Na+,K+-ATPase activity with a simultaneous increase in the amount of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme irrespective of the modification. Adenylyl imidodiphosphate and ADP accelerated Na+,K+-ATPase activity in the presence of 2.7 microM ATP by decreasing the extent of the fluorescence without affecting the amount of phosphoenzyme, irrespective of the modification. These data suggest that Na+,K+-ATPase activity was accelerated due to the acceleration of the breakdown of K+-bound enzyme by high concentrations of ATP and ATP analogues.  相似文献   

11.
The (Na+ and K+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase (Na+,K+)-ATPase) from canine kidney reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles showed an ATP-dependent, ouabain-inhibited uptake of 22Na+ in the absence of added K+. This transport occurred against a Na+ concentration gradient, was not affected by increasing the K+ concentration to 10 microM (four times the endogenous level), and could not be explained in terms of Na+in in equilibrium Na+out exchange. K+-independent transport occurred with a stoichiometry of 0.5 mol of Na+ per mol of ATP hydrolyzed as compared with 2.9 mol of Na+ per mol of ATP for K+-dependent transport.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of Na+, K+, and nucleotides on Mg2+-dependent phosphorylation of (Na+ + K+)-dependent adenosine triphosphatase by Pi were studied under equilibrium conditions. Na+ was a linear competitive inhibitor with respect to Mg2+ and a mixed inhibitor with respect to Pi. K+ was a partial inhibitor; it interacted with positive cooperativity and induced negative cooperativities in the interactions of Mg2+ and Pi with the enzyme. Adenyl-5'-yl (beta, gamma-methylene)diphosphonate, a nonhydrolyzable analog of ATP, interacted with negative cooperativity to inhibit phosphorylation in competition with Pi. ATP was also a competitive inhibitor. Na+ and K+ acted antagonistically, Na+ and nucleotides inhibited synergistically, and K+ and nucleotides were mutually exclusive. In the presence of ouabain, when nucleotides were excluded from the site inhibiting phosphorylation, a low affinity regulatory site for nucleotides became apparent, the occupation of which reduced the rate of dephosphorylation and the initial rate of phosphorylation of the enzyme without affecting the equilibrium constant of the reaction of Pi with the ouabain-complexed enzyme. The regulatory site was also detected in the absence of ouabain. The data suggest that catalytic and transport functions of the oligomeric enzyme may be regulated by homotropic and heterotropic site-site interactions, ligand-induced slow isomerizations, and distinct catalytic and regulatory sites for ATP.  相似文献   

13.
K+ appears to decrease the affinity of the (Na+ + K+)-dependent ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) for its substrate, Mg2+ - ATP, and Mg2+ - ATP, in turn, appears to decrease the affinity of the enzyme for K+. These antagonisms have been investigated in terms of a quantitative model defining the magnitude of the effects as well as identifying the class of K+ sites on the enzyme involved. K+ increased the apparent Km for Mg2+ - ATP, an effect that was antagonized competitively by Na+. The data can be fitted to a model in which Mg2+ - ATP binding is prevented by occupancy of alpha-sites on the enzyme by K+ (i.e. sites of moderate affinity for K+ accessible on the "free" non-phosphorylated enzyme, in situ on the external membrane surface). By contrast, occupancy of these alpha-sites by Na+ has no effect on Mg2+ - ATP binding to the enzyme. On the other hand, Mg2+ - ATP decreased the apparent affinity of the enzyme for K+ at the alpha-sites, in terms of (i) the KD for K+ measured by K+-accelerated inactivation of the enzyme by F-, and (ii) the concentration of K+ for half-maximal activation of the K+-dependent phosphatase reaction (which reflects the terminal hydrolytic steps of the overall ATPase reaction). These data fit the same quantitative model. Although this formulation does not support schemes in which ATP binding effects the release of transported K+ from discharge sites, it is consistent with observations that K+ can inhibit the enzyme at low substrate concentrations, and that Li+, which has poor efficacy when occupying these alpha-sites, can stimulate enzymatic activity at high K+ concentrations by displacing the inhibitory K+.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of various cations on the dephosphorylation of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, phosphorylated by ATP in 50 mM imidazole buffer (pH 7.0) at 22 degrees C without added Na+, have been studied. The dephosphorylation in imidazole buffer without added K+ is extremely sensitive to K+-activation (Km K+ = 1 microM), less sensitive to Mg2+-activation (Km Mg2+ = 0.1 mM) and Na+-activation (Km Na+ = 63 mM). Imidazole and Na+ effectively inhibit K+-activated dephosphorylation in linear competitive fashion (Ki imidazole 7.5 mM, Ki Na+ 4.6 mM). The Ki for Na+ is independent of the imidazole concentration, indicating different and non-interacting inhibitory sites for Na+ and imidazole. Imidazole inhibits Mg2+-activated dephosphorylation just as effective as K+-activated dephosphorylation, as judged from the Ki values for imidazole in the two processes. Tris buffer and choline chloride, like imidazole, inhibit dephosphorylation in the presence of residual K+ (less than 1 microM), but less effectively in terms of I50 values and extent of inhibition. Tris inhibits to the same extent as choline. This indicates different inhibitory sites for Tris or choline and for imidazole. These findings indicate that high steady-state phosphorylation levels in Na+-free imidazole buffer are due to the induction of a phosphorylating enzyme conformation and to the inhibition of (K+ + Mg2+)-stimulated dephosphorylation.  相似文献   

15.
The particular aim of the review on some basic facets of the mechanism of Na+/K(+)-transporting ATPase (Na/K-ATPase) has been to integrate the experimental findings concerning the Na(+)- and K(+)-elicited protein conformation changes and transphosphorylations into the perspective of an allosterically regulated, phosphoryl energy transferring enzyme. This has led the authors to the following summarizing evaluations. 1. The currently dominating hypothesis on a link between protein conformation changes ('E1 in equilibrium with E2') and Na+/K+ transport (the 'Albers-Post scheme') has been constructed from a variety of partial reactions and elementary steps, which, however, do not all unequivocally support the hypothesis. 2. The Na(+)- and K(+)-elicited protein conformation changes are inducible by a variety of other ligands and modulatory factors and therefore cannot be accepted as evidence for their direct participation in effecting cation translocation. 3. There is no evidence that the 'E1 in equilibrium with E2' protein conformation changes are moving Na+ and K+ across the plasma membrane. 4. The allosterically caused ER in equilibrium with ET ('E1 in equilibrium with E2') conformer transitions and the associated cation 'occlusion' in equilibrium with 'de-occlusion' processes regulate the actual catalytic power of an enzyme ensemble. 5. A host of experimental variables determines the proportion of functionally competent ER enzyme conformers and incompetent ET conformers so that any enzyme population, even at the start of a reaction, consists of an unknown mixture of these conformers. These circumstances account for the occurrence of contradictory observations and apparent failures in their comparability. 6. The modelling of the mechanism of the Na/K-ATPase and Na+/K+ pump from the results of reductionistically designed experiments requires the careful consideration of the physiological boundary conditions. 7. Na+ and K+ ligandation of Na/K-ATPase controls the geometry and chemical reactivity of the catalytic centre in the cycle of E1 in equilibrium with E2 state conversions. This is possibly effected by hinge-bending, concerted motions of three adjacent, intracellularly exposed peptide sequences, which shape open and closed forms of the catalytic centre in lock-and-key responses. 8. The Na(+)-dependent enzyme phosphorylation with ATP and the K(+)-dependent hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme formed are integral steps in the transport mechanism of Na/K-ATPase, but the translocations of Na+ and K+ do not occur via a phosphate-cation symport mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Showdomycin [2-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)maleimide] is a nucleoside antibiotic containing a maleimide ring and which is structurally related to uridine. Showdomycin inhibited rat brain (Na+ + K+)-ATPase irreversibly by an apparently bimolecular reaction with a rate constant of about 11.01-mol- minus 1-min- minus 1. Micromolar concentrations of ATP protected against this inhibition but uridine triphosphate or uridine were much less effective. In the presence of K+, 100 MUM ATP was unable to protect against inhibition by showdomycin. These observations show that showdomycin inhibits (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by reacting with a specific chemical group or groups at the nucleotide-binding site on this enzyme. Inhibition by showdomycin appears to be more selective for this site than that due to tetrathionate or N-ethylmaleimide. Since tetrathionate is a specific reactant for sulfhydryl groups it appears likely that the reactive groups are sulfhydryl groups. The data thus show that showdomycin is a relatively selective nucleotide-site-directed inhibitor of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and inhibiton is likely due to the reaction of showdomycin with sulfhydryl group(s) at the nucleotide-binding site on this enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of Na+ and ATP on the K+ binding to Na+, K+-ATPase were investigated by the centrifugation method with radioactive K+ in the absence of Mg2+. In the presence of 10 microM 43KCl, 0.6 and 10 mM Na+ decreased the amount of bound K+ to one-half and zero, respectively. On the other hand, 10 microM and 10 mM ATP decreased the amount of K+ to 60 and 25-40%, respectively. When the combined effect of ATP and Na+ was tested, 10 microM ATP decreased the Na+ concentration giving half-maximal inhibition of the K+ binding to one-third, showing synergistic inhibition by both ligands, though increase in ATP concentration seemed to depress the inhibitory effect of Na+. The synergistic inhibition by ATP and Na+ suggests that the release of K+ from E2K is not completed by the binding of ATP alone but is completed by the binding of Na+ in addition to ATP during the cycle of Na+, K+-dependent ATP-hydrolysis as well as ion-transport.  相似文献   

18.
We used suspensions of partially purified Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase from pig kidney to compare the effects of Rb(+), as a K(+) congener, on the time course and on the equilibrium values of eosin fluorescence and of Rb(+) occlusion. Both sets of data were collected under identical conditions in the same enzyme preparations. The incubation media lacked ATP so that all changes led to an equilibrium distribution between enzyme conformers with and without bound eosin and with and without bound or occluded Rb(+). Results showed that as Rb(+) concentration was increased, the equilibrium value of fluorescence decreased and occlusion increased along rectangular hyperbolas with similar half-maximal values. The time courses of attainment of equilibrium showed an initial phase which was so quick as to fall below the time resolution of our rapid-mixing apparatus. This phase was followed by the sum of at least two exponential functions of time. In the case of fluorescence the fast exponential term accounted for a larger fraction of the time course than in the case of occlusion. Comparison between experimental and simulated results suggests that fluorescence changes express a process that is coupled to Rb(+) occlusion but that is completed before occlusion reaches equilibrium.  相似文献   

19.
Addition of up to 300 microM ATP in the presence of 2 M NaCl with MgCl2 to pig kidney Na+,K+-ATPase treated with N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide seemed to be insufficient to saturate the rate of the fluorescence decrease. However, both the extent of the decrease and the amount of phosphoenzyme at a steady state were saturated below 20 microM ATP. Addition of Mg2+ with Na+ to the enzyme preincubated with 20 to 600 microM ATP gave nearly the same rate constant, which was below 50% of that obtained by adding 300 microM ATP to the Na+-form enzyme in the presence of Mg2+. High concentrations of ATP affected neither the rate of light-scattering change (Taniguchi, K. et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3272-3281) after ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme formation (E1P) nor that of the breakdown of E1P. A stoichiometric amount of [32P]Pi was liberated from [32P]E1P. The data suggested that ATP did not bind to E1P in such a way as to increase the extent of phosphorylation further or to accelerate dephosphorylation. The data also suggested that the reason for the large difference in the apparent affinity of ATP as evaluated from the rate and the extent of fluorescence change is the large dissociation constant for ATP of a Michaelis complex.  相似文献   

20.
The addition of ATP with K+ to pig kidney Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) modified with a sulfhydryl fluorescent reagent N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide induced a transient decrease (t 1/2 = 0.01 s) in the fluorescence in the presence of Mg2+ with 0.64 M Na+, followed by a slow increase (t 1/2 = 0.08 s), to give a higher steady level than that observed without K+. The addition induced a transient increase (t 1/2 less than 0.02 s) in the amount of phosphoenzyme, followed by a slow decrease (t 1/2 = 0.08 s), but the addition without K+ induced a monophasic increase (t 1/2 = 0.02 s). The addition of ATP in the presence of 2 M Na+ with Ca2+ induced a monophasic decrease (t 1/2 = 0.1 s) in the fluorescence along with a much slower increase (t 1/2 = 1.2 s) in the amount of phosphoenzyme. No significant burst of acid-labile phosphate was observed. The data showed clearly the accumulation of the enzyme-ATP complex preceding the phosphoenzyme formation. Fluorescence intensity of these enzyme species and the amount of phosphoenzyme permitted the simulation using the reaction mechanism including enzyme-ATP complex, ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme, K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme, and K+-bound enzyme. The simulation gave a good fit to the experimental data which showed that ATP is hydrolyzed in sequence through the above intermediates in the presence of both Na+ and K+.  相似文献   

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