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1.
To investigate the physical mechanism by which melittin inhibits Ca-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes, we have used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to probe the effect of melittin on lipid-protein interactions in SR. Previous studies have shown that melittin substantially restricts the rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase but only slightly decreases the average lipid hydrocarbon chain fluidity in SR. Therefore, in the present study, we ask whether melittin has a preferential effect on Ca-ATPase boundary lipids, i.e., the annular shell of motionally restricted lipid that surrounds the protein. Paramagnetic derivatives of stearic acid and phosphatidylcholine, spin-labeled at C-14, were incorporated into SR membranes. The electronic paramagnetic resonance spectra of these probes contained two components, corresponding to motionally restricted and motionally fluid lipids, that were analyzed by spectral subtraction. The addition of increasing amounts of melittin, to the level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase, progressively increased the fraction of restricted lipids and increased the hyperfine splitting of both components in the composite spectra, indicating that melittin decreases the hydrocarbon chain rotational mobility for both the fluid and restricted populations of lipids. No further effects were observed above a level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase. In the spectra from control and melittin-containing samples, the fraction of restricted lipids decreased significantly with increasing temperature. The effect of melittin was similar to that of decreased temperature, i.e., each spectrum obtained in the presence of melittin (10:1) was nearly identical to the spectrum obtained without melittin at a temperature approximately 5 degrees C lower. The results suggest that the principal effect of melittin on SR membranes is to induce protein aggregation and this in turn, augmented by direct binding of melittin to the lipid, is responsible for the observed decreases in lipid mobility. Protein aggregation is concluded to be the main cause of inactivation of the Ca-ATPase by melittin, with possible modulation also by the decrease in mobility of the boundary layer lipids.  相似文献   

2.
Using spin-labeled fatty acid derivatives and maleimide, the effect of temperature on the structural state of various parts of the lipid bilayer of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes and the segmental motion of the Ca-ATPase molecule were investigated. The mobility of the spin probes localized in the hydrophobic zone and the outer part of the SR membrane was shown to increase with a rise in temperature from 4 to 44 degrees C, the temperature of 20 degrees C being critical for these changes. In the presence of ATP, critical changes in the spin probe mobility occur at lower temperatures, while in the presence of ATP and Ca2+ they are observed at 20 degrees C for a spin probe localized in the outer part of the SR membrane. The mobility of a spin probe localized in the hydrophobic part of the membrane increases linearly with a rise in temperature. In the absence of ligands, the segmental motion of Ca-ATPase changes linearly within a temperature range of 10-30 degrees C. However, when ATP alone or ATP and Ca2+ are simultaneously added to the incubation mixture, the protein mobility undergoes critical changes at 20 degrees C. The Arrhenius plots for ATPase activity and Ca2+ uptake rate in SR membrane preparations also have a break at 20 degrees C. It is assumed that changes in the structural state of membrane lipids produce conformational changes in the Ca-ATPase molecule; the enzyme seems to be unsensitive to the structural state of the membrane lipid matrix in the absence of the ligands.  相似文献   

3.
J E Mahaney  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7171-7180
We have performed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments on nitroxide spin labels incorporated into rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), in order to investigate the physical and functional interactions between melittin, a small basic membrane-binding peptide, and the Ca-ATPase of SR. Melittin binding to SR substantially inhibits Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity at 25 degrees C, with half-maximal inhibition at 9 mol of melittin bound per mole of Ca-ATPase. Saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) of maleimide spin-labeled Ca-ATPase showed that melittin decreases the submillisecond rotational mobility of the enzyme, with a 4-fold increase in the effective rotational correlation time (tau r) at a melittin/Ca-ATPase mole ratio of 10:1. This decreased rotational motion is consistent with melittin-induced aggregation of the Ca-ATPase. Conventional EPR was used to measure the submicrosecond rotational dynamics of spin-labeled stearic acid probes incorporated into SR. Melittin binding to SR at a melittin/Ca-ATPase mole ratio of 10:1 decreases lipid hydrocarbon chain mobility (fluidity) 25% near the surface of the membrane, but only 5% near the center of the bilayer. This gradient effect of melittin on SR fluidity suggests that melittin interacts primarily with the membrane surface. For all of these melittin effects (on enzymatic activity, protein mobility, and fluidity), increasing the ionic strength lessened the effect of melittin but did not alleviate it entirely. This is consistent with a melittin-SR interaction characterized by both hydrophobic and electrostatic forces. Since the effect of melittin on lipid fluidity alone is too small to account for the large inhibition of Ca-ATPase rotational mobility and enzymatic activity, we propose that melittin inhibits the ATPase primarily through its capacity to aggregate the enzyme, consistent with previous observations of decreased Ca-ATPase activity under conditions that decrease protein rotational mobility.  相似文献   

4.
We have developed a quantitative and relatively model-independent measure of lipid fluidity using EPR and have applied this method to compare the temperature dependence of lipid hydrocarbon chain fluidity, overall protein rotational mobility, and the calcium-dependent enzymatic activity of the Ca-ATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum. We define membrane lipid fluidity to be T/eta, where eta is the viscosity of a long chain hydrocarbon reference solvent in which a fatty acid spin label gives the same EPR spectrum (quantitated by the order parameter S) as observed for the same probe in the membrane. This measure is independent of the reference solvent used as long as the spectral line shapes in the membrane and the solvent match precisely, indicating that the same type of anisotropic probe motion occurs in the two systems. We argue that this empirical measurement of fluidity, defined in analogy to the macroscopic fluidity (T/eta) of a bulk solvent, should be more directly related to protein rotational mobility (and thus to protein function) than are more conventional measures of fluidity, such as the rate or amplitude of rotational motion of the lipid hydrocarbon chains themselves. This new definition thus offers a fluidity measure that is more directly relevant to the protein's behavior. The direct relationship between this measure of membrane fluidity and protein rotational mobility is supported by measurements in sarcoplasmic reticulum. The overall rotational motion of the spin-labeled Ca-ATPase protein was measured by saturation-transfer EPR. The Arrhenius activation energy for protein rotational mobility (11-12 kcal/mol/degree) agrees well with the activation energy for lipid fluidity, if defined as in this study, but not if more conventional definitions of lipid fluidity are used. This agreement, which extends over the entire temperature range from 0 to 40 degrees C, suggests that protein mobility depends directly on lipid fluidity in this system, as predicted from hydrodynamic theory. The same activation energy is observed for the calcium-dependent ATPase activity under physiological conditions, suggesting that protein rotational mobility (dependent on lipid fluidity) is involved in the rate-limiting step of active calcium transport.  相似文献   

5.
We have used spin labels and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to study the correlation between the rotational dynamics of protein and lipid in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. A short-chain maleimide spin label was used to monitor the submillisecond rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase enzyme (using saturation transfer EPR); a free fatty acid spin label was used to monitor the submicrosecond rotational mobility of the bulk lipid hydrocarbon chains (using conventional EPR); and a fatty acid spin label derivative (long-chain maleimide) attached to the enzyme was used to monitor the mobility of hydrocarbon chains adjacent to the protein (i.e., boundary lipid). In the native SR membranes, the protein was highly mobile (effective correlation time 50 microseconds). The spectra of the hydrocarbon probes both contained at least two components. For the unattached probe, the major component indicated nearly as much mobility as in the absence of protein (effective rotational correlation time 3 ns), while a minor component, corresponding to 25-30% of the total signal, indicated strong immobilization (effective correlation time greater than or equal to 10 ns). For the attached hydrocarbon probe, the major component (approximately 70% of the total) was strongly immobilized, and the mobile component was less mobile than that of the unattached probe. When the lipid-to-protein ratio was reduced 55% by treatment with deoxycholate, protein mobility decreased considerably, suggesting protein aggregation. A concomitant increase was observed in the fraction of immobilized spin labels for both the free and attached hydrocarbon probes. The observed hydrocarbon immobilization probably arises in part from immobilization at the protein-lipid boundary, but protein-protein interactions that trap hydrocarbon chains may also contribute. When protein aggregation was induced by glutaraldehyde crosslinking, submillisecond protein mobility was eliminated, but there was no effect on either hydrocarbon probe. Thus protein aggregation does not necessarily cause hydrocarbon chain immobilization.  相似文献   

6.
The temperature dependence of ATPase activities and stearic acid spin label motion in red blood cells of normal and MH-susceptible pigs have been examined. Arrhenius plots of red blood cell ghost Ca-ATPase and calmodulin-stimulable Ca-ATPase activities were identical for both normal and MH erythrocyte ghosts. Arrhenius plots of Mg-ATPase activity exhibited a break (defined as a change in slope) at 24 degrees C in both MH and normal erythrocyte ghosts. However, below 24 degrees C the apparent activation energy for this activity was less in MH than normal ghosts. To determine whether breaks in ATPase Arrhenius plots could be correlated with changes in the physical state of the red blood cell membrane, the spin label 16-doxyl-stearate was introduced into the bilayer of both erythrocyte ghosts and red blood cells. With both ghosts and intact cells, at each temperature examined, the mobility of the probe in the lipid bilayer, as measured by electron paramagnetic resonance, was greater in normal than in MH membranes. While there were no breaks in Arrhenius plots for probe motion in the erythrocyte ghosts, the apparent activation energy for probe motion was significantly greater in normal than in MH ghost membranes. While there was no break in the Arrhenius plot of probe motion in normal intact red blood cell membranes, there were breaks in the Arrhenius plot of probe motion at both 24 and 33 degrees C in intact MH red blood cell membranes. Based on the altered temperature dependence of Mg-ATPase activity and spin probe motion in membranes derived from MH red blood cells, we conclude that there may be a generalized membrane defect in MH pigs which is reflected in the red blood cell as an altered membrane composition or organization.  相似文献   

7.
We have developed a saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) method to measure selectively the rotational dynamics of those lipids that are motionally restricted by integral membrane proteins and have applied this methodology to measure lipid-protein interactions in native sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. This analysis involves the measurement of spectral saturation using a series of six stearic acid spin labels that are labeled with a nitroxide at different carbon atom positions. A large amount of spectral saturation is observed for spin labels in native SR membranes, but not for spin labels in dispersions of extracted SR lipids, implying that the motional properties of those lipids interacting with the Ca-ATPase, i.e., the boundary or annular lipid, can be directly measured without the need for spectral subtraction procedures. A comparison of the motional properties of the restricted lipid, measured by ST-EPR, with those measured by digital subtraction of conventional EPR spectra qualitatively agree, for in both cases the Ca-ATPase restricts the rotational mobility of a population of lipids, whose rotational mobility increases as the nitroxide is positioned toward the center of the bilayer. However, the ability of ST-EPR to directly measure the motionally restricted lipid in a model-independent means provides the greater precision necessary to measure small changes in the rotational dynamics of the lipid at the protein-lipid interface, providing a valuable tool in clarifying the relationship between the physical nature of the protein-lipid interface and membrane function.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the role of lipid and protein dynamics in the activation of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) by diethyl ether. Conventional and saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) were used to probe rotational motions of spin labels attached either to fatty acid hydrocarbon chains or to the Ca-ATPase in SR. We confirm previous studies (Salama, G., and Scarpa, A. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 6525-6528; Salama, G., and Scarpa, A. (1983) Biochem. Pharmacol. 32, 3465-3477; Kidd, A., Scales, D., and Inesi, G. (1981) Biochem. Biophys. Acta 65, 124-131) reporting that addition of diethyl ether to SR results in an approximately 2-fold enzymatic activation, without loss of coupling. Diethyl ether progressively fluidizes the SR membrane with respect to lipid hydrocarbon chain dynamics probed at several depths in the bilayer. Digital substractions, used to analyze two-component lipid spin label spectra, reveal that a 2-fold mobilization occurs in the population of lipid probes motionally restricted by the protein, while the remaining more mobile population is less affected. The microwave saturation properties of lipid probes also indicate that restricted motions of these probes are mobilized in maximally activated SR membranes. Saturation-transfer EPR, applied to maleimide spin-labeled Ca-ATPase, demonstrates that a 2-fold increase in microsecond rotational motion of the Ca-ATPase correlates with the maximal enzymatic activation. Effects of diethyl ether on both the enzymatic activity and molecular dynamics are completely reversible by dilution with buffer. We propose that ether activates by selectively mobilizing lipid chains adjacent to the enzyme, thus facilitating protein motions that are essential for calcium transport.  相似文献   

9.
A comparative study of the effect of an experimental hypercholesterolemia and in vitro induced lipid peroxidation (LPO) on the temperature dependence of the activity of sarcoplasmic reticular Ca-ATPase from rabbit skeletal muscle (SR) has been performed. A control Arrhenius plot of ATPase activity determined in the presence of alamethicin was characterized by discontinuity in the 20 degrees C area. Both in vitro induced LPO and hypercholesterolemia resulted in a shift of discontinuity to 30 degrees C area. The replacement of lipid Ca-ATPase membrane environment by egg yolk lecithin did not affect the temperature dependence of the activity in control SR and failed to restore the original nature of the Arrhenius plot for Ca-ATPase modified by hypercholesterolemia or the in vitro induced LPO.  相似文献   

10.
Skeletal muscle sarcolemma (SL), transverse tubule (TT) and heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum (HSR) membranes were isolated from malignant hyperthermia susceptible (MHS) and normal pigs, and the rotational dynamics of lipid hydrocarbon chain motion was examined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The stearic acid spin probe 16-SASL was incorporated into MHS and normal membranes and both the order parameter (S) and effective correlation time (tau r) of probe motion were calculated from spectra recorded over the temperature range of 2 to 40 degrees C. At any given temperature, TT membranes exhibited significantly greater values for both the S and tau r of probe motion than did SL, which exhibited significantly greater values than did HSR membranes. The order of decreasing S and tau r values for 16-SASL mobility correlated with the decreasing cholesterol content of these membranes (TT greater than SL greater than HSR), however there was no difference in the S or tau r values for a given membrane fraction isolated from both MHS and normal muscle. Arrhenius plots of 16-SASL mobility in SL, TT and HSR were linear from 2 to 40 degrees C, indicating no abrupt thermotropic change in the lipid hydrocarbon phase of any of the membrane types studied. Apparent activation energies (Ea), calculated from the Arrhenius plots, were similar for MHS and normal membranes derived from a given cellular location. However, the Ea of probe motion for TT membranes (2.3 +/- 0.1 and 2.4 +/- 0.1 kcal/mol/degree for MHS and normal, respectively) was significantly less than for SL (3.4 +/- 0.4 and 2.9 +/- 0.1 kcal/mol/degree for MHS and normal, respectively) which, in turn, was significantly less than the Ea for HSR (3.7 +/- 0.1 and 3.7 +/- 0.1 kcal/mol/degree for MHS and normal, respectively). Since 16-SASL motion was similar in MHS and normal membranes, we conclude that there is no evidence for a generalized membrane defect affecting lipid mobility in these MHS muscle membranes.  相似文献   

11.
J Voss  W Birmachu  D M Hussey  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(30):7498-7506
We have studied the effect of melittin, a basic membrane-binding peptide, on Ca-ATPase activity and on protein and lipid dynamics in skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using time-resolved phosphorescence and fluorescence spectroscopy. Melittin completely inhibits Ca-ATPase activity, with half-maximal inhibition at 9 +/- 1 mol of melittin bound to the membrane per mole of ATPase (0.1 mol of melittin per mole of lipid). The time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) decay of the Ca-ATPase labeled with erythrosin isothiocyanate (ERITC) shows that melittin restricts microsecond protein rotational motion. At 25 degrees C in the absence of melittin, the TPA is characterized by three decay components, corresponding to a rapid segmental motion (correlation time phi 1 = 2-3 microseconds), the uniaxial rotation of monomers or dimers (phi 2 = 16-22 microseconds), and the uniaxial rotation of larger oligomers (phi 3 = 90-140 microseconds). The effect of melittin is primarily to decrease the fraction of the more mobile monomer/dimer species (A2) while increasing the fractions of the larger oligomer (A3) and very large aggregates (A infinity). Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of the lipid-soluble probe diphenylhexatriene (DPH) shows only a slight increase in the lipid hydrocarbon chain effective order parameter, corresponding to an increase in lipid viscosity that is too small to account for the large decrease in protein mobility or inhibition of Ca-ATPase activity. Thus the inhibitory effect of melittin correlates with its capacity to aggregate the Ca-ATPase and is consistent with previously reported inhibition of this enzyme under conditions that increase protein-protein interactions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
K H Cheng  J R Lepock 《Biochemistry》1992,31(16):4074-4080
Calcium uptake by rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is inhibited with an effective inactivation temperature (TI) of 37 degrees C in EGTA with no effect on ATPase activity. Since the Ca-ATPase denatures at a much higher temperature (49 degrees C) in EGTA, this suggests that a small or localized conformational change of the Ca-ATPase at 37 degrees C results in inability to accumulate calcium by the SR. Using a fluorescent analogue of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, N-cyclohexyl-N'-[4-(dimethylamino)-alpha-naphthyl]-carbodiimide (NCD-4), the region of the calcium binding sites of the SR Ca-ATPase was labeled. Steady-state and frequency-resolved fluorescence measurements were subsequently performed on the NCD-4-labeled Ca-ATPase. Site-specific information pertaining to the hydrophobicity and segmental flexibility of the region of the calcium binding sites was derived from the steady-state fluorescence intensity, lifetime, and rotational rate of the covalently bound NCD-4 label as a function of temperature (0-50 degrees C). A reversible transition at approximately 15 degrees C and an irreversible transition at approximately 35 degrees C were deduced from the measured fluorescence parameters. The low-temperature transition agrees with the previously observed break in the Arrhenius plot of ATPase activity of the native Ca-ATPase at 15-20 degrees C. The high-temperature transition conforms well with the conformational transition, resulting in uncoupling of Ca translocation from ATP hydrolysis as predicted from the irreversible inactivation of Ca uptake at 31-37 degrees C in 1 mM EGTA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
We have determined directly the effects of the inhibitory peptide phospholamban (PLB) on the rotational dynamics of the calcium pump (Ca-ATPase) of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). This was accomplished by comparing mouse ventricular SR, which has PLB levels similar to those found in other mammals, with mouse atrial SR, which is effectively devoid of PLB and thus has much higher (unregulated) calcium pump activity. To obtain sufficient quantities of atrial SR, we isolated the membranes from atrial tumor cells. We used time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy of an erythrosin isothiocyanate label attached selectively and rigidly to the Ca-ATPase, to detect the microsecond rotational motion of the Ca-ATPase in the two preparations. The time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy decays of both preparations at 25 degrees C were multi-exponential, because of the presence of different oligomeric species. The rotational correlation times for the different oligomers were similar for the two preparations, but the total decay amplitude was substantially greater for atrial tumor SR, indicating that a smaller fraction of the Ca-ATPase molecules exists as large aggregates. Phosphorylation of PLB in ventricular SR decreased the population of large-scale Ca-ATPase aggregates to a level similar to that of atrial tumor SR. Lipid chain mobility (fluidity), detected by electron paramagnetic resonance of stearic acid spin labels, was very similar in the two preparations, indicating that the higher protein mobility in atrial tumor SR is not due to higher lipid fluidity. We conclude that PLB inhibits by inducing Ca-ATPase lateral aggregation, which can be relieved either by phosphorylating or removing PLB.  相似文献   

14.
S M Lewis  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4615-4621
We have studied the effects of vanadate on the rotational motion of the calcium adenosine-triphosphatase (Ca-ATPase) from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR). Vanadate has been proposed to act as a phosphate analogue and produce a stable intermediate state similar to the phosphoenzyme. This study provides evidence about the physical state of this intermediate. In particular, since ST-EPR provides a sensitive measure of microsecond protein rotational mobility, and hence of protein-protein association, these studies allowed us to ask (a) whether the vanadate-induced protein association observed in electron micrographs of SR vesicles also occurs under physiological (as opposed to fixed, stained, or frozen) conditions and (b) whether vanadate-induced changes in protein association also occur under conditions sufficient for enzyme inhibition but not for the production of large arrays detectable by electron microscopy (EM). At 5 mM decavanadate, a concentration sufficient to crystallize the ATPase on greater than 90% of the membrane surface area in EM, ST-EPR showed substantial immobilization of the spin-labeled protein, indicating protein-protein association in the unstained vesicles. Conventional EPR spectra of lipid probes showed that lipid hydrocarbon chain mobility is unaffected by decavanadate-induced protein crystallization in SR, suggesting that changes in protein-protein contacts do not involve the lipid hydrocarbon region. At 5 mM monovanadate, a concentration sufficient to inhibit the ATPase but not to form crystals detectable by EM, no changes were observed in ST-EPR or conventional EPR spectra of either protein or lipid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The effects of temperature on reconstituted sarcoplasmic Ca-ATPase preparations from vitamin E-deficient dystrophic and control rabbits were studied. Delipidated Ca-ATPase from vitamin E-deficient sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) reconstituted with lipid of control SR exhibited properties similar to preparations reconstituted with lipid of vitamin E-deficient SR, namely low Ca-ATPase activity and a linear Arrhenius plot of enzyme activity. On the other hand, delipidated control SR Ca-ATPase reconstituted with lipid of vitamin E-deficient SR showed a reduction in activity but retained the discontinuity in the Arrhenius plot. These results indicated that the altered property of sarcoplasmic Ca-ATPase from vitamin E-deficient dystrophic rabbit was associated with the protein and not the lipid component.  相似文献   

16.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fragments from the skeletal muscles of rabbit with marked atherosclerosis possessed decreased Ca2+-accumulating capacity. Lowering of transport efficiency, namely reduction of the Ca/ATP ratio from 1.9--normal value--to 0.9 during the experiment at 26 degrees C was accompanied by activation of Ca-ATPase and simultaneously of the rate of Ca2+ outflux from the SR. Arrhenius plots of Ca-ATPase temperature dependence characterized under normal conditions by a break at 20--21 degrees C was linearized under hypercholesterolemia. At the same time there was a rise (from 0.03 under normal conditions to 0.15 in atherosclerosis) of cholesterol/protein ratio in the SR membrane preparations. Activation energy for Ca-ATPase crude membranes under normal conditions was equal to 15.6 and 28.7 kcal/mol above and below the break point respectively; this value for Ca-ATPase of membranes with increased cholesterol level was 19 kcal/mol for all the temperatures investigated.  相似文献   

17.
The Arrhenius plots of electron transport activity in cytochrome c oxidase reconstituted with well-defined phospholipids have been shown to display a change in slope at 20--25 degrees C regardless of the chemical nature of the incorporated lipid. In native membranous cytochrome c oxidase, the discontinuity in Arrhenius activity plot occurred at 16--18 degrees C. These temperature breaks were found to correlate with changes in spin-label mobilities but not with the bulk lipid transition observed by differential scanning calorimetry. Temperature-dependent reciprocal equilibrium between the immobilized and fluid pools is demonstrated. It is suggested that the changes in kinetic and spin-label spectral characteristics in cytochrome c oxidase membranes are related very likely to a lipid-protein interaction prompted by a thermally induced change in the physical state of the lipids that does not involve a gel to liquid crystalline transition.  相似文献   

18.
By means of saturation transfer electron spin resonance spectroscopy the rotational motion of spin-labeled Ca2+-dependent ATPase molecules has been investigated for three kinds of preparations of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum: MacLennan's enzyme (purified ATPase preparation), DOPC- and egg PC-ATPase (purified ATPase preparations in which endogenous lipids are replaced with dioleoyl and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine, respectively). The rotational mobility of the enzyme in these preparations is somewhat lower than that in the intact membrane, probably due to the reduced amount of lipids. For all the preparations, however, the Arrhenius plot for rotational mobility showed a break at about 18 degrees C, the same temperature at which a break in the Arrhenius plot for Ca2+-ATPase activity occurs. This result provides further evidence that the break in the Arrhenius plot is not related to a lipid phase transition but to a change in the physical state of the Ca2+-ATPase molecule existing in fluid lipids.  相似文献   

19.
Studies were carried out of temperature relationship of dansylchloride, N-3-pyrenylmaleinimide fluorescence, SR membranes, self-luminescence caused by Ca-ATPase tryptophane - provided fluorescence and of pyrene excimerization in membrane preparations of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of rabbit skeletal muscles. Temperature relationship of fluorescence intensity of dansylchloride and N-3-pyrenylmaleimide in Arrhenius coordinates has bends at 15 and 35 degrees. Selffluorescence of protein samples linearly depends on temperature. Temperature relationship of the ratio between the intensities of exsimeric and monomeric forms of pyrene Fa/Fm in Arrhenius coordinates has the bend at 20-22 degrees. Hence only the latter relationship coincides with the shape of Arrhenius graph for enzymatic activity of SR Ca-ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
The hydrophobic spin label used in ESR showed that the iminoxyl radical rotation in the native membrane of sarcoplasmatic reticulum (SR) occurred much faster than in the membranes, modified by a synthetic lipid. Such effect was observed throughout the whole temperature range (7-40 degrees). Experimental technique for the modification of the SR membrane and the lipid by ultrasonic treatment has been developed. Synthetic lipids without ultrasonic treatment did not inhibit the activity of Ca2+-ATPase. The change in both the enzyme activity and its ability to transport the Ca2+ ions through the membrane vesicules was observed after the phospholipids incorporation into the SR membrane. The investigation of the temperature dependence (in Arrhenius coordinates) of native and modified by lecithin Ca2+-ATPase after ultrasonic treatment and also of a "pure enzyme" showed the presence of two sharp breaks at 20 degrees and 40-42 degrees. It was shown tha the break of an Arrhenius anamorphosis was caused by a lipid environment of ATPase, "melting" of a phospholipid bilayer. The break at 20-22 degrees was observed in all cases and even after the incorporation of all the lipids into the SR membrane. This phenomenon can be explained by the distortion of the protein-lipid interaction, affecting the conformation mobility of protein and the geometry of its catalytically active center.  相似文献   

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