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1.
At least four of the intermediate states of Ca2+-ATPase (and presumably ion transport) can be trapped and characterized using water proton relaxation measurements. Gd3+ binds to two occluded Ca2+ transport sites on Ca2+-ATPase which have a low accessibility to solvent water. In the presence of the MgATP analogue Co(NH3)4AMPPCP, a new state for bound Gd3+ with one less water of hydration) is observed. In the presence of Co(NH3)4ATP or ATP, two additional states for bound Gd3+ are detected by NMR, the first of which probably represents an intermediate state of ATP hydrolysis. The latter is the most occluded Gd3+ site yet observed in these studies and corresponds to the highly occluded E1-P state observed with CrATP (Vilsen and Andersen, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 898, 313 (1987).  相似文献   

2.
The MgATP complex analogue cobalt-tetrammine-ATP [Co(NH3)4ATP] inactivates (Na+ + K+)-ATPase at 37 degrees C slowly in the absence of univalent cations. This inactivation occurs concomitantly with incorporation of radioactivity from [alpha-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP and from [gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP into the alpha subunit. The kinetics of inactivation are consistent with the formation of a dissociable complex of Co(NH3)4ATP with the enzyme (E) followed by the phosphorylation of the enzyme: (Formula: see text). The dissociation constant of the enzyme-MgATP analogue complex at 37 degrees C is Kd = 500 microM, the inactivation rate constant k2 = 0.05 min-1. ATP protects the enzyme against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4ATP due to binding at a site from which it dissociates with a Kd of 360 microM. It is concluded, therefore, that Co(NH3)4ATP binds to the low-affinity ATP binding site of the E2 conformational state. K+, Na+ and Mg2+ protect the enzyme against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4ATP. Whilst Na+ or Mg2+ decrease the inactivation rate constant k2, K+ exerts its protective effect by increasing the dissociation constant of the enzyme.Co(NH3)4ATP complex. The Co(NH3)4ATP-inactivated (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, in contrast to the non-inactivated enzyme, incorporates [3H]ouabain. This indicates that the Co(NH3)4ATP-inactivated enzyme is stabilized in the E2 conformational state. Despite the inactivation of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by Co(NH3)4ATP from the low-affinity ATP binding site, there is no change in the capacity of the high-affinity ATP binding site (Kd = 0.9 microM) nor of its capability to phosphorylate the enzyme Na+-dependently. Since (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is phosphorylated Na+-dependently from the high-affinity ATP binding site although the catalytic cycle is arrested in the E2 conformational state by specific modification of the low-affinity ATP binding site, it is concluded that both ATP binding sites coexist at the same time in the working sodium pump. This demonstration of interacting catalytic subunits in the E1 and E2 conformational states excludes the proposal that a single catalytic subunit catalyzes (Na+ + K+)-transport.  相似文献   

3.
The addition of nanomolar concentrations of free Fe2+, Mn2+, or Co2+ to rat liver plasma membranes resulted in an activation of ATP hydrolysis by these membranes which was not additive with the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activity coupled to the Ca2+ pump. Detailed analysis showed that, if fact, (i) as for the stimulation of (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase by Ca2+, activation of ATP hydrolysis by Fe2+, Mn3+, or Co2+ followed a cooperative mechanism involving two ions; (ii) two interacting sites for ATP were involved in the activation of both Fe2+- and Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activities; (iii) micromolar concentrations of magnesium caused the same dramatic inhibition of both activities; and (iv) the subcellular distribution of Fe2+-activated ATP hydrolysis activity corresponded to that of plasma membrane markers. This suggests that the (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase might be stimulated not only by Ca2+, but also by Fe2+, Mn2+, or Co2+. However, interaction of (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase with Fe2+, Mn2+, or Co2+ inhibited the Ca2+ pump activity. Furthermore, neither the formation of the phosphorylated intermediate of (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase, nor ATP-dependent (59Fe) uptake could be detected in the presence of Fe2+ concentrations which stimulated ATP hydrolysis. We conclude that: (i) under the influence of certain metal ions, the Ca2+ pump in the liver plasma membrane may be switched to an uncoupled state which displays ATP hydrolysis activity, but does not insure ion transport; (ii) therefore the Ca2+ pump in liver plasma membranes specifically insures Ca2+ transport.  相似文献   

4.
M C Maurer  J J Sando  C M Grisham 《Biochemistry》1992,31(33):7714-7721
Water proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation rates were used to identify metal sites on protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes alpha and beta using paramagnetic Gd3+ as a probe. The paramagnetic effect of Gd3+ on water proton relaxation was enhanced with PKC isozymes alpha and beta in the presence of diheptanoylphosphatidylcholine/1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerol (PC7/DO). The data are consistent with a single class of metal-binding sites on PKC beta and two classes of sites on PKC alpha: a single high-affinity site with a KD for Gd3+ of 0.2 microM and a larger class of sites with a lower affinity for Gd3+. Titration with Ca2+ abolished the observed enhancement of water proton relaxation by the PKC alpha.Gd3+ complex, consistent with displacement of Gd3+ by Ca2+. Titrations of the PKC alpha.Gd3+ complex with Co(NH3)4ATP, a substitution-inert analogue of ATP, caused a substantial decrease in the observed water proton relaxation enhancement, consistent with formation of a ternary enzyme.metal.substrate complex with a KPKC alpha.Gd.[CoATP] of 30-100 nM. Titration of the metal enzyme complex with a model peptide substrate derived from the pseudosubstrate sequence of PKC alpha caused a similar decrease in enhancement at stoichiometric concentrations consistent with the formation of a PKC alpha.Gd3+.peptide complex with a KPKC alpha.Gd.[peptide] of less than or equal to 13 nM. Titrations of the fully formed PKC alpha.Gd3+.peptide complex with Co(NH3)4ATP caused a further decrease in enhancement consistent with formation of a quaternary complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase has been shown to bind gadolinium ion (Gd3+) at two high affinity Ca2+ sites (Stephens, E. M., and Grisham, C. M. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 4876-4885). Gd3+ bound at these sites exhibits an unusually long electron spin relaxation time, consistent with occlusion of these sites and reduced contact with solvent H2O. In this report, the nature of the Gd3+ sites was examined in preparations of the enzyme solubilized with the detergent C12E8. The frequency dependence of water proton relaxation in solutions containing the solubilized Ca2+-ATPase yields dipolar correlation times, tau c, for the 1H-Gd3+ interaction of 1.04 X 10(-9) s for Gd3+ bound at site 1 and 1.98 X 10(-9) s for Gd3+ bound at site 2. The correlation time itself is frequency dependent below 30 MHz, indicating that the correlation time is dominated by the electron spin relaxation time of bound Gd3+. The long values of the correlation time found in the present study are consistent with a poor accessibility of these Gd3+ sites (particularly site 2) to solvent water molecules. Analytical ultracentrifugation and molecular sieve high performance liquid chromatography indicated that the active fraction of the soluble Ca2+-ATPase was monomeric. Thus occlusion of the Ca2+ sites in this enzyme is largely dependent on the tertiary structure of the monomeric ATPase and does not appear to depend on multimeric membrane structures.  相似文献   

6.
The beta, gamma-bidentate chromium(III) complex of ATP (CrATP) was used as a substrate analog to stabilize a form of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of the sarcoplasmic reticulum containing both of the bound calcium ions in an occluded state without enzyme phosphorylation. The kinetics of dissociation of Ca2+ from the occlusion sites in the CrATP-enzyme complex were consistent with the existence of two nonequivalent and interdependent Ca2+ occlusion sites, both in the membranous Ca(2+)-ATPase and in a detergent-solubilized monomeric Ca(2+)-ATPase preparation. The rate constant for release of the first calcium ion was k1 = 0.99 h-1, whereas the second calcium ion was released with a rate constant of k2 = 0.25 h-1 when the first site was empty and with a rate constant of k3 = 0.13 h-1 when the first site was occupied by Ca2+. Ca2+ binding at the first site occurred with a rate constant of k-1 = 0.96 microM-1 h-1 (apparent Kd = 1.0 microM). The Ca(2+)-occluded state was further stabilized by ADP, binding in exchange with ATP with an apparent Kd of 8.6 microM. Two kinetic classes of CrATP-binding sites were observed, each with a stoichiometry of 3-4 nmol/mg of protein; but only the fast phase of CrATP binding was associated with Ca2+ occlusion. Derivatization of the Ca(2+)-ATPase with N-cyclohexyl-N'-(4-dimethylamino-1-naphthyl)carbodimide resulted in inactivation of phosphorylation of the enzyme from MgATP, whereas the ability to occlude Ca2+ in the presence of CrATP was retained, albeit with a reduced apparent affinity for Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
Gd3+ binding sites on the purified Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum were characterized at 2 and 6 degrees C and pH 7.0 under conditions in which 45Ca2+ and 54Mn2+ specifically labeled the calcium transport site and the catalytic site of the enzyme, respectively. We detected several classes of Gd3+ binding sites that affected enzyme function: (a) Gd3+ exchanged with 54Mn2+ of the 54MnATP complex bound at the catalytic site. This permitted slow phosphorylation of the enzyme when two Ca2+ ions were bound at the transport site. The Gd3+ ion bound at the catalytic site inhibited decomposition of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme. (b) High-affinity binding of Gd3+ to site(s) distinct from both the transport site and the catalytic site inhibited the decomposition of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme. (c) Gd3+ enhanced 4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole (NBD) fluorescence in NBD-modified enzyme by probably binding to the Mg2+ site that is distinct from both the transport site and the catalytic site. (d) Gd3+ inhibited high-affinity binding of 45Ca2+ to the transport site not by directly competing with Ca2+ for the transport site but by occupying site(s) other than the transport site. This conclusion was based mainly on the result of kinetic analysis of displacement of the enzyme-bound 45Ca2+ ions by Gd3+ and vice versa, and the inability of Gd3+ to phosphorylate the enzyme under conditions in which GdATP served as a substrate. These results strongly suggest that Ln3+ ions cannot be used as probes to structurally and functionally characterize the calcium transport site on the Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase with the Mg.ATP analogues Rh(H2O)4ATP and Co(NH3)4ATP have been examined. Co(NH3)4ATP slowly inactivates Ca(2+)-ATPase in a first order process, with a rate constant of 1.13 x 10(-3) s-1 and an apparent inactivation constant, KI, of 32 mM. Rh(H2O)4ATP likewise inactivates sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, but the plot of reciprocal apparent inactivation rate constants versus 1/[Rh(H2O)4ATP] is biphasic. The chi-intercepts of this plot yield apparent inactivation constants for the inhibition of Ca(2+)-ATPase by Rh(H2O)4ATP of KI1 = 30 microM and KI2 = 221 microM. The corresponding values of k2, the maximal first-order rate constant for inhibition in these two phases, are 1.16 and 2.19 x 10(-4)s-1. Tridentate Rh(H2O)3ATP also inhibits Ca(2+)-ATPase, but only after much longer incubation times. Ca(2+)-ATPase inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of radioactivity from gamma-32P into an acid-precipitable enzyme. Both processes were dependent on the presence of Ca2+ ions and were quenched by excess ATP. The first-order rate constant for inactivation of Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity in this experiment was 2.19 x 10(-4)s-1, and the first-order rate constant for Ca(2+)-dependent E-P formation was 2.07 x 10(-4)s-1, in excellent agreement with the value for inactivation. A linear relationship is observed between ATPase inactivation and E-P formation. Moreover, atomic absorption analysis demonstrates that the phosphorylation of Ca(2+)-ATPase by Rh(H2O)4ATP is accompanied by incorporation and tight binding of rhodium, with a stoichiometry of one rhodium incorporated per ATPase molecule phosphorylated. The characteristics of ATPase inactivation and phosphorylation (i.e., Ca2+ dependence, ATP competition, agreement of rate constants, and stoichiometric rhodium incorporation) suggest that Rh(H2O)4ATP is binding to the catalytic nucleotide site on Ca(2+)-ATPase and producing a highly stable, phosphorylated intermediate.  相似文献   

9.
45Ca2+-40Ca2+ exchangeability of 45Ca bound to the calcium transport sites of unphosphorylated sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase at equilibrium has been found to be heterogeneous: Half of the bound calcium is [Ca2+]-dependent in a slowly exchangeable (k less than 0.3 s-1), "occluded" state in the Ca2+-ATPase, and the other calcium is [Ca2+]-independent in a rapidly exchangeable (k approximately 0.3 s-1), "unoccluded" state (Nakamura, J. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 870, 495-501). In this paper, the two different forms of exchangeable calcium were studied after phosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP without added Mg2+ at pH 7.0 and 0 degree C. By the phosphorylation, the degree of the occlusion became higher (k less than 0.03 s-1). The unoccluded calcium was, however, not significantly affected. The more highly occluded calcium exchanged at the same rate as the decay rate of the phosphoenzyme (EP) in the steady state at a ratio of about 1:1. The occluded calcium was relieved by dephosphorylation of EP by ADP. These results suggest that 1 mol of ADP-sensitive EP more highly occluded 1 mol of calcium, already occluded before phosphorylation. After transformation of ADP-sensitive EP to its ADP-insensitive form by the addition of 20 mM Mg2+ at pH 8.8, the unoccluded calcium was rapidly (k = 0.1-0.3 s-1) released from the transformed EP. However, the occluded calcium was maintained in an occluded state in which the calcium was slowly (k approximately 0.01 s-1) released from the EP without exchange. The results suggest that calcium occlusion in the ADP-sensitive EP is not relieved by the loss of ADP sensitivity of the EP itself.  相似文献   

10.
The molecular environment of Ca2+ translocating sites of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase has been studied by pulsed-laser excited luminescence of Eu3+ used as a Ca2+ analogue. Interaction of Eu3+ with SR was characterized by investigating its effect on partial reactions of the Ca2+ transport cycle. In native SR vesicles, Eu3+ was found to inhibit Ca2+ binding, phosphoenzyme formation, ATP hydrolysis activity and Ca2+ uptake in parallel fashion. The non-specific binding of Eu3+ to acidic phospholipids associated with the enzyme was prevented by purifying (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase and exchanging the endogenous lipids with a neutral phospholipid, dioleoylglycerophosphocholine. The results demonstrate that the observed inhibition of Ca2+ transport by Eu3+ is due to its binding to Ca2+ translocating sites. The 7F0----5D0 transition of Eu3+ bound to these sites was monitored. The non-Lorentzian nature of the excitation profile and a double-exponential fluorescence decay revealed the heterogeneity of the two sites. Measurement of fluorescence decay rates in H2O/D2O mixture buffers further distinguished the sites. The number of water molecules in the first co-ordination sphere of Eu3+ bound at transport sites were found to be 4 and 1.5. Addition of ATP reduced these numbers to zero and 0.6. These data show that the calcium ions in translocating sites are well enclosed by protein ligands and are further occluded down to zero or one water molecule of solvation during the transport process.  相似文献   

11.
E M Stephens  C M Grisham 《Biochemistry》1979,18(22):4876-4885
The interactions of gadolinium ion, lithium, and two substrate analogues, beta,gamma-imido-ATP (AMP-PNP) and tridentate CrATP, with the calcium ion transport adenosine triphosphatase (Ca2+-ATPase) of rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum have been examined by using 7Li+ NMR, water proton NMR, and Gd3+ EPR studies. Steady-state phosphorylation studies indicate that Gd3+ binds to the Ca2+ activator sites on the enzyme with an affinity which is approximately 10 times greater than that of Ca2+. 7Li+, which activates the Ca2+-ATPase in place of K+, has been found to be a suitable nucleus for probing the active sites of monovalent cation-requiring enzymes. 7Li+ nuclear relaxation studies demonstrate that the binding of Gd3+ ion to the two Ca2+ sites on Ca2+-ATPase increases the longitudinal relaxation rate (1/T1) of enzyme-bound Li+. The increase in 1/T1 was not observed in the absence of enzyme, indicating that the ATPase enhances the parmagnetic effect of Gd3+ on 1/T1 of 7Li+. Water proton relaxation studies also show that the ATPase binds Gd3+ at two tight-binding sites. Titrations of Gd3+ solutions with Ca2+-ATPase indicate that the tighter of the two Gd3+-binding sites (site 1) provides a ghigher enhancement of water relaxation than the other, weaker Gd3+ site (site 2) and also indicate that the average of the enhancements at the two sites is 7.4. These data, together with a titration of the ATPase with Gd3+ ion, yield enhancements, epsilonB, of 9.4 at site 1 and 5.4 at site 2. Analysis of the frequency dependence of 1/T1 of water indicates that the electron spin relaxation taus of Gd3+ is unusually long (2 X 10(-9) s) and suggests that the Ca2+-binding sites on the ATPase experience a reduced accessiblity of solvent water. This may indicate that the Ca2+ sites on the Ca2+-ATPase are buried or occluded within a cleft or channel in the enzyme. The analysis of the frequency dependence is also consistent with three exchangeable water protons on Gd3+ at site 1 and two fast exchanging water protons at site 2. Addition of the nonhydrolyzing substrate analogues, AMP-PNP and tridenate CrATP, to the enzyme-Gd3+ complex results in a decrease in the observed enhancement, with little change in the dipolar correlation time for Gd3+, consistent with a substrate-induced decrease in the number of fast-exchanging water protons on enzyme-bound Gd3+. From the effect of Gd3+ on 1/T1 of enzyme-bound Li+, Gd3+-Li+ separations of 7.0 and 9.1 A are calculated. On the assumption of a single Li+ site on the enzyme, these distances set an upper limit on the separation between Ca2+ sites on the enzyme of 16.1 A.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of inhibition of the sarcoplamc reticulum (SR) Ca(2+)-ATPase by the fluoroaluminate complexes was investigated. First, AlF4- was shown to bind to the Ca(2+)-free conformation of the enzyme by a slow quasi-irreversible process. The rate constants of the reaction are k+ = 16 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 and k- < 1.5 10(-3) s-1. We directly measured a stoichiometry of about 4.8 nmol of AlF4- bound/mg of protein. Mg2+ was a necessary cofactor for the reaction with a dissociation constant of 3 mM. It was demonstrated (Dupont, Y., and Pougeois, R. (1983) FEBS Lett. 156, 93-98) that phosphorylation by P(i) induced a dehydration of the catalytic site. The same process has been shown here to occur upon AlF4- binding either by the use of Me2SO or by demonstration of an increase of bound 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienyldene)adenosine triphosphate fluorescence. Phosphorylation by P(i) is inhibited by the binding of AlF4-. Second, a fluoroaluminate complex, presumably AlF4-, was also shown to bind to the Ca(2+)-bound conformation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase in the presence of ADP and stabilize a E1.Ca2.ADP.AlFx complex. The dissociation constant of the nucleotidic site for ADP was shifted to the micromolar range. The Ca2+ ions bound on the external high affinity sites became occluded upon binding of (ADP + AlFx). We propose that AlF4- mimics P(i) binding to the Ca(2+)-free conformation of the ATPase and stabilizes an intermediate similar to the acyl-phosphate derivative; it also acts as an analogue of the gamma-phosphate of ATP and stabilizes an E1.[Ca2].ADP.AlF4 complex where the Ca2+ ions are occluded.  相似文献   

13.
Rapid release of 45Ca from an occluded state of the Na,K-pump   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
45Ca is bound to the occluded state of the Na,K-pump, apparently at K+ sites. Only one 45Ca ion is bound in place of two K+ ions, with an affinity approximately 0.08 mM; K+ competes with an apparent affinity approximately 0.04 mM. 45Ca is released rapidly from Na,K-ATPase in the presence of ATP or ADP, presumably to the intracellular medium. The rate constant of 45Ca release with ATP is greater than 100 s-1 at 20 degrees C, more than twice as fast as the rate of release of 42K from the occluded state. Phosphorylation of Na,K-ATPase with MgPi, which would lead to release of occluded K+ or Rb+ to the extracellular face of the membrane, stabilizes occluded 45Ca. 45Ca release is slower immediately after exposure to MgPi than after a rinse in the absence of Pi indicating that in the former circumstance the rate of 45Ca release is limited by dephosphorylation; 45Ca release is even slower after exposure to Mg2+ arsenate, consistent with dearsenylation being slower than dephosphorylation. When limited by dephosphorylation, the rate of 45Ca release is dependent on the species of monovalent cation present, increasing in the order N-methylglucamine less than Cs+ less than Li+ less than Na+ less than Rb+ less than K+. When the 45Ca occluded state is exposed to K + Mg + Pi and then to Na+ + Mg2+ + ATP, the exposure to K+ is "remembered," indicating simultaneous occlusion of 45Ca and K+. The apparent affinity for K+ in formation of this state is 10-50 mM, and the rate of release of K+ is approximately 2 s-1. Ca2+ has effects on the release of 86Rb from the occluded state: With ATP, Ca2+ acts like Mg2+ by stimulating 86Rb release at low concentrations and inhibiting at high concentrations; with MgPi, Ca2+ inhibits 86Rb release, presumably by preventing phosphorylation. Thus, Ca2+ has two actions on the Na,K-pump as studied here: one as a Mg2+ congener, and another as a K+ congener at transport sites. In the latter role Ca2+ is unusual in that it appears to be able to bind to the transport sites from the intracellular face of the pump and to become occluded, but unable to be released from extracellular sites.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of lanthanides with isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles from rabbit skeletal muscle and the effects of lanthanides on 45Ca2+ uptake by the vesicles were studied. 153Gd3+ was taken up by the vesicles in the absence of ATP and oxalate in a time-dependent manner, reaching a maximum total accumulation of 380 nmol 153Gd3+/mg protein after 20 min with 200 microM 153Gd3+. This 153Gd3+ accumulation was not washed out by 1 mM EGTA. The addition of ATP induced the release of 87% of the bound 153Gd3+, leaving behind irreversibly-accumulated 153Gd3+. Pre-incubation of the vesicles with lanthanides in the absence of ATP and oxalate inhibited 45Ca2+ uptake without affecting Ca2+-ATPase activity. The percent inhibition of 45Ca2+ uptake increased with length of pre-incubation of the vesicles with lanthanides, reaching 33% after 20 min of pre-incubation. Increasing the 45Ca2+ concentration or adding ATP or oxalate to the preincubation medium abolished these inhibitory effects on 45Ca2+ uptake.  相似文献   

15.
Interaction between Gd3+ and Tb3+ ions and Ca2+,Mg2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum was studied. Three classes of lanthanide-ion binding sites with different affinities were distinguished. Binding of Gd3+ to the site with the highest affinity seemed to occur at less than 10(-6)M free Gd3+ and resulted in severe inhibition of ATPase activity. The reaction rates of both E-P formation and decomposition in the forward direction were inhibited in parallel with this binding, whereas ADP-dependent decay of E-P in the backward direction was not. At these Gd3+ concentrations, Ca2+-binding to the transport site was not inhibited. Binding of Gd3+ and Tb3+ to the Ca2+-transport site did occur, but more than 10(-5)M free Gd3+ or Tb3+ was required for effective competition with Ca2+ for that site. Gd3+ bound to the transport site in place of Ca2+ did not activate the E-P intermediate formation. Addition of 10(-1)M Tb3+ to a suspension of sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes resulted in marked enhancement of Tb3+ fluorescence, which is due to an energy transfer from aromatic amino acid residues of ATPase to Tb3+ ions bound to the low affinity site of the enzyme. Gd3+ and Mn2+ competed with Tb3+ for that site, but Ca2+, Zn2+, and Cd2+ did not.  相似文献   

16.
C Klevickis  C M Grisham 《Biochemistry》1982,21(26):6979-6984
It has previously been shown that there are two sites for divalent metals at the active site of kidney (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, one bound directly to the enzyme and one coordinated to the ATP substrate [Grisham, C. (1981) J. Inorg. Biochem. 14, 45; O'Connor, S., & Grisham, C. (1980) FEBS Lett. 118, 303]. The conformation of the metal-nucleotide complex has been studied by using beta, gamma-bidentate Co-(NH3)4ATP, a substitution-inert analogue of MgATP. Kinetic studies show that Co(NH3)4ATP is a competitive inhibitor with respect to MnATP for the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. The Ki values under both high- and low-affinity conditions (Ki = 10 microM and Ki = 1.6 mM, respectively) are similar to the Km values for MnATP under the same conditions (2.88 microM and 0.902 mM). From the paramagnetic effect of Mn2+ bound to the ATPase on the longitudinal relaxation rates of the phosphorus nuclei of Co(NH3)4ATP at the substrate site (at 40.5 and 145.75 MHz), Mn-P distances to all three phosphates are determined. The distances are consistent with the formation of a second sphere coordination complex on the enzyme between Mn2+ and the phosphates of Co(NH3)4ATP. In this respect, kidney (Na+ + K+)-ATPase appears to be similar to pyruvate kinase [Sloan, D., & Mildvan, A. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 2412] and phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase [Granot, J., Gibson, K., Switzer, R., & Mildvan, A. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10931]. Roles for both of the active site divalent cations are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The exchange-inert tetra-ammino-chromium complex of ATP [Cr(NH3)4ATP], unlike the analogous cobalt complex Co(NH3)4ATP, inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase slowly by interacting with the high-affinity ATP binding site. The inactivation proceeded at 37 degrees C with an inactivation rate constant of 1.34 x 10(-3) min-1 and with a dissociation constant of 0.62 microM. To assess the potential role of the water ligands of metal in binding and inactivation, a kinetic analysis of the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(NH3)4ATP, and its H2O-substituted derivatives Cr(NH3)3(H2O)ATP, Cr(NH3)2(H2O)2ATP and Cr(H2O)4ATP was carried out. The substitution of the H2O ligands with NH3 ligands increased the apparent binding affinity and decreased the inactivation rate constants of the enzyme by these complexes. Inactivation by Cr(H2O)4ATP was 29-fold faster than the inactivation by Cr(NH3)4ATP. These results suggested that substitution to Cr(III) occurs during the inactivation of the enzyme. Additionally hydrogen bonding between water ligands of metal and the enzyme's active-site residues does not seem to play a significant role in the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(III)-ATP complexes. Inactivation of the enzyme by Rh(H2O)nATP occurred by binding of this analogue to the high-affinity ATP site with an apparent dissociation constant of 1.8 microM. The observed inactivation rate constant of 2.11 x 10(-3) min-1 became higher when Na+ or Mg2+ or both were present. The presence of K+ however, increased the dissociation constant without altering the inactivation rate constant. High concentrations of Na+ reactivated the Rh(H2O)nATP-inactivated enzyme. Co(NH3)4ATP inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase by binding to the low-affinity ATP binding site only at high concentrations. However, inactivation of the enzyme by Cr(III)-ATP or Rh(III)-ATP complexes was prevented when low concentrations of Co(NH3)4ATP were present. This indicates that, although Co(NH3)4ATP interacts with both ATP sites, inactivation occurs only through the low-affinity ATP site. Inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase was faster by the delta isomer of Co(NH3)4ATP than by the delta isomer. Co(NH3)4ATP, but not Cr(H2O)4ATP or adenosine 5'-[beta,gamma-methylene]triphosphate competitively inhibited K(+)-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of Na+/K(+)-ATPase, which is assumed to be a partial reaction of the enzyme catalyzed by the low-affinity ATP binding site.  相似文献   

18.
Cobalt ion inhibits the Ca2+ + Mg2(+)-ATPase activity of sealed sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles, of solubilized membranes and of the purified enzyme. To use Co2+ appropriately as a spectroscopic ruler to map functional sites of the Ca2+ + Mg2(+)-ATPase, we have carried out studies to obtain the kinetic parameters needed to define the experimental conditions to conduct the fluorimetric studies. 1. The apparent K0.5 values of inhibition of this ATPase are 1.4 mM, 4.8 mM and 9.5 mM total Co2+ at pH 8.0, 7.0 and 6.0, respectively. The inhibition by Co2+ is likely to be due to free Co2+ binding to the enzyme. Millimolar Ca2+ can fully reverse this inhibition, and also reverses the quenching of the fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes due to Co2+ binding to the Ca2+ + Mg2(+)-ATPase. Therefore, we conclude that Co2+ interacts with Ca2+ binding sites. 2. Co2+.ATP can be used as a substrate by this enzyme with Vmax of 2.4 +/- 0.2 mumol ATP hydrolyzed min-1 (mg protein)-1 at 20-22 degrees C and pH 8.0, and with a K0.5 of 0.4-0.5 mM. 3. Co2+ partially quenches, about 10 +/- 2%, the fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ + Mg2(+)-ATPase upon binding to this enzyme at pH 8.0. From the fluorescence data we have estimated an average distance between Co2+ and fluorescein in the ATPase of 1.1-1.8 nm or 1.3-2.1 nm for one or two equidistant Co2+ binding sites, respectively. 4. Co2+.ATP quenches about 20-25% of the fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled Ca2+ + Mg2(+)-ATPase, from which we obtain a distance of 1.1-1.9 nm between Co2+ and fluorescein located at neighbouring catalytic sites.  相似文献   

19.
The binding of Eu3+ with Ca2+-stimulated, Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase ([Ca2+ + Mg2+]-ATPase) of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) has been investigated using direct laser excited Eu3+ luminescence. Eu3+ is found to inhibit both Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity and Ca2+-uptake in a parallel manner. This is attributed to the binding of Eu3+ to the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites. The Ki for Ca2+-dependent ATPase is approximately 50 nM. The 7F0----5D0 excitation spectrum of Eu3+ in cardiac SR shows a peak at 579.3 nm, as compared to 578.8 nm in potassium-morpholino propane sulfonic acid (K-MOPS) pH 6.8. Upon binding with cardiac SR, Eu3+ shows an increase in fluorescence intensity as well as in lifetime values. The fluorescence decay of bound Eu3+ exhibits a double-exponential curve. The apparent number of water molecules in the first coordination sphere of Eu3+ in SR is 2.8 for the short component and 1.0 for the long component. In the presence of ATP, a further increase in fluorescence lifetimes is observed, and the number of water molecules in the first coordination sphere of Eu3+ is reduced further to 1.3 and 0.5. The double exponential nature of the decay curve and the different number of water molecules coordinated to Eu3+ for both decay components suggest that Eu3+ binds to two sites and that these are heterogeneous. The reduction in the number of H2O ligands in the presence of ATP shows a change in the molecular environment of the Eu3+-binding sites upon phosphoenzyme formation, with a movement of Eu3+ to an occluded site on the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by purified (Na,K)-ATPase from pig kidney was more sensitive to Mg2+ inhibition when measured in the presence of saturating Na+ and K+ concentrations [(Na,K)-ATPase] than in the presence of Na+ alone, either at saturating [(Na,Na)-ATPase] or limiting [(Na,0)-ATPase] Na+ concentrations. This was observed at two extreme concentrations of ATP (3 mM where the low-affinity site is involved and 3 microM where only the catalytic site is relevant), although Mg2+ inhibition was higher at low ATP concentration. In the case of (Na,Na)-ATPase activity, inhibition was barely observed even at 10 mM free Mg2+ when ATP was 3 mM. When (Na,K)-ATPase activity was measured at different fixed K+ concentrations the apparent Ki for Mg2+ inhibition was lower at higher monovalent cation concentration. When K+ was replaced by its congeners (Rb+, NH+4, Li+), Mg2+ inhibition was more pronounced in those cases in which the dephosphorylating cation forms a tighter enzyme-cation complex after dephosphorylation. This effect was independent of the ATP concentration, although inhibition was more marked at lower ATP for all the dephosphorylating cations. The K0.5 for ATP activation at its low-affinity site, when measured in the presence of different dephosphorylating cations, increased following the sequence Rb+ greater than K+ greater than NH+4 greater than Li+ greater than none. The K0.5 values were lower with 0.05 mM than with 10 mM free Mg2+ but the order was not modified. The trypsin inactivation pattern of (Na,K)-ATPase indicated that Mg2+ kept the enzyme in an E1 state. Addition of K+ changed the inactivation into that observed with the E2 enzyme form. On the other hand, K+ kept the enzyme in an E2 state and addition of Mg2+ changed it to an E1 form. The K0.5 for KCl-induced E1-to-E2 transformation (observed by trypsin inactivation profile) in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2 was about 0.9 mM. These results concur with two mechanisms for free Mg2+ inhibition of (Na,K)-ATPase: "product" and dead-end. The first would result from Mg2+ interaction with the enzyme in the E2(K) occluded state whereas the second would be brought about by a Mg2+-enzyme complex with the enzyme in an E1 state.  相似文献   

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