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1.
Anborgh PH  Okamura S  Parmeggiani A 《Biochemistry》2004,43(49):15550-15556
The antibiotic pulvomycin is an inhibitor of protein synthesis that prevents the formation of the ternary complex between elongation factor (EF-) Tu.GTP and aminoacyl-tRNA. In this report, novel aspects of its action on EF-Tu are described. Pulvomycin markedly affects the equilibrium and kinetics of the EF-Tu-nucleotide interaction, particularly of the EF-Tu.GTP complex. The binding affinity of EF-Tu for GTP is increased 1000 times, mainly as the consequence of a dramatic decrease in the dissociation rate of this complex. In contrast, the affinity for GDP is decreased 10-fold due to a marked increase in the dissociation rate of EF-Tu.GDP (25-fold) that mimics the action of EF-Ts, the GDP/GTP exchange factor of EF-Tu. The effects of pulvomycin and EF-Ts can coexist and are simply additive, supporting the conclusion that these two ligands interact with different sites of EF-Tu. This is further confirmed on native PAGE by the ability of EF-Tu to bind the EF-Ts and the antibiotic simultaneously. Pulvomycin enhances the intrinsic EF-Tu GTPase activity, like kirromycin, though to a much more modest extent. As with kirromycin, this stimulation depends on the concentration and nature of the monovalent cations, Li(+) being the most effective one, followed by Na(+), K(+), and NH(4)(+). In the presence of pulvomycin (in contrast to kirromycin), aa-tRNA and/or ribosomes do not enhance the GTPase activity of EF-Tu. The property of pulvomycin to modify selectively the conformation(s) of EF-Tu is also supported by its effect on heat- and urea-dependent denaturation, and tryptic digestion of the protein. Specific differences and similarities between the action of pulvomycin and the other EF-Tu-specific antibiotics are described and discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Both Cs(+) and NH(4)(+) alter neuronal Cl(-) homeostasis, yet the mechanisms have not been clearly elucidated. We hypothesized that these two cations altered the operation of the neuronal K(+)-Cl(-) cotransporter (KCC2). Using exogenously expressed KCC2 protein, we first examined the interaction of cations at the transport site of KCC2 by monitoring furosemide-sensitive (86)Rb(+) influx as a function of external Rb(+) concentration at different fixed external cation concentrations (Na(+), Li(+), K(+), Cs(+), and NH(4)(+)). Neither Na(+) nor Li(+) affected furosemide-sensitive (86)Rb(+) influx, indicating their inability to interact at the cation translocation site of KCC2. As expected for an enzyme that accepts Rb(+) and K(+) as alternate substrates, K(+) was a competitive inhibitor of Rb(+) transport by KCC2. Like K(+), both Cs(+) and NH(4)(+) behaved as competitive inhibitors of Rb(+) transport by KCC2, indicating their potential as transport substrates. Using ion chromatography to measure unidirectional Rb(+) and Cs(+) influxes, we determined that although KCC2 was capable of transporting Cs(+), it did so with a lower apparent affinity and maximal velocity compared with Rb(+). To assess NH(4)(+) transport by KCC2, we monitored intracellular pH (pH(i)) with a pH-sensitive fluorescent dye after an NH(4)(+)-induced alkaline load. Cells expressing KCC2 protein recovered pH(i) much more rapidly than untransfected cells, indicating that KCC2 can mediate net NH(4)(+) uptake. Consistent with KCC2-mediated NH(4)(+) transport, pH(i) recovery in KCC2-expressing cells could be inhibited by furosemide (200 microM) or removal of external [Cl(-)]. Thermodynamic and kinetic considerations of KCC2 operating in alternate transport modes can explain altered neuronal Cl(-) homeostasis in the presence of Cs(+) and NH(4)(+).  相似文献   

3.
The effect of monovalent cations on the thermal stability of a small model DNA hairpin has been measured by capillary electrophoresis, using an oligomer with 16 thymine residues as an unstructured control. The melting temperature of the model hairpin increases approximately linearly with the logarithm of increasing cation concentration in solutions containing Na(+), K(+), Li(+), NH(4)(+), Tris(+), tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)), or tetraethylammonium (TEA(+)) ions, is approximately independent of cation concentration in solutions containing tetrapropylammonium (TPA(+)) ions, and decreases with the logarithm of increasing cation concentration in solutions containing tetrabutylammonium (TBA(+)) ions. At constant cation concentration, the melting temperature of the DNA model hairpin decreases in the order Li(+) ~ Na(+) ~ K(+) > NH(4)(+) > TMA(+) > Tris(+) > TEA(+) > TPA(+) > TBA(+). Isothermal studies indicate that the decrease in the hairpin melting temperature with increasing cation hydrophobicity is not due to saturable, site-specific binding of the cation to the random coil conformation, but to the concomitant increase in cation size with increasing hydrophobicity. Larger cations are less effective at shielding the charged phosphate residues in B-form DNA because they cannot approach the DNA backbone as closely as smaller cations. By contrast, larger cations are relatively more effective at shielding the phosphate charges in the random coil conformation, where the phosphate-phosphate distance more closely matches cation size. Hydrophobic interactions between alkylammonium ions interacting electrostatically with the phosphate residues in the coil may amplify the effect of cation size on DNA thermal stability.  相似文献   

4.
C Ebel  P Faou  B Kernel  G Zaccai 《Biochemistry》1999,38(28):9039-9047
Halophilic malate dehydrogenase unfolds at low salt, and increasing the salt concentration stabilizes, first, the folded form and then, in some cases, destabilizes it. From inactivation and fluorescence measurements performed on the protein after its incubation in the presence of various salts in a large range of concentrations, the apparent effects of anions and cations were found to superimpose. A large range of ions was examined, including conditions that are in general not of physiological relevance, to explore the physical chemistry driving adaptation to extreme environments. The order of efficiency of cations and anions to maintain the folded form is, for the low-salt transition, Ca(2+) approximately Mg(2+) > Li(+) approximately NH(4)(+) approximately Na(+) > K(+) > Rb(+) > Cs(+), and SO(4)(2)(-) approximately OAc(-) approximately F(-) > Cl(-), and for the high-salt transition, NH(4)(+) approximately Na(+) approximately K(+) approximately Cs(+) > Li(+) > Mg(2+) > Ca(2+), and SO(4)(2)(-) approximately OAc(-) approximately F(-) > Cl(-) > Br(-) > I(-). If a cation or anion is very stabilizing, the effect of the salt ion of opposite charge is limited. Anions of high charge density are always the most efficient to stabilize the folded form, in accordance with the order found in the Hofmeister series, while cations of high charge density are the most efficient only at the lower salt concentrations and tend to denature the protein at higher salt concentrations. The stabilizing efficiency of cations and anions can be related in a minor way to their effect on the surface tension of the solution, but the interaction of ions with sites only present in the folded protein has also to be taken into account. Unfolding at high salt concentrations corresponds to interactions of anions of low charge density and cations of high charge density with the peptide bond, as found for nonhalophilic proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The guanine-nucleotide-binding domain (G domain) of elongation factor Tu(EF-Tu) consisting of 203 amino acid residues, corresponding to the N-terminal half of the molecule, has been recently engineered by deleting part of the tufA gene and partially characterized [Parmeggiani, A., Swart, G. W. M., Mortensen, K. K., Jensen, M., Clark, B. F. C., Dente, L. and Cortese, R. (1987) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 84, 3141-3145]. In an extension of this project we describe here the purification steps leading to the isolation of highly purified G domain in preparative amounts and a number of functional properties. The G domain is a relatively stable protein, though less stable than EF-Tu towards thermal denaturation (t50% = 41.3 degrees C vs. 46 degrees C, respectively). Unlike EF-Tu, its affinity for GDP and GTP, as well as the association and dissociation rates of the relative complexes are similar, as determined under a number of different experimental conditions. Like EF-Tu, the GTPase of the G domain is strongly enhanced by increasing concentrations of Li+, K+, Na+ or NH+4, up to the molar range. The effects of the specific cations shows similarities and diversities when compared to the effects on EF-Tu. K+ and Na+ are the most active followed by NH+4 and Li+ whilst Cs+ is inactive. In the presence of divalent cations, optimum stimulation occurs in the range 3-5 mM, Mg2+ being more effective than Mn2+ and Ca2+. Monovalent and divalent cations are both necessary components for expressing the intrinsic GTPase activity of the G domain. The pH curve of the G domain GTPase displays an optimum at pH 7-8, similar to that of EF-Tu. The 70-S ribosome is the only EF-Tu ligand affecting the G domain in the same manner as that observed with the intact molecule, although the extent of the stimulatory effect is lower. The rate of dissociation of the G domain complexes with GTP and GDP as well as the GTPase activity are also influenced by EF-Ts and kirromycin, but the effects evoked are small and in most cases different from those exerted on EF-Tu. The inability of the G domain to sustain poly(Phe) synthesis is in agreement with the apparent lack of formation of a ternary complex between the G domain.GTP complex and aa-tRNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The DNA sequence d(G(4)T(4)G(4)) [Oxy-1.5] consists of 1.5 units of the repeat in telomeres of Oxytricha nova and has been shown by NMR and X-ray crystallographic analysis to form a dimeric quadruplex structure with four guanine-quartets. However, the structure reported in the X-ray study has a fundamentally different conformation and folding topology compared to the solution structure. In order to elucidate the possible role of different counterions in this discrepancy and to investigate the conformational effects and dynamics of ion binding to G-quadruplex DNA, we compare results from further experiments using a variety of counterions, namely K(+), Na(+)and NH(4)(+). A detailed structure determination of Oxy-1.5 in solution in the presence of K(+)shows the same folding topology as previously reported with the same molecule in the presence of Na(+). Both conformations are symmetric dimeric quadruplexes with T(4)loops which span the diagonal of the end quartets. The stack of quartets shows only small differences in the presence of K(+)versus Na(+)counterions, but the T(4)loops adopt notably distinguishable conformations. Dynamic NMR analysis of the spectra of Oxy-1.5 in mixed Na(+)/K(+)solution reveals that there are at least three K(+)binding sites. Additional experiments in the presence of NH(4)(+)reveal the same topology and loop conformation as in the K(+)form and allow the direct localization of three central ions in the stack of quartets and further show that there are no specific NH(4)(+)binding sites in the T(4)loop. The location of bound NH(4)(+)with respect to the expected coordination sites for Na(+)binding provides a rationale for the difference observed for the structure of the T(4)loop in the Na(+)form, with respect to that observed for the K(+)and NH(4)(+)forms.  相似文献   

7.
Ono T  Rompel A  Mino H  Chiba N 《Biophysical journal》2001,81(4):1831-1840
Effects of adding monovalent alkali metal cations to Ca(2+)-depleted photosystem (PS)II membranes on the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of the oxygen-evolving complex were studied. The Ca(2+)-dependent oxygen evolution was competitively inhibited by K(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+), the ionic radii of which are larger than the radius of Ca(2+) but not inhibited significantly by Li(+) and Na(+), the ionic radii of which are smaller than that of Ca(2+). Ca(2+)-depleted membranes without metal cation supplementation showed normal S(2) multiline electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal and an S(2)Q(A)(-) thermoluminescence (TL) band with a normal peak temperature after illumination under conditions for single turnover of PSII. Membranes supplemented with Li(+) or Na(+) showed properties similar to those of the Ca(2+)-depleted membranes, except for a small difference in the TL peak temperatures. The peak temperature of the TL band of membranes supplemented with K(+), Rb(+), or Cs(+) was elevated to approximately 38 degrees C which coincided with that of Y(D)(+)Q(A)(-) TL band, and no S(2) EPR signals were detected. The K(+)-induced high-temperature TL band and the S(2)Q(A)(-) TL band were interconvertible by the addition of K(+) or Ca(2+) in the dark. Both the Ca(2+)-depleted and the K(+)-substituted membranes showed the narrow EPR signal corresponding to the S(2)Y(Z)(+) state at g = 2 by illuminating the membranes under multiple turnover conditions. These results indicate that the ionic radii of the cations occupying Ca(2+)-binding site crucially affect the properties of the manganese cluster.  相似文献   

8.
The GTPase activity of purified EF-1 alpha from calf brain has been studied under various experimental conditions and compared with that of EF-Tu. EF-1 alpha displays a much higher GTPase turnover than EF-Tu in the absence of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) and ribosomes (intrinsic GTPase activity); this is due to the higher exchange rate between bound GDP and free GTP. Also the intrinsic GTPase of EF-1 alpha is enhanced by increasing the concentration of monovalent cations, K+ being more effective than NH+4. Differently from EF-Tu, aa-tRNA is much more active than ribosomes in stimulating the EF-1 alpha GTPase activity. However, ribosomes strongly reinforce the aa-tRNA effect. In the absence of aa-tRNA the rate-limiting step of the GTPase turnover appears to be the hydrolysis of GTP, whereas in its presence the GDP/GTP exchange reaction becomes rate-limiting, since addition of EF-1 beta enhances turnover GTPase activity. Kirromycin moderately inhibits the intrinsic GTPase of EF-1 alpha; this effect turns into stimulation when aa-tRNA is present. Addition of ribosomes abolishes any kirromycin effect. The inability of kirromycin to affect the EF-1 alpha/guanine-nucleotide interaction in the presence of ribosomes shows that, differently from EF-Tu, the EF-1 alpha X GDP/GTP exchange reaction takes place on the ribosome.  相似文献   

9.
Ba(2+), a doubly charged analogue of K(+), specifically blocks K(+) channels by virtue of electrostatic stabilization in the permeation pathway. Ba(2+) block is used here as a tool to determine the equilibrium binding affinity for various monovalent cations at specific sites in the selectivity filter of a noninactivating mutant of KcsA. At high concentrations of external K(+), the block-time distribution is double exponential, marking at least two Ba(2+) sites in the selectivity filter, in accord with a Ba(2+)-containing crystal structure of KcsA. By analyzing block as a function of extracellular K(+), we determined the equilibrium dissociation constant of K(+) and of other monovalent cations at an extracellular site, presumably S1, to arrive at a selectivity sequence for binding at this site: Rb(+) (3 μM) > Cs(+) (23 μM) > K(+) (29 μM) > NH(4)(+) (440 μM) > Na(+) and Li(+) (>1 M). This represents an unusually high selectivity for K(+) over Na(+), with |ΔΔG(0)| of at least 7 kcal mol(-1). These results fit well with other kinetic measurements of selectivity as well as with the many crystal structures of KcsA in various ionic conditions.  相似文献   

10.
KcsA: it's a potassium channel   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Ion conduction and selectivity properties of KcsA, a bacterial ion channel of known structure, were studied in a planar lipid bilayer system at the single-channel level. Selectivity sequences for permeant ions were determined by symmetrical solution conductance (K(+) > Rb(+), NH(4)(+), Tl(+) > Cs(+), Na(+), Li(+)) and by reversal potentials under bi-ionic or mixed-ion conditions (Tl(+) > K(+) > Rb(+) > NH(4)(+) > Na(+), Li(+)). Determination of reversal potentials with submillivolt accuracy shows that K(+) is over 150-fold more permeant than Na(+). Variation of conductance with concentration under symmetrical salt conditions is complex, with at least two ion-binding processes revealing themselves: a high affinity process below 20 mM and a low affinity process over the range 100-1,000 mM. These properties are analogous to those seen in many eukaryotic K(+) channels, and they establish KcsA as a faithful structural model for ion permeation in eukaryotic K(+) channels.  相似文献   

11.
To better comprehend the role of gill ion regulatory mechanisms, the modulation by Na(+), K(+), NH(4)(+) and ATP of (Na(+), K(+))-ATPase activity was examined in a posterior gill microsomal fraction from the hermit crab, Clibanarius vittatus. Under saturating Mg(2+), Na(+) and K(+) concentrations, two well-defined ATP hydrolyzing sites were revealed. ATP was hydrolyzed at the high-affinity sites at a maximum rate of V=19.1+/-0.8 U mg(-1) and K(0.5)=63.8+/-2.9 nmol L(-1), obeying cooperative kinetics (n(H)=1.9); at the low-affinity sites, hydrolysis obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with K(M)=44.1+/-2.6 mumol L(-1) and V=123.5+/-6.1 U mg(-1). Stimulation by Na(+) (V=149.0+/-7.4 U mg(-1); K(M)=7.4+/-0.4 mmol L(-1)), Mg(2+) (V=132.0+/-5.3 U mg(-1); K(0.5)=0.36+/-0.02 mmol L(-1)), NH(4)(+) (V=245.6+/-9.8 U mg(-1); K(M)=4.5+/-0.2 mmol L(-1)) and K(+) (V=140.0+/-4.9 U mg(-1); K(M)=1.5+/-0.1 mmol L(-1)) followed a single saturation curve and, except for Mg(2+), obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Under optimal ionic conditions, but in the absence of NH(4)(+), ouabain (K(I)=117.3+/-3.5 mumol L(-1)) and orthovanadate inhibited up to 67% of the ATPase activity. The inhibition studies performed suggest the presence of F(0)F(1), V- and P-ATPases, but not Na(+)-, K(+)- or Ca(2+)-ATPases as contaminants in the gill microsomal preparation. (Na(+), K(+))-ATPase activity was synergistically modulated by NH(4)(+) and K(+). At 20 mmol L(-1) K(+), a maximum rate of V=290.8+/-14.5 U mg(-1) was seen as NH(4)(+) concentration was increased up to 50 mmol L(-1). However, at fixed NH(4)(+) concentrations, no additional stimulation was found for increasing K(+) concentrations (V=135.2+/-4.1 U mg(-1) and V=236.6+/-9.5 U mg(-1) and for 10 and 30 mmol L(-1) NH(4)(+), respectively). This is the first report to detail ionic modulation of gill (Na(+), K(+))-ATPase in C. vittatus, revealing an asymmetrical, synergistic stimulation of the enzyme by K(+) and NH(4)(+), as yet undescribed for other (Na(+), K(+))-ATPases, and should provide a better understanding of NH(4)(+) excretion in pagurid crabs.  相似文献   

12.
The Na(+)-pumping NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) is a fundamental enzyme of the oxidative phosphorylation metabolism and ionic homeostasis in several pathogenic and marine bacteria. To understand the mechanism that couples electron transfer with sodium translocation in Na(+)-NQR, the ion dependence of the redox potential of the individual cofactors was studied using a spectroelectrochemical approach. The redox potential of one of the FMN cofactors increased 90 mV in the presence of Na(+) or Li(+), compared to the redox potentials measured in the presence of other cations that are not transported by the enzyme, such as K(+), Rb(+), and NH(4)(+). This shift in redox potential of one FMN confirms the crucial role of the FMN anionic radicals in the Na(+) pumping mechanism and demonstrates that the control of the electron transfer rate has both kinetic (via conformational changes) and thermodynamic components.  相似文献   

13.
O Fasano  A Parmeggiani 《Biochemistry》1981,20(5):1361-1366
In the preceding article a mutant elongation factor Tu (EF-TuD2216) resistant to the action of kirromycin was found to display a spontaneous guanosine 5'-triphosphatase (GTPase) activity, i.e., in the absence of aminoacyl transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA) and ribosome-messenger RNA. This is the first example of an Ef-Tu supporting GTPase activity in the absence of macromolecular effectors and/or kirromycin. In this study we show that this activity is elicited by increasing NH4+ concentrations. As additional effect, the mutation caused an increased affinity of EF-Tu for GTP. Ammonium dependence of the GTPase activity an increased affinity for GTP are two properties also found with wild-type EF-Tu in the presence of kirromycin [Fasano, O., Burns, W., Crechet, J.-B., Sander, G., & Parmeggiani, A. (1978) Eur. J. Biochem. 89, 557-565; Sander, G., Okonek, M., Crechet, J.-B., Ivell, R., Bocchini, V., & Parmeggiani, A. (1979) FEBS Lett. 98, 111-114]. Therefore, both binding of kirromycin to wild-type EF-Tu and acquisition of kirromycin resistance introduce functionally related modifications. Kirromycin at high concentrations (0.1 mM) does not interact with mutant EF-TuD2216.GDP but still does with EF-TuD2216.GTP in agreement with our previous finding that EF-Tu.GTP is the preferential target of the antibiotic in the wild type [Fasano, O., Bruns, W., Crechet, J.-B., Sander, G., & Parmeggiani, A. (1978) Eur. J. Biochem. 89, 557-565). The GTPase activity of mutant EF-Tu in the presence of aminoacyl-tRNA and ribosome.mRNA is much higher than with wild-type EF-Tu and also much less dependent on the presence of mRNA. Miscoding for leucine, measured as poly(U)-directed poly(phenyl-alanine/leucine) synthesis at increasing Mg2+ concentrations, is identical for both wild-type and mutant EF-Tu.  相似文献   

14.
Liu W  Toney MD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):4998-5010
Dialkylglycine decarboxylase (DGD) is a tetrameric pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme that catalyzes both decarboxylation and transamination in its normal catalytic cycle. Its activity is dependent on cations. Metal-free DGD and DGD complexes with seven monovalent cations (Li(+), Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+), NH(4)(+), and Tl(+)) and three divalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), and Ba(2+)) have been studied. The catalytic rate constants for cation-bound enzyme (ck(cat) and ck(cat)/bK(AIB)) are cation-size-dependent, K(+) being the monovalent cation with the optimal size for catalytic activity. The divalent alkaline earth cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), and Ba(2+)) all give approximately 10-fold lower activity compared to monovalent alkali cations of similar ionic radius. The Michaelis constant for aminoisobutyrate (AIB) binding to DGD-PLP complexes with cations (bK(AIB)) varies with ionic radius. The larger cations (K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+), NH(4)(+), and Tl(+)) give smaller bK(AIB) ( approximately 4 mM), while smaller cations (Li(+), Na(+)) give larger values (approximately 10 mM). Cation size and charge dependence is also found with the dissociation constant for PLP binding to DGD-cation complexes (aK(PLP)). K(+) and Rb(+) possess the optimal ionic radius, giving the lowest values of aK(PLP). The divalent alkaline earth cations give aK(PLP) values approximately 10-fold higher than alkali cations of similar ionic radius. The cation dissociation constant for DGD-PLP-AIB-cation complexes (betaK(M)z+) was determined and also shown to be cation-size-dependent, K(+) and Rb(+) yielding the lowest values. The kinetics of PLP association and dissociation from metal-free DGD and its complexes with cations (Na(+), K(+), and Ba(2+)) were analyzed. All three cations tested increase PLP association and decrease PLP dissociation rate constants. Kinetic studies of cation binding show saturation kinetics for the association reaction. The half-life for association with saturating Rb(+) is approximately 24 s, while the half-life for dissociation of Rb(+) from the DGD-PLP-AIB-Rb(+) complex is approximately 12 min.  相似文献   

15.
Variations in the structure of d(GGGA)(5) oligonucleotide in the presence of Li(+), Na(+), and K(+) ions and its temperature stability were studied using electronic and vibrational circular dichroism, IR absorption, and ab initio calculations with the Becke 3-Lee-Yang-Parr functional at the 6-31G** level. The samples were characterized by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis. Oligonucleotide d(GGGA)(5) in the presence of Li(+) forms a nonplanar single tetramer, with angles of 102 degrees and 171 degrees between neighboring guanine bases. This tetramer changes its geometry at temperatures >50 degrees C, but does not form a quadruplex structure. In the presence of Na(+), the d(GGGA)(5) structure was optimized to almost planar tetramers with an angle of 177 degrees between neighboring guanines. The spectral results suggest that it stacks into a quadruplex helical structure. This quadruplex structure decayed to a single tetramer at temperatures >60 degrees C. The Hartree-Fock energies imply that d(GGGA)(5) prefers to form complexes with Na(+) rather than Li(+). The d(GGGA)(5) structure in the presence of monovalent ions is stabilized against thermal denaturation in the order Li(+) < Na(+) < K(+).  相似文献   

16.
The primary sequence of non-gastric H,K-ATPase differs much more between species than that of Na,K-ATPase or gastric H,K-ATPase. To investigate whether this causes species-dependent differences in enzymatic properties, we co-expressed the catalytic subunit of human non-gastric H,K-ATPase in Sf9 cells with the beta(1) subunit of rat Na,K-ATPase and compared its properties with those of the rat enzyme (Swarts et al., J. Biol. Chem. 280, 33115-33122, 2005). Maximal ATPase activity was obtained with NH(4)(+) as activating cation. The enzyme was also stimulated by Na(+), but in contrast to the rat enzyme, hardly by K(+). SCH 28080 inhibited the NH(4)(+)-stimulated activity of the human enzyme much more potently than that of the rat enzyme. The steady-state phosphorylation level of the human enzyme decreased with increasing pH, [K(+)], and [Na(+)] and nearly doubled in the presence of oligomycin. Oligomycin increased the sensitivity of the phosphorylated intermediate to ADP, demonstrating that it inhibited the conversion of E(1)P to E(2)P. All three cations stimulated the dephosphorylation rate dose-dependently. Our studies support a role of the human enzyme in H(+)/Na(+) and/or H(+)/NH(4)(+) transport but not in Na(+)/K(+) transport.  相似文献   

17.
Four patients with overhydrated cation leak stomatocytosis (OHSt) exhibited the heterozygous RhAG missense mutation F65S. OHSt erythrocytes were osmotically fragile, with elevated Na and decreased K contents and increased cation channel-like activity. Xenopus oocytes expressing wild-type RhAG and RhAG F65S exhibited increased ouabain and bumetanide-resistant uptake of Li(+) and (86)Rb(+), with secondarily increased (86)Rb(+) influx sensitive to ouabain and to bumetanide. Increased RhAG-associated (14)C-methylammonium (MA) influx was severely reduced in RhAG F65S-expressing oocytes. RhAG-associated influxes of Li(+), (86)Rb(+), and (14)C-MA were pharmacologically distinct, and Li(+) uptakes associated with RhAG and RhAG F65S were differentially inhibited by NH(4)(+) and Gd(3+). RhAG-expressing oocytes were acidified and depolarized by 5 mM bath NH(3)/NH(4)(+), but alkalinized and depolarized by subsequent bath exposure to 5 mM methylammonium chloride (MA/MA(+)). RhAG F65S-expressing oocytes exhibited near-wild-type responses to NH(4)Cl, but MA/MA(+) elicited attenuated alkalinization and strong hyperpolarization. Expression of RhAG or RhAG F65S increased steady-state cation currents unaltered by bath Li(+) substitution or bath addition of 5 mM NH(4)Cl or MA/MA(+). These oocyte studies suggest that 1) RhAG expression increases oocyte transport of NH(3)/NH(4)(+) and MA/MA(+); 2) RhAG F65S exhibits gain-of-function phenotypes of increased cation conductance/permeability, and loss-of-function phenotypes of decreased and modified MA/MA(+) transport, and decreased NH(3)/NH(4)(+)-associated depolarization; and 3) RhAG transports NH(3)/NH(4)(+) and MA/MA(+) by distinct mechanisms, and/or the substrates elicit distinct cellular responses. Thus, RhAG F65S is a loss-of-function mutation for amine transport. The altered oocyte intracellular pH, membrane potential, and currents associated with RhAG or RhAG F65S expression may reflect distinct transport mechanisms.  相似文献   

18.
The molecular identity of K(+) channels involved in Ehrlich cell volume regulation is unknown. A background K(+) conductance is activated by cell swelling and is also modulated by extracellular pH. These characteristics are most similar to those of newly emerging TASK (TWIK-related acid-sensitive K(+) channels)-type of two pore-domain K(+) channels. mTASK-2, but not TASK-1 or -3, is present in Ehrlich cells and mouse kidney tissue from where the full coding sequences were obtained. Heterologous expression of mTASK-2 cDNA in HEK-293 cells generated K(+) currents in the absence intracellular Ca(2+). Exposure to hypotonicity enhanced mTASK-2 currents and osmotic cell shrinkage led to inhibition. This occurred without altering voltage dependence and with only slight decrease in pK(a) in hypotonicity but no change in hypertonicity. Replacement with other cations yields a permselectivity sequence for mTASK-2 of K(+) > Rb(+) Cs(+) > NH(4)(+) > Na(+) congruent with Li(+), similar to that for the native conductance (I(K, vol)). Clofilium, a quaternary ammonium blocker of I(K, vol), blocked the mTASK-2-mediated K(+) current with an IC(50) of 25 microm. The presence of mTASK-2 in Ehrlich cells, its functional similarities with I(K, vol), and its modulation by changes in cell volume suggest that this two-pore domain K(+) channel participates in the regulatory volume decrease phenomenon.  相似文献   

19.
Sze H  Hodges TK 《Plant physiology》1977,59(4):641-646
Influx of alkali cations (Li(+), Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+)) across plasma membranes of cells of excised roots of Avena sativa cv. Goodfield was selective, but different, in the absence and in the presence of 1 mm CaSO(4). Ca(2+) reduced the influx rates of all of the alkali cations-especially Na(+) and Li(+). Transport selectivity changed as the external concentrations of the alkali cations increased.Plasma membrane ATPase, purified from Avena sativa roots, was differentially stimulated by alkali cations. This specificity, however, was not altered by Ca(2+) or the external cation concentrations. A close correspondence existed between the relative influx rates of K(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+) and the relative stimulation of the ATPase by these cations. A similar correspondence did not occur for Na(+) and Li(+).Selective cation transport in oat roots could result, in part, from the specificity of the plasma membrane ATPase, but other factors such as specific carriers or porters or differential diffusion rates must also be involved.  相似文献   

20.
We used the baculovirus/Sf9 expression system to gain new information on the mechanistic properties of the rat non-gastric H,K-ATPase, an enzyme that is implicated in potassium homeostasis. The alpha2-subunit of this enzyme (HKalpha2) required a beta-subunit for ATPase activity thereby showing a clear preference for NaKbeta1 over NaKbeta3 and gastric HKbeta. NH4(+), K+, and Na+ maximally increased the activity of HKalpha2-NaKbeta1 to 24.0, 14.2, and 5.0 micromol P(i) x mg(-1) protein x h(-1), respectively. The enzyme was inhibited by relatively high concentrations of ouabain and SCH 28080, whereas it was potently inhibited by oligomycin. From the phosphorylation level in the presence of oligomycin and the maximal NH4(+)-stimulated ATPase activity, a turnover number of 20,000 min(-1) was determined. All three cations decreased the steady-state phosphorylation level and enhanced the dephosphorylation rate, disfavoring the hypothesis that Na+ can replace H+ as the activating cation. The potency with which vanadate inhibited the cation-activated enzyme decreased in the order K+ > NH4(+) > Na+, indicating that K+ is a stronger E2 promoter than NH4(+), whereas in the presence of Na+ the enzyme is in the E1 form. For K+ and NH4(+), the E2 to E1 conformational equilibrium correlated with their efficacy in the ATPase reaction, indicating that here the transition from E2 to E1 is rate-limiting. Conversely, the low maximal ATPase activity with Na+ is explained by a poor stimulatory effect on the dephosphorylation rate. These data show that NH4(+) can replace K+ with similar affinity but higher efficacy as an extracellular activating cation in rat nongastric H,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

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