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1.
Inhibition of (Na+ + K+)-dependent adenosine triphosphatase phosphatase by vanadate is thought to occur through the tight binding of vanadate to the same site from which Pi is released. To see if ATP binds to [48V] vanadate-enzyme complex, just as it does to the phosphoenzyme, the effects of Na+, K+, and ATP on the dissociation rate of the complex at 10 degrees C were studied. The rate constant was increased by Na+, and this increase was blocked by K+, indicating that either Na+ or K+ binds to the complex. ATP alone, or in combination with K+, had no effect on the rate constant. In the presence of Na+, however, ATP caused a further increase in the rate constant. The value of K0.5 of Na+ was the same in the presence or absence of ATP; K0.5 of ATP (0.2 mM) did not seem to change significantly when Na+ concentration was varied, and K0.5 of K+, at a constant Na+ concentration, was the same in the presence or absence of ATP. The data indicate that ATP binds to the enzyme-vanadate complex regardless of the presence or absence of Na+ or K+, but it affects the dissociation rate only when Na+ is bound simultaneously. The value of K0.5 of Na+ decreased as pH was increased in the range of 6.5-7.8, but K0.5 of ATP was independent of pH. Demonstration of ATP binding to the enzyme-vanadate complex provides further support for the suggestion that the oligomeric enzyme contains a low-affinity regulatory site for ATP that is distinct from the interacting high-affinity catalytic sites.  相似文献   

2.
An increase in pH decreases the Na+ concentration (Na+ +K+ = 150 mM) necessary for half-maximum activation of the (Na+ +K+)-ATPase at non-saturating concentrations of ATP just as an increase in the concentration of ATP at a given pH. It also decreases the concentration of Na+ necessary for transformation from the K+-form to the Na+-form at equilibrium conditions (Na+ +K+ = 150 mM). An increase in pH increases the rate of the transformation from the K+-form to the Na+-form of the system and decreases the rate of the reverse reaction. The pH effect on the conformation suggests that the K+-form is a protonated form and the Na+-form a deprotonated one. The similarity between the effect of an increase in pH with non-saturating concentrations of ATP and that of an increase in ATP at a given pH suggests that ATP exerts its effect on the transformation from the K+ - to the Na+-form by a decrease in pK values of the system, i.e., by releasing protons, a Bohr effect. Enzyme modified by reaction with pyridoxal 5-phosphate terminated by NaBH4 behaves at a given pH as if it were non-modified enzyme but at a higher pH. The 'pH effect' is seen after modification by pyridoxal 5-phosphate in the presence of ATP, of Na+ without and with ATP, of K+ with ATP but not in the presence of K+ alone. The modification has also a 'pH effect' on the rate of the transformation from the K+ -form to the Na+ -form and on the reverse reaction. There are at least two different pyridoxal 5-phosphate-reactive groups (amino groups), one which can be protected by ATP and which is of importance for activity and another which is not protected by ATP and which is of importance for the pH effect on the conformation. The effect of a protonation-deprotonation of amino groups on the conformation is explained by an involvement of the amino groups in salt bridge formation in between and inside the polypeptide chains, a hemoglobin-like situation. The protonated K+ -form is then a tense T-structure with a high K+, low Na+ affinity and the deprotonated Na+ -form a relaxed, R-structure with high Na+, low K+ affinity. ATP facilitates deprotonation by decreasing pK values. Oligomycin has 'pH effect' on the K0.5 for Na+ under equilibrium and steady-state conditions, but oligomycin has no effect on the rate of the transformation from the K+ -form to the Na+ -form, but gives a pronounced decrease of the rate of the reverse reaction, indicating that oligomycin does not react with the K+ -form but with the Na+ -form of the system and prevents the protonation, the E1 to E2 transformation.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of pH and of ATP on the Na : K selectivity of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase has been tested under equilibrium conditions. The Na+ : K+-induced change in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and in fluorescence of eosin maleimide bound to the system has been used as a tool. 1 mol of eosin maleimide per mol of enzyme gives no loss in either ATPase or phosphatase activity and the fluorescence in the presence of Na+ is about 30% higher than in the presence of K+. Choline, protonated Tris, protonated histidine and Mg2+ have an 'Na+' effect on the extrinsic fluorescence, while Rb+, Cs+ and NH4+ have a 'K+' effect. Choline and protonated Tris have an Na+ effect on intrinsic fluorescence. A close correlation between the effect of Na+ compared to K+ on the fluorescence change and on Na+ activation of hydrolysis indicates that the observed changes in fluorescence are due to an effect of Na+ and of K+ on the internal sites of the system. The equilibrium between the two conformations, which are reflected by the difference in fluorescence with Na+ and K+, respectively, is highly influenced by the concentration of protons. At a given Na+ : K+ ratio, an increase in the proton concentration shifts the equilibrium towards the 'K+' fluorescence form while a decrease shifts the equilibrium towards the 'Na+' fluorescence form, i.e., protons increase the apparent affinity for K+ and vice versa, K+ increases pK values of importance for the Na+ : K+ selectivity. Conversely, a decrease in protons increases the apparent affinity for Na+ and vice versa, Na+ decreases the pK. ATP decreases the apparent pK for the protonation-deprotonation, i.e., ATP facilitates the deprotonation which accompanies Na+ binding. The results suggest two effects of ATP for the hydrolysis in the presence of Na+ and K+ : (i) at low ATP concentrations (K0.5 < 10 microM) on the K+-Na+ exchange on the internal sites and (ii) at higher, substrate, concentrations on the activation by K+ on the external sites.  相似文献   

4.
T Friedrich  E Bamberg    G Nagel 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(5):2486-2500
The giant-patch technique was used to study the Na+,K(+)-ATPase in excised patches from rat or guinea pig ventricular myocytes. Na+,K(+)-pump currents showed a saturable ATP dependence with aK(m) of approximately 150 microM at 24 degrees C. The pump current can be completely abolished by ortho-vanadate. Dissociation of vanadate from the enzyme in the absence of extracellular Na+ was slow, with a Koff of 3.10(-4) S-1 (K1 approximately 0.5 microM, at 24 degrees C). Stationary currents were markedly dependent on intracellular pH, with a maximum at pH 7.9. Temperature-dependence measurements of the stationary pump current yielded an activation energy of approximately 100 kJ mol-1. Partial reactions in the transport cycle were investigated by generating ATP concentration jumps through photolytic release of ATP from caged ATP at pH 7.4 and 6.3. Transient outward currents were obtained at pH 6.3 with a fast rising phase followed by a slower decay to a stationary current. It was concluded that the fast rate constant of approximately 200 s-1 at 24 degrees C (pH 6.3) reflects a step rate-limiting the electrogenic Na+ release. Simulating the data with a simple three-state model enabled us to estimate the turnover rate under saturating substrate concentrations, yielding rates (at pH 7.4) of approximately 60 s-1 and 200 s-1 at 24 degrees C and 36 degrees C, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
The inhibition of guinea-pig heart (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase EC 3.6.1.3) by calcium has been studied at pH 7.4, 6.8 and 6.4. 1. A decrease in pH reduced the threshold inhibitory concentration of calcium and the calcium concentration producing an inhibition of 50% of the enzyme activity. 2. Calcium reduced the apparent affinity of the enzyme of Na+, this effect occurred only at pH 7.4. 3. Calcium increased the apparent affinity of the enzyme for K+, this effect was enhanced at acidic pH. 4. Activation of the enzyme by Na+ for a constant Na+ : K+ ratio has been studied at pH 7.4 and at pH 6.8 in the absence and in the presence of 3.10(-4) M Ca 2+; the results of this experiment indicate that Ca2+ effect at pH 7.4 was not influenced by Na+ -- K+ competition and was probably due to a Na+ -- Ca2+ interaction. 5. At pH 7.4, the calcium inhibitory threshold concentration and the concentration producing 50% inhibition were reduced when Na+ was low; at pH 6.8, the calcium inhibition was not markedly modified by the change of Na+ concentration. 6. The Ca2+ -activated ATPase of myosin B which is related to the contractile behaviour of muscle and the Ca2+ -ATPase of the sarcoplasmic reticulum which is related to the ability of this structure to accumulate calcium were activated in a range of calcium concentration producing an inhibition of (Na2+ + K+) -ATPase. The present results indicate that the increase by acidity of the (Na2+ + K+) -ATPase sensitivity to calcium might be due to a suppression of a Na+ -Ca2+ interaction. On the basis of these observations, it is proposed that calcium might inhibit the Na+ -pump during the repolarization phase of the action potential and that, by this effect, it might control cell excitability.  相似文献   

6.
Since Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) of pig kidney modified with a fluorescent sulfhydryl reagent, N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl) phenyl]maleimide, at Cys-964 of the alpha-chain showed ATP-dependent, reversible, and dynamic fluorescence changes (Nagai, M., Taniguchi, K., Kangawa, K., Matsuo, S., Nakamura, S., and Iida, S. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 13197-13202), we studied the conformational change during Na+,K+-ATPase reaction using the modified enzyme. The addition of K+ to the enzyme increased the fluorescence intensity to 2% in the presence of 160 mM Na+ and 3 mM Mg2+ (K0.5 = 16.4 mM). Addition of low concentrations of ATP immediately increased the intensity to 3.2% (K0.5 less than 0.1 microM) to accumulate fully K+-bound enzyme in the presence of 43 mM K+ with Na+ and Mg2+, but further addition of higher concentrations of ATP diminished the increase (K0.5 = 120 microM). After exhaustion of ATP, the fluorescence intensity decreased to -0.4% (K0.5 = 0.3 microM) and -2% (K0.5 = 20 microM), respectively, in the presence of low and high concentrations of ADP produced from ATP. High concentrations of ATP accelerated Na+,K+-ATPase activity with a simultaneous increase in the amount of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme irrespective of the modification. Adenylyl imidodiphosphate and ADP accelerated Na+,K+-ATPase activity in the presence of 2.7 microM ATP by decreasing the extent of the fluorescence without affecting the amount of phosphoenzyme, irrespective of the modification. These data suggest that Na+,K+-ATPase activity was accelerated due to the acceleration of the breakdown of K+-bound enzyme by high concentrations of ATP and ATP analogues.  相似文献   

7.
The modulatory effects of calcium ions on highly active Na+, K(+)-ATPase from calf brain and pig kidney tissues have been studied. The inhibitory action of Ca2+free on this enzyme depends on the level of ATP (but not AcP). The reduction of pH from 7.4 to 6.0 noticeably increases, but the elevation of pH to 8.0, in its turn, decreases the inhibition of ATP-hydrolyzing activity by calcium. With the increase of K+ concentration (in contrast to Na+) the sensibilization of Na+, K(+)-ATPase to Ca ions is observed. In the presence of potassium ions Mg2+free effectively modifies the inhibitory action of Ca2+free on this enzyme. Ca2+free (0.16-0.4 mM) decreases the sensitivity of Na+, K(+)-ATPase to action of the specific inhibitor ouabain in the presence of ATP. In the presence of AcP (phosphatase reaction) such a change of enzyme sensitivity to ouabain isn't observed. The influence of membranous effects of Ca2+ on the interaction of Na+, K(+)-ATPase with the essential ligands and cardiosteroids is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Purified Na+, K(+)-ATPase was phosphorylated by [gamma-32P]ATP in a medium containing dimethylsulfoxide and 5 mM Mg2+ in the absence of Na+ and K+. Addition of K+ increased the phosphorylation levels from 0.4 nmol phosphoenzyme/mg of protein in the absence of K+ to 1.0 nmol phosphoenzyme/mg of protein in the presence of 0.5 mM K+. Higher velocities of enzyme phosphorylation were observed in the presence of 0.5 mM K+. Increasing K+ concentrations up to 100 mM lead to a progressive decrease in the phosphoenzyme (EP) levels. Control experiments, that were performed to determine the contribution to EP formation from the Pi inevitably present in the assays, showed that this contribution was of minor importance except at high (20-100 mM) KCl concentrations. The pattern of EP formation and its KCl dependence is thus characteristic for the phosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP. In the absence of Na+ and with 0.5 mM K+, optimal levels (1.0 nmol EP/mg of protein) were observed at 20-40% dimethylsulfoxide and pH 6.0 to 7.5. Addition of Na+ up to 5 mM has no effect on the phosphoenzyme level under these conditions. At 100 mM Na+ or higher the full capacity of enzyme phosphorylation (2.2 nmol EP/mg of protein) was reached. Phosphoenzyme formed from ATP in the absence of Na+ is an acylphosphate-type compound as shown by its hydroxylamine sensitivity. The phosphate radioactivity was incorporated into the alpha-subunit of the Na+, K(+)-ATPase as demonstrated by acid polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by autoradiography.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of Na+ and ATP on the K+ binding to Na+, K+-ATPase were investigated by the centrifugation method with radioactive K+ in the absence of Mg2+. In the presence of 10 microM 43KCl, 0.6 and 10 mM Na+ decreased the amount of bound K+ to one-half and zero, respectively. On the other hand, 10 microM and 10 mM ATP decreased the amount of K+ to 60 and 25-40%, respectively. When the combined effect of ATP and Na+ was tested, 10 microM ATP decreased the Na+ concentration giving half-maximal inhibition of the K+ binding to one-third, showing synergistic inhibition by both ligands, though increase in ATP concentration seemed to depress the inhibitory effect of Na+. The synergistic inhibition by ATP and Na+ suggests that the release of K+ from E2K is not completed by the binding of ATP alone but is completed by the binding of Na+ in addition to ATP during the cycle of Na+, K+-dependent ATP-hydrolysis as well as ion-transport.  相似文献   

10.
The objective of the present investigation was to characterize the ATP-dependent Na+-Na+ exchange, with respect to cation sensitivity on the two aspects of the Na+/K+-pump protein. In order to accomplish this, we used Na+/K+-ATPase reconstituted with known orientation in the proteoliposomes. Activation by cytoplasmic Na+ shows cooperative interaction between three sites. The apparent intrinsic site constants displayed transmembrane dependence on the extracellular Na+ concentration. However, the apparent K0.5 for cytoplasmic Na+ is independent of the extracellular Na+ concentration. The activation by extracellular Na+ at a fixed cytoplasmic Na+ concentration is biphasic with a component which saturates at a concentration of about 1-2 mM extracellular Na+, a plateau phase up to 20 mM, and another component which tends to saturate at about 80 mM followed by a slight deactivation at higher concentrations of Na+. The apparent K0.5 value for extracellular Na+ is also found to be independent of the Na+ concentration on the opposite side of the membrane. The activation by extracellular Na+ can be explained by the negative cooperativity in the binding of extracellular Na+, but positive cooperativity in the rate of dephosphorylation of enzyme species with one and three sodium ions bound extracellularly. Na+ bound to E2-PNa has a transmembrane effect on the cooperativity between binding of cytoplasmic Na+, and E2-PNa2 does not dephosphorylate. K0.5/Vm for cytoplasmic as well as for extracellular Na+ decreases with an increase in the trans Na+ concentration in the non-saturating concentration range. The experiments indicate that at a step in the reaction simultaneous binding of extracellular and cytoplasmic Na+ occurs.  相似文献   

11.
Showdomycin inhibited pig brain (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with pseudo first-order kinetics. The rate of inhibition by showdomycin was examined in the presence of 16 combinations of four ligands, i.e., Na+, K+, Mg2+ and ATP, and was found to depend on the ligands added. Combinations of ligands were divided into five groups in terms of the magnitude of the rate constant; in the order of decreasing rate constants these were: (1) Na+ + Mg2+ + ATP, (2) Mg2+, Mg2+ + K+, K+ and none, (3) Na+ + Mg2+, Na+, K+ + Na+ and Na+ + K+ + Mg2+, (4) Mg2+ + K+ + ATP, K+ + ATP and Mg2+ + ATP, (5) K+ + Na + + ATP, Na+ + ATP, Na+ + K+ + Mg2+ + ATP and ATP. The highest rate was obtained in the presence of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP. The apparent concentrations of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP for half-maximum stimulation of inhibition (KS0.5) were 3 mM, 0.13 mM and 4 MicroM, respectively. The rate was unchanged upon further increase in Na+ concentration from 140 to 1000 mM. The rates of inhibition could be explained on the basis of the enzyme forms present, including E1, E2, ES, E1-P and E2-P, i. e., E2 has higher reactivity with showdomycin than E1, while E2-P has almost the same reactivity as E1-P. We conclude that the reaction of (Na+ + K+)- ATPase proceeds via at least four kinds of enzyme form (E1, E2, E1 . nucleotide and EP), which all have different conformations.  相似文献   

12.
Acetyl phosphate, as a substrate of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, was further characterized by comparing its effects with those of ATP on some total and partial reactions carried out by the enzyme. In the absence of Mg2+ acetyl phosphate could not induce disocclusion (release) of Rb+ from E2(Rb); nor did it affect the acceleration of Rb+ release by non-limiting concentrations of ADP. In K+-free solutions and at pH 7.4 sodium ions were essential for ATP hydrolysis by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase; when acetyl phosphate was the substrate a hydrolysis (inhibited by ouabain) was observed in the presence and absence of Na+. In liposomes with (Na+ + K+)-ATPase incorporated and exposed to extravesicular (intracellular) Na+, acetyl phosphate could sustain a ouabain-sensitive Rb+ efflux; the levels of that flux were similar to those obtained with micromolar concentrations of ATP. When the liposomes were incubated in the absence of extravesicular Na+ a ouabain-sensitive Rb+ efflux could not be detected with either substrate. Native (Na+ + K+)-ATPase was phosphorylated at 0 degrees C in the presence of NaCl (50 mM for ATP and 10 mM for acetyl phosphate); after phosphorylation had been stopped by simultaneous addition of excess trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N' tetraacetic acid and 1 M NaCl net synthesis of ATP by addition of ADP was obtained with both phosphoenzymes. The present results show that acetyl phosphate can fuel the overall cycle of cation translocation by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase acting only at the catalytic substrate site; this takes place via the formation of phosphorylated intermediates which can lead to ATP synthesis in a way which is indistinguishable from that obtained with ATP.  相似文献   

13.
We have measured the time course of release of 42K and 86Rb from an occluded state of the Na,K-pump using a rapid filtration apparatus. We have found that at 20 degrees C and in the presence of ATP, 42K is released with a rate constant of approximately 45 s-1 and 86Rb with a rate constant of approximately 20 s-1; both ATP and ADP are effective at a low affinity site (Kd approximately 0.3 and 1 mM, respectively) with the rate of deocclusion being only half as great in ADP as in ATP. Mg2+ stimulates 2-fold at low concentrations probably by forming MgATP, and free Mg2+ is strongly inhibitory at high concentrations (Kd approximately 10 mM). Mg2+ also decreases the affinity for ATP, and the data are consistent with mixed type inhibition; from the analysis the dissociation constant is approximately 1 mM for the inhibitory Mg2+ and the Rb+-occluded form without ATP. The rate of 42K or 86Rb release increases monotonically with pH while ATPase activity decreases above pH 8, so that deocclusion is not rate-limiting in the overall cycle at high pH. This is reflected by a convergence of the rate of Na,K-ATPase and Na,Rb-ATPase activities at high pH and by a decrease in the observed steady-state level of the occluded 86Rb intermediate at high pH. K+, Rb+, Na+, and Cs+, but not Li+, increase the rate of 42K and 86Rb release at constant ionic strength, presumably at sites other than the transport sites. The spontaneous rate of deocclusion is only approximately 0.1 s-1 at low ionic strength in the absence of nucleotides, and it is increased markedly by all cations tested except Li+. Overall the data are consistent with deocclusion as a rate-limiting step in the Na,K-pump cycle.  相似文献   

14.
A high basal level of phosphorylation (approx. 70% of the optimal Na+-dependent phosphorylation level) is observed in 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.0), in the absence of added Na+ and K+ and the presence of 10-100 microM Mg2+. In 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0) the basal level is only 5%, irrespective of the Mg2+ concentration. Nevertheless, imidazole is a less effective activator of phosphorylation than Na+ (Km imidazole-H+ 5.9 mM, Km Na+ 2 mM under comparable conditions). Imidazole-activated phosphorylation is strongly pH dependent, being optimal at pH less than or equal to 7 and minimal at pH greater than or equal to 8, while Na+-activated phosphorylation is optimal at pH 7.4. This suggests that imidazole-H+ is the activating species. Imidazole facilitates Na+-stimulated phosphorylation. The Km for Na+ decreases from 0.63 mM at 5 mM imidazole-HCl to 0.21 mM at 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7; 0.1 mM Mg2+ in all cases). Imidazole-activated phosphorylation is more sensitive to inhibition by K+ (I50 = 12.5 microM) than Na+-activated phosphorylation (I50 = 180 microM). Mg2+ antagonizes activation by imidazole-H+ and also inhibition by K+. The Ki value for Mg2+ (approx. 0.3 mM) is the same for the two antagonistic effects. Tris buffer (pH 7.0) inhibits imidazole-activated phosphorylation with an I50 value of 30 mM in 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.0) plus 0.1 mM Mg2+. We conclude that imidazole-H+, but not Tris-H+, can replace Na+ as an activator of ATP-dependent phosphorylation, primarily by shifting the E2----E1 transition to the right, leading to a phosphorylating E1 conformation which is different from that in Tris buffer.  相似文献   

15.
To determine the biochemical events of Na+ transport, we studied the interactions of Na+, Tris+, and K+ with the phosphorylated intermediates of Na,K-ATPase from ox brain. The enzyme was phosphorylated by incubation at 0 degrees C with 1 mM Mg2+, 25 microM [32P]ATP, and 20-600 mM Na+ with or without Tris+, and the dephosphorylation kinetics of [32P]EP were studied after addition of (1) 1 mM ATP, (2) 2.5 mM ADP, (3) 1 mM ATP plus 20 mM K+, and (4) 2.5 mM ADP plus Na+ up to 600 mM. In dephosphorylation types 2-4, the curves were bi- or multiphasic. "ADP-sensitive EP" and "K+-sensitive EP" were determined by extrapolation of the slow phase of the curves to the ordinate and their sum was always larger than Etotal. These results required a minimal model consisting of three consecutive EP pools, A, B, and C, where A was ADP sensitive and both B and C were K+ sensitive. At high [Na+], B was converted rapidly to A (type 4 experiment). The seven rate coefficients were dependent on [Na+], [Tris+], and [K+], and to explain this we developed a comprehensive model for cation interaction with EP. The model has the following features: A, B, and C are equilibrium mixtures of EP forms; EP in A has two to three Na ions bound at high-affinity (internal) sites, pool B has three, and pool C has two to three low-affinity (external) sites. The putative high-affinity outside Na+ site may be on E2P in pool C. The A leads to B conversion is blocked by K+ (and Tris+). We conclude that pool A can be an intermediate only in the Na-ATPase reaction and not in the normal operation of the Na,K pump.  相似文献   

16.
Na+/K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) is an important membrane-bound enzyme. In this paper, kinetic studies on Na+/K+-ATPase were carried out under mimetic physiological conditions. By using microcalorimeter, a thermokinetic method was employed for the first time. Compared with other methods, it provided accurate measurements of not only thermodynamic data (deltarHm) but also the kinetic data (Km and Vmax). At 310.15K and pH 7.4, the molar reaction enthalpy (deltarHm) was measured as -40.514 +/- 0.9kJmol(-1). The Michaelis constant (Km) was determined to be 0.479 +/- 0.020 mM and consistent with literature data. The reliability of the thermokinetic method was further confirmed by colorimetric studies. Furthermore, a simple and reliable kinetic procedure was presented for ascertaining the true substrate for Na+/K+-ATPase and determining the effect of free ATP. Results showed that the MgATP complex was the real substrate with a Km value of about 0.5mM and free ATP was a competitive inhibitor with a Ki value of 0.253 mM.  相似文献   

17.
P Vigne  C Frelin    M Lazdunski 《The EMBO journal》1984,3(8):1865-1870
The internal pH (pHi) of chick muscle cells is determined by the transmembrane Na+ gradient. Li+, but not K+, Rb+ or Cs+, can substitute for Na+ for regulating the internal pH of chick muscle cells. Pharmacological evidence using amiloride and amiloride analogs has shown that the Na+/H+ exchange system is the membrane mechanism that couples the pHi to the transmembrane Na+ gradient. The pHi dependence of the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange mechanism was defined. Internal H+ interacts cooperatively with the Na+/H+ exchange system, in contrast with external H+, thus indicating an asymmetrical behaviour of this exchanger. The half-maximum effect for the activation by the internal H+ of the Na+ transporting activity of the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange was observed at pH 7.4. The Hill coefficient of the H+ concentration dependence is higher than 3. Insulin was shown to have no effect on the pHi of chick muscle cells.  相似文献   

18.
In order to characterize low affinity ATP-binding sites of renal (Na+,K+) ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+)ATPase, the effects of ATP on the splitting of the K+-sensitive phosphoenzymes were compared. ATP inactivated the dephosphorylation in the case of (Na+,K+)ATPase at relatively high concentrations, while activating it in the case of (Ca2+)ATPase. When various nucleotides were tested in place of ATP, inactivators of (Na+,K+)ATPase were found to be activators in (Ca2+)ATPase, with a few exceptions. In the absence of Mg2+, the half-maximum concentration of ATP for the inhibition or for the activation was about 0.35 mM or 0.25 mM, respectively. These values are comparable to the previously reported Km or the dissociation constant of the low affinity ATP site estimated from the steady-state kinetics of the stimulation of ATP hydrolysis or from binding measurements. By increasing the concentration of Mg2+, but not Na+, the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Na+,K+)ATPase was reduced. On the other hand, Mg2+ did not modify the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Ca2+)ATPase. During (Na+,K+)ATPase turnover, the low affinity ATP site appeared to be exposed in the phosphorylated form of the enzyme, but the magnesium-complexed ATP interacted poorly with the reactive K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme, which has a tightly bound magnesium, probably because of interaction between the divalent cations. In the presence of physiological levels of Mg2+ and K+, ATP appeared to bind to the (Na+,K+)ATPase only after the dephosphorylation, while it binds to the (Ca2+)-ATPase before the dephosphorylation to activate the turnover.  相似文献   

19.
The chromium(III) complex of ATP, an MgATP complex analogue, inactivates (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by forming a stable chromo-phosphointermediate. The rate constant k2 of inactivation at 37 degrees C of the beta, gamma-bidentate of CrATP is enhanced by Na+ (K0.5 = 1.08 mM), imidazole (K0.5 = 15 mM) and Mg2+ (K0.5 = 0.7 mM). These cations did not affect the dissociation constant of the enzyme-chromium-ATP complex. The inactive chromophosphoenzyme is reactivated slowly by high concentrations of Na+ at 37 degrees C. The half-maximal effect on the reactivation was reached at 40 mM NaCl, when the maximally observable reactivation was studied. However, 126 mM NaCl was necessary to see the half-maximal effect on the apparent reactivation velocity constant. K+ ions hindered the reactivation with a Ki of 70 microM. Formation of the chromophosphoenzyme led to a reduction of the Rb+ binding sites and of the capacity to occlude Rb+. The beta, gamma-bidentate of chromium(III)ATP (Kd = 8 microM) had a higher than the alpha, beta, gamma-tridentate of chromium(III)ATP (Kd = 44 microM) or the cobalt tetramine complex of ATP (Kd = 500 microM). The beta, gamma-bidentate of the chromium(III) complex of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate also inactivated (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Although CrATP could not support Na+, K+ exchange in everted vesicles prepared from human red blood cells, it supported the Na+-Na+ and Rb+-Rb+ exchange. It is concluded that CrATP opens up Na+ and K+ channels by forming a relatively stable modified enzyme-CrATP complex. This stable complex is also formed in the presence of the chromium complex of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate. Because the beta, gamma-bidentate of chromium ATP is recognized better than the alpha, beta, gamma-tridentate, it is concluded that the triphosphate site recognizes MgATP with a straight polyphosphate chain and that the Mg2+ resides between the beta- and the gamma-phosphorus. The enhancement of inactivation by Mg2+ and Na+ may be caused by conformational changes at the triphosphate site.  相似文献   

20.
Theoretical expression for the rate of decay of delta pH across vesicular membrane due to carrier-mediated ion transports, 1/tau, has been modified taking note of carrier states (such as mon- and mon-H-M+) for which the translocation rate constants in the membrane are small. The rates of delta pH decay due to monensin-mediated H+ and M+ transports (M+ = Na+, K+, Li+) observed in our experiments in the pH range 6-8, and [M+] range 50-250 mM at 25 degrees C have been analysed with the help of this expression. delta pH across soybean phospholipid vesicular membranes were created by temperature jump in our experiments. The following could be inferred from our studies. (a) At low pH (approximately 6) 1/tau in a medium of Na+ is greater than that in a medium of K+. In contrast with this, at higher pH (approximately 7.5) 1/tau is greater in a medium of K+. Such contradictory observations could be understood with the help of our equation and the parameters determined in this work. The relative concentrations of the rate-limiting species (mon-H, mon-K, and mon-Li at Ph approximately 7 in vesicle solutions having Na+, K+ and Li+, respectively) can explain such behaviours. (b) The proton dissociation constant KH for mon-H in the lipid medium (pKH approximately 6.55) is larger than the reported KH in methanol. (c) The concentrations of mon- and mon-H-Na+ are not negligible under the conditions of our experiments. The latter species cause a [Na+]-dependent inhibition of ion transports. (d) The relative magnitudes of metal ion dissociation constants KHM (approximately 0.05 M) for mon-H-Na+ and KM (approximately 0.03 M) for mon-Na suggest that the carboxyl group involved in the protonation may not be dominantly involved in the metal ion complexation. (e) The estimates of KM (approximately 0.03 M for Na+, 0.5 M for K+ and 2.2 M for Li+) follow the ionophore selectivity order. (f) The rate constants k1 and k2 for the translocations of mon-H and mon-M (M+ = Na+, K+ and Li+) are similar in magnitude (approximately 9 x 10(3) s-1) and are higher than that for nig-H and nig-M (approximately 6 x 10(3) s-1) which can be expected from the relative molecular sizes of the ion carriers.  相似文献   

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