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1.
S M Lewis  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4615-4621
We have studied the effects of vanadate on the rotational motion of the calcium adenosine-triphosphatase (Ca-ATPase) from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR). Vanadate has been proposed to act as a phosphate analogue and produce a stable intermediate state similar to the phosphoenzyme. This study provides evidence about the physical state of this intermediate. In particular, since ST-EPR provides a sensitive measure of microsecond protein rotational mobility, and hence of protein-protein association, these studies allowed us to ask (a) whether the vanadate-induced protein association observed in electron micrographs of SR vesicles also occurs under physiological (as opposed to fixed, stained, or frozen) conditions and (b) whether vanadate-induced changes in protein association also occur under conditions sufficient for enzyme inhibition but not for the production of large arrays detectable by electron microscopy (EM). At 5 mM decavanadate, a concentration sufficient to crystallize the ATPase on greater than 90% of the membrane surface area in EM, ST-EPR showed substantial immobilization of the spin-labeled protein, indicating protein-protein association in the unstained vesicles. Conventional EPR spectra of lipid probes showed that lipid hydrocarbon chain mobility is unaffected by decavanadate-induced protein crystallization in SR, suggesting that changes in protein-protein contacts do not involve the lipid hydrocarbon region. At 5 mM monovanadate, a concentration sufficient to inhibit the ATPase but not to form crystals detectable by EM, no changes were observed in ST-EPR or conventional EPR spectra of either protein or lipid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We have used saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) to study the effect of ATP on the rotational dynamics of spin-labeled myosin heads crosslinked to actin (XLAS1). We have previously shown that ATP induces microsecond rotational motions in activated myofibrils or muscle fibers, but the possibility remained that the motion occurred only in the detached phase of the cross-bridge cycle. The addition of ATP to the crosslinked preparation has been shown to be a model system for active cross-bridges, presumably providing an opportunity to measure the motion in the attached state, without interference from unattached heads. In the absence of ATP, XLAS1 had very little microsecond rotational mobility, yielding a spectrum identical to that observed for uncrosslinked acto-S1. This suggests that all of the labeled S1 forms normal rigor complexes when crosslinked to actin. The addition of 5 mM ATP greatly increased the microsecond rotational mobility of XLAS1, and the effects were reversed upon depletion of ATP. The most plausible explanation for these results is that myosin heads undergo microsecond rotational motion while attached actively to actin during steady state ATPase activity. These results have important implications for the interpretation of spectroscopic data obtained during muscle contraction.  相似文献   

3.
We have varied the degree of protein-protein interactions among Ca-ATPase polypeptide chains in sarcoplasmic reticulum using the cleavable homobifunctional cross-linker dithiobissuccinimidyl propionate and have measured both the rotational mobility and calcium-dependent ATPase activity of the Ca-ATPase in order to assess 1) the nature of the microsecond rotational motion measured by saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) of the spin-labeled Ca-ATPase and 2) the functional significance of this rotational motion. The Ca-ATPase was labeled specifically and covalently with a maleimide spin label, with full preservation of enzymatic activity. ST-EPR experiments show that cross-linking increases the enzyme's effective rotational correlation time (tau r), thus decreasing its rotational mobility (tau r-1). As the degree of cross-linking is varied, tau r is proportional to the mean molecular weight of the cross-linked aggregate, as predicted by theory, adding to the evidence that ST-EPR measures the overall rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase with respect to the membrane normal. Furthermore, enzymatic activity correlates with overall protein rotational mobility, suggesting that this motion is functionally important. The second-order inactivation profile resulting from the use of either cross-linking or chemical modification with fluorescein isothiocyanate as modes of inactivation indicates that protein-protein interactions are critical to the reaction mechanism. However, the pattern of cross-linking observed on polyacrylamide gels demonstrates that cross-linking occurs in a random manner, indicating that no specific and stable oligomeric complexes exist. In order to rationalize both the functional need for protein mobility and the evidence that protein-protein interactions are critical and random, we propose that the enzymatic cycle of the Ca-ATPase involves the making and breaking of functionally important protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

4.
We have used saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) to detect the microsecond rotational motions of spin-labeled myosin heads in bundles of skinned muscle fibers, under conditions of rigor, relaxation, and isometric contraction. Experiments were performed on fiber bundles perfused continuously with an ATP-regenerating system. Conditions were identical to those we have used in previous studies of myosin head orientation, except that the fibers were perpendicular to the magnetic field, making the spectra primarily sensitive to rotational motion rather than to the orientational distribution. In rigor, the high intensity of the ST-EPR signal indicates the absence of microsecond rotational motion, showing that heads are all rigidly bound to actin. However, in both relaxation and contraction, considerable microsecond rotational motion is observed, implying that the previously reported orientational disorder under these conditions is dynamic, not static, on the microsecond time scale. The behavior in relaxation is essentially the same as that observed when myosin heads are detached from actin in the absence of ATP (Barnett and Thomas, 1984), corresponding to an effective rotational correlation time of approximately 10 microseconds. Slightly less mobility is observed during contraction. One possible interpretation is that in contraction all heads have the same mobility, corresponding to a correlation time of approximately 25 microseconds. Alternatively, more than one motional population may be present. For example, assuming that the spectrum in contraction is a linear combination of those in relaxation (mobile) and rigor (immobile), we obtained a good fit with a mole fraction of 78-88% of the heads in the mobile state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The physical mechanism of calcium pump regulation in the heart.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1  
The Ca-ATPase in the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane is regulated by an amphipathic transmembrane protein, phospholamban. We have used time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy to detect the microsecond rotational dynamics, and thereby the self-association, of the Ca-ATPase as a function of phospholamban phosphorylation and physiologically relevant calcium levels. The phosphorylation of phospholamban increases the rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase in the sarcoplasmic reticulum bilayer, due to a decrease in large-scale protein association, with a [Ca2+] dependence parallel to that of enzyme activation. These results support a model in which phospholamban phosphorylation or calcium free the enzyme from a kinetically unfavorable associated state.  相似文献   

6.
C L Berger  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(46):11036-11045
We have used saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) to detect the microsecond rotational motions of spin-labeled myosin subfragment one (MSL-S1) bound to actin in the presence of the ATP analogues AMPPNP (5'-adenylylimido diphosphate) and ATP gamma S [adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate)], which are believed to trap myosin in strongly and weakly bound intermediate states of the actomyosin ATPase cycle, respectively. Sedimentation binding measurements were used to determine the fraction of myosin heads bound to actin under ST-EPR conditions and the fraction of heads containing bound nucleotide. ST-EPR spectra were then corrected to obtain the spectrum corresponding to the ternary complex (actin.MSL-S1.nucleotide). The ST-EPR spectrum of MSL-S1.AMPPNP bound to actin is identical to that obtained in the absence of nucleotide (rigor complex), indicating no rotational motion of MSL-S1 relative to actin on the microsecond time scale. However, MSL-S1-ATP gamma S bound to actin is rotationally mobile, with an effective rotational correlation time (tau r) of 17 +/- 2 microseconds. This motion is similar to that observed previously for actin-bound MSL-S1 during the steady-state hydrolysis of ATP [Berger et al. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 8753-8757]. We conclude that, in solution, the weakly bound actin-attached states of the myosin ATPase cycle undergo microsecond rotational motions, while the strongly bound intermediates do not, and that these motions are likely to be involved in the molecular mechanism of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

7.
The most probable source of force generation in muscle fibers in the rotation of the myosin head when bound to actin. This laboratory has demonstrated that ATP induces microsecond rotational motions of spin-labeled myosin heads bound to actin (Berger, C. L. E. C. Svensson, and D. D. Thomas. 1989. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 86:8753-8757). Our goal is to determine whether the observed ATP-induced rotational motions of actin-bound heads are accompanied by changes in actin rotational motions. We have used saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) and laser-induced photolysis of caged ATP to monitor changes in the microsecond rotational dynamics of spin-labeled F-actin in the presence of myosin subfragment-1 (S1). A maleimide spin label was attached selectively to cys-374 on actin. In the absence of ATP (with or without caged ATP), the ST-EPR spectrum (corresponding to an effective rotational time of approximately 150 microseconds) was essentially the same as observed for the same spin label bound to cys-707 (SH1) on S1, indicating that S1 is rigidly bound to actin in rigor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
We have developed a saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) method to measure selectively the rotational dynamics of those lipids that are motionally restricted by integral membrane proteins and have applied this methodology to measure lipid-protein interactions in native sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. This analysis involves the measurement of spectral saturation using a series of six stearic acid spin labels that are labeled with a nitroxide at different carbon atom positions. A large amount of spectral saturation is observed for spin labels in native SR membranes, but not for spin labels in dispersions of extracted SR lipids, implying that the motional properties of those lipids interacting with the Ca-ATPase, i.e., the boundary or annular lipid, can be directly measured without the need for spectral subtraction procedures. A comparison of the motional properties of the restricted lipid, measured by ST-EPR, with those measured by digital subtraction of conventional EPR spectra qualitatively agree, for in both cases the Ca-ATPase restricts the rotational mobility of a population of lipids, whose rotational mobility increases as the nitroxide is positioned toward the center of the bilayer. However, the ability of ST-EPR to directly measure the motionally restricted lipid in a model-independent means provides the greater precision necessary to measure small changes in the rotational dynamics of the lipid at the protein-lipid interface, providing a valuable tool in clarifying the relationship between the physical nature of the protein-lipid interface and membrane function.  相似文献   

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

10.
We have determined directly the effects of the inhibitory peptide phospholamban (PLB) on the rotational dynamics of the calcium pump (Ca-ATPase) of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). This was accomplished by comparing mouse ventricular SR, which has PLB levels similar to those found in other mammals, with mouse atrial SR, which is effectively devoid of PLB and thus has much higher (unregulated) calcium pump activity. To obtain sufficient quantities of atrial SR, we isolated the membranes from atrial tumor cells. We used time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy of an erythrosin isothiocyanate label attached selectively and rigidly to the Ca-ATPase, to detect the microsecond rotational motion of the Ca-ATPase in the two preparations. The time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy decays of both preparations at 25 degrees C were multi-exponential, because of the presence of different oligomeric species. The rotational correlation times for the different oligomers were similar for the two preparations, but the total decay amplitude was substantially greater for atrial tumor SR, indicating that a smaller fraction of the Ca-ATPase molecules exists as large aggregates. Phosphorylation of PLB in ventricular SR decreased the population of large-scale Ca-ATPase aggregates to a level similar to that of atrial tumor SR. Lipid chain mobility (fluidity), detected by electron paramagnetic resonance of stearic acid spin labels, was very similar in the two preparations, indicating that the higher protein mobility in atrial tumor SR is not due to higher lipid fluidity. We conclude that PLB inhibits by inducing Ca-ATPase lateral aggregation, which can be relieved either by phosphorylating or removing PLB.  相似文献   

11.
S M Lewis  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1992,31(32):7381-7389
We have used frequency- and time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to study the effects of substrate on the nanosecond conformational dynamics of the Ca-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum, as detected by an iodoacetamide spin label (IASL) attached covalently to the enzyme. We confirm previous results [Coan, C. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5826] showing that this probe is less rotationally mobile following the addition of nucleotides (ADP, AMPPNP, ATP) and that the shape of the spectrum suggests the presence of two components. We used two approaches to enhance EPR resolution in order to resolve the spectral components and their corresponding conformational states. First, to improve resolution in the frequency (spectral) domain, we used perdeuterated IASL, which results in narrower line widths. Digital spectral analysis resolves the EPR spectrum into two components, one that is indistinguishable from the spectrum observed in the absence of ligands and another that indicates more restricted probe motions, suggesting a distinct conformation of the labeled protein. Additions of substrate ligands appear to change only the mole fractions of the two components. The mole fraction of the restricted component (fR) was 0 in the absence of ligands, but increased to about 0.5 in the presence of saturating concentrations of AMPPNP and Ca2+. In general, ATP and its analogs increase fR, with larger effects observed in the presence of Ca. However, calcium has no effect by itself (fR = 0). Both monovanadate and decavanadate increase fR, but the formation of a covalent phosphoenzyme from inorganic phosphate (E2-P) had no effect (fR = 0).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the role of lipid and protein dynamics in the activation of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) by diethyl ether. Conventional and saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) were used to probe rotational motions of spin labels attached either to fatty acid hydrocarbon chains or to the Ca-ATPase in SR. We confirm previous studies (Salama, G., and Scarpa, A. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 6525-6528; Salama, G., and Scarpa, A. (1983) Biochem. Pharmacol. 32, 3465-3477; Kidd, A., Scales, D., and Inesi, G. (1981) Biochem. Biophys. Acta 65, 124-131) reporting that addition of diethyl ether to SR results in an approximately 2-fold enzymatic activation, without loss of coupling. Diethyl ether progressively fluidizes the SR membrane with respect to lipid hydrocarbon chain dynamics probed at several depths in the bilayer. Digital substractions, used to analyze two-component lipid spin label spectra, reveal that a 2-fold mobilization occurs in the population of lipid probes motionally restricted by the protein, while the remaining more mobile population is less affected. The microwave saturation properties of lipid probes also indicate that restricted motions of these probes are mobilized in maximally activated SR membranes. Saturation-transfer EPR, applied to maleimide spin-labeled Ca-ATPase, demonstrates that a 2-fold increase in microsecond rotational motion of the Ca-ATPase correlates with the maximal enzymatic activation. Effects of diethyl ether on both the enzymatic activity and molecular dynamics are completely reversible by dilution with buffer. We propose that ether activates by selectively mobilizing lipid chains adjacent to the enzyme, thus facilitating protein motions that are essential for calcium transport.  相似文献   

13.
We have used saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) to measure the microsecond rotational motion of actin-bound myosin heads in spin-labeled myofibrils in the presence of the ATP analogs AMPPNP (5'-adenylylimido-diphosphate) and ATP gamma S (adenosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate)). AMPPNP and ATP gamma S are believed to trap myosin in two major conformational intermediates of the actomyosin ATPase cycle, respectively known as the weakly bound and strongly bound states. Previous ST-EPR experiments with solutions of acto-S1 have demonstrated that actin-bound myosin heads are rotationally mobile on the microsecond time scale in the presence of ATP gamma S, but not in the presence of AMPPNP. However, it is not clear that results obtained with acto-S1 in solution can be extended to actomyosin constrained within the myofibrillar lattice. Therefore, ST-EPR spectra of spin-labeled myofibrils were analyzed explicitly in terms of the actin-bound component of myosin heads in the presence of AMPPNP and ATP gamma S. The fraction of actin-attached myosin heads was determined biochemically in the spin-labeled myofibrils, using the proteolytic rates actomyosin binding assay. At physiological ionic strength (mu = 165 mM), actin-bound myosin heads were found to be rotationally mobile on the microsecond time scale (tau r = 24 +/- 8 microseconds) in the presence of ATP gamma S, but not AMPPNP. Similar results were obtained at low ionic strength, confirming the acto-S1 solution studies. The microsecond rotational motions of actin-attached myosin heads in the presence of ATP gamma S are similar to those observed for spin-labeled myosin heads during the steady-state cycling of the actomyosin ATPase, both in solution and in an active isometric muscle fiber. These results indicate that weakly bound myosin heads, in the pre-force phase of the ATPase cycle, are rotationally mobile, while strongly bound heads, in the force-generating phase, are rotationally immobile. We propose that force generation involves a transition from a dynamically disordered crossbridge to a rigid and stereospecific one.  相似文献   

14.
Hunter GW  Bigelow DJ  Squier TC 《Biochemistry》1999,38(14):4604-4612
Catalytically important motions of the Ca-ATPase, modulated by the physical properties of surrounding membrane phospholipids, have been suggested to be rate-limiting under physiological conditions. To identify the nature of the structural coupling between the Ca-ATPase and membrane phospholipids, we have investigated the functional and structural effects resulting from the incorporation of the lysophospholipid 1-myristoyl-2-hydroxy-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine (LPC) into native sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. Nonsolubilizing concentrations of LPC abolish changes in fluorescence signals associated with either intrinsic or extrinsic chromophores that monitor normal conformational transitions accompanying calcium activation of the Ca-ATPase. There are corresponding decreases in the rates of calcium transport coupled to ATP hydrolysis, suggesting that LPC may increase conformational barriers associated with catalytic function. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements of the lipid analogue 1-(4-trimethylammoniumphenyl)-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (TMA-DPH) partitioned into SR membranes indicate that LPC does not significantly modify lipid acyl chain rotational dynamics, suggesting differences in headgroup conformation between LPC and diacylglycerol phosphatidylcholines. Complementary measurements using phosphorescence anisotropy of erythrosin isothiocyanate at Lys464 on the Ca-ATPase provide a measure of the dynamic structure of the phosphorylation domain, and indicate that LPC restricts the amplitude of rotational motion. These results suggest a structural linkage between the cytosolic phosphorylation domain and the conformation of membrane phospholipid headgroups. Thus, changes in membrane phospholipid composition can modulate membrane surface properties and affect catalytically important motions of the Ca-ATPase in a manner that suggests a role for LPC generated during signal transduction.  相似文献   

15.
Saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR) spectroscopy has been employed to characterize the very slow microsecond to millisecond rotational dynamics of a wide range of nitroxide spin-labeled proteins and other macromolecules in the past three decades. The vast majority of this previous work has been carried out on spectrometers that operate at X-band ( approximately 9 GHz) microwave frequency with a few investigations reported at Q-band ( approximately 34 GHz). EPR spectrometers that operate in the 94-250-GHz range and that are capable of making conventional linear EPR measurements on small aqueous samples have now been developed. This work addresses potential advantages of utilizing these same high frequencies for ST-EPR studies that seek to quantitatively analyze the very slow rotational dynamics of spin-labeled macromolecules. For example, the uniaxial rotational diffusion (URD) model has been shown to be particularly applicable to the study of the rotational dynamics of integral membrane proteins. Computational algorithms have been employed to define the sensitivity of ST-EPR signals at 94, 140, and 250 GHz to the correlation time for URD, to the amplitude of constrained URD, and to the orientation of the spin label relative to the URD axis. The calculations presented in this work demonstrate that these higher microwave frequencies provide substantial increases in sensitivity to the correlation time for URD, to small constraints in URD, and to the geometry of the spin label relative to the URD axis as compared with measurements made at X-band. Moreover, the calculations at these higher frequencies indicate sensitivity to rotational motions in the 1-100-ms time window, particularly at 250 GHz, thereby extending the slow motion limit for ST-EPR by two orders of magnitude relative to X- and Q-bands.  相似文献   

16.
Calcium filling of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles in the steady state is greatly increased by precipitation of lumenal calcium with oxalate. We find that low concentrations (1 mM) of Pi also allow greater loading by forming a soluble complex with lumenal calcium, an effect that is likely to be of physiological relevance. Furthermore, ADP scavenging by ATP regenerating systems favors calcium loading by preventing reversal of the pump. We also find that uncoupling of ATPase and transport activities is another factor limiting calcium loading. In fact, calcium uptake and ATP utilization occur with a molar ratio of 2:1 in the transient state following addition of ATP but decrease to much lower values in the steady state. Even in the absence of the highly conductive channel which is present only in "heavy" vesicles, "light" vesicles display calcium leakage which is inhibited by medium Ca2+ in the concentration range of ATPase activation and is likely related to an ATPase channel which is involved in calcium transport. It is apparent that, under conditions of ATPase turnover and in the presence of high lumenal Ca2+ and ADP, slippage of calcium through this channel produces true uncoupling of catalytic and transport activities. Coupling is improved by complexation of lumenal Ca2+ and by ATP regeneration and is influenced by the solvent characteristics of the reaction medium. The synergistic effects of lumenal Ca2+ and ADP, and the role of alternate pathways for phosphoenzyme cleavage, are clarified by steady state analysis of a multiple step reaction mechanism. It is concluded that the ideal (2:1) stoichiometric coupling of transport and ATPase activities is not insured by an obligatory pathway of catalysis (as predicted by all reaction schemes published so far); rather, coupling is influenced by the concentrations of ligands and their effects on second order reactions and the consequent distribution of intermediate states.  相似文献   

17.
A preparation of purified erythrocyte membrane ATPase whose activation by Ca2+ is or is not dependent on calmodulin depending on the enzyme dilution was used in the low dilution state for these studies. In appropriate conditions, the purified ATPase in the absence of calmodulin exhibited a Ca2+ concentration dependence identical to that of the native enzyme in the erythrocyte membrane ghost in the presence of calmodulin. Accordingly, an apparent Kd approximately equal to 1 X 10(-7) M was derived for cooperative calcium binding to the activating and transport sites of the nonphosphorylated enzyme. The kinetics of enzyme phosphorylation in the transient state following addition of ATP to enzyme activated with calcium were then resolved by rapid kinetic methods, demonstrating directly that phosphoenzyme formation precedes Pi production, consistent with the phosphoenzyme role as an intermediate in the catalytic cycle. Titration of a low affinity site (Kd approximately equal to 2 X 10(-3) M) with calcium produced inhibition of phosphoenzyme cleavage and favored reversal of the catalytic cycle, indicating that calcium dissociation from the transport sites precedes hydrolytic cleavage of the phosphoenzyme. The two different calcium dissociation constants of the nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated enzyme demonstrate that a phosphorylation-induced reduction of calcium affinity is the basic coupling mechanism of catalysis and active transport, with an energy expenditure of approximately 6 kcal/mol of calcium in standard conditions. From the kinetic point of view, a rate-limiting step is identified with the slow dissociation of calcium from the phosphoenzyme; another relatively slow step following hydrolytic cleavage and preceding recycling of the enzyme is suggested by the occurrence of a presteady state phosphoenzyme overshoot.  相似文献   

18.
In this work, we set out to identify and characterize the calcium occluded intermediate(s) of the plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA) to study the mechanism of calcium transport. To this end, we developed a procedure for measuring the occlusion of Ca(2+) in microsomes containing PMCA. This involves a system for overexpression of the PMCA and the use of a rapid mixing device combined with a filtration chamber, allowing the isolation of the enzyme and quantification of retained calcium. Measurements of retained calcium as a function of the Ca(2+) concentration in steady state showed a hyperbolic dependence with an apparent dissociation constant of 12 ± 2.2 μM, which agrees with the value found through measurements of PMCA activity in the absence of calmodulin. When enzyme phosphorylation and the retained calcium were studied as a function of time in the presence of La(III) (inducing accumulation of phosphoenzyme in the E(1)P state), we obtained apparent rate constants not significantly different from each other. Quantification of EP and retained calcium in steady state yield a stoichiometry of one mole of occluded calcium per mole of phosphoenzyme. These results demonstrate for the first time that one calcium ion becomes occluded in the E(1)P-phosphorylated intermediate of the PMCA.  相似文献   

19.
The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the separate roles of lipid, detergent and protein-protein interaction for stability and catalytic properties of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase solubilized in the non-ionic detergent octa(ethylene glycol) monododecyl ether (C12E8). The use of large-zone high-performance liquid chromatography permitted us to define the self-association state of Ca-ATPase peptide at various detergent, phospholipid and protein concentrations, and also during enzymatic turnover with ATP. Conditions were established for monomerization of Ca-ATPase in the presence of a high concentration of phospholipid relative to detergent. The lipid-saturated monomeric preparation was relatively resistant to inactivation in the absence of Ca2+, whereas delipidated enzyme in monomeric or in oligomeric form was prone to inactivation. Kinetics of phosphoenzyme turnover were examined in the presence and absence of Mg2+. Dephosphorylation rates were sensitive to Mg2+, irrespective of whether the peptide was present in soluble monomeric form or was membrane-bound. C12E8-solubilized monomer without added phospholipid was, however, characterized by a fast initial phase of dephosphorylation in the absence of Mg2+. This was not observed with monomer saturated with phospholipid or with monomer solubilized in myristoylglycerophosphocholine or deoxycholate. The mechanism underlying this difference was shown to be a C12E8-induced acceleration of conversion of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P) to ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P). The phosphoenzyme isomerization rate was also found to be enhanced by low-affinity binding of ATP. This was demonstrated both in membrane-bound and in soluble monomeric Ca-ATPase. Our results indicate that a single peptide chain constitutes the target for modulation of phosphoenzyme turnover by Mg2+ and ATP, and that detergent effects, distinct from those arising from disruption of protein-protein contacts, are the major determinants of kinetic differences between C12E8-solubilized and membrane-bound enzyme preparations.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated the relationship between function and molecular dynamics of both the lipid and the Ca-ATPase protein in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using temperature as a means of altering both activity and rotational dynamics. Conventional and saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was used to probe rotational motions of spin-labels attached either to fatty acid hydrocarbon chains or to the Ca-ATPase sulfhydryl groups in SR. EPR studies were also performed on aqueous dispersions of extracted SR lipids, in order to study intrinsic lipid properties independent of the protein. While an Arrhenius plot of the Ca-ATPase activity exhibits a clear change in slope at 20 degrees C, Arrhenius plots of lipid hydrocarbon chain mobility are linear, indicating that an abrupt thermotropic change in the lipid hydrocarbon phase is not responsible for the Arrhenius break in enzymatic activity. The presence of protein was found to decrease the average hydrocarbon chain mobility, but linear Arrhenius plots were observed both in the intact SR and in extracted lipids. Lipid EPR spectra were analyzed by procedures that prevent the production of artifactual breaks in the Arrhenius plots. Similarly, using sample preparations and spectral analysis methods that minimize the temperature-dependent contribution of local probe mobility to the spectra of spin-labeled Ca-ATPase, we find that Arrhenius plots of overall protein rotational mobility also exhibit no change in slope. The activation energy for protein mobility is the same as that of ATPase activity above 20 degrees C; we discuss the possibility that overall protein mobility may be essential to the rate-limiting step above 20 degrees C.  相似文献   

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