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1.
Rat heart sarcolemma prepared by the hypotonic shock-LiBr treatment method was found to bind calcium by a concentration-dependent and saturable process. The calcium binding values at 50 muM and 1.25 mM Ca2+ concentrations were about 30 and 250 nmoles/mg protein, respectively. Both Mg2+ and ATP inhibited calcium binding and no evidence for energy-linked calcium binding with sarcolemmn was found. z sn the other hand, maximal ATP hydrolysis by heart sarcolemma was seen at 4 mM Mg2+ or Ca2+. The Ca2+-ATPase LEO) of Ca2+ failed to stimulate ATP hydrolysis in the presence of various concentrations of Mg-ATP. These results indicate the absence of a "calcium pump" mechanism in the heart sarcolemmal membrane preparation employed in this study.  相似文献   

2.
Sarcolemma isolated from guinea pig heart ventricles possessed ATP-dependent Ca2+ binding and accumulation (+ oxalate) activities which were not inhibited by sodium azide, oligomycin, or ruthenium red. Ca2+ binding and accumulation by sarcolemma were sensitive to pH, the optimum being about pH 6.8. The concentrations of ATP required for half-maximal binding and accumulation were 94.3 and 172 muM, respectively. Mg2+ up to 5 mM significantly enhanced both activities but was inhibitory at higher concentrations (greater than 10 mM). Sarcolemmal Ca2+ binding and accumulation were stimulated 100% by K+, half-maximal enhancement occurring at 5-10 mM K+. Ca2+ binding and accumulation were both saturable processes and the respective apparent Km values for Ca2+ were 16.4 and 14.3 muM. Ca2+ binding by sarcolemma was a rapid process and the bound Ca2+ was released upon depletion of ATP in the medium. It is suggested that the sarcolemmal Ca2+ transport system may well be of significance in regulation of the contraction-relaxation cycle of cardiac muscle.  相似文献   

3.
Solubilized and purified high-affinity (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) of the human erythrocyte membrane (Wolf, H.U., Dieckvoss, G. and Lichtner, R. (1977) Acta Biol. Ger. 36, 847) has been phosphorylated and dephosphorylated under various conditions with respect to Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations. In the range, 0.001--100 mM, the rate of phosphorylation was dependent on Ca2+ concentration, showing a maximum at 10 mM. The phosphorylation rate was nearly independent of the Mg2+ concentration within the range 0.01-1 mM. This enzyme has at least three Ca2+ binding sites with different affinities and regulatory functions: (1) binding to the high-affinity site yields phosphorylation of the enzyme; (2) binding to a low-affinity site (Ca2+ concentrations higher than 40 microM) inhibits dephosphorylation or the conformational change which is necessary for dephosphorylation; (3) by binding to an additional low-affinity site, Ca2+ at concentrations higher than 1 mM abolishes negative cooperative behaviour (shown below 1 mM Ca2+) and causes weak positive cooperativity between at least two catalytic subunits in the phosphorylation reaction. The phosphoprotein obtained at Ca2+ concentrations above 1 mM dephosphorylates spontaneously after removal of the divalent metal ions. Addition of Mg2+ accelerates the dephosphorylation rate. Affinities of the inhibitory Ca2+ binding sites are reduced by the binding of substrate or K+.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of Ca2+ on the interaction of bovine cardiac myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) with actin regulated by cardiac troponin-tropomyosin was evaluated. The ratios of actin to troponin and to tropomyosin were adjusted to optimize the Ca2+-dependent regulation of the steady-state actin-activated magnesium adenosinetriphosphatase (MgATPase) rate of myosin S-1. At 25 degrees C, pH 6.9, 16 mM ionic strength, the extrapolated values for maximal adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) turnover rate at saturating actin, Vmax, were 6.5 s-1 in the presence of Ca2+ and 0.24 s-1 in the absence of Ca2+. In contrast to this 27-fold regulation of ATP hydrolysis, there was negligible Ca2+-dependent regulation of cardiac myosin S-1 binding to actin. In the presence of ATP, the dissociation constant of regulated actin and cardiac myosin S-1 was 32 microM in the presence of Ca2+ and 40 microM in the presence of [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. These dissociation constants are indistinguishable from the concentrations of actin needed to reach half-saturation of the myosin S-1 MgATPase rates, 37 microM actin in the presence of Ca2+ and 53 microM in its absence. Although there may be Ca2+-dependent regulation of cross-bridge binding in the intact heart, the present biochemical studies suggest that cardiac regulation critically involves other parts of the cross-bridge cycle, evidenced here by almost complete Ca2+-mediated control of the myosin S-1 MgATPase rate even when the myosin S-1 is actin-bound.  相似文献   

5.
The sequential binding of Sr2+ and Ca2+ to the cytoplasmic transport sites of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase allows the formation of two different mixed complexes: cE.Sr.Ca, with Sr2+ bound to the "inner" site and Ca2+ bound to the "outer" site, and cE. Ca.Sr, with Ca2+ bound to the inner site and Sr2+ bound to the outer site (pH 7.0, 25 degrees C, 10 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl). Both cE.Sr.45Ca and cE.45Ca.Sr react with ATP to internalize one 45Ca/phosphoenzyme. The value of K0.5 = 83 microM Sr2+ for activation of the enzyme for phosphorylation by ATP is much larger than K0.5 = 28 microM Sr2+ for inhibition of phosphoenzyme formation from inorganic phosphate (eta H = 1.0-1.3). These results are consistent with the sequential binding of two strontium ions with negative cooperativity and dissociation constants of KSr1 = 35 microM and KSr2 = 55 microM. The species cE.Sr2 and cE.Ca2 react rapidly with ATP but not inorganic phosphate. However, enzyme with one strontium bound, cE.Sr, does not react with either inorganic phosphate or ATP. Therefore, the conformational changes in the enzyme that alter the chemical specificity for phosphorylation by ATP and by inorganic phosphate are different. This requires the existence of at least three forms of the unphosphorylated enzyme with three different chemical specificities for catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
L S Tobacman 《Biochemistry》1987,26(2):492-497
The magnesium adenosinetriphosphatase (MgATPase) rate of cardiac myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) was studied in the presence of regulated actin in order to investigate the mechanism by which Ca2+ cooperatively induces cardiac muscle contraction. The MgATPase rate increased cooperatively with Ca2+, exhibiting a Hill coefficient of 1.8 and 50% activation at pCa 5.75. This cooperative response occurred despite an experimental design excluding several potential sources of cooperativity. First, to exclude spurious cooperativity due to erroneous calculation of pCa at low ionic strength, the affinities of Ca2+ and Mg2+ for [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid (EGTA) were measured by a novel method using Quin 2. At pH 7.06, 25 degrees C, and mu = 30 mM, the KD was 140 nM for CaEGTA and 2.7 mM for MgEGTA. Second, the cooperativity was not produced by actin-myosin S-1 binding; myosin S-1 was bound to only 1 of every 300 actin promoters, and earlier work [Tobacman, L. S., & Adelstein, R. S. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 798-802] had shown that cardiac myosin S-1 binds with equal affinity to the thin filament at very low Ca2+ and at saturating Ca2+ concentrations. Furthermore, the adenosine 5'-triphosphate turnover rate of the myosin S-1 was independent of enzyme concentration at low, intermediate, and saturating Ca2+ concentrations. Finally, since cardiac troponin has only one regulatory Ca2+-specific site, cooperative interactions between such sites could not occur. These data suggest that part of the cooperativity conferred by interaction between adjacent troponin-tropomyosin complexes is intrinsic to the thin filament and independent of myosin.  相似文献   

7.
Acetyl phosphate is hydrolyzed by the calcium ATPase of leaky sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles from rabbit skeletal muscle with Km = 6.5 mM and kcat = 7.9 s-1 in the presence of 100 microM calcium (180 mM K+, 5 mM MgSO4, pH 7.0, 25 degrees C). In the absence of calcium, hydrolysis is 6% of the calcium-dependent rate at low and 24% at saturating concentrations of acetyl phosphate. Values of K0.5 for calcium are 3.5 and 2.2 microM (n = 1.6) in the presence of 1 and 50 mM acetyl phosphate, respectively; inhibition by calcium follows K0.5 = 1.6 mM (n approximately 1.1) with 50 mM acetyl phosphate and K0.5 = 0.5 mM (n approximately 1.3) with 1.5 mM ATP. The calcium-dependent rate of phosphoenzyme formation from acetyl phosphate is consistent with Km = 43 mM and kf = 32 s-1 at saturation; decomposition of the phosphoenzyme occurs with kt = 16 s-1. The maximum fraction of phosphoenzyme formed in the steady state at saturating acetyl phosphate concentrations is 43-46%. These results are consistent with kc congruent to 30 s-1 for binding of Ca2+ to E at saturating [Ca2+], to give cE.Ca2, in the absence of activation by ATP. Phosphoenzyme formed from ATP and from acetyl phosphate shows the same biphasic reaction with ADP, rate constants for decomposition that are the same within experimental error, and similar or identical activation of decomposition by ATP. It is concluded that the reaction pathways for acetyl phosphate and ATP in the presence of Ca2+ are the same, with the exception of calcium binding and phosphorylation; an alternative, faster route that avoids the kc step is available in the presence of ATP. The existence of three different regions of dependence on ATP concentration for steady state turnover is confirmed; activation of hydrolysis at high ATP concentrations involves an ATP-induced increase in kt.  相似文献   

8.
J Myung  W P Jencks 《FEBS letters》1991,278(1):35-37
The E-E* model for calcium pumping by the CaATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum includes two distinct conformational states of the enzyme, E and E*. Exterior Ca2+ binds only to E and interior Ca2+ binds only to E*. Therefore, it is expected that there will be competition between the binding of calcium to the unphosphorylated enzyme from the two sides of the membrane. The equilibrium concentration of cECa2, the enzyme with Ca2+ bound at the exterior site, was measured at different Ca2+ concentrations with empty sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles (SRV) and with SRV loaded with 40 mM Ca2+ by reaction with 0.5 mM [gamma-32P]ATP plus 20 mM EGTA for 13 ms (100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgSO4, 40 mM Mops/KOH, pH 7.0, 25 degrees C). The sigmoidal dependence on free exterior calcium concentration of the concentration of cECa2, measured as [32P]phosphoenzyme, is identical with empty and loaded SRV, within experimental error. The value of K0.5 is 2.8 microM, and the Hill coefficient is 2. This result shows that there is no competition between binding of Ca2+ to the outside and the inside of the membrane. This is consistent with a model in which the vectorial specificity for calcium binding is controlled by the chemical state of the enzyme, rather than a simple conformational change. It is concluded that there are not two interconverting forms of the free enzyme, E and E*, instead the vectorial specificity for binding and dissociation of Ca2+ is determined by the state of phosphorylation of the CaATPase.  相似文献   

9.
A M Hanel  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1991,30(47):11320-11330
The internalization of 45Ca by the calcium-transporting ATPase into sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles from rabbit muscle was measured during a single turnover of the enzyme by using a quench of 7 mM ADP and EGTA (25 degrees C, 5 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 40 mM MOPS.Tris, pH 7.0). Intact vesicles containing either 10-20 microM or 20 mM Ca2+ were preincubated with 45Ca for approximately 20 s and then mixed with 0.20-0.25 mM ATP and excess EGTA to give 70% phosphorylation of Etot with the rate constant k = 300 s-1. The two 45Ca ions bound to the phosphoenzyme (EP) become insensitive to the quench with ADP as they are internalized in a first-order reaction with a rate constant of k = approximately 30 s-1. The first and second Ca2+ ions that bind to the free enzyme were selectively labeled by mixing the enzyme and 45Ca with excess 40Ca, or by mixing the enzyme and 40Ca with 45Ca, for 50 ms prior to the addition of ATP and EGTA. The internalization of each ion into loaded or empty vesicles follows first-order kinetics with k = approximately 30 s-1; there is no indication of biphasic kinetics or an induction period for the internalization of either Ca2+ ion. The presence of 20 mM Ca2+ inside the vesicles has no effect on the kinetics or the extent of internalization of either or both of the individual ions. The Ca2+ ions bound to the phosphoenzyme are kinetically equivalent. A first-order reaction for the internalization of the individual Ca2+ ions is consistent with a rate-limiting conformational change of the phosphoenzyme with kc = 30 s-1, followed by rapid dissociation of the Ca2+ ions from separate independent binding sites on E approximately P.Ca2; lumenal calcium does not inhibit the dissociation of calcium from these sites. Alternatively, the Ca2+ ions may dissociate sequentially from E approximately P.Ca2 following a rate-limiting conformational change. However, the order of dissociation of the individual ions can not be distinguished. An ordered-sequential mechanism for dissociation requires that the ions dissociate much faster (k greater than or equal to 10(5) s-1) than the forward and reverse reactions for the conformational change (k-c = approximately 3000 s-1). Finally, the Ca2+ ions may exchange their positions rapidly on the phosphoenzyme (kmix greater than or equal to 10(5) s-1) before dissociating. A Hill slope of nH = 1.0-1.2, with K0.5 = 0.8-0.9 mM, for the inhibition of turnover by binding of Ca2+ to the low-affinity transport sites of the phosphoenzyme was obtained from rate measurements at six different concentrations of Mg2+.  相似文献   

10.
Calcium binding to bile salt monomers and micelles is an important issue with respect to the possible (but rare) precipitation of calcium bile salts in the gallbladder. In the present work the binding of Ca2+ to six bile salts was measured in solutions containing 2 to 100 mM bile salts by means of a calcium-sensitive dye, murexide, which determines the ionic calcium concentration. In solutions containing bile salt at concentration higher than 20 mM most, if not all, of the bound Ca2+ is associated with micellar surfaces. The results were analyzed by employing a model which combines specific binding with electrostatic equations and accounts for the system being a closed one. The analysis of Ca2+ binding data considered explicitly the presence of Na+ ions and yielded intrinsic binding coefficients for Ca2+ and Na+ which were utilized to explain and predict binding results for various concentrations of Ca2+, Na+ and bile salts. The calculations indicate that in saline solutions most of the surface sites were bound by Na+, whereas less than 10% were bound by Ca2+ even in the presence of 8 mM Ca2+. The binding of Ca2+ to bile salt micelles increases with pH. An increase in temperature results in reduced binding affinity of Ca2+ to the bile salt micelles.  相似文献   

11.
G Tiger  C J Fowler 《Life sciences》1991,48(13):1283-1291
The calcium and potassium ion dependency of the inositol phospholipid breakdown response to stimulatory agents has been investigated in rat cerebral cortical miniprisms. The calcium channel agonist BAY K-8644 (10 microM) potentiated the response to carbachol at 6 mM K+ when Ca2(+)-free, but not when 2.52 mM Ca2+ assay buffer was used. In Ca2(+)-free buffer, verapamil (10 microM) inhibited the response to carbachol at both 6 and 18 mM K+ but higher concentrations (30-300 microM) were needed when 2.52 mM Ca2+ was used. At these higher concentrations, however, verapamil inhibited the binding of 2 nM [3H]pirenzepine to muscarinic recognition sites. N-Methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA, 100 microM) significantly reduced the basal phosphoinositide breakdown rate at 18 mM K+ at 1.3 mM Ca2+, but was without effect on the basal rate at other K+ and Ca2+ concentrations. In the presence of NMDA (100 microM) or quisqualate (100 microM), the responses to carbachol were reduced, the degree of reduction showing a complex dependency upon the assay K+ and Ca2+ concentrations used. These results indicate that the inositol phospholipid breakdown response to carbachol in cerebral cortical miniprisms can be modulated in a manner dependent upon the extracellular calcium and potassium concentrations used.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of 45Ca2+ into synaptosomal plasma membranes (SPM) of dog brain follows a sigmoid path. In graphical analysis of this binding the mean Hill coefficient (h) was 1.64 +/- 0.09 (r2 = 0.96 +/- 0.02). Binding of Ca2+ into SPM was saturable, with an apparent binding constant of 1.2 +/- 0.1 microM. At saturation, such calcium specific binding sites corresponded to 11.2 +/- 0.9 nmol/mg SPM protein. The Hill plot in combination with the biphasic nature of the curve to obtain the equilibrium constant, showed a moderate degree of positive cooperativity in the binding of calcium into SPM of at least one class of high affinity specific binding sites. [14C]estradiol, [14C]estrone and [14C]progesterone, when incubated with SPM up to a concentration of 10 microM for 2 hr at 37 degrees C, bind into SPM at nmolar concentrations. Ca2+ ions up to 5 mM considerably increase steroids binding into SPM. This effect of calcium was concentration-dependent, reached saturation at approx 4-5 mM. Once calcium has promoted steroids binding, the subsequent addition of 25 mM EGTA failed to displace bound steroids. Molecular interactions between calcium and SPM was assessed by measuring the steady-state fluorescence polarization (P) of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH), and by estimating the production of malondialdehyde (MDA) during 2 hr incubation of Ca2+ (5 mM) with SPM at 37 degrees C. The effect of Ca2+ on the SPM structure was to increase both the rigidity of the membrane and the MDA production. Chelation of Ca2+ (5 mM) with EGTA (25 mM) did not reverse the increase in the rigidity owing to metabolic alterations of SPM lipids (e.g. production of MDA).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the interrelationship between free calcium (Ca2+) and magnesium (Mg2+) in the Ca2+ ATPase enzyme cycle of kidney membranes. Experiments were performed with basolateral membranes from rat renal cortex and microdissected proximal and distal tubules from mice. Results were similar in the three types of preparations. We first investigated the effect of ATP concentration on Ca2(+)- and Mg2(+)-dependent ATP hydrolysis. With 0.2 microM Ca2+, the enzyme activity, as a function of ATP concentration, showed two saturable components: a high affinity component with a Km of 33 microM ATP and a low affinity component with a Km of 0.63 mM ATP. These components may represent either two distinct sites of ATP binding or two forms of the same site. For the sake of simplicity, it was assumed that the two components correspond to a high affinity and a low affinity substrate site. At the high affinity site (ATP = 50 microM), the Ca2+ dependence of ATP hydrolysis followed a single Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km for Ca2+ of 0.08 microM. The addition of 1 mM Mg2+ resulted in a relatively constant increase in ATP hydrolysis at all Ca2+ concentrations, indicating that the effects of the two cations were additive. With high ATP concentration (ATP = 3 mM), Ca2+ also induced an ATP hydrolysis according to a saturable process, with a Km for Ca2+ of 0.2 microM. In contrast with what occurred with low concentrations of ATP, addition of millimolar Mg2+ completely curtailed the sensitivity of the enzyme to Ca2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
A M Hanel  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1990,29(21):5210-5220
The calcium-transport ATPase (CaATPase) of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum preincubated with 0.02 mM Ca2+ (cE.Ca2) is phosphorylated upon the addition of 0.25 mM LaCl3 and 0.3 mM [gamma-32P]ATP with an observed rate constant of 6.5 s-1 (40 mM MOPS, pH 7.0, 100 mM KCl, 25 degrees C). La.ATP binds to cE.Ca2 with a rate constant of 5 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, while ATP, Ca2+, and La3+ dissociate from cE.Ca2.La.ATP at less than or equal to 1 s-1. The reaction of ADP with phosphoenzyme (EP) formed from La.ATP is biphasic. An initial rapid loss of EP is followed by a slower first-order disappearance, which proceeds to an equilibrium mixture of EP.ADP and nonphosphorylated enzyme with bound ATP. The fraction of EP that reacts in the burst (alpha) and the first-order rate constant for the slow phase (kb) increase proportionally with increasing concentrations of ADP to give maximum values of 0.34 and 65 s-1, respectively, at saturating ADP (KADPS = 0.22 mM). The burst represents rapid phosphoryl transfer and demonstrates that ATP synthesis and hydrolysis on the enzyme are fast. The phosphorylation of cE.Ca2 by La.ATP at 6.5 s-1 and the kinetics for the reaction of EP with ADP are consistent with a rate-limiting conformational change in both directions. The conformational change converts cE.Ca2.La.ATP to the form of the enzyme that is activated for phosphoryl transfer, aE.Ca2.La.ATP, at 6.5 s-1; this is much slower than the analogous conformational change at 220 s-1 with Mg2+ as the catalytic ion [Petithory & Jencks (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4493]. The rate constant for the conversion of aE.Ca2.La.ATP to cE.Ca2.La.ATP is 170 s-1. ATP does not dissociate measurably from aE.Ca2.La.ATP. Labeled EP formed from cE.Ca2 and La.ATP with leaky vesicles undergoes hydrolysis at 0.06 s-1. It is concluded that the reaction mechanism of the CaATPase is remarkably similar with Mg.ATP and La.ATP; however, the strong binding of La.ATP slows both the conformational change that is rate limiting for EP formation and the dissociation of La.ATP. An interaction between La3+ at the catalytic site and the calcium transport sites decreases the rate of calcium dissociation by greater than 60-fold. When cE-Ca2 is mixed with 0.3 mM ATP and 1.0 mM Cacl2, the phosphoenzyme is formed with an observed rate constant of 3 s-1. The phosphoenzyme formed from Ca.ATP reacts with 2.0 mM ADP and labeled ATP with a rate constant of 30 s-1; there may be a small burst (alpha less than or equal to 0.05).  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the relationship between thin filament Ca2+ binding and activation of the MgATPase rate of myosin subfragment 1, native cardiac thin filaments were isolated and characterized. Direct measurements of 45Ca binding to the thin filament were consistent with non-cooperative binding to two high affinity sites (Ka 7.3 +/- 0.8 x 10(6) M-1) and either cooperative or non-cooperative binding to one low affinity site (Ka 4 +/- 2 x 10(5) M-1) per troponin at 25 degrees C, 30 mM ionic strength, pH 7.06. Addition of a low concentration of myosin subfragment 1 to the native thin filaments produced a Ca2+-regulated MgATPase activity with Kapp (2.5 +/- 1.3 x 10(5) M-1), matching the low affinity Ca2+ site. The MgATPase rate was cooperatively activated by Ca2+ (Hill coefficient 1.8). To determine whether Ca2+ binding to the low affinity sites was cooperative, native thin filament troponin was exchanged with troponin labeled on troponin C with 2-(4'-iodoacetamidanilo)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid. From the Ca2+-sensitive fluorescence of this complex, Ca2+ binding was cooperative with a Hill coefficient of 1.7-2.0. Using the troponin-exchanged thin filaments, myosin subfragment 1 MgATPase rate activation was also cooperative and closely proportional to Ca2+ thin filament binding. Reconstitution of the thin filament from its components raised the Ca2+ affinity by a factor of 2 (compared with native thin filaments) and incorporation of fluorescently modified troponin raised the Ca2+ affinity by another factor of 2. Stoichiometrically reconstituted thin filaments produced non-cooperative MgATPase rate activation, contrasting with cooperative activation with native thin filaments, troponin-exchanged thin filaments and thin filaments reconstituted with a stoichiometric excess of troponin. The Ca2+-induced fluorescence transition of stoichiometrically reconstituted thin filaments was non-cooperative. These results suggest that Ca2+ binds cooperatively to the regulatory sites of the cardiac thin filament, even in the absence of myosin, and even though cardiac troponin C has only one Ca2+-specific binding site. A theoretical model for these observations is described and related to the experimental data. Well-known interactions between neighboring troponin-tropomyosin complexes are the proposed source of cooperativity and also influence the overall Ka. The data indicate that Ca2+ is four times more likely to elongate a sequence of troponin-tropomyosin units already binding Ca2+ than to bind to a site interior to a sequence of units without Ca2+.  相似文献   

16.
F U Reiffen  M Gratzl 《Biochemistry》1986,25(15):4402-4406
Recently we found that Ca2+ within chromaffin vesicles is largely bound [Bulenda, D., & Gratzl, M. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 7760-7765]. In order to explore the nature of these bonds, we analyzed the binding of Ca2+ to the vesicle matrix proteins as well as to ATP, the main nucleotide present in these vesicles. The dissociation constant at pH 7 is 50 microM (number of binding sites, n = 180 nmol/mg of protein) for Ca2+-protein bonds and 15 microM (n = 0.8 mumol/mumol) for Ca2+-ATP bonds. When the pH is decreased to more physiological values (pH 6), the number of binding sites remains the same. However, the affinity of Ca2+ for the proteins decreases much less than its affinity for ATP (dissociation constant of 90 vs. 70 microM). At pH 6 monovalent cations (30-50 mM) as well as Mg2+ (0.1-0.5 mM), which are also present within chromaffin vesicles, do not affect the number of binding sites for Ca2+ but cause a decrease in the affinity of Ca2+ for both proteins and ATP. For Ca2+ binding to ATP in the presence of 0.5 mM Mg2+ we found a dissociation constant of 340 microM and after addition of 35 mM K+ a dissociation constant of 170 microM. Ca2+ binding to the chromaffin vesicle matrix proteins in the presence of 0.5 mM Mg2+ is characterized by a Kd of 240 microM and after addition of 15 mM Na+ by a Kd of 340 microM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
When intact rat heart mitochondria were pulsed with 150 nmol of CaCl2/mg of mitochondrial protein, only a marginal stimulation of the rate of oxygen consumption was observed. This result was obtained with mitochondria isolated in either the presence or absence of nagarse. In contrast, rat liver mitochondria under similar conditions demonstrated a rapid, reversible burst of respiration associated with energy-linked calcium accumulation. Direct analysis of calcium retention using 45Ca and Millipore filtration indicated that calcium was accumulated by heart mitochondria under the above conditions via a unique energy-dependent process. The rate of translocation by heart mitochondria was less than that of liver mitochondria; likewise the release of bound calcium back into the medium was also retarded. These results suggest that the slower accumulation and release of calcium is characteristic of heart mitochondria. The amound of calcium bound was independent of penetrant anions at low calcium concentrations. Above 100 nmol/mg of mitochondrial protein, the total calcium bound was increased by the presence of inorganic phosphate. Under nonrespiring conditions, a biphasic Scatchard plot indicative of binding sites with different affinities for Ca2+ was observed. The extrapolated constants are 7.5 nmol/mg bound with an apparent half-saturation value of 75 muM and 42.5 nmol/mg bound with half-saturation at 1.15 mM. The response of the reduced State 4 cytochrome b to pulsed additions of Ca2+ was used to calculate an energy-dependent half-saturation constant of 40 muM. When the concentration of free calcium was stabilized at low levels with Ca2+-EGTA buffers, the spectrophotometrically determined binding constant decreased two orders of magnitude to an apparent affinity of 4.16 X 10(-7) M. Primary of calcium transport over oxidative phosphorylation was not observed with heart mitochondria. The phosphorylation of ADP competed with Ca2+ accumulation, depressed the rates of cation transport, and altered the profile of respiration-linked H+ movements. Consistent with these result was the observation that with liver mitochondrial the magnitude of the cytochrome b oxidation-reduction shift was greater for Ca2+ than for ADP, whereas calcium responses never surpassed the ADP response in heart mitochondria. Furthermore, Mg2+ ingibited calcium accumulation by heart mitochondria while having only a slight effect upon calcium transport in liver mitochondria. The unique energetics of heart mitochondrial calcium transport are discussed relative to the regulated flux of cations during the cardiac excitation-relaxation cycle.  相似文献   

18.
Vanadate binding to different sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane preparations was determined by measuring bound vanadate colorimetrically and by phosphorylating the vanadate-free enzyme fraction with [gamma-32P] ATP. Colorimetry allowed the study of the dependence of equilibrium vanadate binding on ionized magnesium and the displacing effect of ionized calcium at vanadate concentrations greater than 0.1 mM only. At saturating magnesium concentration the enzyme binds 6-8 nmol vanadate/mg protein and half-maximum saturation is reached at 40 microM. Vanadate is displaced from the enzyme when its high-affinity calcium-binding sites are saturated and conversely calcium is solely displaced from its high-affinity binding sites by vanadate. The phosphorylation procedure allowed the measurement of equilibrium binding as well as the kinetics of vanadate binding and release at vanadate concentrations below 0.1 mM. Half-times of 30s and 3s were observed for vanadate release induced by 0.1 mM and 1 mM calcium respectively. Millimolar concentrations of ATP are required for vanadate displacement. Under equilibrium conditions the enzyme displays an affinity for vanadate of 1.6 X 10(6) M-1. The dependence on the concentration of vanadate of the rate of vanadate binding yielded an affinity of only 1 X 10(4) M-1. Closed vesicles bind vanadate much more slowly than calcium-permeable preparations. The initial rate of calcium-induced vanadate dissociation is accelerated considerably when the vesicles are made calcium permeable. The rate of vanadate dissociation from calcium-permeable vesicles reaches half-maximum values at 1-2 mM calcium indicating that the internal low-affinity calcium-binding sites must first be occupied in order to release bound vanadate. The results suggest that vanadate binding leads to a transition of the external high to internal low-affinity calcium-binding sites.  相似文献   

19.
Mechanism for nucleotide exchange in monomeric actin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C Frieden  K Patane 《Biochemistry》1988,27(10):3812-3820
Rabbit skeletal muscle G-actin has been treated to obtain ADP, 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate (epsilon-ADP), or 1,N6-ethenoadenosine triphosphate (epsilon-ATP) at the nucleotide binding site and either Mg2+ or Ca2+ at high- and moderate-affinity metal binding sites. Apparent rates or rate constants for the displacement of the actin-bound nucleotides by epsilon-ATP or ATP have been obtained by stopped-flow measurements at pH 8 and 20 degrees C of the fluorescence difference between bound and free epsilon-ATP or epsilon-ADP. In the presence of Ca2+, displacement of ADP by epsilon-ATP or epsilon-ADP by ATP is a biphasic process, but in the presence of low (less than 10 microM) Mg2+ concentrations, it is a slow first-order process. At high levels of Mg2+ (greater than 50 microM), low ADP concentrations displace epsilon-ATP from G-actin as a consequence of Mg2+ binding to moderate-affinity sites on the actin. Displacement of epsilon-ATP by ATP in the presence of either Ca2+ or Mg2+ is slow at low ATP concentrations, but the rate is increased by high ATP concentrations. Using ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, we find that nucleotide exchange is affected differently by the removal of Ca2+ from the high-affinity site compared to Ca2+ removal from moderate-affinity sites. A mechanism for the displacement reaction is proposed in which there are two forms of an actin-ADP complex and metal binding influences the ratio of these forms as well as the binding of ATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In the absence of added calcium, inhibition of NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase by ATP occurred without ADP (I0.5 = 1.8 mM) and with 0.2 mM ADP3- (I0.5 = 1.0 mM) at subsaturating substrate concentrations at pH 7.4. Inhibition by ATP was competitive with NAD+ in the presence and absence of ADP and was not reversed by magnesium citrate. No reversal of ATP inhibition by free Ca2+ was observed in the presence of ADP (0.2 mM). However, when ADP was absent, increasing Ca2+ first caused progressive reversal of ATP inhibition followed by activation by ATP. Without ADP, the S0.5 for calcium activation was 80-140 microM at ATP concentrations between 0.6 and 3.0 mM. The S0.5 for ATP activation, in the absence of ADP, was 1.1 and 2.1 microM when free Ca2+ was held constant at 0.1 and 1.0 mM, respectively. As in activation by ADP, ATP decreased the S0.5 for magnesium isocitrate without affecting V. However, in contrast to ADP, the activation by ATP occurred without lowering the Hill coefficient for the substrate. GDP activated the enzyme at relatively high concentrations of Ca2+ but not without added Ca2+.  相似文献   

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