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1.
Dephosphorylation of [32P]phosphoenzyme of bovine brain Na+,K+-stimulated ATP phosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.3), labelled by [gamma-32P]ATP, was investigated at 21 degrees C by means of a rapid-mixing technique. On addition of a high concentration of KCl (10 mM) to [32P]phosphoenzyme at steady state in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+, very rapid dephosphorylation was obtained. Simultaneously, the amount of [32P]orthophosphate increased at about the same rate. It was concluded that this K+-stimulated dephosphorylation and liberation of [32P]orthophosphate from the [32P]phosphoenzyme was rapid enough to participate in the Na+,K+-stimulated hydrolysis of ATP. In order to study the dephosphorylation in absence of continuing 32P-labelling, excess unlabelled ATP or a chelator of Mg2+ was added. Simultaneous addition of a high concentration of KCl to the [32P]phosphoenzyme formed in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+ but in the absence of K+, resulted in an initial very rapid phase and a subsequent slower phase of dephosphorylation. With KCl also initially present in the incubation medium, only the slow phase was observed. The slow phase of dephosphorylation also seemed to be sufficiently rapid to participate in the Na+, K+-stimulated ATPase reaction. On addition of a high concentration of ADP (5 mM) to [32P]phosphoenzyme formed in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+, an initial comparatively rapid, and later slow phase of dephosphorylation were detected. This gave further support for different forms of phosphoenzyme. Approximate concentrations of these forms, in the absence and presence of KCl, were estimated by extrapolation and the turnover of these forms was calculated. The nature of the kinetically different components of phosphoenzyme and their role in the Na+, K+-stimulated ATPase reaction is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The ATP-dependent phosphoenzyme formation and its reversal were studied at 0 degrees C and pH 7.0 in the ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum. Addition of KCl or several other salts (approximately 100 mM) decreased the maximum rate of ADP-induced dephosphorylation of phosphoenzyme as well as the apparent affinity of the phosphoenzyme toward ADP. High ATP had a similar effect on the latter, whereas it had little effect on the former. In contrast, high KCl or a considerable change in the ionic strength had little effect on the initial rate of phosphoenzyme formation at saturating ATP concentrations. During steady state phosphorylation at 1.0 mM MgCl2 and 5.0 mM CaCl2 in the absence of added KCl, a significant amount of [gamma-32P]ATP remained bound to the enzyme even when the enzyme concentration was much in excess over that of [gamma-32P]ATP. Evidence is presented that this enzyme-ATP complex represents a precursor to the phosphoenzyme. ATP dissociated slowly (0.20 s-1) from this enzyme-ATP complex and addition of high KCl or other salts accelerated its dissociation. In contrast, when the enzyme was complexed with adenyl-5'-yl (beta, gamma-methylene)diphosphonate in the absence of added KCl under these conditions, dissociation of the nucleotide from the complex as estimated in the displacement experiment with [gamma-32P]ATP, was found to be much faster than that of ATP.  相似文献   

3.
The rate of phosphorylation of sodium and potassium ion-transport adenosine triphosphatase by 10 microM [gamma-32P]ATP was much slower with Ca2+ than with Mg2+ (0.13-10 mM) in the presence of 16 to 960 mM Na+ at 0 degrees C and pH 7.4. In the presence of a fixed concentration of Mg2+ or Ca2+, the rate became slower with increasing Na+ concentration. When the Na+ concentration was fixed, the rate became slower with decreasing divalent cation concentration. Sodium ions appear to antagonize the divalent cation in the phosphorylation to slow its rate. In the presence of 1 mM Ca2+ and 126 or 270 mM Na+, the rate was slow enough to permit the manual addition of a chasing solution at various times before the phosphorylation reached the steady state. Therefore, we studied the time-dependent change of the sensitivity to ADP or to K+ of the phosphoenzyme by a chase with unlabeled ATP containing ADP or K+ during the time range from the transient to the steady state of the phosphorylation. The ADP sensitivity decreased and the K+ sensitivity increased with the progress of the phosphorylation. With 270 mM Na+, the phosphoenzyme found at 1 s, when its amount was 5.5% of the maximum level, was virtually completely sensitive to ADP. Under these conditions, it was concluded that the form of the phosphoenzyme initially produced from the enzyme.ATP complex has ADP sensitivity and that the phosphoenzyme acquires K+ sensitivity later. The initially produced ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme partially lost its normal instability and sensitivity upon adding a chelating agent, probably because of dissociation of a divalent cation from the phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The dephosphorylation kinetics of acid-stable phosphointermediates of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase from ox brain, ox kidney and pig kidney was studied at 0 degree C. Experiments performed on brain enzyme phosphorylated at 0 degree C in the presence of 20-600 mM Na+, 1 mM Mg2+ and 25 microM [gamma-32P]ATP show that irrespectively of the EP-pool composition, which is determined by Na+ concentration, all phosphoenzyme is either ADP- or K+-sensitive. After phosphorylation of kidney enzymes at 0 degree C with 1 mM Mg2+, 25 microM [gamma-32P]ATP and 150-1000 mM Na+ the amounts of ADP- and K+-sensitive phosphoenzymes were determined by addition of 1 mM ATP + 2.5 mM ADP or 1 mM ATP + 20 mM K+. Similarly to the previously reported results on brain enzyme, both types of dephosphorylation curves have a fast and a slow phase, so that also for kidney enzymes a slow decay of a part of the phosphoenzyme, up to 80% at 1000 mM Na+, after addition of 1 mM ATP + 20 mM K+ is observed. The results obtained with the kidney enzymes seem therefore to reinforce previous doubts about the role played by E1 approximately P(Na3) as intermediate of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. Furthermore, for both kidney enzymes the sum of ADP- and K+-sensitive phosphoenzymes is greater than E tot. In experiments on brain enzyme an estimate of dissociation rate constant for the enzyme-ATP complex, k-1, is obtained. k-1 varies between 1 and 4 s-1 and seems to depend on the ligands present during formation of the complex. The highest values are found for enzyme-ATP complex formed in the presence of Na+ or Tris+. The results confirm the validity of the three-pool model in describing dephosphorylation kinetics of phosphointermediates of Na+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Partial reactions of potassium-stimulated ATP phosphohydrolase from hog gastric mucosa were studied by means of a rapid-mixing apparatus. At 21 degrees C, in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2 and 5 microM [gamma-32P]ATP there was a rapid phosphorylation of the enzyme with a pseudofirst order rate constant of 1400 min-1. Addition of the ATP about 120 ms before the MgCl2 increased this rate constant to 4400 min-1. In the absence of MgCl2 there was no phosphorylation. Addition of 4 or 10 mM KCl to the phosphoenzyme which had been formed in the absence of KCl produced a rapid initial rate of dephosphorylation (k = 2600 and 3200 min-1 respectively). An additional slow component of dephosphorylation was observed when unlabeled ATP was added together with the KCl (k = 700 to 900 min-1). At a 4 mM concentration, KCl stimulated the ATPase activity about 9-fold. At higher concentrations, the activity was reduced in parallel with a reduction of the steady state level of phosphoenzyme. Addition of KCl to the enzyme before the addition of ATP plus MgCl2 resulted in a low rate and extent of phosphorylation. KCl appeared to inhibit the phosphorylation at a level preceeding the E.ATP complex.  相似文献   

7.
When human erythrocyte membranes are phosphorylated with a very low concentration of [gamma-32P]ATP (0.02 muM) at 0 degrees, and then EDTA is added, rapid disappearance of the phosphoenzyme intermediate of Na+ATPase is observed. The initial rapid phase of phosphoenzyme disappearance is, for the most part, not associated with P1 release and its rate constant, kD, is severalfold greater than the ratio of Na+ATPase activity to phosphoenzyme intermediate, v:EP, at steady state. It is concluded that this rapid disappearance of phosphoenzyme is due to resynthesis of ATP via reversal of phosphorylation. In contrast, rapid reversal is not observed when excess nonradioactive ATP is added to reduce E32P formation, provided Mg2+ is present; however, K+ added with the ATP stimulates reversal. Rapid reversal following EDTA addition is unlikely also when higher ATP concentrations (greater than or equal to 10(-6) M) are used to phosphorylate the enzyme since, at higher ATP, kD congruent to v:EP. The results are compatible with the concept that the Na+ATPase enzyme is composed of two or more catalytic subunits, in which ATP at one catalytic site can regulate the reactivity at another site.  相似文献   

8.
Slow dissociation of ATP from the calcium ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The acyl-phosphate intermediate of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase reaction, formed in a brief incubation of vesicular enzyme with 5 microM [gamma-32P]ATP and calcium, reacts biphasically with added ADP (pH 7.0, 25 degrees C, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgSO4). Both the burst size and the rate constant for the slow phase increase with increasing ADP concentration in the way that is expected if the burst represents very rapid formation of an equilibrium amount of enzyme-bound ATP and the slow phase represents rate-limiting dissociation of ATP. Also consistent with this interpretation are the slow labeling of phosphoenzyme under conditions in which unlabeled ATP must dissociate first and the observation of a burst of ATP formation on ADP addition to phosphoenzyme. Values of the equilibrium constants for ADP dissociation from phosphoenzyme (0.75 mM), for ATP formation on the enzyme (2.3), and for the ATP dissociation rate constant (37 s-1) were obtained from a quantitative analysis of the data.  相似文献   

9.
In order to determine the role of divalent cations in the reaction mechanism of the H+,K+-ATPase, we have substituted calcium for magnesium, which is required by the H+,K+-ATPase for phosphorylation from ATP and from PO4. Calcium was chosen over other divalent cations assayed (barium and manganese) because in the absence of magnesium, calcium activated ATP hydrolysis, generated sufficiently high levels of phosphoenzyme (573 +/- 51 pmol.mg-1) from [gamma-32P]ATP to study dephosphorylation, and inhibited K+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis. The Ca2+-ATPase activity of the H+,K+-ATPase was 40% of the basal Mg2+-ATPase activity. However, the Ca2+,K+-ATPase activity (minus the Ca2+ basal activity) was only 0.7% of the Mg2+,K+-ATPase, indicating that calcium could partially substitute for Mg2+ in activating ATP hydrolysis but not in K+ stimulation of ATP hydrolysis. Approximately 0.1 mM calcium inhibited 50% of the Mg2+-ATPase or Mg2+,K+-ATPase activities. Inhibition of Mg2+,K+-ATPase activity was not competitive with respect to K+. Inhibition by calcium of Mg2+,K+ activity p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity was competitive with respect to Mg2+ with an apparent Ki of 0.27 mM. Proton transport measured by acridine orange uptake was not detected in the presence of Ca2+ and K+. In the presence of Mg2+ and K+, Ca2+ inhibited proton transport with an apparent affinity similar to the inhibition of the Mg2+, K+-ATPase activity. The site of calcium inhibition was on the exterior of the vesicle. These results suggest that calcium activates basal turnover and inhibits K+ stimulation of the H+,K+-ATPase by binding at a cytosolic divalent cation site. The pseudo-first order rate constant for phosphoenzyme formation from 5 microM [gamma-32P]ATP was at least 22 times slower in the presence of calcium (0.015 s-1) than magnesium (greater than 0.310 s-1). The Ca.EP (phosphoenzyme formed in the presence of Ca2+) formed dephosphorylated four to five times more slowly that the Mg.EP (phosphoenzyme formed in the presence of Mg2+) in the presence of 8 mm trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (CDTA) or 250 microM ATP. Approximately 10% of the Ca.EP formed was sensitive to a 100 mM KCl chase compared with greater than 85% of the Mg.EP. By comparing the transient kinetics of the phosphoenzyme formed in the presence of magnesium (Mg.EP) and calcium (Ca.EP), we found two actions of divalent cations on dephosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The effects on phosphoenzyme (E-P) formation of ligands which activate Electrophorus (Na,K)-ATPase were investigated in the presence of oligomycin. When the enzyme was allowed to bind oligomycin in the presence of NaCl and MgCl2, subsequent addition of ATP plus KCl produced a monoexponential time course of E-P formation with a rate of 56 s-1, similar to the rate obtained in the uninhibited enzyme phosphorylated by ATP in the absence of KCl. Pi liberation under these conditions was slow and showed no initial burst phase, consistent with the inhibitory effect oligomycin has on the E1-P to E2-P conformational transition. Addition to KCl to a preincubation medium containing oligomycin, NaCl, and MgCl2 had no further effect on E-P formation. However, equilibration with oligomycin, KCl, and MgCl2 prior to the addition of NaCl plus ATP gave a much slower rate of E-P formation (5 s-1) and resulted in an initial rapid release of Pi similar to that found in the uninhibited enzyme. The slow increase in E-P level observed after incubation with oligomycin, KCl, and MgCl2 may be due to secondary formation of an inhibition complex following rapid binding of oligomycin. In contrast to the monophasic behavior which resulted from pre-exposure to NaCl or KCl, preincubation with oligomycin in the presence of MgCl2 plus Tris or Tris alone gave a biphasic pattern of E-P formation in which about 50% of the intermediate accumulated at a rate of 56 s-1 and the remainder at a rate of 5 s-1. In addition, the Pi burst amplitude was reduced, indicating partial inhibition of the enzyme. These results suggest that in the absence of Na+ and K+ only half of the enzyme is inhibited by oligomycin while the remainder undergoes inhibition subsequent to initiation of phosphorylation. Since the oligomycin concentration was saturating, the partial inhibition reflected in the biphasic pattern of E-P formation may be due to half-of-the-sites reactivity in which only half of the subunits bind oligomycin in the absence of monovalent cations.  相似文献   

11.
Addition of up to 300 microM ATP in the presence of 2 M NaCl with MgCl2 to pig kidney Na+,K+-ATPase treated with N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide seemed to be insufficient to saturate the rate of the fluorescence decrease. However, both the extent of the decrease and the amount of phosphoenzyme at a steady state were saturated below 20 microM ATP. Addition of Mg2+ with Na+ to the enzyme preincubated with 20 to 600 microM ATP gave nearly the same rate constant, which was below 50% of that obtained by adding 300 microM ATP to the Na+-form enzyme in the presence of Mg2+. High concentrations of ATP affected neither the rate of light-scattering change (Taniguchi, K. et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3272-3281) after ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme formation (E1P) nor that of the breakdown of E1P. A stoichiometric amount of [32P]Pi was liberated from [32P]E1P. The data suggested that ATP did not bind to E1P in such a way as to increase the extent of phosphorylation further or to accelerate dephosphorylation. The data also suggested that the reason for the large difference in the apparent affinity of ATP as evaluated from the rate and the extent of fluorescence change is the large dissociation constant for ATP of a Michaelis complex.  相似文献   

12.
Abe K  Kaya S  Imagawa T  Taniguchi K 《Biochemistry》2002,41(7):2438-2445
The maximum amount of acid-stable phosphoenzyme (E32P)/mol of alpha chain of pig gastric H/K-ATPase from [gamma-32P]ATP (K(1/2) = 0.5 microM) was found to be approximately 0.5, which was half of that formed from 32P(i) (K(1/2) = 0.22 mM). The maximum 32P binding for the enzyme during turnover in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP or [alpha-32P]ATP was due to 0.5 mol of E32P + 0.5 mol of an acid-labile enzyme-bound [gamma-32P]ATP (EATP) or 0.5 mol of an acid-labile enzyme-bound [alpha-32P]ATP, respectively. The K(1/2) for EATP formation in both cases was 0.12 approximately 0.14 mM. The turnover number of the enzyme (i.e., the H+-ATPase activity/(EP + EATP)) was very close to the apparent rate constants for EP breakdown and P(i) liberation, both of which decreased with increasing concentrations of ATP. The ratio of the amount of P(i) liberated to that of EP that disappeared increased from 1 to approximately 2 with increasing concentrations of ATP (i.e., equal amounts of EP and EATP exist, both of which release phosphate in the presence of high concentrations of ATP). This represents the first direct evidence, for the case of a P-type ATPase, in which 2 mol of P(i) liberation occurs simultaneously from 1 mol of EP for half of the enzyme molecules and 1 mol of EATP for the other half during ATP hydrolysis. Each catalytic alpha chain is involved in cross-talk, thus maintaining half-site phosphorylation and half-site ATP binding which are induced by high- and low-affinity ATP binding, respectively, in the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of Mg2+ and nucleotides on the dephosphorylation process of the (K+ + H+)-ATPase phosphoenzyme have been studied. Phosphorylation with [gamma-32P]ATP is stopped either by addition of non-radioactive ATP or by complexing of Mg2+ with EDTA. The dephosphorylation process is slow and monoexponential when dephosphorylation is initiated with ATP. When phosphorylation is stopped by complexing of Mg2+ the dephosphorylation process is fast and biexponential. The discrepancy could be explained by a nucleotide mediated inhibition of the dephosphorylation process. The I0.5 for ATP for this inhibition is 0.1 mM and that for ADP is 0.7 mM, suggesting that a low-affinity binding site is involved. When Mg2+ is present in millimolar concentrations in addition to the nucleotides the dephosphorylation process is enhanced. Evidence has been obtained that Mg2+ acts through lowering the affinity for ATP. In contrast to K+, Mg2+ does not stimulate dephosphorylation in the absence of nucleotides. Mg2+ and nucleotides show the same interaction in the dephosphorylation process of a phosphoenzyme generated from inorganic phosphate. These findings suggest the presence of a low-affinity nucleotide binding site on the phosphoenzyme, as is found in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase phosphoenzyme. This low-affinity binding site may function as a feed-back mechanism in proton transport.  相似文献   

14.
N Stahl  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1987,26(24):7654-7667
Phosphorylation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase, E, is first order with kb = 70 +/- 7 s-1 after free enzyme was mixed with saturating ATP and 50 microM Ca2+; this is one-third the rate constant of 220 s-1 for phosphorylation of enzyme preincubated with calcium, cE.Ca2, after being mixed with ATP under the same conditions (pH 7.0, Ca2+-loaded vesicles, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM Mg2+, 25 degrees C). Phosphorylation of E with ATP and Ca2+ in the presence of 0.25 mM ADP gives approximately 50% E approximately P.Ca2 with kobsd = 77 s-1, not the sum of the forward and reverse rate constants, kobsd = kf + kr = 140 s-1, that is expected for approach to equilibrium if phosphorylation were rate limiting. These results show that (1) kb represents a slow conformational change, rather than phosphoryl transfer, and (2) different pathways are followed for the phosphorylation of E and of cE.Ca2. The absence of a lag for phosphorylation of E with saturating ATP and Ca2+ indicates that all other steps, including the binding of Ca2+ ions and phosphoryl transfer, have rate constants of greater than 500 s-1. Chase experiments with unlabeled ATP or with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) show that the rate constants for dissociation of [gamma-32P]ATP and Ca2+ are comparable to kb. Dissociation of ATP occurs at 47 s-1 from E.ATP.Ca2+ and at 24 s-1 from E.ATP. Approximately 20% phosphorylation occurs following an EGTA chase 4.5 ms after the addition of 300 microM ATP and 50 microM Ca2+ to enzyme. This shows that Ca2+ binds rapidly to the free enzyme, from outside the vesicle, before the conformational change (kb). The fraction of Ca2+-free E.[gamma-32P]ATP that is trapped to give labeled phosphoenzyme after the addition of Ca2+ and a chase of unlabeled ATP is half-maximal at 6.8 microM Ca2+, with a Hill slope of n = 1.8. The calculated dissociation constant for Ca2+ from E.ATP.Ca2 is approximately 2.2 X 10(-10) M2 (K0.5 = 15 microM). The rate constant for the slow phase of the biphasic reaction of E approximately P.Ca2 with 1.1 mM ADP increases 2.5-fold when [Ca2+] is decreased from 50 microM to 10 nM, with half-maximal increase at 1.7 microM Ca2+. This shows that Ca2+ is dissociating from a different species, aE.ATP.Ca2, that is active for catalysis of phosphoryl transfer, has a high affinity for Ca2+, and dissociates Ca2+ with k less than or equal to 45 s-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
(Na+ + K+)-ATPase from beef brain and pig kidney are slowly inactivated by chromium(III) complexes of nucleotide triphosphates in the absence of added univalent and divalent cations. The inactivation of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity was accompanied by a parallel decrease of the associated K+-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase and a parallel loss of the capacity to form, Na+-dependently, a phosphointermediate from [gamma-32P]ATP. The kinetics of inactivation and of phosphorylation with [gamma-32P]CrATP and [alpha-32P]CrATP are consistent with the assumption of the formation of a dissociable complex of CrATP with the enzyme (E) followed by phosphorylation of the enzyme: formula: (see text). The dissociation constant of the CrATP complex of the pig kidney enzyme at 37 degrees C was 43 microM. The inactivation rate constant (k + 2 = 0.033 min-1) was in the range of the dissociation rate constant kd of ADP from the enzyme of 0.011 min-1. The phosphoenzyme was unreactive towards ADP as well as to K+. No hydrolysis of the native isolated phosphoenzyme was observed within 6 h under a variety of conditions, but high concentrations of Na+ reactivated it slowly. The capacity of the Cr-phosphoenzyme of 121 +/- 18 pmol/unit enzyme is identical with the capacity of the unmodified enzyme to form, Na+-dependently, a phosphointermediate. The Cr-phosphoenzyme behaved after acid denaturation like an acylphosphate towards hydroxylamine, but the native phosphoenzyme was not affected by it. ATP protected the enzyme against the inactivation by CrATP (dissociation constant of the enzyme ATP complex = 2.5 microM) as well as low concentrations of K+. CrATP was a competitive inhibitor of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. It is concluded that CrATP is slowly hydrolyzed at the ATP-binding site of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and inactivates the enzyme by forming an almost non-reactive phosphoprotein at the site otherwise needed for the Na+-dependent proteinkinase reaction as the phosphate acceptor site.  相似文献   

16.
Direct evidence for the occurrence of an ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme of (K+ + H+)-ATPase, the proton-pumping system of the gastric parietal cell is presented. The enzyme is phosphorylated with 5 microM [gamma-32P]ATP in 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.0) and in the presence of 7-15 microM Mg2+. Addition of 5 mM ADP to this preparation greatly accelerates its hydrolysis. We have been able to establish this by stopping the phosphorylation with radioactive ATP, by adding 1 mM non-radioactive ATP, which leads to a slow monoexponential process of dephosphorylation of 32P-labeled enzyme. The relative proportion of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme is 22% of the total phosphoenzyme. Values for the rate constants of breakdown and interconversion of the two phosphoenzyme forms have been determined.  相似文献   

17.
The steady state kinetics of ATP hydrolysis by partially purified adenosine triphosphatase preparations of sarcoplasmic reticulum was investigated at 0 degrees C and pH 7.0 in 2.0 mM MgCl2, 20 microM [gamma-32P]ATP, 20 microM CaCl2, and various concentrations of KCl in the presence and absence of 12% dimethyl sulfoxide. The steady state phosphoenzyme formed under these conditions could be resolved kinetically into ADP-sensitive and ADP-insensitive forms. These steady state kinetic data were analyzed according to a scheme in which the ADP-sensitive and ADP-insensitive phosphoenzymes occur sequentially, and Pi is derived from the latter. The KCl-dependent turnover rate of the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme that was estimated according to this scheme was in good agreement with the directly measured hydrolysis rate constant of the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme. In addition, the time course of the decomposition of the total amount of phosphoenzyme, measured after a steady state level was reached in 20 mM KCl and further phosphorylation was prevented by addition of excess ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, was also in agreement with that calculated according to this scheme using values of the rate constants estimated from the amounts of the ADP-sensitive and ADP-insensitive phosphoenzymes and the rate of ATP hydrolysis. These results, together with our previous findings, support the view that this scheme describes the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis in the presence of KCl.  相似文献   

18.
The addition of ATP with K+ to pig kidney Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) modified with a sulfhydryl fluorescent reagent N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide induced a transient decrease (t 1/2 = 0.01 s) in the fluorescence in the presence of Mg2+ with 0.64 M Na+, followed by a slow increase (t 1/2 = 0.08 s), to give a higher steady level than that observed without K+. The addition induced a transient increase (t 1/2 less than 0.02 s) in the amount of phosphoenzyme, followed by a slow decrease (t 1/2 = 0.08 s), but the addition without K+ induced a monophasic increase (t 1/2 = 0.02 s). The addition of ATP in the presence of 2 M Na+ with Ca2+ induced a monophasic decrease (t 1/2 = 0.1 s) in the fluorescence along with a much slower increase (t 1/2 = 1.2 s) in the amount of phosphoenzyme. No significant burst of acid-labile phosphate was observed. The data showed clearly the accumulation of the enzyme-ATP complex preceding the phosphoenzyme formation. Fluorescence intensity of these enzyme species and the amount of phosphoenzyme permitted the simulation using the reaction mechanism including enzyme-ATP complex, ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme, K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme, and K+-bound enzyme. The simulation gave a good fit to the experimental data which showed that ATP is hydrolyzed in sequence through the above intermediates in the presence of both Na+ and K+.  相似文献   

19.
Membrane-bound Na+,K(+)-ATPase (0.1 mg/ml) was incubated with the K(+)-site-directed probe (Z)-5-methyl-2-[2-(1-naphthyl)ethenyl]-4-piperidinopyridine (AU-1421) (Takada, J. et al. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1037, 373-379) at 37 degrees C for 30 min in the absence of ligands, then the Na(+)-dependent phosphorylation level was examined in the presence of 10 microM [32P]ATP at 0 degrees C. The level was decreased to 50% and 0% by about 50 microM and 100 microM AU-1421, respectively. Addition of 1 mM K+ during the treatment with AU-1421 resulted in complete maintenance of the phosphorylation level. When the preincubation was performed at 0 degrees C for 10 s, even 100 microM AU-1421 did not impair the phosphorylation. In contrast to the non-phospho form of the enzyme, the K(+)-sensitive phosphoenzyme formed from ATP was immediately inhibited by the addition of AU-1421 at 0 degrees C. The reactivity of the inhibited phosphoenzyme was restored by the addition of K+. About 1 mM K+ gave the same maximal reactivity in the presence of various fixed concentrations (8-41 microM) of AU-1421, but the apparent affinity for K+ decreased simply with the increase of AU-1421 concentration. From this simple competitive relationship, the apparent Ki value of AU-1421 for the phosphoenzyme was calculated to be 7.2 microM. Compared to the non-phospho form of the enzyme, the phospho form appears to be rather susceptible to AU-1421, probably because the K(+)-site of the phosphoenzyme is exposed to the extracellular aqueous phase.  相似文献   

20.
The Na/K-ATPase has been shown to bind 1 and 0.5 mol of (32)P/mol of alpha-chain in the presence [gamma-(32)P]ATP and [alpha-(32)P]ATP, respectively, accompanied by a maximum accumulation of 0.5 mol of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (NaE1P) and potassium-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P). The former accumulation was followed by the slow constant liberation of P(i), but the latter was accompanied with a rapid approximately 0.25 mol of acid-labile P(i) burst. The rubidium (potassium congener)-occluded enzyme (approximately 1.7 mol of rubidium/mol of alpha-chain) completely lost rubidium on the addition of sodium + magnesium. Further addition of approximately 100 microM [gamma-(32)P]ATP and [alpha-(32)P]ATP, both induced 0.5 mol of (32)P-ATP binding to the enzyme and caused accumulation of approximately 1 mol of rubidium/mol of alpha-chain, accompanied by a rapid approximately 0.5 mol of P(i) burst with no detectable phosphoenzyme under steady state conditions. Electron microscopy of rotary-shadowed soluble and membrane-bound Na/K-ATPases and an antibody-Na/K-ATPase complex, indicated the presence of tetraprotomeric structures (alphabeta)(4). These and other data suggest that Na/K-ATP hydrolysis occurs via four parallel paths, the sequential appearance of (NaE1P:E.ATP)(2), (E2P:E.ATP:E2P:E. ADP/P(i)), and (KE2:E.ADP/P(i))(2), each of which has been previously referred to as NaE1P, E2P, and KE2, respectively.  相似文献   

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