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1.
Phosphorylation of red cell membranes at ambient temperatures with micromolar [32P]ATP in the presence of Na ions produced phosphoenzyme that was dephosphorylated rapidly upon the addition of ADP or K ions. However, as first observed by Blostein (1968, J. Biol. Chem., 243:1957), the phosphoenzyme formed at 0 degrees C under otherwise identical conditions was insensitive to the addition of K ions but was dephosphorylated rapidly by ADP. This suggested that the conformational transition from ADP-sensitive, K-insensitive Na pump phosphoenzyme (E1 approximately P) to K-sensitive, ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P) is blocked at 0 degrees C. Since the ATP:ADP exchange reaction is a partial reaction of the overall enzyme cycle dependent upon the steady state level of E1 approximately P that is regulated by [Na], we examined the effects of temperature on the curve relating [Na] to ouabain-sensitive ATP:ADP exchange. The characteristic triphasic curve seen at higher temperatures when [Na] was between 0.5 and 100 mM was not obtained at 0 degrees C. Simple saturation was observed instead with a K0.5 for Na of approximately 1 mM. The effect of increasing temperature on the ATP:ADP exchange at fixed (150 mM) Na was compared with the effect of increasing temperature on (Na + K)-ATPase activity of the same membrane preparation. It was observed that (a) at 0 degrees C, there was significant ouabain-sensitive ATP:ADP exchange activity, (b) at 0 degrees C, ouabain-sensitive (Na + K)-ATPase activity was virtually absent, and (c) in the temperature range 5-37 degrees C, there was an approximately 300-fold increase in (Na + K)-ATPase activity with only a 9-fold increase in the ATP:ADP exchange. These observations are in keeping with the suggestion that the E1 approximately P----E2P transition of the Na pump in human red cell membranes is blocked at 0 degrees C. Previous work has shown that the inhibitory effect of Na ions and the low-affinity stimulation by Na of the rate of ATP:ADP exchange occur at the extracellular surface of the Na pump. The absence of both of these effects at 0 degrees C, where E1 approximately P is maximal, supports the idea that external Na acts through sites on the E2P form of the phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

2.
(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   

3.
Treatment of the canine renal Na,K-ATPase with N-(2-nitro-4-isothiocyanophenyl)-imidazole (NIPI), a new imidazole-based probe, results in irreversible loss of enzymatic activity. Inactivation of 95% of the Na,K-ATPase activity is achieved by the covalent binding of 1 molecule of [3H]NIPI to a single site on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase. The reactivity of this site toward NIPI is about 10-fold greater when the enzyme is in the E1Na or sodium-bound form than when it is in the E2K or potassium-bound form. K+ ions prevent the enhanced reactivity associated with Na+ binding. Labeling and inactivation of the enzyme is prevented by the simultaneous presence of ATP or ADP (but not by AMP). The apparent affinity with which ATP prevents the inactivation by NIPI at pH 8.5 is increased from 30 to 3 microM by the presence of Na+ ions. This suggests that the affinity with which native enzyme binds ATP (or ADP) at this pH is enhanced by Na+ binding to the enzyme. Modification of the single sodium-responsive residue on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase results in loss of high affinity ATP binding, without affecting phosphorylation from Pi. Modification with NIPI probably alters the adenosine binding region without affecting the region close to the phosphorylated carboxyl residue aspartate 369. Tightly bound (or occluded) Rb+ ions are not displaced by ATP (4 mM) in the inactivated enzyme. Thus modification of a single residue simultaneously blocks ATP acting with either high or low affinity on the Na,K-ATPase. These observations suggest that there is a single residue on the alpha-subunit (probably a lysine) which drastically alters its reactivity as Na+ binds to the enzyme. This lysine residue is essential for catalytic activity and is prevented from reacting with NIPI when ATP binds to the enzyme. Thus, the essential lysine residue involved may be part of the ATP binding domain of the Na,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

4.
The addition of Mg2+ or ATP to (Na+,K+)-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) of pig kidney modified with a sulfhydryl fluorescent reagent N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide simply reduced fluorescence in the presence of Na+; however, the addition of both ligands to the enzyme induced a reversible dynamic change. The direction of the change was dependent on the concentration of Na+ present. These dynamic changes in fluorescence intensity both in the presence of low and high concentrations of Na+ can be repeated by the re-addition of ATP but not by ADP. Addition of ouabain under the former condition stabilized the fluorescence at the highest level, but the addition of ouabain under the latter condition increased the fluorescence from the lowest to the highest level. The phosphoenzyme formed under the former condition was sensitive to K+ and insensitive to ADP while the phosphoenzyme formed under the latter condition was sensitive to ADP and insensitive to K+. The data indicate that the positive and negative fluorescence changes were induced by the formation of K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme and ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme, respectively. N-Ethylmaleimide treatment partially inhibited the positive change without affecting the negative change. These data also indicate that the transition of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme to K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme accompanied the largest fluorescence intensity change which was examined during the hydrolysis of ATP. The data obtained from the tryptophan fluorescence of both the native and the modified enzyme suggest that the micro-environments of the tryptophan and the sulfhydryl residues are similar in the state of K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme but different in the state of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

5.
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   

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

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
1. Conditions for binding of [gamma-32P]ATP to bovine brain Na+,K+-stimulated ATPase were investigated by the indirect technique of measuring the initial rate of 32P-labelling of the active site of the enzyme. 2. At 100 muM [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2, approximately the same very high rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme was obtained irrespective of whether [gamma-32P]ATP was added to the enzyme simultaneously with, or 70 ms in advance of the addition of NaCl. A comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was obtained at 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP without preincubation. However, on preincubation of the enzyme with 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP a rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme almost as rapid as at 100 muM[gamma-32P]ATP was observed. 3. A transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was discovered. It appeared in the presence of K+, under conditions which allowed extensive binding of [gamma-32P]-ATP. The amount of [gamma-32P]ATP that could be bound to the enzyme seemed to equal the amount of [32P] phosphorylatable sites. 4. The formation of the transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was inhibited by ADP. The transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was concluded mainly to represent the K+-insensitive and ADP-sensitive E1-32P. 5. When KCl was present in the enzyme solution before the addition of NaCl only a comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was observed. On preincubation of the enzyme with [gamma-32]ATP an increase in the rate of formation of [32P] phosphoenzyme was obtained, but there was no transient [32P]-phosphoenzyme. The transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was, however, detected when the enzyme solution contained NaCl in addition to KCl and the phosphorylation was started by the addition of [gamma-32P]ATP.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
We have recently shown that inactivation of renal Na,K-ATPase by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide occurs via an intramolecular cross-link formed between an activated carboxyl group and an endogenous nucleophile (Pedemonte, C.H., and Kaplan, J.H. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3632-3639). The modified enzyme shows the same level of Rb+ binding as untreated enzyme: 3.16 and 2.93 ATP-sensitive mumol of Rb+ binding/mumol of phosphoenzyme, respectively. Thus, the Rb+ binding site and the transition accomplished by low affinity nucleotide binding which accelerates de-occlusion are not greatly affected by the carbodiimide inactivation. 1 mM K+ reduces the ADP binding to the high affinity nucleotide binding site to the same extent in normal and 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide-treated enzyme and Na+ counteracts this effect. Thus, the competition between Na+ and K+ ions for binding to the free enzyme are also largely unaltered by the modification. Phosphorylation from ATP (microM) in the presence of Na+ and Mg2+ ions and from inorganic phosphate in the presence of Mg2+ ions (in the absence or presence of ouabain) is greatly inhibited (85%) following carbodiimide treatment. The extent of inhibition of phosphorylation quantitatively correlates with the residual Na,K-ATPase activity (15%). Consequently, the rate of inactivation by carbodiimide is reduced when a greater proportion of the enzyme is in the phosphorylated form. Fluoroscein isothiocyanate, which inhibits the Na,K-ATPase by covalently modifying a lysine residue close to the high affinity binding site for ATP in the alpha-subunit does not bind to the carbodiimide-inactivated enzyme. Since high affinity nucleotide binding is only partially inhibited by the modification produced by the carbodiimide this suggests that the lysine residue to which fluoroscein isothiocyanate binds is not specifically required for competent nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

14.
The MgATP complex analogue cobalt-tetrammine-ATP [Co(NH3)4ATP] inactivates (Na+ + K+)-ATPase at 37 degrees C slowly in the absence of univalent cations. This inactivation occurs concomitantly with incorporation of radioactivity from [alpha-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP and from [gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP into the alpha subunit. The kinetics of inactivation are consistent with the formation of a dissociable complex of Co(NH3)4ATP with the enzyme (E) followed by the phosphorylation of the enzyme: (Formula: see text). The dissociation constant of the enzyme-MgATP analogue complex at 37 degrees C is Kd = 500 microM, the inactivation rate constant k2 = 0.05 min-1. ATP protects the enzyme against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4ATP due to binding at a site from which it dissociates with a Kd of 360 microM. It is concluded, therefore, that Co(NH3)4ATP binds to the low-affinity ATP binding site of the E2 conformational state. K+, Na+ and Mg2+ protect the enzyme against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4ATP. Whilst Na+ or Mg2+ decrease the inactivation rate constant k2, K+ exerts its protective effect by increasing the dissociation constant of the enzyme.Co(NH3)4ATP complex. The Co(NH3)4ATP-inactivated (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, in contrast to the non-inactivated enzyme, incorporates [3H]ouabain. This indicates that the Co(NH3)4ATP-inactivated enzyme is stabilized in the E2 conformational state. Despite the inactivation of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by Co(NH3)4ATP from the low-affinity ATP binding site, there is no change in the capacity of the high-affinity ATP binding site (Kd = 0.9 microM) nor of its capability to phosphorylate the enzyme Na+-dependently. Since (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is phosphorylated Na+-dependently from the high-affinity ATP binding site although the catalytic cycle is arrested in the E2 conformational state by specific modification of the low-affinity ATP binding site, it is concluded that both ATP binding sites coexist at the same time in the working sodium pump. This demonstration of interacting catalytic subunits in the E1 and E2 conformational states excludes the proposal that a single catalytic subunit catalyzes (Na+ + K+)-transport.  相似文献   

15.
The ATP/ADP exchange is shown to be a partial reaction of the (H+ +K+)-ATPase by the absence of measurable nucleoside diphosphokinase activity and the insensitivity of the reaction to P1, P5-di(adenosine-5') pentaphosphate, a myokinase inhibitor. The exchange demonstrates an absolute requirement for Mg2+ and is optimal at an ADP/ATP ratio of 2. The high ATP concentration (K0.5=116 microM) required for maximal exchange is interpreted as evidence for the involvement of a low affinity form of nucleotide site. The ATP/ADP exchange is regarded as evidence for an ADP-sensitive form of the phosphoenzyme. In native enzyme, pre-steady state kinetics show that the formation of the phosphoenzyme is partially sensitive to ADP while modification of the enzyme by pretreatment with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) in the absence of Mg2+ results in a steady-state phosphoenzyme population, a component of which is ADP sensitive. The ATP/ADP exchange reaction can be either stimulated or inhibited by the presence of K+ as a function of pH and Mg2+.  相似文献   

16.
Ouabain-binding and phosphorylation of (Na+ mk+)-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) of the plasma membranes from kidney were investigated after treatment with N-ethylmaleimide or oligomycin. Either of these inhibitors brought about the following changes: the phosphoenzyme, formed in the presence of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP became essentially insensitive to splitting by K+ but was split by ADP. One mole of this ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme bound one mole of ouabain but the enzyme-ouabain complex was less stable than in the native enzyme primarily because the rate of its dissociation increased. Ouabain was bound to the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme in the presence of Mg2+ alone and addition of inorganic phosphate enhanced both the rate of formation and the steady-state level of the enzyme-ouabain complex. The inhibitors did not affect the properties of this second type of complex. Both in the native enzyme and in the enzyme treated with the two inhibitors inorganic phosphate enhanced ouabain binding by phosphorylating the active center of the enzyme as shown (a) by mapping the labeled peptides from the enzyme after peptic digestion, (b) by inhibition of this phosphorylation with Na+ and (c) by the 1:1 stoichiometric relation between this phosphorylation and the amount of bound ouabain. Unlike the phosphoenzyme, the binding of ouabain remained sensitive to K+ in the enzyme treated with the inhibitors. K+ slowed ouabain-binding either in the presence of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP or of Mg2+ and inorganic phosphate. A higher concentration of K+ was needed to slow ouabain-binding either in the presence of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP or of Mg2+ and inorganic phosphate. A higher concentration of K+ was needed to slow ouabain-binding than to stimulate dephosphorylation. This finding is interpreted as being an indication of separate sites for K+ on the enzyme: a site(s) with high K+-affinity which stimulates dephosphorylation, another site(s) with moderate K+-affinity which inhibits ouabain-binding. Inhibitors may enhance formation of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme by blocking interaction between K+ and the site(s) with high affinity.  相似文献   

17.
Several experiments were carried out to study the difference between two isozymes (alpha(+) and alpha) of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase in the conformational equilibrium. Rat brain (Na+ + K+)-ATPase was much more thermolabile than the kidney enzyme. Both enzymes were protected from heat inactivation not only by Na+ and K+, but also by choline in varying degrees, though there was a difference between the two enzymes in the protection by the ligands. The brain enzyme was partially protected from N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) inactivation by both Na+ and K+, but the effects of the ligands on NEM inactivation of the kidney enzyme were more complex. Though ligands differentially affected the thermostability and NEM sensitivity of the two enzymes, the effects were not simply related to the conformational states. The sensitivity of phosphoenzyme (EP) formed in the presence of ATP, Na+, and Mg2+ to ADP or K+ and K+-p-nitrophenyl phosphatase (pNPPase) was then studied as a probe of the differences in the conformational equilibrium between the two isozymes. The EP of the brain enzyme was partially sensitive to ADP, while those of the heart and kidney enzymes were not. At physiological Na+ concentrations the percentages of E1P formed by the brain and kidney enzymes were determined to be about 40-50 and 10-20% of the total EP, respectively. The hydrolytic activity of pNPP in the presence of Li+, a selective activator at catalytic sites of the reaction, was much higher in the kidney enzyme than in the brain enzyme. The inhibition of K+-stimulated pNPPase by ATP and Na+ was greater in the latter enzyme than in the former. These results suggest that neuronal and nonneuronal (Na+ + K+)-ATPases differ in their conformational equilibrium: the E1 or E1P may be more stable in the alpha(+) than in the alpha during the turnover, and conversely the E2 or E2P may be more stable in the latter than in the former.  相似文献   

18.
The aim of the present work was to study the Mg2+-Na+/K+-ATPase interaction that was proposed to lead to the formation of a stable Mg-enzyme complex during phosphorylation from ATP. Instead of Mg we used Mn, which can replace Mg as essential activator of Na+/K+-ATPase activity. The amounts of steady-state Mn bound to the enzyme were estimated at 0 degree C on the basis of the 54Mn remaining in the effluent after passing the reaction mixture through a cation exchange resin column. As a function of the MnCl2 concentration, the amount of Mn retained by the enzyme in the absence and presence of ATP showed a saturable and a linear component; the slope of the linear component was the same in both instances (0.016 nmol/mg per microM). The ATP-dependent Mn binding could be adjusted to a hyperbolic function with a Km of 0.76 microM. The ratio [ATP-dependent E-Mn]/[E-P] measured at 5 microM MnCl2 and 5 microM ATP was not different from 1.0, both in native (Mn-E2-P) as well as in a chymotrypsin treated enzyme (Mn-E1-P). When the Mn.E-P complex was allowed to react with KCl (E2-P form) or ADP (E1-P form), the enzyme was dephosphorylated and simultaneously lost the strongly bound Mn in such a way that the ratio [ATP-dependent E-Mn]/[E-P] remained 1:1. These results show the existence of strongly bound Mn ions to Na+/K+-ATPase during phosphorylation by ATP. That binding is (i) of high affinity for Mn, (ii) probably on a single site, and (iii) with a stoichiometry Mn-Pi of 1:1.  相似文献   

19.
A hydrophobic amine, (Z)-5-methyl-2-[2-(1-naphthyl)ethenyl]-4-piperidinopyridine (AU-1421), was examined as a probe of the K+ occlusion center of Na+/K(+)-ATPase. Treatment of the enzyme with AU-1421 at 37 degrees C and pH 7.0 produced irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. This inactivation was prevented, with simple competitive kinetics, by K+ or its congeners in the order of Tl+ greater than Rb+ greater than NH+4 greater than Cs+. The concentrations of these cations required for the protection, were consistent with the affinities for transport and ATPase activity. The apparent binding constant for K+ was calculated to be 0.03 mM, from the competition with AU-1421. This protection was cancelled by a high concentration of ATP or ADP. A high concentration of Na+ (Kd = 6.5-6.9 mM), as a substitute for K+, also prevented the inactivation by AU-1421. Thus, the enzyme was protected from AU-1421 when the occlusion center was occupied by a monovalent cation, irrespective of the enzyme conformation, E1 (Na(+)-bound form) or E2 (K(+)-bound form). On the other hand, the enzyme was most sensitive to AU-1421 in the presence of low concentration of Na+ (0.4-0.8 mM) or a high concentration of ATP. Tris, imidazole or choline, which favors the E1 state, also accelerated the inactivation by AU-1421. These suggest that AU-1421 reacts with the occlusion center through the E1 state.  相似文献   

20.
W J Ball 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):7155-7162
The effects of a monoclonal antibody, prepared against the purified lamb kidney Na+,K+-ATPase, on the enzyme's Na+,K+-dependent ATPase activity were analyzed. This antibody, designated M10-P5-C11, is directed against the catalytic subunit of the "native" holoenzyme. It inhibits greater than 90% of the ATPase activity and acts as a noncompetitive or mixed inhibitor with respect to the ATP, Na+, and K+ dependence of enzyme activity. It inhibits the Na+- and Mg2+ATP-dependent phosphoenzyme intermediate formation. In contrast, it has no effect on K+-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase (pNPPase) activity, the interconversion of the phosphoenzyme intermediates, and ADP-sensitive or K+-dependent dephosphorylation. It does not alter ATP binding to the enzyme nor the covalent labeling of the enzyme at the presumed ATP site by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC), but it prevents the ATP-induced stimulation in the rate of cardiac glycoside [3H]ouabain binding to the Na+,K+-ATPase. M10-P5-C11 binding appears to inhibit enzyme function by blocking the transfer of the gamma-phosphoryl of ATP to the phosphorylation site after ATP binding to the enzyme has occurred. In the presence of Mg2+ATP, it also prevents the ATP-induced transmembrane conformational change that enhances cardiac glycoside binding. This uncoupling of ATP binding from its stimulation of ouabain binding and enzyme phosphorylation demonstrates the existence of an enzyme-Mg2+ATP transitional intermediate preceding the formation of the Na+-dependent ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate. These results are also consistent with a model of the Na+,K+-ATPase active site being composed of two distinct but interacting regions, the ATP binding site and the phosphorylation site.  相似文献   

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