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1.
We examined the effect of protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent phosphorylation on Ca2+ uptake and ATP hydrolysis by microsomal as well as purified sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase preparations isolated from bovine aortic smooth muscle. The phosphorylation was performed by treating these preparations with PKC and saturating concentrations of ATP (or ATP-gamma S), Ca2+, and 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) at 37 degrees C for 10 min. In microsomes, treatment with PKC enhanced a portion of the Ca2+ uptake activity inhibitable by 10 microM vanadate, by up to about 30%. On the other hand, Ca2(+)-dependent ATPase activity in the purified Ca2(+)-ATPase preparation was stimulated by up to twofold. Up to twofold stimulation by PKC was also observed for the Ca2+ uptake by proteoliposomes reconstituted from purified sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase and phospholipids. Since these effects were evident only at Ca2+ concentrations between 0.1 to 1.0 microM, we concluded that it was the affinity of the Ca2(+)-ATPase for Ca2+ that was increased by the PKC treatment. Under conditions in which PKC increased Ca2+ pump activity, the sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-ATPase was phosphorylated to a level of about 1 mol per mol of the enzyme. There was good parallelism between the ATPase phosphorylation and the extent of enzyme activation. These results strongly suggest that the activity of the sarcolemmal Ca2+ pump in vascular smooth muscle is regulated through its direct phosphorylation by PKC.  相似文献   

2.
Inside-out vesicles of human erythrocytes took up Ca2+ against an electrochemical gradient. This Ca2+ uptake was dependent on ATP and was stimulated by calmodulin. Treatment of vesicles with 1 mM-EDTA exposed an apparent low-CA2+-affinity Ca2+-transport component with Kd of about 100 microM-Ca2+ or more. This was converted into a single high-Ca2+-affinity transport activity of Kd about 2.5 microM-Ca2+ in the presence of 2 micrograms of calmodulin/ml, showing that the decrease in transport activity after EDTA treatment was reversible. Vesicles not extracted with EDTA showed mainly apparent high-Ca2+-affinity kinetics even in the absence of added calmodulin. Trifluoperazine (30 microM) and calmodulin-binding protein (20 micrograms/ml) inhibited about 50% of the high-affinity Ca2+ uptake and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (Ca2+-activated, Mg2+-dependent ATPase) activity of these vesicles, indicating that the vesicles isolated by the procedure used retained some calmodulin from the erythrocytes. Comparison of Ca2+ transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activities in inside-out vesicles yielded a variable Ca2+/P1 stoichiometric ratio. At low free Ca2+ concentrations (below 20 micro-Ca2+), a Ca2+/P1 ration of about 2 was found, whereas at higher Ca2+ concentrations the stoichiometry was approx. 1. The stoichiometry was not significantly altered by calmodulin.  相似文献   

3.
Sarcolemmal properties implicated in the skeletal muscle disorder, malignant hyperthermia (MH), were examined using sarcolemma-membrane vesicles isolated from normal and MH-susceptible (MHS) porcine skeletal muscle. MHS and normal sarcolemma did not differ in the distribution of the major proteins, cholesterol or phospholipid content, vesicle size and sidedness, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity, ouabain binding, or adenylate cyclase activity (total and isoproterenol sensitivity). The regulation of the initial rates of MHS and normal sarcolemmal ATP-dependent calcium transport (calcium uptake after 1 min) by Ca2+ (K1/2 = 0.64-0.81 microM), calmodulin, and cAMP-dependent protein kinase were similar. However, when sarcolemmal calcium content was measured at either 2 or 20 min after the initiation of active calcium transport, a significant difference between MHS and normal sarcolemmal calcium uptake became apparent, with MHS sarcolemma accumulating approximately 25% less calcium than normal sarcolemma. Calcium transport by MHS and normal sarcolemma, at 2 or 20 min, had a similar calmodulin dependence (C1/2 = 150 nM), and was stimulated to a similar extent by cAMP-dependent protein kinase or calmodulin. Halothane inhibited MHS and normal sarcolemmal active calcium uptake in a similar fashion (half-maximal inhibition at 10 mM halothane), while dantrolene (30 microM) and nitrendipine (1 microM) had little effect on either MHS or normal sarcolemmal calcium transport. After 20 min of ATP-supported calcium uptake, 2 mM EGTA plus 10 microM sodium orthovanadate were added to initiate sarcolemmal calcium efflux. Following an initial rapid phase of calcium release, an extended slow phase of calcium efflux (k = 0.012 min-1) was similar for both MHS and normal sarcolemma vesicles. We conclude that although a number of sarcolemmal properties, including passive calcium permeability, are normal in MH, a small but significant defect in MHS sarcolemmal ATP-dependent calcium transport may contribute to the abnormal calcium homeostasis and altered contractile properties of MHS skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylation of the Ca2(+)-pump ATPase of cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles by exogenously added protein kinases was examined to elucidate the molecular basis for its regulation. The Ca2(+)-pump ATPase was isolated from protein kinase-treated sarcolemmal vesicles using a monoclonal antibody raised against the erythrocyte Ca2(+)-ATPase. Protein kinase C (C-kinase) was found to phosphorylate the Ca2(+)-ATPase. The stoichiometry of this phosphorylation was about 1 mol per mol of the ATPase molecule. The C-kinase activation resulted in up to twofold acceleration of Ca2+ uptake by sarcolemmal vesicles due to its effect on the affinity of the Ca2+ pump for Ca2+ in both the presence and absence of calmodulin. Both the phosphorylation and stimulation of ATPase activity by C kinase were also observed with a highly-purified Ca2(+)-ATPase preparation isolated from cardiac sarcolemma with calmodulin-Sepharose and a high salt-washing procedure. Thus, C-kinase appears to stimulate the activity of the sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-pump through its direct phosphorylation. In contrast to these results, neither cAMP-dependent protein kinase, cGMP-dependent protein kinase nor Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II phosphorylated the Ca2(+)-ATPase in the sarcolemmal membrane or the purified enzyme preparation, and also they exerted virtually no effect on Ca2+ uptake by sarcolemmal vesicles.  相似文献   

5.
The in vitro stimulation of human and rabbit erythrocyte membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity by physiological concentrations of thyroid hormone has recently been described. To extend these observations to a nucleated cell model, Ca2+-ATPase activity in a membrane preparation obtained from rabbit myocardium has been studied. Activity of 5'-nucleotidase in the preparation was increased 26-fold over that of myocardial homogenate, consistent with enrichment by sarcolemma. Mean basal enzyme activity in membranes from nine animals was 20.8 +/- 3.3 mumol Pi mg membrane protein-1 90 min-1, approximately 20-fold the activity described in rabbit red cell membranes. Exposure of heart membranes in vitro to L-thyroxine (T4) (10(-10)M) increased Ca2+-ATPase activity to 29.2 +/- 3.8 mumol Pi (P less than 0.001). Dose-response studies conducted with T4 showed that maximal stimulatory response was obtained at 10(-10) M). Hormonal stimulation was comparable for L-T4 and triiodo-L-thyronine (T3) (10(-10) M). Tetraiodothyroacetic acid was without biological activity, whereas triiodothyroacetic acid and D-T4, each at 10(-10) M, significantly decreased enzyme activity compared to control (basal) levels. The action of L-T4 on myocardial membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity was inhibited by trifluoperazine (100 microM) and the naphthalenesulfonamide W-7 (50-100 microM), compounds that block actions of calmodulin, the protein activator of membrane-associated Ca2+-ATPase. Radioimmunoassay revealed the presence of calmodulin (1.4 micrograms/mg membrane protein-1) in the myocardial membrane fraction and 0.35 micrograms/mg-1 in cytosol. Myocardial Ca2+-ATPase activity, apparently of sarcolemmal origin, is thus thyroid hormone stimulable. The hormonal responsiveness of this calcium pump-associated enzyme requires calmodulin.  相似文献   

6.
Sarcolemmal membranes were isolated from porcine skeletal muscle by modifications of a LiBr-extraction technique. Latency determinations of acetylcholinesterase, ouabain-sensitive p-nitrophenylphosphatase, [3H]ouabain binding, and (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activities indicated that 65-76% of the membranes were sealed inside-out vesicles. The preparations were enriched in cholesterol and phospholipid, and demonstrated adenylate cyclase activity and both cAMP and cGMP phosphodiesterase activities. An indication of the purity of this fraction was that the Ca2+-ATPase activity (0.13 mumol Pi mg-1 min-1 at 37 degrees C) was 3.8% of that of porcine skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum preparations. Pertussis toxin specifically catalyzed the ADP-ribosylation of a Mr 41,000 sarcolemmal protein, indicating the presence of the inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase, Ni. An endogenous ADP-ribosyltransferase activity, with several membrane protein substrates, was also demonstrated. The addition of exogenous cAMP-dependent protein kinase or calmodulin promoted the phosphorylation of a number of sarcolemmal proteins. The calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation exhibited an approximate K 1/2 for Ca2+ of 0.5 microM, and an approximate K 1/2 for calmodulin of 0.1 microM. 125I-Calmodulin affinity labeling of the sarcolemma, using dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate), demonstrated the presence of Mr 160,000 and 280,000 calmodulin-binding components in these membranes. These results demonstrate that this porcine preparation will be valuable in the study of skeletal muscle sarcolemmal ion transport, protein and hormonal receptors, and protein kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation.  相似文献   

7.
The Ca2+-pumping ATPase has been isolated from calf heart sarcolemma by calmodulin affinity chromatography (Caroni, P., and Carafoli, E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 3263-3270) as a polypeptide of Mr about 140,000. The purified enzyme has high affinity for Ca2+ in the presence of calmodulin (Km about 0.4 microM) but shifts to a low affinity state (Km about 20 microM) in its absence. Calmodulin increases also the Vmax of the enzyme. The effects of calmodulin are mimicked by phosphatidylserine and by a limited proteolytic treatment of the enzyme with trypsin. The purified ATPase can be reconstituted in asolectin liposomes, where it pumps Ca2+ with an approximate stoichiometry to ATP of 1. The purified (and reconstituted) enzyme is not phosphorylated by added ATP and cAMP-dependent protein kinase under conditions where the enzyme in situ is stimulated concomitant with the phosphorylation of the sarcolemmal membrane (Caroni, P., and Carafoli, E. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 9371-9373). Hence, the target of the regulatory phosphorylation system is not the ATPase molecule. The purified ATPase cross-reacts with an antibody raised against the erythrocyte Ca2+-pumping ATPase. Under the same conditions, the purified sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase does not react. The proteolytic splitting pattern of the purified heart sarcolemma and erythrocyte enzymes are similar but not identical.  相似文献   

8.
The (Ca2+ + Mg2+) ATPase of dog heart sarcolemma (Caroni, P., and Carafoli, E. (1980) Nature 283, 765-767) has been characterized. The enzyme possesses an apparent Km (Ca2+) of 0.3 +/- 02 microM, a Vmax of Ca2+ transport of 31 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein/min, and an apparent Km (ATP) of 30 microM. It is only slightly influenced by monovalent cations and is highly sensitive to orthovanadate (Ki = 0.5 +/- 0.1 microM). The high vanadate sensitivity has been used to distinguish the sarcolemmal and the contaminating sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-dependent ATPase in heart microsomal fractions. Calmodulin has been shown to be present in heart sarcolemma. Its depletion results in the transition of the Ca2+-pumping ATPase to a low Ca2+ affinity; readdition of calmodulin reverses this effect. The Na+/Ca2+ exchange system was not affected by calmodulin. The results of calmodulin extraction can be duplicated by using the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine. The calmodulin-depleted Ca2+-ATPase has been solubilized from the sarcolemmal membrane and "purified" on a calmodulin affinity chromatography column. One major (Mr = 150,000) and 3 minor protein bands could be eluted from the column with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). The major protein band (72%) has Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity and can be phosphorylated by [gamma]32P]ATP in a Ca2+-dependent reaction.  相似文献   

9.
Preparations of rabbit small intestine smooth muscle cell sarcolemma are capable of hydrolyzing ATP in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Mg2+ and Ca2+ and possess the activity of Mg2+,Ca2+-ATPase having a high affinity for Ca2+ (Km = 5.8 X 10(-6) M). The optimal conditions for the Mg2+,Ca2+-ATPase reaction were established. It was demonstrated that sarcolemmal preparations hydrolyze ATP, GTP, ITP and UTP almost at the same rates. The enzyme contains SH-groups that are unequally exposed to the water phase and are inhibited by 50% by p-chloromercurybenzoate and by 90% by dithionitrobenzoate. The Mg2+,Ca2+-ATPase activity is highly sensitive to oxytocin: at the concentration of 10(-7) MU/ml, the hormone completely inhibits the enzyme without affecting its Mg2+-, Ca2+- and Na+,K+-ATPase activities.  相似文献   

10.
The Ca2+-transport system of human erythrocyte membranes was solubilized by deoxycholate in the presence of the nonionic detergent Tween 20 and was purified by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The method yields a functional enzyme, which as compared with the erythrocyte membrane was purified 207-fold based on specific activity, and about 330-fold based on protein content. The activity of the isolated enzyme can be increased about 9-fold by the addition of calmodulin, resulting in a specific activity of 10.1 mumoles/mg . min at 37 degrees C. Triton X-100 and deoxycholate stimulate the calmodulin-deficient Ca2+-ATPase in a concentration dependent manner, which results in a loss of the calmodulin-sensitivity. The Ca2+-transport ATPase could be reconstituted after solubilization of the ATPase by deoxycholate and controlled dialysis near room temperature. The system was reconstituted to form membraneous vesicles capable of energized Ca2+ accumulation. The membrane vesicles showed a protein to lipid ratio (approx. 60% protein and 40% lipid) similar to that of the original erythrocyte membrane. The stimulation by calmodulin of the calmodulin-depleted membrane-bound and partially purified Ca2+-ATPase is strongly time dependent. At a Ca2+-concentration of 40 microM and low calmodulin concentrations, approx. 120 min are required to regain full activity. This time period is decreased to about 15 min in the presence of a high excess of calmodulin. Vice versa, at fixed concentrations of calmodulin, the time necessary for regain of full activity is decreased as the Ca2+ concentrations is increased. The dependence of the Ca2+-ATPase activity on the calmodulin concentration shows strong deviation from Michaelis-Menten kinetics at Ca2+ concentrations below (4--10 microM) and above (200 microM) the optimum concentration of 40 microM. Mathematical analysis of the results at 200 microM Ca2+ leads to the assumption that 4 calmodulin molecules interact with one oligomer of Ca2+-ATPase consisting of 4 identical subunits.  相似文献   

11.
Effects of lanthanum on Ca2+-ATPase, Mg2+-ATPase, Na+-K+-ATPase, and calcium binding activities were studied in rat heart sarcolemma. Ten to 100 micrometers lanthanum depressed significantly the Ca2+-ATPase activity and 50--200 micrometers lanthanum inhibited the calcium binding activity. Lineweaver-Burk plots of the Ca2+-ATPase activity showed that the inhibition by lanthanum was competitive with calcium concentration. Neither Mg2+-ATPase nor Na+-K+-ATPase activities were affected by lanthanum when the assay medium contained 1 mM EDTA; however, in the absence of EDTA, these enzyme activities were significantly decreased by 10--100 micrometers lanthanum. Rat hearts perfused with HEPES buffer containing 0.5 mM lanthanum showed electron-dense deposits restricted to the outer cell surface and the sarcolemma obtained from these hearts also had the deposits, indicating that the membrane fraction isolated by the hypotonic shock--LiBr treatment method is of sarcolemmal origin. The Ca2+-ATPase activity of the sarcolemma isolated from lanthanum-perfused hearts, unlike the Mg2+-ATPase, Na+-K+-ATPase, and calcium binding activities, was significantly less than the control value. From these observations it is suggested that lanthanum may influence calcium movement across the sarcolemma by affecting sarcolemmal ATPase and calcium binding activities.  相似文献   

12.
To elucidate the regulation mechanisms for sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-pumping ATPase of vascular smooth muscle, the preparation of the membrane fraction of porcine aorta with which the enzyme activity could be analyzed was attempted. A Ca2(+)-activated, Mg2(+)-dependent ATPase [Ca2(+)+Mg2+)-ATPase) activity with high affinity for Ca2+ (Km = 79 +/- 18 nM) was found in a sarcolemma-enriched fraction obtained from digitonin-treated microsomes that possessed the essential properties of plasma membrane (PM) Ca2(+)-pumping ATPases, as determined for the erythrocyte and cardiac muscle enzymes. The activity was stimulated by calmodulin and inhibited by low concentrations of vanadate. Saponin had a stimulatory effect on it. The existence of the PM enzyme in the membrane fraction was substantiated by the Ca2(+)-dependent, hydroxylamine sensitive phosphorylation of a 130K protein, which could be selectively enhanced by LaCl3. The enzyme activity was potentiated by either cGMP or a purified G-kinase. Purified protein kinase C potentiated the enzyme activity. However, none of these agents stimulated the activity of the enzyme purified from microsomes by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The results suggest that the sarcolemmal Ca2(+)-pumping ATPase of vascular smooth muscle is regulated by these protein kinases not through phosphorylation of the enzyme itself but through phosphorylation of membrane components(s) other than the enzyme. Phosphatidylinositol phosphate was found to stimulate the enzyme, suggesting its role in mediation of the stimulatory effects of the protein kinases.  相似文献   

13.
N-Ethylmaleimide was employed as a surface label for sarcolemmal proteins after demonstrating that it does not penetrate to the intracellular space at concentrations below 1.10(-4) M. The sarcolemmal markers, ouabain-sensitive (Na+ +K+)-ATPase and Na+/Ca2+-exchange activities, were inhibited in N-ethylmaleimide perfused hearts. Intracellular activities such as creatine phosphokinase, glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase and the internal phosphatase site of the Na+ pump (K+-p-nitrophosphatase) were not affected. Almost 20% of the (Ca2+ +Mg2+)-ATPase and Ca2+ pump were inhibited indicating the localization of a portion of this activity in the sarcolemma. Sarcolemma purified by a recent method (Morcos, N.C. and Drummond, G.I. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 598, 27-39) from N-ethylmaleimide-perfused hearts showed loss of approx. 85% of its (Ca2+ +Mg2+-ATPase and Ca2+ pump compared to control hearts. (Ca2+ +Mg2+)-ATPase and Ca2+ pump activities showed two classes of sensitivity to vanadate ion inhibition. The high vanadate affinity class (K1/2 for inhibition approx. 1.5 microM) may be localized in the sarcolemma and represented approx. 20% of the total inhibitable activity in agreement with estimates from N-ethylmaleimide studies. Sucrose density fractionation indicated that only a small portion of Mg2+-ATPase and Ca2+-ATPase may be associated with the sarcolemma. The major portion of these activities seems to be associated with high density particles.  相似文献   

14.
Gingerol, isolated as a potent cardiotonic agent from the rhizome of ginger, stimulated the Ca2+-pumping activity of fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) prepared from rabbit skeletal and dog cardiac muscles. The extravesicular Ca2+ concentrations of the heavy fraction of the fragmented SR (HSR) were measured directly with a Ca2+ electrode to examine the effect of gingerol on the SR. Gingerol (3-30 microM) accelerated the Ca2+-pumping rate of skeletal and cardiac SR in a concentration-dependent manner. The rate of 45Ca2+ uptake of HSR was also increased markedly by 30 microM gingerol without affecting the 45Ca2+ efflux from HSR. Furthermore, gingerol activated Ca2+-ATPase activities of skeletal and cardiac SR (EC50, 4 microM). The activation of SR Ca2+-ATPase activity by gingerol (30 microM) was completely reversed by 100-fold dilution with the fresh saline solution. Kinetic analysis of activating effects of gingerol suggests that the activation of SR Ca2+-ATPase is uncompetitive and competitive with respect to Mg . ATP at concentrations of 0.2-0.5 mM and above 1 mM, respectively. Kinetic analysis also suggests that the activation by gingerol is mixed-type with respect to free Ca2+ and this enzyme is activated probably due to the acceleration of enzyme-substrate complex breakdown. Gingerol had no significant effect on sarcolemmal Ca2+-ATPase, myosin Ca2+-ATPase, actin-activated myosin ATPase and cAMP-phosphodiesterase activities, indicating that the effect of gingerol is rather specific to SR Ca2+-ATPase activity. Gingerol may provide a valuable chemical tool for studies aimed at clarifying the regulatory mechanisms of SR Ca2+-pumping systems and the causal relationship between the Ca2+-pumping activity of SR and muscle contractility.  相似文献   

15.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer has been used to study oligomerization of the purified erythrocyte Ca2+-ATPase. The energy transfer efficiency has been measured at different enzyme concentrations, from fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate attached on one enzyme molecule to eosin 5-maleimide or tetramethylrhodamine 5-isothiocyanate attached on another enzyme molecule. The energy transfer efficiency showed a sigmoid dependence on enzyme concentration and was half-maximal at 10-12 nM enzyme; this dependence on enzyme concentration closely resembled previously demonstrated dependence of Ca2+-ATPase activity and polarization of the fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate enzyme (Kosk-Kosicka, D., and Bzdega, T. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18184-18189). Thus, the three independent methods establish that enzyme concentration-dependent oligomerization is a mechanism of activation of the erythrocyte Ca2+-ATPase. Further energy transfer studies demonstrated that enzyme oligomerization required calcium. This calcium dependence was characterized by high affinity (half-maximal energy transfer at pCa 7.15) and cooperativity (Hill coefficient of 2.36), being very similar in both respects to the Ca2+ dependence of the Ca2+-ATPase activity. The data indicated that the oligomerization process produced a highly cooperative, Ca2+-regulated activation of the enzyme at physiologically relevant Ca2+ concentrations. These studies show that the Ca2+-ATPase can be fully activated by a Ca2+-dependent oligomerization mechanism, which is independent of the previously described activation by calmodulin. We propose two pathways for the activation of the Ca2+-ATPase, taking into account the interdependencies between the Ca2+, calmodulin, and enzyme concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
The Kd for ouabain for inhibition of Na+,K+-ATPase isolated from murine plasmocytoma MOPC 173 cells is 120 microM, but when isolated in the presence of EDTA, it is 100-fold lower (1.2 microM). Simultaneous addition of muscle tropomyosin and calcium to sensitive membranes restored the original insensitivity (tropomyosin bound to the membranes in an irreversible and saturable manner). For comparison 86Rb influx into intact cells, mediated by the Na+,K+-pump, is half-maximally inhibited at 50 microM ouabain. Calcium converts the enzyme to an insensitive form. This appeared to involve calmodulin because after extraction of calmodulin with EDTA and EGTA from sensitive membranes, they could not be made insensitive by the addition of tropomyosin and Ca2+. Addition of exogenous calmodulin to these calmodulin-depleted membranes was required, in addition to tropomyosin and Ca2+, to decrease the ouabain sensitivity. The involvement of calmodulin was further assessed by measuring the range of Ca2+ concentrations required to convert to the insensitive form. At saturating concentrations of tropomyosin, increasing free [Ca2+] up to 3 microM led to an heterogeneous population of Na+,K+-ATPase forms. The calcium dependency was a saturable process. The shift to the insensitive form was half maximal at 0.65 + 0.11 microM free Ca2+ and was abolished by the addition of troponin I or trifluoroperazine (0.1 mM). These results suggest that, in murine plasmocytoma cells, the intrinsic sensitivity of Na+,K+-ATPase to ouabain might be regulated by a calmodulin-dependent process within a submembrane contractile-like environment.  相似文献   

17.
A Ca2(+)-ATPase with a high affinity for free Ca2+ (apparent Km of 0.13 microM) was found and characterized in membrane fractions from porcine aortic and coronary artery smooth muscles in comparison with the plasma membrane Ca2(+)-pump ATPase purified from porcine aorta by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The activity of the high-affinity Ca2(+)-ATPase became enriched in a plasma membrane-enriched fraction, suggesting its localization in the plasma membrane. The enzyme was fully active in the absence of exogenously added Mg2+, but required a minute amount of Mg2+ for its activity as evidenced by the findings that it was fully active in the presence of 0.1 microM free Mg2+ but lost the activity in a reaction mixture containing trans-cyclohexane-1,2-diamine-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid as a divalent cation chelator which has, unlike EGTA, high affinities for both Ca2+ and Mg2+. It was able to utilize a variety of nucleoside di- and triphosphates as substrates, such as ADP, GDP, ATP, GTP, CTP, and UTP, showing a broad substrate specificity. The activity of the enzyme was not modified by calmodulin (5, 10 micrograms/ml). Trifluoperazine, a calmodulin antagonist, had a partial inhibitory effect on the activity at 30 to 240 microM, but this inhibition could not be reproduced by a more specific calmodulin antagonist, W-7, indicating that this inhibition by trifluoperazine was not specific. Furthermore, the high-affinity Ca2(+)-ATPase activity was not modified either by low concentrations (0.5-9 microM) of vanadate or by 1-100 microM p-chloromercuribenzoic acid. Cyclic GMP, nitroglycerin, and nicorandil did not have any effect on the enzyme activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Calmodulin has been shown to stimulate the initial rates of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, when it is present in the reaction assay media for these activities. To determine whether the stimulatory effect of calmodulin is mediated directly through its interaction with the Ca2+-ATPase, or indirectly through phosphorylation of phospholamban by an endogenous protein kinase, two approaches were taken in the present study. In the first approach, the effects of calmodulin were studied on a Ca2+-ATPase preparation, isolated from cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, which was essentially free of phospholamban. The enzyme was preincubated with various concentrations of calmodulin at 0 degrees C and 37 degrees C, but there was no effect on the Ca2+-ATPase activity assayed over a wide range of [Ca2+] (0.1-10 microM). In the second approach, cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were prephosphorylated by an endogenous protein kinase in the presence of calmodulin. Phosphorylation occurred predominantly on phospholamban, an oligomeric proteolipid. The sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were washed prior to assaying for Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-ATPase activity in order to remove the added calmodulin. Phosphorylation of phospholamban enhanced the initial rates of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase, and this stimulation was associated with an increase in the affinity of the Ca2+-pump for calcium. The EC50 values for calcium activation of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase were 0.96 +/- 0.03 microM and 0.96 +/- 0.1 microM calcium by control vesicles, respectively. Phosphorylation decreased these values to 0.64 +/- 0.12 microM calcium for Ca2+-uptake and 0.62 +/- 0.11 microM calcium for Ca2+-ATPase. The stimulatory effect was associated with increases in the apparent initial rates of formation and decomposition of the phosphorylated intermediate of the Ca2+-ATPase. These findings suggest that calmodulin regulates cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum function by protein kinase-mediated phosphorylation of phospholamban.  相似文献   

19.
Plasma membrane enriched fraction isolated from the fundus smooth muscle of rat stomach displayed Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activity in the absence of Mg2+. The Ca2+ dependence of such an ATPase activity can be resolved into two hyperbolic components with a high affinity (Km = 0.4 microM) and a low affinity (Km = 0.6 mM) for Ca2+. Distribution of these high-affinity and low-affinity Ca2+-ATPase activities parallels those of several plasma membrane marker enzyme activities but not those of endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial membrane marker enzyme activities. Mg2+ also stimulates the ATPase in the absence of Ca2+. Unlike the Mg2+-ATPase and low-affinity Ca2+-ATPase, the plasmalemmal high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase is not sensitive to the inhibitory effect of sodium azide or Triton X-100 treatment. The high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase is noncompetitively inhibited by Mg2+ with respect to Ca2+ stimulation. Such an inhibitory effect of Mg2+ is potentiated by Triton X-100 treatment of the membrane fraction. Calmodulin has little effect on the high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase activity of the plasma membrane enriched fraction with or without EDTA pretreatment. Findings of this novel, Mg2+-independent, high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase activity in the rat stomach smooth muscle plasma membrane are discussed with those of Mg2+-dependent, high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase activities previously reported in other smooth muscle plasma membrane preparations in relation to the plasma membrane Ca2+-pump.  相似文献   

20.
Highly purified vesicles of rabbit myocardium sarcolemma with predominant inside-out orientation possess the Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity. At optimal concentrations of calmodulin (0.5 microM) and Ca2+ (0.1 mM), the activity of protein kinase is 0.21 nmol 32P X min X mg of protein. The Km(app) value for ATP is 3.0 X 10(-6) M, V = 0.27 nmol 32P X mg of protein X min. Endogenous Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase phosphorylates four protein substrates in sarcolemmal vesicles (Mr = 145, 22, 11.5, and 6-8 KD). Studies with passive efflux of Ca2+ from the SL vesicles showed that the Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of protein components of sarcolemma inhibits this reaction.  相似文献   

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