首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A rapid mixing technique was used to investigate the effects of Ca2+ ion on the kinetics of ATP hydrolysis by sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. "Basic" ATPase measured in the absence of Ca2+ showed an initial burst of inorganic phosphate production. Similarities in the transient state kinetic properties of basic and "extra" or Ca2+-dependent ATPase suggest that the two activities represent a single enzyme species. At low concentrations of Ca2+ (less than 10(-6) M) the time course of the partial reactions of extra ATPase appeared to fit a simple scheme in which the acid-stable, phosphorylated enzyme (E approximately P) breaks down directly to inorganic phosphate and free enzyme. A similar mechanism seemed to apply to moderate levels of ATP and high external concentrations of Ca2+ known to inhibit transport activity. In the intermediate range of Ca2+ concentrations inorganic phosphate production was resolved into two phases consisting of a fast initial rate (burst) and slow steady state. Acid-stable phosphorylated protein showed a transient decay which coincided with the appearance of the burst. This behavior is consistent with a scheme in which E approximately P breaks down to an acid-labile or noncovalent intermediate state (E-P). A slow secondary increase in phosphorylation followed the transient decay in E approximately P. This late phase of protein labeling was eliminated following pretreatment with Triton X-100, sodium oxalate, or diethyl ether which decrease or prevent the formation of a transport gradient. An analysis of the dependence of the steady state level of phosphorylation and rate of inorganic phosphate production on Ca2+ concentration indicated that the phosphorylation mechanism involves interaction of two Ca2+ ions with the enzymatic carrier. The pathway by which E approximately P breaks down, i.e. whether it goes to E + Pi or E-P, may depend on the extent to which these sites are occupied by Ca2+. The transport of Ca2+ is discussed in terms of a flip-flop mechanism in which E approximately P and E-P represent high and low affinity Ca2+ binding states occurring in separate halves of an enzyme dimer.  相似文献   

2.
The phosphorylation of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase with Pi in the absence of Ca2+ was studied by equilibrium and kinetic experimentation. The combination of these measurements was then subjected to analysis without assumptions on the stoichiometry of the reactive sites. The analysis indicates that the species undergoing covalent interaction is the tertiary complex E X Pi X Mg formed by independent interaction of the two ligands with the enzyme. The binding constant of Pi or Mg2+ to either free or partially associated enzyme is approximately equal to 10(2) M-1, and no significant synergistic effect is produced by one ligand on the binding of the other; the equilibrium constant (Keq) for the covalent reaction E X Pi X Mg E-P X Mg is approximately equal to 16, with kphosph = 53 s-1, and khyd = 3-4 s-1 (25 degrees C, pH 6.0, no K+). The phosphorylation reaction of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase with Pi is highly H+ dependent. Such a pH dependence involves the affinity of enzyme for different ionization states of Pi, as well as protonation of two protein residues per enzyme unit in order to obtain optimal phosphorylation. The experimental data can then be fitted satisfactorily assuming pK values of 5.7 and 8.5 for the two residues in the nonphosphorylated enzyme (changing to 7.7 for one of the two residues, following phosphorylation) and values of 50.0 and 0.58 for the equilibrium constants of the H2(E X HPO4) in equilibrium with H(E-PO3) + H2O and H(E X HPO4) in equilibrium with E-PO3 + H2O reactions, respectively. In addition to the interdependence of H+ and phosphorylation sites, an interdependence of Ca2+ and phosphorylation sites is revealed by total inhibition of the Pi reaction when two high affinity calcium sites per enzyme unit are occupied by calcium. Conversely, occupancy of the phosphate site by vanadate (a stable transition state analogue of phosphate) inhibits high affinity calcium binding. The known binding competition between the two cations and their opposite effects on the phosphorylation reaction suggest that interdependence of phosphorylation site, H+ sites, and Ca2+ sites is a basic mechanistic feature of enzyme catalysis and cation transport.  相似文献   

3.
Investigation of the properties of Ca2(+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum cross-linked at the active site with glutaraldehyde showed that ATP binding affinity and rate of ATP-dependent phosphorylation and Ca2+ occlusion were decreased 2-3 orders of magnitude compared with the native enzyme. Cross-linkage had little effect on or marginally increased the rate of acetyl phosphate- and p-nitrophenyl phosphate-supported Ca2+ occlusion. Ca2+ binding or Ca2(+)-induced changes in tryptophan fluorescence were unaffected. High levels of phosphoenzyme (up to 4 nmol/mg of protein) were obtained, with 2 mol of Ca2+ occluded/mol of E-P. Dephosphorylation and deocclusion occurred together at a slow rate (k = 0.01 s-1) and were stimulated in a monophasic manner up to 20-fold by ADP. Cross-linking inhibited E2-P formation from Pi in 30% (v/v) dimethyl sulfoxide by more than 95%. Induction of turnover of the native ATPase, under conditions designed to yield high steady state levels of E1 approximately P(2Ca), results in a 3-4-fold increase in reactivity of active site residues to glutaraldehyde. The results show that cross-linkage sterically impairs nucleotide binding, changing ATP and ADP into relatively poor substrates, slowing nucleotide-dependent phosphoryl transfer and Ca2+ occlusion and deocclusion. The forward reaction with smaller substrates is unaffected. Another major effect of the cross-link is to inhibit E2-P formation, causing accumulation of E1 approximately P(2Ca) during enzyme turnover and preventing phosphorylation by Pi in the reverse direction. We suggest that occlusion and deocclusion of cations at the transport site of the native enzyme are linked to a two-step cleft closure movement at the active site and that the crosslink stabilizes occluded forms of the pump because it blocks part of this tertiary structural change. The latter could normally be propagated through linking helices to the distal side of the pump to destabilize the cations and open the transport sites to the lumen.  相似文献   

4.
Purified Ca(2+)-stimulated, Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase (Ca(2+)-ATPase) from human erythrocytes was phosphorylated with a stoichiometry of about 1 mol of phosphate/mol of ATPase at both threonine and serine residues by purified rat brain type III protein kinase C. In the presence of calmodulin, the phosphorylation was markedly reduced. Labeled phosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP was retained on an 86-kDa calmodulin-binding tryptic fragment of Ca(2+)-ATPase but not on 82- and 77-kDa non-calmodulin-binding fragments. Similarly, fragmentation of the phosphorylated Ca(2+)-ATPase by calpain I revealed that calmodulin-binding fragments (127 and 125 kDa) retained phosphate label whereas a non-calmodulin-binding fragment (124 kDa) did not. The calmodulin-binding domain, located about 12 kDa from the carboxyl terminus of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, was thus located as a site of protein kinase C phosphorylation. A synthetic peptide corresponding to a segment of the calmodulin-binding domain (H2 N-R-G-L-N-R-I-Q-T-Q-I-K-V-V-N-COOH) was indeed phosphorylated at the single threonine residue within this sequence. The additional serine phosphorylation site was carboxyl terminal to the calmodulin domain. Phosphorylation by purified type III protein kinase C (canine heart) antagonized the calmodulin activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, particularly at lower Ca2+ concentrations (0.2-1.0 microM). By contrast, a purified but unresolved protein kinase C isoenzyme mixture from rat brain stimulated the activity of Ca(2+)-ATPase prepared in asolectin, but not glycerol, by more than 2-fold in the presence of the ionophore A23187, without increasing its Ca2+ sensitivity. The results clearly indicate that human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase is a substrate of protein kinase C, but the effect of phosphorylation on the activity of the enzyme depends on the isoenzyme form of protein kinase C used and on the lipid associated with the Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

5.
Protein kinase C incorporates phosphate into two sites of myosin light chain kinase (MLC-kinase) in the absence of calmodulin. Phosphorylation is all but abolished in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, suggesting that both sites of phosphorylation are close to the calmodulin binding site. The phosphorylation of MLC-kinase results in an approximately 10-fold increase in the dissociation constant of MLC-kinase for calmodulin. Following phosphorylation (2 mol/mol of enzyme) of MLC-kinase by protein kinase C, an additional 2 mol of phosphate can be incorporated into the MLC-kinase apoenzyme by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Different maps of phosphopeptides were obtained by tryptic hydrolysis from MLC-kinase preparations phosphorylated by each kinase. The phosphorylation sites for the cAMP-dependent kinase were located in a fragment of approximately 25,000 daltons. In contrast the phosphorylation sites for protein kinase C are found in a much smaller tryptic peptide. These results suggest that the phosphorylation sites on MLC-kinase are different for protein kinase C and for cAMP-dependent protein kinase. However, phosphorylation in both regions results in a reduced affinity for calmodulin.  相似文献   

6.
C Coan  S Keating 《Biochemistry》1982,21(13):3214-3220
The labeling kinetics of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase with the iodoacetamide spin probe N-(1-oxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodoacetamide were followed under conditions designed to selectively label all reactive groups. Approximately 1 mol of spin-label reacted per one 100 000-dalton ATPase chain, indicating only one residue on the enzyme had been labeled. One uniform rate of labeling was observed in the presence of Ca2+. When substrate was then added, approximately one-half of the residues showed a 10-fold increase in labeling rate while the remaining residues reacted at the initial, slower rate. Sequential labeling experiments further established that the two labeling rates correspond to the coexistence of two conformational state of the enzyme. Both Ca2+ and substrate are required to obtain an equal distribution between states, and the effect is completely reversed when substrate is removed. The iodoacetamide spin probe is known to be highly sensitive to the conformation of the ATPase binding pocket, and the residue labeled here is the one which generates broadening in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum on substrate binding. Due to the unique selectively of the labeling reaction, it is suggested that when both substrate and Ca2+ are bound to the enzyme, conditions which are precursory to enzyme phosphorylation, two specific conformations of the binding pocket exist in approximately at 50:50 ratio.  相似文献   

7.
The phosphorylation of the whole troponin complex and of the cardiac and skeletal troponin components by Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase was studied. The activity of enzyme isolated from rat brain by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex and by affinity chromatography on phosphatidylserine immobilized on polyacrylamide gel was shown to be completely dependent on Ca2+ and phospholipids and was equal to 0.4-0.6 mumol of phosphate/min.mg protein with histone H1 as substrate. The resulting preparation of Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase was able to phosphorylate the isolated troponin I; the amount of phosphate transferred per mol of cardiac and skeletal troponin I was equal to 1.1 and 0.4, respectively. The maximal degree of phosphorylation of isolated troponin T by Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase was 0.6 mol of phosphate per mol of troponin T both for skeletal and cardiac proteins. The rate and degree of phosphorylation were independent of the initial level of troponin T phosphorylation. Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase did not phosphorylate the first serine residue of troponin T, i.e., the site which was phosphorylated in the highest degree after isolation of troponin T from skeletal muscles. The data obtained and the fact that the rate and degree of phosphorylation of troponins I and T within the whole troponin complex are 10-20 times less than those for isolated components provide little evidence for the participation of protein kinase C in troponin phosphorylation in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
J A Teruel  G Inesi 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):5885-5890
The roles of the phosphorylation (phosphorylated enzyme intermediate) and nucleotide binding domains in calcium transport were studied by comparing acetyl phosphate and ATP as substrates for the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. We found that the maximal level of phosphoenzyme obtained with either substrate is approximately 4 nmol/mg of protein, corresponding to the stoichiometry of catalytic sites in our preparation. The initial burst of phosphoenzyme formation observed in the transient state, following addition of either substrate, is accompanied by internalization of 2 mol of calcium per mole of phosphoenzyme. The internalized calcium is then translocated with a sequential pattern, independent of the substrate used. Following a rate-limiting step, the phosphoenzyme undergoes hydrolytic cleavage and proceeds to the steady-state activity which is soon "back inhibited" by the rise of Ca2+ concentration in the lumen of the vesicles. When the "back inhibition" is released by the addition of oxalate, substrate utilization and calcium transport occur with a ratio of 1:2, independent of the substrate and its concentration. When the nucleotide binding site is derivatized with FITP, the enzyme can still utilize acetyl phosphate (but not ATP) for calcium transport. No secondary activation of acetyl phosphate utilization by the FITC-enzyme was obtained with millimolar nucleotide. These observations demonstrate that the basic coupling mechanism of catalysis and calcium transport involves the phosphorylation and calcium binding domains, and not the nucleotide binding domain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The effect of phosphorylation by cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (G-kinase) on the activity of the plasmalemmal Ca2+-transport ATPase was studied on isolated plasma membranes and on the ATPase purified from pig erythrocytes and from the smooth muscle of pig stomach and pig aorta. Incubation with G-kinase resulted, in both smooth-muscle preparations, but not in the erythrocyte ATPase, in a higher Ca2+ affinity and in an increase in the maximal rate of Ca2+ uptake. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase) did not exert such an effect. The stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-dependent ATPase activity of the purified Ca2+ pump reconstituted in liposomes depended on the phospholipid used for reconstitution. The stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity by G-kinase was only observed in the presence of phosphatidylinositol (PI). G-kinase, but not A-kinase, stimulated the phosphorylation of PI to phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP) in a preparation of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase obtained by calmodulin affinity chromatography from smooth muscle, but not in a similar preparation from erythrocytes. Adenosine inhibited both the phosphorylation of PI and the stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase by G-kinase. In the absence of G-kinase the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was stimulated by the addition of PIP, but not by PI. In contrast with previous results of Furukawa & Nakamura [(1987) J. Biochem (Tokyo) 101, 287-290], no convincing evidence for a phosphorylation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was found. Evidence is presented showing that the apparent phosphorylation occurs in a contaminant protein, possibly myosin light-chain kinase. It is proposed that G-kinase stimulates the plasmalemmal Ca2+ pump of smooth-muscle cells indirectly via the phosphorylation of an associated PI kinase.  相似文献   

12.
Myosin light-chain kinase was purified from porcine myometrium to apparent homogeneity at about 262-fold with an Mr of 130 000 as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and a sedimentation coefficient of 4.5 S. The approximate content of the soluble myosin light-chain kinase was estimated to be about 0.85 microM. The purified enzyme exhibited strict substrate specificity only for 20-kDa myosin light chain and Ka values of 0.6 nM and 0.3 microM for calmodulin and Ca2+, respectively. The enzyme was phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, which resulted in a decrease in the affinity for calmodulin of 4-7-fold without effect on the Vmax. The maximal amount of phosphate incorporated into the enzyme was 0.5-0.8 and 1.0-1.4 mol per mol of the enzyme in the presence and absence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, respectively. In the presence of a subsaturating concentration of calmodulin, the enzyme showed a lower sensitivity for Ca2+ by phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase phosphatase (CaMKPase) is a protein phosphatase which dephosphorylates autophosphorylated Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) and deactivates the enzyme (Ishida, A., Kameshita, I. and Fujisawa, H. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 1904-1910). In this study, a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation relationship between CaMKII and CaMKPase was examined. CaMKPase was not significantly phosphorylated by CaMKII under the standard phosphorylation conditions but was phosphorylated in the presence of poly-L-lysine, which is a potent activator of CaMKPase. The maximal extent of the phosphorylation was about 1 mol of phosphate per mol of the enzyme and the phosphorylation resulted in an about 2-fold increase in the enzyme activity. Thus, the activity of CaMKPase appears to be regulated through phosphorylation by its target enzyme, CaMKII.  相似文献   

14.
A severalfold activation of calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity by micromolar concentrations of calmodulin was observed in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles obtained from canine ventricles. This activation was seen in the presence of 120 mM KCl. The ratio of moles of calcium transported per mol of ATP hydrolyzed remained at about 0.75 when calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity were measured in the presence and absence of calmodulin. Thus, the efficiency of the calcium transport process did not change. Stimulation of calcium transport by calmodulin involves the phosphorylation of one or more proteins. The major 32P-labeled protein, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gel electrophoresis, was the 22,000-dalton protein called phospholamban. The Ca2+ concentration dependency of calmodulin-stimulated microsomal phosphorylation corresponded to that of calmodulin-stimulated (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity. Proteins of 11,000 and 6,000 daltons and other proteins were labeled to a lesser extent. A similar phosphorylation pattern was obtained when microsomes were incubated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase and ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. Phosphorylation produced by added cAMP-dependent protein kinase and calmodulin was additive. These studies provided further evidence for Ca2+-dependent regulation of calcium transport by calmodulin in sarcoplasmic reticulum that could play a role in the beat-to-beat regulation of cardiac relaxation in the intact heart.  相似文献   

15.
Prior studies identified phosphoenzyme intermediates in the turnover of sodium- and potassium-activated adenosinetriphosphatase [(Na,K)ATPase] from several sources and of the calcium-activated adenosinetriphosphatase [(Ca)-ATPase] of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. In both cases, the transphosphorylation is to a beta-aspartyl carboxyl group at the active site. We now report observation of a K+-sensitive phosphorylated intermediate of purified (Na,-K)ATPase from the salt gland of the duck using high-field 31P nuclear magnetic resonance. Addition of ATP to a suspension of this enzyme in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+ produced a resonance at about +17 ppm relative to 85% phosphoric acid. Addition of inorganic phosphate and Mg2+ to (Na,K)ATPase also produced a resonance at about +17 ppm which was enhanced in the presence of a saturating concentration of the inhibitor, ouabain; again, addition of K+ made this resonance disappear. These findings are consistent with earlier kinetic characterization of an acid-stable (Na,K)ATPase phosphoenzyme intermediate by 32P-labeled phosphate incorporation into a denatured precipitate of the enzyme. We attribute the +17-ppm resonance to formation of an acyl phosphate at an aspartyl residue of the catalytic site of (Na,K)ATPase. This is supported by our finding of a similar resonance at +17 ppm after phosphorylation of another membrane-bound cation transport enzyme, sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca)ATPase, as well as by a similar resonance at about +17 ppm after phosphorylation of the model dipeptide L-seryl-L-aspartate.  相似文献   

16.
The properties of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase have been studied after modification of the ATP high affinity binding site with fluorescein isothiocyanate, both in the membranous state and after solubilization with the nonionic detergent, octaethyleneglycol monododecyl ether. Total inactivation of both membrane-bound and solubilized Ca2+-ATPase requires covalent attachment of 1 mol of fluorescein/mol of enzyme (115,000 g of protein) or per binding site for ATP. Sedimentation velocity studies of soluble enzyme showed that both unlabeled and fluorescein-labeled Ca2+-ATPase were present in a predominantly monomeric form. The phosphorylation level of unlabeled Ca2+-ATPase was unchanged by solubilization. Dephosphorylation measurements at 0 degree C indicated that the phosphorylation is an intermediate in the ATPase reaction catalyzed by solubilized Ca2+-ATPase. Fluorescein labeling of half of the Ca2+-ATPase in the membrane did not influence the enzyme kinetics of the remaining unmodified Ca2+-ATPase. Measurements of both fluorescein and tryptophan fluorescence indicated that the soluble monomer of Ca2+-ATPase like the membrane-bound enzyme exists in a Ca2+-dependent equilibrium between two principal conformations (E and E). E (absence of Ca2+) is unstable in the soluble form, but the pCa dependence of the E - E equilibrium is identical with that of the membranous Ca2+-ATPase (pCa0.5 = 6.7 and Hill coefficient 2). These results suggest that the Ca2+-ATPase polypeptides function with a high degree of independence in the membrane.  相似文献   

17.
To define the mechanism responsible for the slow rate of calcium transport by cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, the kinetic properties of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase of canine cardiac microsomes were characterized and compared with those of a comparable preparation from rabbit fast skeletal muscle. A phosphoprotein intermediate (E approximately P), which has the stability characteristics of an acyl phosphate, is formed during ATP hydrolysis by cardiac microsomes. Ca2+ is required for the E approximately P formation, and Mg2+ accelerates its decomposition. The Ca2+ concentration required for half-maximal activation of the ATPase is 4.7 +/- 0.2 muM for cardiac microsomes and 1.3 +/- 0.1 muM for skeletal microsomes at pH 6.8 and 0 degrees. The ATPase activities at saturating concentrations of ionized Ca2+ and pH 6.8, expressed as ATP hydrolysis per mg of protein, are 3 to 6 times lower for cardiac microsomes than for skeletal microsomes under a variety of conditions tested. The apparent Km value for MgATP at high concentrations in the presence of saturating concentrations of ionized Ca2+ is 0.18 +/- 0.03 ms at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees. The maximum velocity of ATPase activity under these conditions is 0.45 +/- 0.05 mumol per mg per min for cardiac microsomes and 1.60 +/- 0.05 mumol per mg per min for skeletal microsomes. The maximum steady state level of E approximately P for cardiac microsomes, 1.3 +/- 0.1 nmol per mg, is significantly less than the value of 4.9 +/- 0.2 nmol per mg for skeletal microsomes, so that the turnover number of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase of cardiac microsomes, calculated as the ratio of ATPase activity to the E approximately P level is similar to that of the skeletal ATPase. These findings indicate that the relatively slow rate of calcium transport by cardiac microsomes, whem compared to that of skeletal microsomes, reflects a lower density of calcium pumping sites and lower Ca2+ affinity for these sites, rather than a lower turnover rate.  相似文献   

18.
A preparation of purified erythrocyte membrane ATPase whose activation by Ca2+ is or is not dependent on calmodulin depending on the enzyme dilution was used in the low dilution state for these studies. In appropriate conditions, the purified ATPase in the absence of calmodulin exhibited a Ca2+ concentration dependence identical to that of the native enzyme in the erythrocyte membrane ghost in the presence of calmodulin. Accordingly, an apparent Kd approximately equal to 1 X 10(-7) M was derived for cooperative calcium binding to the activating and transport sites of the nonphosphorylated enzyme. The kinetics of enzyme phosphorylation in the transient state following addition of ATP to enzyme activated with calcium were then resolved by rapid kinetic methods, demonstrating directly that phosphoenzyme formation precedes Pi production, consistent with the phosphoenzyme role as an intermediate in the catalytic cycle. Titration of a low affinity site (Kd approximately equal to 2 X 10(-3) M) with calcium produced inhibition of phosphoenzyme cleavage and favored reversal of the catalytic cycle, indicating that calcium dissociation from the transport sites precedes hydrolytic cleavage of the phosphoenzyme. The two different calcium dissociation constants of the nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated enzyme demonstrate that a phosphorylation-induced reduction of calcium affinity is the basic coupling mechanism of catalysis and active transport, with an energy expenditure of approximately 6 kcal/mol of calcium in standard conditions. From the kinetic point of view, a rate-limiting step is identified with the slow dissociation of calcium from the phosphoenzyme; another relatively slow step following hydrolytic cleavage and preceding recycling of the enzyme is suggested by the occurrence of a presteady state phosphoenzyme overshoot.  相似文献   

19.
Transverse tubule membranes isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle have high levels of a Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase with Km values for Ca-ATP or Mg-ATP in the 0.2 mM range, but do not display detectable levels of ATPase activity activated by micromolar [Ca2+]. The transverse tubule enzyme is less temperature or pH dependent than the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum and hydrolyzes equally well ATP, ITP, UTP, CTP, and GTP. Of several ionic, non-ionic, and zwitterionic detergents tested, only lysolecithin solubilizes the transverse tubule membrane while preserving ATPase activity. After extraction of about 50% of the transverse tubule proteins by solubilization with lysolecithin most of the ATPase activity remains membrane bound, indicating that the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase is an intrinsic membrane enzyme. A second extraction of the remaining transverse tubule proteins with lysolecithin results in solubilization and partial purification of the enzyme. Sedimentation of the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase, partially purified by lysolecithin solubilization, through a continuous sucrose gradient devoid of detergent leads to additional purification, with an overall 3- to 5-fold purification factor. The purified enzyme preparation contains two main protein components of molecular weights 107,000 and 30,000. Cholesterol, which is highly enriched in the transverse tubule membrane, copurifies with the enzyme. Transverse tubule membrane vesicles also display ATP-dependent calcium transport which is not affected by phosphate or oxalate. The possibility that the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase is the enzyme responsible for the Ca2+ transport displayed by isolated transverse tubules is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
A pure bovine phospholamban sample was phosphorylated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase maximally to about 1 mol of phosphate/mol of protein (Mr 25,000), whereas phospholamban purified from bovine cardiac SR (sarcoplasmic reticulum) vesicle prephosphorylated by the protein kinase was found to contain 4.6 mol of phosphate/mol of phospholamban. The decrease in phospholamban phosphorylation occurred during the protein purification at the immunoaffinity chromatography step. The protein phosphorylation could be restored by the addition of the affinity column flow-through fraction to the phosphorylation reaction. The phosphorylation-stimulating activity of the flow-through fraction was resistant to boiling and trypsin treatment and extractable by organic solvent, suggesting that the endogenous factor(s) is lipid. Various phospholipids were found capable of stimulating the phosphorylation of phospholamban by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, but only phosphatidylinositol could stimulate the protein phosphorylation to a level achieved by the phosphorylation of SR membrane-bound phospholamban, about 5 mol of phosphate/mol. Phospholamban phosphorylated in the presence of phosphatidylinositol showed similar sites of phosphorylation and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis mobility shifts as the phospholamban isolated from phosphorylated SR vesicles. Results of the present study suggest that phospholamban in SR is embedded in a phosphatidylinositol-rich microenvironment, and that this specific environment may be important for the regulation of Ca2+ pump by phospholamban.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号