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1.
The paper describes the interaction of ATP, Na+ and K+ with (NaK)-ATPase exploiting the inactivation by reaction with NBD-chloride as an analytical tool for the evaluation of enzyme ligandation with the various effectors. 1. The inactivation of (NaK)-ATPase by reaction with NBD-chloride showing under all conditions studied a pseudo first-order rate rests on the alkylation of thiol groups in or near catalytic centre. ATP bound to catalytic centre prevents from enzyme inactivation by NDD-chloride through protection of these thiol groups from alkylation. Na+ and K+ affect the reactivity of the thiol groups towards NBD-chloride either indirectly via influencing ATP binding or more directly via changing the conformation of catalytic centre. Proceeding from these interrelations, the interaction of the various effectors with the enzyme was analyzed. 2. The K'D-values of various nucleotides determined by our approach correspond to the values obtained by independent methods. As shown for the first time, two catalytic centres per enzyme molecule exist. They exhibit high or low affinity to both ATP and ADP apparently caused by anticooperative interaction of the half-units of the enzyme through intersubunit communication ("half-of-the-sites reactivity"). 3. In the absence of ATP, Na+ or K+ ligandation of (NaK)-ATPase produce opposite effects on the reactivity of the thiol groups of catalytic centres reflecting different changes of their conformation. This corresponds to the well-known antagonistic effect of Na+ and K+ on some partial reactions of (NaK)-ATPase. The Na+ and K+ concentrations required to change thiol reactivity are rather high, i.e. the ionophoric centres for both Na+ and K+ are not readily accessible for cation complexation in the absence of enzyme complexation with ATP. 4. Na+ being without effect on ATP binding to the enzyme also does not influence the inactivating reaction with NBD-chloride while K+ by decreasing ATP binding dramatically decreases the protective effect of ATP. The K+ affinity of the enzyme-ATP complex is by more than two orders of magnitude higher than that of free enzyme. Na+ ligandation of the K+-liganded enzyme-ATP complex reverses the effect of K+ ligandation and produces a protective effect which distinctly surpasses that of the complexation of free enzyme with ATP. Hence, the enzyme molecule carries simultaneously ionophoric centres for both Na+ and K+. 5. The findings that per enzyme molecule ionophoric centres for Na+ and K+, and two catalytic centres with anticooperative interaction coexist corroborate the corresponding basic predictions of the flip-flop concept of (NaK)-ATPase pump mechanism, and explain some peculiar kinetic features of transport and enzyme activities of (NaK)-ATPase.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The controlling effect of ATP, K+ and Na+ on the rate of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase inactivation by 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-Cl) is used for the mathematical modelling of the interaction of the effectors with the enzyme under equilibrium conditions.
1. 1. Of a series of conceivable interaction models, designed without conceptual restrictions to describe the effector control of inactivation kinetics, only one fits the experimental data described in a preceding paper.
2. 2. The model is characterized by the coexistence of two binding sites for ATP and the coexistence of two separate binding sites for K+ and Na+ on the enzyme-ATP complex. On the basis of this model, the effector parameters fitting the experimental data most closely are estimated by means of nonlinear least-squares fits.
3. 3. The apparent dissociation constants for ATP of the enzyme-ATP complex or of the enzyme-(ATP)2 complex are computed to lie near 0.0024 mM and 0.34 mM, respectively, irrespective of whether K+ and Na+ were absent or K+ and K+ plus Na+, respectively, were present in the experiments.
4. 4. The origin of the high and the low affinity site for binding of ATP to the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase molecule is traced back to the coexistence of two catalytic centres which, although primarily equivalent as to the reactivity of their thiol groups with NBD-Cl, are induced into anticooperative communication by ATP binding and thus show an induced geometric asymmetry.
Keywords: (Na+ + K+)-ATPase; SH-group alkylation; Inactivation kinetics; Mathematical modelling; Substrate affinity  相似文献   

4.
1. Sea bass kidney microsomal preparations contain two Mg2+ dependent ATPase activities: the ouabain-sensitive (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and an ouabain-insensitive Na+-ATPase, requiring different assay conditions. The (Na+ + K+)-ATPase under the optimal conditions of pH 7.0, 100 mM Na+, 25 mM K+, 10 mM Mg2+, 5 mM ATP exhibits an average specific activity (S.A.) of 59 mumol Pi/mg protein per hr whereas the Na+-ATPase under the conditions of pH 6.0, 40 mM Na+, 1.5 mM MgATP, 1 mM ouabain has a maximal S.A. of 13.9 mumol Pi/mg protein per hr. 2. The (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is specifically inhibited by ouabain and vanadate; the Na+-ATPase specifically by ethacrynic acid and preferentially by frusemide; both activities are similarly inhibited by Ca2+. 3. The (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is specific for ATP and Na+, whereas the Na+-ATPase hydrolyzes other substrates in the efficiency order ATP greater than GTP greater than CTP greater than UTP and can be activated also by K+, NH4+ or Li+. 4. Minor differences between the two activities lie in the affinity for Na+, Mg2+, ATP and in the thermosensitivity. 5. The comparison between the two activities and with what has been reported in the literature only partly agree with our findings. It tentatively suggests that on the one hand two separate enzymes exist which are related to Na+ transport and, on the other, a distinct modulation in vivo in different tissues.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Na+-ATPase activity of a dog kidney (Na+ + K+)-ATPase enzyme preparation was inhibited by a high concentration of NaCl (100 mM) in the presence of 30 microM ATP and 50 microM MgCl2, but stimulated by 100 mM NaCl in the presence of 30 microM ATP and 3 mM MgCl2. The K0.5 for the effect of MgCl2 was near 0.5 mM. Treatment of the enzyme with the organic mercurial thimerosal had little effect on Na+ -ATPase activity with 10 mM NaCl but lessened inhibition by 100 mM NaCl in the presence of 50 microM MgCl2. Similar thimerosal treatment reduced (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity by half but did not appreciably affect the K0.5 for activation by either Na+ or K+, although it reduced inhibition by high Na+ concentrations. These data are interpreted in terms of two classes of extracellularly-available low-affinity sites for Na+: Na+-discharge sites at which Na+-binding can drive E2-P back to E1-P, thereby inhibiting Na+-ATPase activity, and sites activating E2-P hydrolysis and thereby stimulating Na+-ATPase activity, corresponding to the K+-acceptance sites. Since these two classes of sites cannot be identical, the data favor co-existing Na+-discharge and K+-acceptance sites. Mg2+ may stimulate Na+-ATPase activity by favoring E2-P over E1-P, through occupying intracellular sites distinct from the phosphorylation site or Na+-acceptance sites, perhaps at a coexisting low-affinity substrate site. Among other effects, thimerosal treatment appears to stimulate the Na+-ATPase reaction and lessen Na+-inhibition of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction by increasing the efficacy of Na+ in activating E2-P hydrolysis.  相似文献   

7.
1. Incubation of purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase EC 3.6.1.3) from rabbit kidney outer medulla with butanedione in borate buffer leads to reversible inactivation of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. 2. The reaction shows second-outer kinetics, suggesting that modification of a single amino acid residue is involved in the inactivation of the enzyme. 3. The pH dependence of the reaction and the effect of borate ions strongly suggest that modification of an arginine residue is involved. 4. Replacement of Na+ by K+ in the butanedione medium decreases inactivation. 5. ATP, ADP and adenylyl imido diphosphate, particularly in the presence of trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid to complex Mg2+, protect the enzyme very efficiently against inactivation by butanedione. 6. The (Na+ + Mg2+)-dependent phosphorylation capacity of the enzyme is inhibited in the same degree as the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity by butanedione. 7. The K+-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity is much less inhibited than the (Na+ + K+)ATPase activity. 8. The ATP stimulation of the K+-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity is inhibited by butanedione to the same extent as the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. 9. Modification of sulfhydryl groups with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) protects partially against the inactivating effect of butanedione. 10. The results suggest that an arginine residue is present in the nucleotide binding centre of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
1. Gilthead gill 10(-3) M ouabain-inhibited (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and 10(-2) M ouabain-insensitive Na+-ATPase require the optimal conditions of pH 7.0, 160 mM Na+, 20 mM K+, 5 mM MgATP and pH 4.8-5.2, 75 mM Na+, 2.5 mM Mg2+, 1.0 mM ATP, respectively. 2. The main distinctive features between the two activities are confirmed to be optimal pH, the ouabain-sensitivity and the monovalent cation requirement, Na+ plus another cationic species (K+, Rb+, Cs+, NH4+) in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and only one species (Na+, K+, Li+, Rb+, Cs+, NH4+ or choline+) in the Na+-ATPase. 3. The aspecific Na+-ATPase activation by monovalent cations, as well as by nucleotide triphosphates, opposed to the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase specificity for ATP and Na+, relates gilthead gill ATPases to lower organism ATPases and differentiates them from mammalian ones. 4. The discrimination between the two activities by the sensitivity to ethacrynic acid, vanadate, furosemide and Ca2+ only partially agrees with the literature. 5. Present findings are viewed on the basis of the ATPase's presumptive physiological role(s) and mutual relationship.  相似文献   

9.
This paper describes properties of a simple manual assay for Rb+ occlusion on renal (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. Rb+ occlusion is measured by applying the enzyme plus Rb+ (86Rb) mixture to a Dowex-50 cation exchange column at 0 degree C, and eluting the enzyme with occluded Rb+ using an ice-cold sucrose solution. The enzyme-Rb+ complex is quite stable at 0 degree C. This method is useful for measuring Rb+ occlusion under equilibrium binding conditions and slow rates of dissociation of the enzyme-Rb+ complex. The stoichiometry of Rb+ occluded per phosphorylation site is 2. Rb+ saturation curves are strictly hyperbolic, suggesting that the two Rb+ sites have very different affinities, one in the micromolar range and one in the tens of millimolar range. ATP shifts the Rb+ saturation curves to the right (control K0.5 100-200 microM; plus ATP, K0.5 0.8-1.4 mM, in a 100 mM Tris-HCl medium, pH 7.0) and reduces the maximal level occluded (control approx. 4 nmol/mg; plus ATP approx. 3 nmol/mg protein). Thus, as expected, ATP shifts the E(1)2Rb+-E2(2Rb+)occ equilibrium towards E1. Sodium ions at concentrations of up to 30 mM compete with the rubidium ions, KNa = 1.86 mM in the Tris-HCl medium. Na+ at higher concentrations (30-100 mM) has an added non-competitive antagonistic effect. At room temperature, Rb+ dissociates slowly from the enzyme, kobs = 0.08 s-1, in the presence of either Rb+ (20 mM) or Na, (100 mM). As expected, dissociation is greatly accelerated by ATP, the rate being to fast to be measured by this technique. (Na+ + K+)-ATPase proteolyzed selectively by chymotrypsin in a Na+ medium, occludes Rb+. For control and proteolyzed (Na+ + K+)-ATPase the Rb+ saturation curves are similar and the rates of dissociation of the enzyme-Rb+ complex are identical. The chymotryptic split appears to disrupt antagonistic interactions between cation and ATP binding domains, while the E1-E2 conformational transition of the unphosphorylated protein probably remains.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of Na+ and K+ on the steady-state kinetics at 37 degrees C of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase was investigated. From an analysis of the dependence of slopes and intercepts (from double-reciprocal plots or from Hanes plots) of the primary data on Na+ and K+ concentrations a detailed model for the interaction of the cations with the individual steps in the mechanism may be inferred and a set of intrinsic (i.e. cation independent) rate constants and cation dissociation constants are obtained. A comparison of the rate constants with those obtained from an analogous analysis of Na+-ATPase kinetics (preceding paper) provides evidence that the ATP hydrolysis proceeds through a series of intermediates, all of which are kinetically different from those responsible for the Na+-ATPase activity. The complete model for the enzyme thus involves two distinct, but doubly connected, hydrolysis cycles. The model derived for (Na+ + K+)-ATPase has the following properties: The empty, substrate free, enzyme form is the K+-bound form E2K. Na+ (Kd = 9 mM) and MgATP (Kd = 0.48 mM), in that order, must be bound to it in order to effect K+ release. Thus Na+ and K+ are simultaneously present on the enzyme in part of the reaction cycle. Each enzyme unit has three equivalent and independent Na+ sites. K+ binding to high-affinity sites (Kd = 1.4 mM) on the presumed phosphorylated intermediate is preceded by release of Na+ from low-affinity sites (Kd = 430 mM). The stoichiometry is variable, and may be Na:K:ATP = 3:2:1. To the extent that the transport properties of the enzyme are reflected in the kinetic ATPase model, these properties are in accord with one of the models shown by Sachs ((1980) J. Physiol. 302, 219-240) to give a quantitative fit of transport data for red blood cells.  相似文献   

11.
In experiments performed at 37 degrees C, Ca2+ reversibly inhibits the Na+-and (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activities and the K+-dependent phosphatase activity of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. With 3 mM ATP, the Na+-ATPase was less sensitive to CaCl2 than the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. With 0.02 mM ATP, the Na+-ATPase and the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activities were similarly inhibited by CaCl2. The K0.5 for Ca2+ as (Na+ + K+)-ATPase inhibitor depended on the total MgCl2 and ATP concentrations. This Ca2+ inhibition could be a consequence of Ca2+-Mg2+ competition, Ca . ATP-Mg . ATP competition or a combination of both mechanisms. In the presence of Na+ and Mg2+, Ca2+ inhibited the K+-dependent dephosphorylation of the phosphoenzyme formed from ATP, had no effect on the dephosphorylation in the absence of K+ and inhibited the rephosphorylation of the enzyme. In addition, the steady-state levels of phosphoenzyme were reduced in the presence both of NaCl and of NaCl plus KCl. With 3 mM ATP, Ca2+ alone sustained no more than 2% of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity and about 23% of the Na+-ATPase activity observed with Mg2+ and no Ca2+. With 0.003 mM ATP, Ca2+ was able to maintain about 40% of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity and 27% of the Na+-ATPase activity seen in the presence of Mg2+ alone. However, the E2(K)-E1K conformational change did not seem to be affected. Ca2+ inhibition of the K+-dependent rho-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase followed competition kinetics between Ca2+ and Mg2+. In the presence of 10 mM NaCl and 0.75 mM KCl, the fractional inhibition of the K+-dependent rho-nitrophenylphosphatase activity as a function of Ca2+ concentration was the same with and without ATP, suggesting that Ca2+ indeed plays the important role in this process. In the absence of Mg2+, Ca2+ was unable to sustain any detectable ouabain-sensitive phosphatase activity, either with rho-nitrophenylphosphate or with acetyl phosphate as substrate.  相似文献   

12.
1. The 3'-ribosyl ester of ATP with 2-nitro-4-azidophenyl propionic acid has been prepared and its ability to act as a photoaffinity label of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase has been tested. 2. In the dark 3'-O-[3-(2-nitro-4-azidophenyl)-propionyl]adenosine triphosphate (N3-ATP) is a substrate of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and a competitive inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis. 3. Upon irradiation by ultraviolet light, N3-ATP photolabels the high-affinity ATP-binding site and is covalently attached to the alpha-subunit and an approximately 12000-Mr component. 4. Photolabeling of the alpha-subunit by N3-ATP irreversibly inactivates (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. 5. Photoinactivation is strictly Mg2+-dependent. Na+ enhances the inactivation. ATP or ADP and K+ protect the enzyme against inactivation. 6. Mg2+, in concentrations required for photoinactivation, protects (Na+ + K+)-ATPase against inactivation by tryptic digestion under controlled conditions. 7. It is assumed that a conformational change of the ATP-binding site of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase occurs upon binding of Mg2+ to a low-affinity site.  相似文献   

13.
The radiation inactivation analysis of Na+, K+-ATPase, (EC 3.6.1.37) from two different sources was carried out using ATP, CTP, GTP and p-NPP as substrates. In the case of Na+, K+-ATPase from the bovine brain the relation between the logarithm of the residual activity and the radiation dose is strictly linear, which permits calculating 75-90 kDa (for 3 mM GTP and 10 mM p-NPP). Duck salt glands Na+, K+-ATPase reveals larger target sizes: 350 kDa for ATP hydrolysis in saturating concentrations and 145-190 kDa in the case of GTP and p-NPP or low concentration of ATP (30 microM). A conclusion is drawn that while hydrolyzing substrates with complex kinetics (ATP and CTP) the enzyme functions like oligomer. The interaction of nucleotide with substrate-binding site of low affinity induces the aggregation of monomers.  相似文献   

14.
To clarify the mechanism of inhibition of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by cardiac glycosides, we tried to see if ouabain binding alters the properties of the binding sites for Na+, K+, and ATP. Ouabain was bound in the presence of either Na+ + MgATP or MgPi. Ligand-induced changes in the rate of release of ouabain from the two resulting complexes were used as signals to determine the affinities, the numbers, and the interactions of the ligand binding sites. Because the two complexes showed differences in the properties of their ligand binding sites, and since neither complex could be converted to the other, it is concluded that either the enzyme has two dissimilar but mutually exclusive ouabain sites or that it can be frozen in two distinct conformations by ouabain. The following ligand sites were identified on the two complexes: 1) two coexisting ATP sites (K0.5 values, 0.1 and 2 mM) representing altered states of the catalytic and the regulatory sites of the native enzyme; 2) mutually exclusive Na+ and K+ sites whose affinities (K0.5 values, 1.3 mM Na+ and 0.1 mM K+) suggested their identities with the high affinity uptake sites of the native enzyme; and 3) coexisting low affinity Na+ and K+ sites (K0.5 values, 0.2-0.6 M) representing either the discharge sites, or the regulatory sites, or the access channels of the native enzyme. The data suggest that the inability of the ouabain-complexed enzyme to participate in the normal reaction cycle is not because of its lack of ligand binding sites but most likely due to ouabain-induced disruptions of interprotomer site-site interactions.  相似文献   

15.
F R Gorga 《Biochemistry》1985,24(24):6783-6788
N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), a reagent that reacts with carboxyl groups under mild conditions, irreversibly inhibits (Na+,K+)-ATPase activity (measured by using 1 mM ATP) with a pseudo-first-order rate constant of 0.084 min-1 (0.25 mM DCCD and 37 degrees C). The partial activities of the enzyme, including (Na+,K+)-ATPase at 1 microM ATP, Na+-ATPase, and the formation of enzyme-acyl phosphate (E-P), decayed at about one-third the rate at which (Na+,K+)-ATPase at 1 mM ATP was lost. The formation of E-P from inorganic phosphate was unaffected by DCCD while K+-phosphatase activity decayed at the same rate as (Na+,K+)-ATPase measured at 1 mM ATP. The enzyme's substrates (i.e., sodium, potassium, magnesium, and ATP) all decreased the rate of DCCD inactivation of (Na+,K+)-ATPase activity measured at either 1 mM or 1 microM ATP. The concentration dependence of the protection afforded by each substrate is consistent with its binding at a catalytically relevant site. DCCD also causes cross-linking of the enzyme into species of very high molecular weight. This process occurs at about one-tenth the rate at which (Na+,K+)-ATPase activity measured at 1 mM ATP is lost, too slowly to be related to the loss of enzymatic activity. Labeling of the enzyme with [14C]DCCD shows the incorporation of approximately 1 mol of DCCD per mole of large subunit; however, the incorporation is independent of the loss of enzymatic activity. The results presented here suggest that (Na+,K+)-ATPase contains two carboxyl groups that are essential for catalytic activity, in addition to the previously known aspartate residue which is involved in formation of E-P.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Thallium binding to native and radiation-inactivated Na+/K+-ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The number of high-affinity K+-binding sites on purified Na+/K+-ATPase from pig kidney outer medulla has been assessed by measurement of equilibrium binding of thallous thallium, Tl+, under conditions (low ionic strength, absence of Na+ and Tris+) where the enzyme is in the E2-form. Na+/K+-ATPase has two identical Tl+ sites per ADP site, and the dissociation constant varies between 2 and 9 microM. These values are identical to those for Tl+ occlusion found previously by us, indicating that all high-affinity binding leads to occlusion. The specific binding was obtained after subtraction of a separately characterized unspecific adsorption of Tl+ to the enzyme preparations. Radiation inactivation leads to formation of modified peptides having two Tl+-binding sites with positive cooperativity, the second site-dissociation constant approximating that for the native sites. The radiation inactivation size (RIS) for total, specific Tl+ binding is 71 kDa, and the RIS for Tl+ binding with original affinity is approx. 190 kDa, equal to that of Na+/K+-ATPase activity and to that for Tl+ occlusion with native affinity. This latter RIS value confirms our recent theory that in situ the two catalytic peptides of Na+/K+-ATPase are closely associated. The 71 kDa value obtained for total Tl+ sites is equal to that for total binding of ATP and ADP and it is clearly smaller than the molecular mass of one catalytic subunit (112 kDa). The Tl+-binding experiments reported thus supports the notion that radiation inactivation of Na+/K+-ATPase is a stepwise rather than an all or none process.  相似文献   

17.
Experiments using liposomes with (Na+ + K+)-ATPase incorporated showed that in the presence of extravesicular Mg2+, acetyl phosphate was able to stimulate Na+ uptake when the liposomes contained Na+ or choline and were K+-free; this acetyl phosphate-dependent Na+ transport was similar to the ATP-dependent transport observed with 0.003 mM or 3 mM ATP. When the intravesicular solution contained K+, there was an ATP-dependent Na+ uptake which was large with 3 mM ATP and small (about the size seen in K+-free liposomes) with 0.003 mM ATP; in this case, although acetyl phosphate produced a slight activation of Na+ transport, the effect was not statistically significant. All ATP and acetyl phosphate-stimulated Na+ transport disappeared in the absence of extravesicular Mg2+ or in the presence of ouabain in the intravesicular solution. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that, at the concentration used, acetyl phosphate can replace ATP in the catalytic but not in the regulatory site of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and active Na+ transport system. This suggests that as far as the early stages of the pump cycle are concerned the role of ATP is simply to phosphorylate.  相似文献   

18.
The chromium(III) complex of ATP, an MgATP complex analogue, inactivates (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by forming a stable chromo-phosphointermediate. The rate constant k2 of inactivation at 37 degrees C of the beta, gamma-bidentate of CrATP is enhanced by Na+ (K0.5 = 1.08 mM), imidazole (K0.5 = 15 mM) and Mg2+ (K0.5 = 0.7 mM). These cations did not affect the dissociation constant of the enzyme-chromium-ATP complex. The inactive chromophosphoenzyme is reactivated slowly by high concentrations of Na+ at 37 degrees C. The half-maximal effect on the reactivation was reached at 40 mM NaCl, when the maximally observable reactivation was studied. However, 126 mM NaCl was necessary to see the half-maximal effect on the apparent reactivation velocity constant. K+ ions hindered the reactivation with a Ki of 70 microM. Formation of the chromophosphoenzyme led to a reduction of the Rb+ binding sites and of the capacity to occlude Rb+. The beta, gamma-bidentate of chromium(III)ATP (Kd = 8 microM) had a higher than the alpha, beta, gamma-tridentate of chromium(III)ATP (Kd = 44 microM) or the cobalt tetramine complex of ATP (Kd = 500 microM). The beta, gamma-bidentate of the chromium(III) complex of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate also inactivated (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Although CrATP could not support Na+, K+ exchange in everted vesicles prepared from human red blood cells, it supported the Na+-Na+ and Rb+-Rb+ exchange. It is concluded that CrATP opens up Na+ and K+ channels by forming a relatively stable modified enzyme-CrATP complex. This stable complex is also formed in the presence of the chromium complex of adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate. Because the beta, gamma-bidentate of chromium ATP is recognized better than the alpha, beta, gamma-tridentate, it is concluded that the triphosphate site recognizes MgATP with a straight polyphosphate chain and that the Mg2+ resides between the beta- and the gamma-phosphorus. The enhancement of inactivation by Mg2+ and Na+ may be caused by conformational changes at the triphosphate site.  相似文献   

19.
Monoclonal antibodies against horse kidney outer medulla (Na+ + K+)-ATPase were prepared. One of these antibodies (M45-80), was identified as an IgM, recognized the alpha subunit of the enzyme. M45-80 had the following effects on horse kidney (Na+ + K+)-ATPase: (1) it inhibited the enzyme activity by 50% in 140 mM Na+ and by 80% in 8.3 mM Na+; (2) it increased the Na+ concentration necessary for half-maximal activation (K0.5 for Na+) from 12.0 to 57.6 mM, but did not affect K0.5 for K+; (3) it slightly increased the K+-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase (K-pNPPase) activity; (4) it inhibited phosphorylation of the enzyme with ATP by 30%, but did not affect the step of dephosphorylation; and (5) it enhanced the ouabain binding rate. These data are compatible with a stabilizing effect on the E2 form of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. M45-80 was concluded to bind to the extracellular surface of the plasmamembrane, based on the following evidence: (1) M45-80 inhibited by 50% the ouabain-sensitive 86Rb+ uptake in human intact erythrocytes from outside of the cells; (2) the inhibition of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity in right-side-out vesicles of human erythrocytes was greater than that in inside-out vesicles; and (3) the fluorescence intensity due to FITC-labeled rabbit anti-mouse IgM that reacted with M45-80 bound to the right-side-out vesicles was much greater than that in the case of the inside-out vesicles.  相似文献   

20.
Optimal binding of [2,8-3H]AdoPP[NH]P to (Na+ + K+)-ATPase requires 25 mM Na+ (Cl-), 50 mM imidazole+ (Cl-) or 50 mM Tris+ (Cl-). Chloride is essential as counterion. We conclude that imidazole+ and Tris+ are able to bind to the Na+ site, and recommend the use of dilute buffers for studying the partial reactions of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. In NaCl or the substituting buffers the dissociation constant for the enzyme-AdoPP[NH]P complex at 0 degrees C and pH 7.25 is 0.4 microM, whereas in millimolar MgCl2 it is about 2 microM. These distinct levels in affinity with MgCl2 as compared to NaCl, together with the MgCl2-dependence of photolabelling of the enzyme with ATP analogues (Rempeters, G. and Schoner, W. (1981) Eur. J. Biochem. 121, 131-137), suggest significant changes within the substrate site of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase upon binding of Mg2+ (Cl-)2.  相似文献   

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