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1.
The fluorescent ATP derivative 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienylidine) adenosine 5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP) binds specifically with enhanced fluorescence to the ATP site of purified eel electroplax sodium-potassium adenosine triphosphatase, (Na,K)-ATPase. A single homogeneous high affinity TNP-ATP binding site with a KD of 0.04 to 0.09 microM at 3 degrees C and 0.2 to 0.7 microM at 21 degrees-25 degrees C was observed in the absence of ligands when binding was measured by fluorescence titration or with [3H]TNP-ATP. ATP and other nucleotides competed with TNP-ATP for binding with KD values similar to those previously determined for binding to the ATP site. Binding stoichiometries determined from Scatchard plot intercepts gave one TNP-ATP site/175,000 g of protein (range: 1.64 X 10(5) to 1.92 X 10(5) when (Na,K)-ATPase protein was determined by quantitative amino acid analysis. The ratio of [3H]ouabain sites to TNP-ATP sites was 0.91. These results are inconsistent with "half-of-sites" binding and suggest that there is one ATP and one ouabain site/alpha beta protomer. (Na,K)-ATPase maintained a high affinity for TNP-ATP regardless of the ligands present. K+ increased the KD for TNP-ATP about 5-fold and Na+ reversed the effect of K+. The effects of Na+, K+, and mg2+ on ATP binding at 3 degrees C were studied fluorimetrically by displacement of TNP-ATP by ATP. The results are consistent with competition between ATP and TNP-ATP for binding at a single site regardless of the metallic ions present. The derived KD values for ATP were : no ligands, 1 microM; 20 mM NaCl, 3-4 microM; 20 mM KCl, 15-19 microM; 20 mM Kcl + 4 mM MgCl2, 70-120 microM. These results suggests that a single ATP site exhibits a high or low affinity for ATP depending on the ligands present, so that high and low affinity ATP sites observed kinetically are interconvertible and do not co-exist independently. We propose that during turnover the affinity for ATP changes more than 100-fold owing to the conformational changes associated with ion binding, translocation, and release.  相似文献   

2.
The interactions of monovalent cations and of the K+-specific ionophore, valinomycin, with the Ca2+-ATPase of skeletal muscle of sarcoplasmic reticulum have been studied in the absence of cation gradients by their effects on enzyme turnover and on the ATP plus Ca2+-dependent enhanced fluorescence of the ATP analogue, 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexyldienylidine)-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP) (Watanabe, T., and Inesi, G. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 11510-11516). Monovalent cations decreased turnover-dependent TNP-ATP fluorescence in the series K+ greater than Rb+ approximately equal to Cs+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+ (K0.5 = 49, 73, 75, 94, and 246 mM, respectively), consistent with the known specificity of the monovalent cation binding site that stimulates turnover and E-P hydrolysis. Valinomycin (200 nmol/mg), in the absence of monovalent cations, decreased ATPase activity by 30% and abolished the stimulatory effects of 150 mM KCl or NaCl on turnover. The ionophore alone enhanced TNP-ATP fluorescence by 20% and altered the specificity and affinity of the site that inhibited TNP-ATP fluorescence to Cs+ greater than Rb+ greater than K+ approximately equal to Na+ greater than Li+ (K0.5 = 79, 111, 134, 136, and 270 mM, respectively), which follows the Hofmeister series for effectiveness of monovalent lyotropic cations. TNP-ATP binding was not affected by either monovalent cations or valinomycin. Inhibition of turnover-dependent TNP-ATP fluorescence appears to be a useful parameter for monitoring monovalent cation binding to the Ca2+-ATPase. It is concluded that the ionophore interacts directly with the Ca2+-ATPase, independent of its K+ conductance effects on the lipid bilayer, and modifies the affinity and specificity of the monovalent cation site, either by direct interaction or by the formation of a valinomycin-monovalent cation-enzyme complex.  相似文献   

3.
The hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by purified (Na,K)-ATPase from pig kidney was more sensitive to Mg2+ inhibition when measured in the presence of saturating Na+ and K+ concentrations [(Na,K)-ATPase] than in the presence of Na+ alone, either at saturating [(Na,Na)-ATPase] or limiting [(Na,0)-ATPase] Na+ concentrations. This was observed at two extreme concentrations of ATP (3 mM where the low-affinity site is involved and 3 microM where only the catalytic site is relevant), although Mg2+ inhibition was higher at low ATP concentration. In the case of (Na,Na)-ATPase activity, inhibition was barely observed even at 10 mM free Mg2+ when ATP was 3 mM. When (Na,K)-ATPase activity was measured at different fixed K+ concentrations the apparent Ki for Mg2+ inhibition was lower at higher monovalent cation concentration. When K+ was replaced by its congeners (Rb+, NH+4, Li+), Mg2+ inhibition was more pronounced in those cases in which the dephosphorylating cation forms a tighter enzyme-cation complex after dephosphorylation. This effect was independent of the ATP concentration, although inhibition was more marked at lower ATP for all the dephosphorylating cations. The K0.5 for ATP activation at its low-affinity site, when measured in the presence of different dephosphorylating cations, increased following the sequence Rb+ greater than K+ greater than NH+4 greater than Li+ greater than none. The K0.5 values were lower with 0.05 mM than with 10 mM free Mg2+ but the order was not modified. The trypsin inactivation pattern of (Na,K)-ATPase indicated that Mg2+ kept the enzyme in an E1 state. Addition of K+ changed the inactivation into that observed with the E2 enzyme form. On the other hand, K+ kept the enzyme in an E2 state and addition of Mg2+ changed it to an E1 form. The K0.5 for KCl-induced E1-to-E2 transformation (observed by trypsin inactivation profile) in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2 was about 0.9 mM. These results concur with two mechanisms for free Mg2+ inhibition of (Na,K)-ATPase: "product" and dead-end. The first would result from Mg2+ interaction with the enzyme in the E2(K) occluded state whereas the second would be brought about by a Mg2+-enzyme complex with the enzyme in an E1 state.  相似文献   

4.
The (Na+ + K+)-activated ATPase catalyzes the K+-activated hydrolysis of 3-O-methylfluorescein phosphate (3OMFP) with a Km of 50 microM, nearly two orders of magnitude lower than the Km for nitrophenyl phosphate, 3 mM. Both ATP and nitrophenyl phosphate are competitors toward 3OMFP with Ki values corresponding to their Km values (for ATP that at the low-affinity sites of the E2 conformation). Enzyme treated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) such that 60% of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity is lost still hydrolyzes both 3OMFP and nitrophenyl phosphate: the apparent Km values are increased less than 2-fold and the Vmax is unaffected. ATP still inhibits these K+-phosphatase reactions of the FITC-treated enzyme, and this inhibition can exceed the 40% of residual (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. Evaluation of a kinetic model indicates that the Ki for ATP is increased about an order of magnitude by FITC-binding. Similar results obtain with trinitrophenyl-ATP (TNP-ATP) as inhibitor, in this case with Ki values in the micromolar range. Finally, FITC treatment increases K+-activated ADPase activity. These observations are interpreted as the fluorescein ring of 3OMFP binding to the adenine pocket of the substrate site, thereby conferring high affinity, just as the fluorescein ring of FITC binding to the adenine pocket in the E1 conformation permits specific linkage of the isothiocyanate chain to a particular lysine, Lys-501. Then, coincident with the transition to the E2 conformation, which bears the low-affinity site for ATP and which catalyzes the K+-phosphatase reaction, the FITC molecule tethered to Lys-501 is pulled from the adenine pocket: allowing 3OMFP and ADP to bind as substrates and ATP and TNP-ATP as inhibitors, albeit in altered conformation. The E1 to E2 transition thus involves not only a change from high to low affinity for ATP, but also a distortion of the adenine pocket and the orientation between Lys-501 and Asp-369, the residue associated with catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
A Mg2+-induced change of the (Na+ and K+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase (Na+,K+)-ATPase) from Electrophorus electricus was investigated by kinetics and fluorescence techniques. Binding of Mg2+ to a low affinity site(s) caused inhibition of (Na+,K+)-ATPase activity, an effect which was antagonized by both Na+ and ATP. Mg2+ also caused inhibition of K+-dependent dephosphorylation of the enzyme without inhibiting either (Na+)-ATPase activity or Na+-dependent phosphorylation. Mg2+ also induced a 5 to 6% enhancement in the fluorescence intensity of enzyme labeled with the fluorescent sulfhydryl reagent, 2-(4-maleimidylanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonate. As in the case of Mg2+ inhibition of activity, the affinity for Mg2+ as an inducing agent for this effect was significantly reduced by both Na+ and ATP, suggesting that the same change was being monitored in both cases. The Mg2+ effect was reduced by both Na+ and ATP, suggesting that the same change was being monitored in both cases. The Mg2+ effect was reduced in magnitude by ouabain and prevented by oligomycin, specific inhibitors of the enzyme. In addition, K+ (and cations that substitute for K+ in supporting activity) induced a 3 to 4% enhancement in fluorescence intensity in the presence of Na+, Mg2+, and ATP, although the K+ and Mg2+ effects appeared to be different on the basis of their excitation spectra. The K+ effect was inhibited by ouabain and occurred with a rate greater than the rate of turnover of the enzyme, permitting its involvement in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

6.
To delineate better the reaction sequence of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and illuminate properties of the active site, kinetic data were fitted to specific quantitative models. For the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction, double-reciprocal plots of velocity against ATP (in the millimolar range), with a series of fixed KCl concentrations, are nearly parallel, in accord with the ping pong kinetics of ATP binding at the low-affinity sites only after Pi release. However, contrary to requirements of usual formulations, Pi is not a competitor toward ATP. A new steady-state kinetic model accommodates these data quantitatively, requiring that under usual assay conditions most of the enzyme activity follows a sequence in which ATP adds after Pi release, but also requiring a minor alternative pathway with ATP adding after K+ binds but before Pi release. The fit to the data also reveals that Pi binds nearly as rapidly to E2 X K X ATP as to E2 X K, whereas ATP binds quite slowly to E2 X P X K: the site resembles a cul-de-sac with distal ATP and proximal Pi sites. For the K+-nitrophenyl phosphatase reaction also catalyzed by this enzyme, the apparent affinities for both substrate and Pi (as inhibitor) decrease with higher KCl concentrations, and both Pi and TNP-ATP appear to be competitive inhibitors toward substrate with 10 mM KCl but noncompetitive inhibitors with 1 mM KCl. These data are accommodated quantitatively by a steady-state model allowing cyclic hydrolytic activity without obligatory release of K+, and with exclusive binding of substrate vs. either Pi or TNP-ATP. The greater sensitivity of the phosphatase reaction to both Pi and arsenate is attributable to the weaker binding by the occluded-K+ enzyme form occurring in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction sequence. The steady-state models are consistent with cyclical interconversion of high- and low-affinity substrate sites accompanying E1/E2 transitions, with distortion to low-affinity sites altering not only affinity and route of access but also separating the adenine- and phosphate-binding regions, the latter serving in the E2 conformation as the active site for the phosphatase reaction.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of two lectins, wheat germ agglutinin and concanavalin A, were studied on a variety of parameters of two highly purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPases (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3), from the rectal salt gland of Squalus acanthias and from the electroplax of Electrophorus electricus. Both lectins agglutinated the rectal gland enzyme equally, but wheat germ agglutinin inhibited (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity much more. The electroplax enzyme was only marginally agglutinated and inhibited by the lectins. Neuraminidase treatment of the rectal gland (Na+ + K+)-ATPase had no effect on germ agglutinin inhibition. The inhibition of the rectal gland (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by wheat germ agglutinin could be reversed by N,N'-diacetylchitobiose, which has a high affinity for wheat germ agglutinin. Neither ouabain inhibition nor ouabain binding to the rectal gland enzyme was affected by wheat germ agglutinin. The p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of the rectal gland enzyme was not inhibited by wheat germ agglutinin. Na+-ATPase activity, which reflects ATP binding and phosphorylation at the substrate site was inhibited by wheat germ agglutinin and this inhibition was reversed by potassium. Evidence is cited (Pennington, J. and Hokin, L.E., in preparation) that the inhibition of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by wheat germ agglutinin is due to binding to the glycoprotein subunit.  相似文献   

8.
We have shown previously that the canine kidney Na+,K+ pump [Na+ + K+)-ATPase) reacts with the ATP affinity analog p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA). At 20 degrees C, we find the time-course of this reaction to be that predicted for a first-order reaction accompanied by competing solvolysis of the reagent. The FSBA-inactivated (Na+ + K+)-ATPase retains the ability to move between the E1 and E2 conformations that predominate in Na+ and K+ medium, respectively. Therefore, FSBA reaction with the enzyme does not interfere significantly with either its alkali metal cation binding or its conformational freedom. The ability of ATP to influence the enzyme's conformation by binding to the high-affinity nucleotide site is decreased, however, in proportion to the degree of inhibition of enzyme activity by FSBA. In addition, the ability of the enzyme to shift from the E1 to the E2 conformation through the (ATP + Na+)-dependent phosphorylation cycle is inhibited by FSBA treatment, as shown by the decreased ability of these substrates to stimulate the K+-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity. Both of these effects are consistent with specific reaction of FSBA with the ATP binding site of the enzyme. An additional effect of FSBA treatment is that it causes loss of p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity, but to a lesser extent than (Na+ + K+)-ATPase or Na+-ATPase activity. Binding of p-nitrophenylphosphate to the enzyme is apparently unaffected by FSBA treatment, since the Km for p-nitrophenylphosphate is not changed.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
W J Ball 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):7155-7162
The effects of a monoclonal antibody, prepared against the purified lamb kidney Na+,K+-ATPase, on the enzyme's Na+,K+-dependent ATPase activity were analyzed. This antibody, designated M10-P5-C11, is directed against the catalytic subunit of the "native" holoenzyme. It inhibits greater than 90% of the ATPase activity and acts as a noncompetitive or mixed inhibitor with respect to the ATP, Na+, and K+ dependence of enzyme activity. It inhibits the Na+- and Mg2+ATP-dependent phosphoenzyme intermediate formation. In contrast, it has no effect on K+-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase (pNPPase) activity, the interconversion of the phosphoenzyme intermediates, and ADP-sensitive or K+-dependent dephosphorylation. It does not alter ATP binding to the enzyme nor the covalent labeling of the enzyme at the presumed ATP site by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC), but it prevents the ATP-induced stimulation in the rate of cardiac glycoside [3H]ouabain binding to the Na+,K+-ATPase. M10-P5-C11 binding appears to inhibit enzyme function by blocking the transfer of the gamma-phosphoryl of ATP to the phosphorylation site after ATP binding to the enzyme has occurred. In the presence of Mg2+ATP, it also prevents the ATP-induced transmembrane conformational change that enhances cardiac glycoside binding. This uncoupling of ATP binding from its stimulation of ouabain binding and enzyme phosphorylation demonstrates the existence of an enzyme-Mg2+ATP transitional intermediate preceding the formation of the Na+-dependent ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate. These results are also consistent with a model of the Na+,K+-ATPase active site being composed of two distinct but interacting regions, the ATP binding site and the phosphorylation site.  相似文献   

11.
Long-chain fatty acid esters of CoA activate (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (the sodium pump) when ATP is suboptimal. To explore the nature of the interactions of these CoA derivatives with the pump, reversible effects of palmitoyl-CoA on the purified membrane-bound kidney enzyme were studied under conditions where interference from the irreversible membrane-damaging effect of the compound was ruled out. With 50 microM ATP, while saturating palmitoyl-CoA increased (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity, it caused partial inhibition of Na+-ATPase activity without affecting the steady-state level of the phosphoenzyme. Palmitoyl-CoA did not change the K0.5 of ATP for Na+-ATPase, but it altered the complex Na+ activation curve to suggest the antagonism of the low-affinity, but not the high-affinity, Na+ sites. At a low ATP concentration (0.5 microM), K+ inhibited Na+-ATPase as expected. In the presence of palmitoyl-CoA and 0.5 microM ATP, however, K+ became an activator, as it is at high ATP concentrations. The activating effect of palmitoyl-CoA on (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity was reduced with increasing pH (6.5-8.5), but its inhibitory effect on Na+-ATPase was not altered in this pH range. The data show two distinct actions of palmitoyl-CoA: 1) blockade of the extracellular "allosteric" Na+ sites whose exact role in the control of the pump is yet to be determined, and 2) activation of the pump through increased rate of K+ deocclusion. Since in their latter action the fatty acid esters of CoA are far more effective than ATP at a low-affinity regulatory site, we suggest that these CoA derivatives may be the physiological ligands of this regulatory site of the pump.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments with the reconstituted (Na+ + K+)-ATPase show that besides the ATP-dependent cytoplasmic Na(+)-K+ competition for Na+ activation there is a high affinity inhibitory effect of cytoplasmic K+. In contrast to the high affinity K+ inhibition seen with the unsided preparation at a low ATP especially at a low temperature, the high affinity inhibition by cytoplasmic K+ does not disappear when the ATP concentration an-or the temperature is increased. The high affinity inhibition by cytoplasmic K+ is also observed with Cs+, Li+ or K+ as the extracellular cation, but the fractional inhibition is much less pronounced than with Na+ as the extracellular cation. The results suggest that either there are two populations of enzyme, one with the normal ATP dependent cytoplasmic Na(+)-K+ competition, and another which due to the preparative procedure has lost this ATP sensitivity. Or that the normal enzyme has two pathways for the transition from E2-P to E1ATP. One on which the enzyme with the translocated ion binds cytoplasmic K+ with a high affinity but not ATP, and another on which ATP is bound but not K+. A kinetic model which can accommodate this is suggested.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of lithium in vivo and in vitro on the two molecular forms of Na+,K(+)-ATPase in rat brain were investigated. Inhibition by strophanthidin, affinity to monovalent cations and cellular localization of the enzyme were used to differentiate the two molecular forms. K+ dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity and strophanthidin inhibition studies revealed selective increase in the activity of low affinity form but not high affinity form of the enzyme following lithium treatment. Na+ sensitivity of neither forms of Na+,K(+)-ATPase was changed but K+ sensitivity of low affinity form was increased due to lithium. Lithium showed biphasic effects on low affinity form of the enzyme; activation at low concentration and inhibition at high concentration. The results suggest that lithium in vivo regulates the concentration of extra cellular potassium by selectively acting at K+ site of low affinity form of the enzyme (astroglial) but not on high affinity form (neuronal enzyme) and leading to changes in neuronal depolarization.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of external Na+ on the activity of the Na+-pump are complex. The first-order rate constant for Na+-efflux is reduced in the presence of very low external Na+ concentrations, and this inhibition is reversed when the Na+ level is raised. The same pattern has been observed for Na+-ATPase activity; however, it is not apparent from the current reaction mechanisms at which site (or sites) external Na+ binds to cause inhibition. In this paper, the effect of external Na+ on Na+-pump activity was studied by simulation, using a model similar to the Post-Albers scheme. Curves similar to those experimentally observed were obtained assuming that: (i) after phosphorylation, three Na+ ions are translocated and consecutively released to the external medium with decreasing dissociation constants; (ii) external Na+, with low affinity, binds to the K+o (external) sites stimulating dephosphorylation. These assumptions also permit one to explain the experimental observation that external Na+ (with both high and low affinities) competes with K+, inhibiting the K+ influx due to the Na+-pump, and the kinetically similar behavior of Na+-ATPase and ATP/ADP exchange reactions at low variable Na+ concentrations. The experimental evidence available that supports the present hypothesis is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The comparative analysis of the kinetic properties of ouabain-sensitive Na+, K+ -ATPase activity of saponin-perforated blood lymphocytes of donors and patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and ankylosing spondyloarthritis (AS) was carried out. When analyzing the alterations in hydrolase activity of the examined enzyme it was shown that in the blood lymphocytes of patients with RA and AS the primary active transport of Na+ and K+ ions is less intensive in comparison with practically healthy donors, but it is characterized by almost the same capacity as in donors. The affinity constant of Na+, K+ -ATPase for ATP in the blood lymphocytes in patients with RA and AS is greater 3.1 and 2.5 times, respectively, in comparison with healthy donor. It was found that in conditions of rheumatic pathology in immunocompetent cells the inhibition of Na+, K+ -ATPase activity is not related to the reduction of maximum reaction rate, but is related to the decrease of Na+, K+ -ATPase affinity to ATP. However, Mg2+ -binding center of Na+, K+ -ATPase in patients with RA and AS remains native. It was identified that the affinity constant of Na+, K+ -ATPase to Na+ ions in the blood lymphocytes of patients with RA and AS is 2.75 times lower than its value in healthy donors. Na+, K+ -ATPase of the blood lymphocytes of patients with RA and AS retains its native receptor properties and sensitivity to ouabain does not change.  相似文献   

16.
The exchange-inert tetra-ammino-chromium complex of ATP [Cr(NH3)4ATP], unlike the analogous cobalt complex Co(NH3)4ATP, inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase slowly by interacting with the high-affinity ATP binding site. The inactivation proceeded at 37 degrees C with an inactivation rate constant of 1.34 x 10(-3) min-1 and with a dissociation constant of 0.62 microM. To assess the potential role of the water ligands of metal in binding and inactivation, a kinetic analysis of the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(NH3)4ATP, and its H2O-substituted derivatives Cr(NH3)3(H2O)ATP, Cr(NH3)2(H2O)2ATP and Cr(H2O)4ATP was carried out. The substitution of the H2O ligands with NH3 ligands increased the apparent binding affinity and decreased the inactivation rate constants of the enzyme by these complexes. Inactivation by Cr(H2O)4ATP was 29-fold faster than the inactivation by Cr(NH3)4ATP. These results suggested that substitution to Cr(III) occurs during the inactivation of the enzyme. Additionally hydrogen bonding between water ligands of metal and the enzyme's active-site residues does not seem to play a significant role in the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(III)-ATP complexes. Inactivation of the enzyme by Rh(H2O)nATP occurred by binding of this analogue to the high-affinity ATP site with an apparent dissociation constant of 1.8 microM. The observed inactivation rate constant of 2.11 x 10(-3) min-1 became higher when Na+ or Mg2+ or both were present. The presence of K+ however, increased the dissociation constant without altering the inactivation rate constant. High concentrations of Na+ reactivated the Rh(H2O)nATP-inactivated enzyme. Co(NH3)4ATP inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase by binding to the low-affinity ATP binding site only at high concentrations. However, inactivation of the enzyme by Cr(III)-ATP or Rh(III)-ATP complexes was prevented when low concentrations of Co(NH3)4ATP were present. This indicates that, although Co(NH3)4ATP interacts with both ATP sites, inactivation occurs only through the low-affinity ATP site. Inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase was faster by the delta isomer of Co(NH3)4ATP than by the delta isomer. Co(NH3)4ATP, but not Cr(H2O)4ATP or adenosine 5'-[beta,gamma-methylene]triphosphate competitively inhibited K(+)-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of Na+/K(+)-ATPase, which is assumed to be a partial reaction of the enzyme catalyzed by the low-affinity ATP binding site.  相似文献   

17.
B Vilsen 《Biochemistry》1999,38(35):11389-11400
Mutant Phe788 --> Leu of the rat kidney Na+,K(+)-ATPase was expressed in COS cells to active-site concentrations between 40 and 60 pmol/mg of membrane protein. Analysis of the functional properties showed that the discrimination between Na+ and K+ on the two sides of the system is severely impaired in the mutant. Micromolar concentrations of K+ inhibited ATP hydrolysis (K(0.5) for inhibition 107 microM for the mutant versus 76 mM for the wild-type at 20 mM Na+), and at 20 mM K+, the molecular turnover number for Na+,K(+)-ATPase activity was reduced to 11% that of the wild-type. This inhibition was counteracted by Na+ in high concentrations, and in the total absence of K+, the mutant catalyzed Na(+)-activated ATP hydrolysis ("Na(+)-ATPase activity") at an extraordinary high rate corresponding to 86% of the maximal Na+,K(+)-ATPase activity. The high Na(+)-ATPase activity was accounted for by an increased rate of K(+)-independent dephosphorylation. Already at 2 mM Na+, the dephosphorylation rate of the mutant was 8-fold higher than that of the wild-type, and the maximal rate of Na(+)-induced dephosphorylation amounted to 61% of the rate of K(+)-induced dephosphorylation. The cause of the inhibitory effect of K+ on ATP hydrolysis in the mutant was an unusual stability of the K(+)-occluded E2(K2) form. Hence, when E2(K2) was formed by K+ binding to unphosphorylated enzyme, the K(0.5) for K+ occlusion was close to 1 microM in the mutant versus 100 microM in the wild-type. In the presence of 100 mM Na+ to compete with K+ binding, the K(0.5) for K+ occlusion was still 100-fold lower in the mutant than in the wild-type. Moreover, relative to the wild-type, the mutant exhibited a 6-7-fold reduced rate of release of occluded K+, a 3-4-fold increased apparent K+ affinity in activation of the pNPPase reaction, a 10-11-fold lower apparent ATP affinity in the Na+,K(+)-ATPase assay with 250 microM K+ present (increased K(+)-ATP antagonism), and an 8-fold reduced apparent ouabain affinity (increased K(+)-ouabain antagonism).  相似文献   

18.
Effects of free fatty acids on parameters of (Na+,K+)-ATPase regulation related to enzyme conformation were examined. Sensitivity to inhibition by free fatty acid increased as the number of double bonds increased. Free fatty acids reduced affinity for K+ or Na+ at their regulatory sites without altering apparent K+ affinity at its high-affinity site, and increased apparent affinity for ATP. The apparent E2/E1 ratio and apparent delta H and delta S for the E1-E2 transition were reduced by fatty acid. High K+ or low temperature reduced the sensitivity of enzyme to inhibition by free fatty acid. In the presence of low K+, arachidonic acid potentiated inhibition of phosphatase activity by ethanol. Arachidonic acid alone had little effect on the rate of ouabain binding, but accelerated ouabain binding in the presence of K+. These data suggest that fatty acids alter (Na+,K+)-ATPase by preventing the univalent cation-mediated transition to E2, the K+-sensitive form of enzyme. (Na+,K+)-ATPase could potentially be influenced in vivo by free fatty acids released by phospholipases or during hypoxia, or by changes in membrane lipid saturation.  相似文献   

19.
Rubratoxin B, a lactone-containing bisanhydride metabolite of certain toxigenic molds, inhibited (Na+-K+)-stimulated ATPase activity of mouse brain microsomes in a dose-dependent manner with an estimated IC50 of 6 x 10(-6) M. Hydrolysis of ATP was linear with time and enzyme concentration, with or without rubratoxin in reaction mixtures. Altered pH and activity curves for (Na+-K+)-ATPase demonstrated comparable inhibition by rubratoxin in buffered acidic, neutral, and alkaline pH ranges. Kinetic studies of cationic-substrate activation of (Na+-K+)-ATPase indicated classical competitive inhibition for Na+ and K+. Results also showed competitive inhibition for K+ activated p-nitrophenyl phosphatase as demonstrated by altered binding site parameters without change in the catalytic velocity of dephosphorylation of the enzyme . phosphoryl complex. Noncompetitive inhibition with regards to activation by ATP and p-nitrophenyl phosphate was indicated by altered Vmax values with no change in Km values. Inhibition was partially restored by repeated washings. Preincubation with sulfhydryl agents protected the enzyme from inhibition. Cumulative inhibition studies with rubratoxin and ouabain indicated possible interaction between the two inhibitors of (Na+-K+)-ATPase. Rubratoxin appeared to exert its effects on (Na+-K+)-ATPase by interacting at Na+ and K+ sites.  相似文献   

20.
1. The ATP sites. Homotropic interactions between ATP sites have been studied in a very large range of Na+ and K+ concentrations. The ( Na+, K+)-activated ATPase displays Michaelis-Menten kinetics for ATP under standard concentration conditions of Na+ (100 mM) and K+ (10 mM). The steady-state kinetics behavior changes at very low concentrations of K+ where negative cooperativity is observed. The existence of a high affinity and a low affinity site for ATP was clearly demonstrated from the study of the ATP stimulated hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylphosphate in the presence of Na+ and K+. The ratio of apparent affinities of high and low affinity sites for ATP is 86 at pH 7.5. 2. The Na+ sites. The binding of Na+ to its specific stimulatory sites (internal sites) is characterized by positive cooperativity with a Hill coefficient n(H(Na+))=2.0. Homotropic interactions between Na+ sites are unaffected by variations of the K+ concentration. 3. The K+ sites. (a) Binding of K+ to the (external) stimulatory site of the ATPase has been analyzed by following the (Na+, K+)-ATPase activity as well as the p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity in the presence of Na+ and K+ (with or without ATP). Binding is characterized by a Hill coefficient of 1.0 and a K(0.5(K+))=0.1 to 0.8 mM. The absence of positive or negative cooperativity persists between 5 mM and 100 mM Na+. (b) The analysis of the p-nitrophenylphosphatase or of the 2, 4 dinitrophenylphosphatase activity in the presence of K+ alone indicates the existence of low affinity sites for K+ with positive homotropic interactions. The characteristics of stimulation in that case are, K(0.5)=5 mM, n(H)=1.9. The properties of this family of site(s) are the following: firstly, saturation of the low affinity site(s) by K+ prevents ATP binding to its high affinity internal site. Secondly, saturation of the low affinity sites for K+ prevents binding of Na+ to its internal sites. Thirdly, this family of sites disappears in the presence of ATP, p-nitrophenylphosphate or of both substrates, when Na+ binds to its internal sites. Na+ binding to its specific stimulatory sites provokes the formation of the high affinity type of site for K+. 4. Mg2+ stimulation of the (Na+, K+)-ATPase is characterized by a Hill coefficient n(H(Mg2+))=1.0 and a K(0.5(Mg2+))=1 mM stimulation is essentially a V effect. Heterotropic effects between binding of Mg2+ and substrate to their respective sites are small. Heterotropic interactions between the Ms2+, Na+ and K+ sites are also small. 5. The fluidity of membrane lipids also controls the (Na+, K+)-ATPase activity. Phase transitions or separations in the membrane hardly affect recognition properties of substrates, Na+, K+ and Mg2+ for their respective sites on both sides of the membrane. Only the rate of the catalytic transformation is affected.  相似文献   

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