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1.
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   

2.
A Hampton  L A Slotin 《Biochemistry》1975,14(25):5438-5444
N6-O- and p-fluorobenzoyladenosine 5'-triphosphates (IIIc and IIc, respectively) have been synthesized as potential adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) site-directed reagents for enzymes. IIc and IIIc were substrates of yeast hexokinase; neither they nor the corresponding ADP derivatives inactivated yeast hexokinase or rabbit pyruvate kinase. IIc rapidly inactivated rabbit and carp muscle adenylate kinases; the effect is probably ATP site directed because N6-benzoyl-ATP did not inactivate and was a substrate (Vmax = 28 and 10%, respectively, that of ATP), and because of ATP retarded the inactivation. The inactivations followed pseudo-firsr-order kinetics; in the presence of 2.64 mM ATP at 0 degrees the half-life of the rabbit kinase was 210 min with 50 muM IIc and the half-life of the carp kinase was 130 min with 100 muM IIc. Adenylate kinase of pig muscle was inactivated by IIc in a manner similar to the rabbit and carp enzymes except that the rate of inactivation exhibited an inflexion. IIIc inactivated rabbit, pig, and carp adenylate kinases by pseudo-first-order kinetics; the rate constants for inactivation at 0 degrees were 9.1 X 10(-3), 1.3 X 10(-3), and 1.9 X 10(-3) min-1 and the apparent dissociation constants (K) of the IIIc-enzyme complexes were 710, 970, and 720 muM, respectively. From the substrate properties of IIIc alone and in admixture with ATP its dissociation constants (Ki) from the ATP sites of the enzymes were found to be 500, 700, and 845 muM, respectively. The similarity between the K and Ki values, together with marked retardation of the inactivations by ATP, indicates that IIIc is an ATP-site-directed reagent for the three adenylate kinases.  相似文献   

3.
J M Argüello  J H Kaplan 《Biochemistry》1990,29(24):5775-5782
Treatment of renal Na,K-ATPase with N-acetylimidazole (NAI) results in loss of Na,K-ATPase activity. The inactivation kinetics can be described by a model in which two classes of sites are acetylated by NAI. The class I sites are rapidly reacting, the acetylation is prevented by the presence of ATP (K0.5 congruent to 8 microM), and the inactivation is reversed by incubation with hydroxylamine. These data suggest that the class I sites are tyrosine residues at the ATP binding site. The second class of sites are more slowly reacting, not protected by ATP, nor reversed by hydroxylamine treatment. These are probably lysine residues elsewhere in the protein. The associated K-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity is inactivated by acetylation of the class II sites only; thus the tyrosine residues associated with ATP binding to the catalytic center are not essential for phosphatase activity. Inactivated enzyme no longer has high-affinity ATP binding associated with the catalytic site, although low-affinity ATP effects (inhibition of phosphatase and deocclusion of Rb) are still present. The inactivated enzyme can still be phosphorylated by Pi, occlude Rb+ ions, and undergo the major conformational transitions between the E1 Na and E2 K forms of the enzyme. Thus acetylation of the Na,K-ATPase by NAI inhibits high-affinity ATP binding to the catalytic center and produces inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
D L DeCamp  S Lim  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7651-7658
Two new reactive nucleotides have been synthesized and characterized: 8-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]adenosine 5'-diphosphate and 5'-triphosphate (8-BDB-TADP and 8-BDB-TATP). ADP or ATP was converted to 8-thio-ADP (-ATP) via 8-bromo-ADP (-ATP), followed by condensation with 1,4-dibromobutanedione. Rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase is inactivated by both reagents in a biphasic manner with an initial rapid loss of 75% activity, followed by a slow total inactivation. The initial fast reaction with both compounds exhibits nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration, indicating formation of a reversible enzyme-reagent complex prior to covalent attachment. The presence of the gamma-phosphoryl group improves the performance of the affinity label: KI values for the fast phase are similar (about 100 microM), whereas kmax for 8-BDB-TATP is about three times greater than that of 8-BDB-TADP (0.286 min-1 vs 0.0835 min-1). After an 80-min incubation with 175 microM of either reagent, about 2 mol/mol of subunit is incorporated with 76% inactivation caused by 8-BDB-TADP and 97% inactivation by 8-BDB-TATP. Loss of activity is prevented by substrates, with the best protection afforded by a combination of ATP, Mn2+, K+, and phosphoenolpyruvate. Reaction of pyruvate kinase with either compound in the presence of protecting ligands leads to incorporation of about 1 mol of reagent/mol of subunit with only about 15% loss of activity. These results suggest that 8-BDB-TADP and 8-BDB-TATP react with two groups on the enzyme, one of which is at or near the active site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  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.
Reaction of ADP with hexamethylene diisocyanate in hexamethylphosphoramide followed by treatment in an acidic medium afforded three new adenine nucleotide analogues, N6-[N-(6-aminohexyl)carbamoyl]-ADP, N6-[N-(6-aminohexyl)carbamoyl]-ATP, and N6-[N-(6-aminohexyl)carbamoyl]-AMP in yields of 13%, 12% and 17%, respectively. The occurrence of the ATP analogue may be interpreted in terms of the equilibrium, 2ADP = ATP + AMP. Coenzymic activities of the ADP analogue against acetate kinase and pyruvate kinase were 82% and 20%, respectively, relative to ADP and those of the ATP analogue against hexokinase and glycerokinase were 63% and 87%, respectively, relative to ATP. These analogues were bound to CNBr-activated soluble dextran through their terminal amino group to give an immobilized ADP and an immobilized ATP, each of which was recycled in a system comprising acetate kinase and hexokinase, and when placed in a membrane reactor together with the enzymes, functioned as an immobilized coenzyme continuously yielding glucose 6-phosphate. A series of chemically defined affinity adsorbents were obtained by coupling these analogues to CNBr-activated Sepharose, and were used to separate the enzymes in a mixture of hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, phosphoglycerate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, and alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

7.
The Na(+)-dependent or E1 stages of the Na,K-ATPase reaction require a few micromolar ATP, but submillimolar concentrations are needed to accelerate the K(+)-dependent or E2 half of the cycle. Here we use Co(NH(3))(4)ATP as a tool to study ATP sites in Na,K-ATPase. The analogue inactivates the K(+) phosphatase activity (an E2 partial reaction) and the Na,K-ATPase activity in parallel, whereas ATP-[(3)H]ADP exchange (an E1 reaction) is affected less or not at all. Although the inactivation occurs as a consequence of low affinity Co(NH(3))(4)ATP binding (K(D) approximately 0.4-0.6 mm), we can also measure high affinity equilibrium binding of Co(NH(3))(4)[(3)H]ATP (K(D) = 0.1 micro m) to the native enzyme. Crucially, we find that covalent enzyme modification with fluorescein isothiocyanate (which blocks E1 reactions) causes little or no effect on the affinity of the binding step preceding Co(NH(3))(4)ATP inactivation and only a 20% decrease in maximal inactivation rate. This suggests that fluorescein isothiocyanate and Co(NH(3))(4)ATP bind within different enzyme pockets. The Co(NH(3))(4)ATP enzyme was solubilized with C(12)E(8) to a homogeneous population of alphabeta protomers, as verified by analytical ultracentrifugation; the solubilization did not increase the Na,K-ATPase activity of the Co(NH(3))(4)ATP enzyme with respect to parallel controls. This was contrary to the expectation for a hypothetical (alphabeta)(2) membrane dimer with a single ATP site per protomer, with or without fast dimer/protomer equilibrium in detergent solution. Besides, the solubilized alphabeta protomer could be directly inactivated by Co(NH(3))(4)ATP, to less than 10% of the control Na,K-ATPase activity. This suggests that the inactivation must follow Co(NH(3))(4)ATP binding at a low affinity site in every protomeric unit, thus still allowing ATP and ADP access to phosphorylation and high affinity ATP sites.  相似文献   

8.
Treatment of the canine renal Na,K-ATPase with N-(2-nitro-4-isothiocyanophenyl)-imidazole (NIPI), a new imidazole-based probe, results in irreversible loss of enzymatic activity. Inactivation of 95% of the Na,K-ATPase activity is achieved by the covalent binding of 1 molecule of [3H]NIPI to a single site on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase. The reactivity of this site toward NIPI is about 10-fold greater when the enzyme is in the E1Na or sodium-bound form than when it is in the E2K or potassium-bound form. K+ ions prevent the enhanced reactivity associated with Na+ binding. Labeling and inactivation of the enzyme is prevented by the simultaneous presence of ATP or ADP (but not by AMP). The apparent affinity with which ATP prevents the inactivation by NIPI at pH 8.5 is increased from 30 to 3 microM by the presence of Na+ ions. This suggests that the affinity with which native enzyme binds ATP (or ADP) at this pH is enhanced by Na+ binding to the enzyme. Modification of the single sodium-responsive residue on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase results in loss of high affinity ATP binding, without affecting phosphorylation from Pi. Modification with NIPI probably alters the adenosine binding region without affecting the region close to the phosphorylated carboxyl residue aspartate 369. Tightly bound (or occluded) Rb+ ions are not displaced by ATP (4 mM) in the inactivated enzyme. Thus modification of a single residue simultaneously blocks ATP acting with either high or low affinity on the Na,K-ATPase. These observations suggest that there is a single residue on the alpha-subunit (probably a lysine) which drastically alters its reactivity as Na+ binds to the enzyme. This lysine residue is essential for catalytic activity and is prevented from reacting with NIPI when ATP binds to the enzyme. Thus, the essential lysine residue involved may be part of the ATP binding domain of the Na,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

9.
Pre-steady-state phosphorylation of purified Na,K-ATPase from red outer medulla of pig kidney was studied at 25 degrees C and an ample range of [tau-32P]ATP concentrations. At 10 microM ATP phosphorylation followed simple exponential kinetics reaching after 40 ms a steady level of 0.76 +/- 0.04 nmol of P/mg of protein with kapp = 73.0 +/- 6.5 s-1. At 500 microM ATP the time course of phosphorylation changed drastically, since the phosphoenzyme reached a level two to four times higher at a much higher rate (kapp greater than or equal to 370 s-1) and in about 40 ms dropped to the same steady level as with 10 microM ATP. This superphosphorylation was not observed in Na,K-ATPase undergoing turnover in a medium with Mg2+, Na+, and ATP, suggesting that it required the enzyme to be at rest. Superphosphorylation depended on Mg2+ and Na+ and was fully inhibited by ouabain and FITC. After denaturation the phosphoenzyme made by superphosphorylation had the electrophoretic mobility of the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase, and its hydrolysis was accelerated by hydroxylamine. On a molar basis, the stoichiometry of phosphate per ouabain bound was 2.40 +/- 0.60 after phosphorylation with 1000 microM ATP. The results are consistent with the idea that under proper conditions every functional Na,K-ATPase unit can accept two, or more, phosphates of rapid turnover from ATP.  相似文献   

10.
Fusion proteins of glutathione-S-transferase and fragments from the large cytoplasmic domain of the sheep Na,K-ATPase alpha1-subunit were expressed in Escherichia coli. The Na,K-ATPase sequences begin at Ala345 and terminate at either Arg600 (DP600f), Thr610 (DP610f), Gly731 (DP731f), or Glu779 (DP779f). After affinity purification on glutathione-Sepharose, the fusion proteins were labeled with [alpha-32P]-2-N3-ATP, and incorporation of the radiolabel into the fusion proteins was measured by scintillation counting after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Kd values of 220-290 microM for 2-N3-ATP binding to the fusion proteins were obtained from the photolabeling experiments. Approximately 1 mol of 2-N3-ATP was calculated to be incorporated per mole of fusion protein after correction for photochemical incorporation efficiency. Labeling of all of the fusion proteins by 25 microM 2-N3-ATP was reduced in the presence of MgATP, Na2ATP, MgCl2, 2',3'-O-(2,4, 6-trinitrophenyl)-ATP, and p-nitrophenylphosphate, and Ki values of 2-11 mM for Na2ATP, 0.2-5 mM for MgCl2, 0.1-5 mM for MgATP, and 20-300 microM for p-nitrophenylphosphate were calculated for these ligands. All of the fusion proteins catalyze the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylphosphate. The reaction requires MgCl2 and is inhibited by inorganic phosphate, which is similar to the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylphosphate by native Na,K-ATPase. Based on these observations, it appears that the soluble fragments from the large cytoplasmic domain of Na,K-ATPase expressed in bacterial cells are folded in an E2-like conformation and are likely to retain much of the native structure.  相似文献   

11.
Tetrammine cobalt(III) phosphate [Co(NH3)4PO4] inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase in the E2 conformational state, dependent on time and concentration, according to Eqn (1): Co(NH3)4PO4 + E2 Kd in equilibrium E2.Co(NH3)4PO4k2----E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4. The inactivation rate constant k2 for the formation of a stable E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4 at 37 degrees C was 0.057 min-1; the dissociation constant, Kd = 300 microM. The activation energy for the inactivation process was 149 kJ/mol. ATP and the uncleavable adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 for its binding site with Ks = 0.41 mM and 5 mM, respectively. MgPO4 competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 linearly, with Ks = 50 microM, as did phosphate (Ks = 16 mM) and Mg2+ (Ks = 160 microM). It is concluded that the MgPO4 analogue binds to the MgPO4-binding subsite of the low-affinity ATP-binding site (of the E2 conformation). Also, Na+ (Ks = 860 microM) protected the enzyme against inactivation in a competitive manner. From the intersecting (slope and intercept linear) noncompetitive effect of Na+ against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4PO4, apparent affinities of K+ for the free enzyme of 41 microM, and for the E.Co(NH3)4PO4 complex of 720 microM, were calculated. Binding of Co(NH3)4PO4 to the enzyme inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase and K(+)-activated phosphatase, and, moreover, prevented the occlusion of 86Rb+; however, the activity of the Na(+)-ATPase, the phosphorylation capacity of the high-affinity ATP-binding site and the ATP/ADP-exchange reaction remained unchanged. With Co(NH3)432PO4 a binding capacity of 135 pmol unit enzyme was found. Phosphorylation and complete inactivation of the enzyme with Co(NH3)432PO4 or the 32P-labelled tetramminecobalt ATP ([gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP) at the low-affinity ATP-binding site, allowed (independent of the purity of the Na+/K(+)-ATPase preparation) a further incorporation of radioactivity from 32P-labelled tetraaquachromium(III) ATP ([gamma-32P]CrATP) to the high-affinity ATP-binding site with unchanged phosphorylation capacity. However, inactivation and phosphorylation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by [gamma-32P]CrATP prevented the binding of Co(NH3)4 32PO4 or [gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP to the enzyme. [gamma-32P]CO(NH3)4ATP and Co(NH3)432PO4 are mutually exclusive. The data are consistent with the assumption of a cooperation of catalytic subunits within an (alpha,beta)2-diprotomer, which change their interactions during the Na+/K(+)-pumping process. Our findings seem not to support a symmetrical Repke and Stein model of enzyme action.  相似文献   

12.
To test the hypothesis that Na+/K+-ATPase works as an (alpha beta)2-diprotomer with interacting catalytic alpha-subunits, tryptic digestion of pig kidney enzyme, that had been inactivated with substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues, was performed. This led to the demonstration of coexisting C-terminal Na+-like 80-kDa as well as K+-like 60-kDa peptides and N-terminal 40-kDa peptides of the alpha-subunit. To localize the ATP binding sites on tryptic peptides, studies with radioactive MgATP complex analogues were performed: Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP specifically modified the E2ATP (low affinity) binding site of Na+/K+-ATPase with an inactivation rate constant (k2) of 12 x 10-3.min-1 at 37 degrees C and a dissociation constant (Kd) of 207 +/- 28 microm. Tryptic digestion of the [gamma32P]Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP-inactivated and photolabelled alpha-subunit (Mr = 100 kDa) led, in the absence of univalent cations, to a K+-like C-terminal 60-kDa fragment which was labelled in addition to an unlabelled Na+-like C-terminal 80-kDa fragment. Tryptic digestion of [alpha32P]-or [gamma32P]Cr(H2O)4ATP - bound to the E1ATP (high affinity) site - led to the labelling of a Na+-like 80-kDa fragment besides the immediate formation of an unlabelled K+-like N-terminal 40-kDa fragment and a C-terminal 60-kDa fragment. Because a labelled Na+-like 80-kDa fragment cannot result from an unlabelled K+-like 60-kDa fragment, and because unlabelled alpha-subunits did not show any catalytic activity, the findings are consistent with a situation in which Na+- and K+-like conformations are stabilized by tight binding of substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues to the E1ATP and E2ATP sites. Hence, all data are consistent with the hypothesis that ATP binding induces coexisting Na+ and K+ conformations within an (alphabeta)2-diprotomeric Na+/K+-ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction of yeast hexokinase with Procion Green H-4G.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. A number of reactive triazine dyes specifically and irreversibly inactive yeast hexokinase at pH 8.5 and 33 degrees C. Under these conditions, the enzyme is readily inactivated by 100 microM-Procion Green H-4G, Blue H-B, Turquoise H-7G and Turquoise H-A, is less readily inactivated by Procion Brown H-2G. Green HE-4BD, Red HE-3B and Yellow H-5G and is not inactivated at all by Procion Yellow H-A. 2. The inactivation of hexokinase by Procion Green H-4G is competitively inhibited by the adenine nucleotides ATP and ADP and the sugar substrates D-glucose, D-mannose and D-fructose but not by nonsubstrates such as D-arabinose and D-galactose. 3. Quantitatively inhibited hexokinase contains approx. 1 mol of dye per mol of monomer of mol.wt. 51000. The inhibition is irreversible and activity cannot be recovered on incubation with high concentration (20 mM) of ATP or D-glucose. 4. Mg2+ protects the enzyme against inactivation by Procion Green H-4G but enhances the rate of inactivation by all the other Procion dyes tested. In the presence of 10 mM-Mg2+ the apparent dissociation constant between enzyme and dye is reduced from 199.0 microM to 41.6 microM. Binding of the dye to hexokinase is accompanied by characteristic spectral changes in the range 560-700 nm. 5. Mg2+ promotes binding of yeast hexokinase to agarose-immobilized Procion Green H-4G but not to the other dyes tested. Elution could be effected by omission of Mg2+ from the column irrigants or by inclusion of MgATP or D-glucose, but not by D-galactose. These effects can be exploited to purify hexokinase from crude yeast extracts. 6. The specific active-site-directed binding of triazine dyes to yeast hexokinase is interpreted in terms of the crystallographic structure of the hexokinase monomer.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Lysine 480 has been suggested to be essential for ATP binding and hydrolysis by Na,K-ATPase because it is labeled by reagents that are thought to react with the ATPase from within the ATP binding site. In order to test this hypothesis, Lys-480 was changed to Ala, Arg, or Glu by site-directed mutagenesis, and the resultant Na,K-ATPase molecules were expressed in yeast cells. The ATPase activity of each of the mutants was similar to the activity of the wild type enzyme indicating that Lys-480 is not essential for ATP hydrolysis. The binding of [3H]ouabain in both ATP-dependent and inorganic phosphate-dependent reactions was used to determine the apparent affinity of each mutant for ATP or Pi. The K0.5(ATP) for ouabain binding to phosphoenzyme formed from ATP was 1-3 microM for Lys-480, Arg-480, and Ala-480, whereas for Glu-480 the K0.5(ATP) was 18 microM. The K0.5(Pi) for ouabain binding to phosphoenzyme formed from inorganic phosphate was 16-28 microM for Lys-480, Arg-480, and Ala-480, but was 74 microM for Glu-480. The Kd for ouabain binding was similar for both the wild type and mutant Na,K-ATPase molecules (3-6 nM). These data indicate that the substitution of an acidic amino acid for lysine at position 480 appears to reduce the affinity of the Na,K-ATPase for both ATP and phosphate. It is concluded that Lys-480 is not essential for ATP binding or hydrolysis or for phosphate binding by Na,K-ATPase but is likely to be located within the ATP binding site of the Na,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Free and bound forms of hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, and lactate dehydrogenase were prepared from the brain of the sea scorpion (Scorpaena porcus) in a low ionic strength medium. Properties of the free and bound forms were compared to determine whether binding to particulate matter could influence enzyme function or stability in vivo. Changes in pH differently affected the activity of the free and bound forms of all three enzymes. Furthermore, bound forms of hexokinase and pyruvate kinase were more stable than the free enzymes to heating at 45 degrees C. Bound hexokinase showed higher affinity for substrates (ATP, glucose) than the free form and bound lactate dehydrogenase had greater affinity for pyruvate and NADH. Although the affinities of the two forms of pyruvate kinase for substrates were similar, Hill coefficients for phosphoenolpyruvate as well as inhibition by ATP differed between the two enzyme forms. Free and bound lactate dehydrogenase also showed differences in Hill coefficients and bound lactate dehydrogenase was less sensitive to substrate inhibition by high pyruvate concentrations. The possible physiological role of the binding of these glycolytic enzymes to subcellular structures is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Stability and Activation of Glutamate Apodecarboxylase from Pig Brain   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1  
The stability and activation of glutamate apodecarboxylase was studied with three forms of the enzyme from pig brain (referred to as the alpha, beta, and gamma forms). Apoenzyme was prepared by incubating the holoenzyme with aspartate followed by chromatography on Sephadex G-25. Apoenzyme was much less stable than holoenzyme to inactivation by heat (for beta-glutamate decarboxylase (beta-GAD) at 30 degrees C, t1/2 values of apo- and holoenzyme were 17 and greater than 100 min). ATP protected holoenzyme and apoenzyme against heat inactivation. The kinetics of reactivation of apoenzyme by pyridoxal-P was consistent with a two-step mechanism comprised of a rapid, reversible association of the cofactor with apoenzyme followed by a slow conversion of the complex to active holoenzyme. The reactivation rate constant (kr) and apparent dissociation constant (KD) for the binding of pyridoxal-P to apoenzyme differed substantially among the forms (for alpha-, beta-, and gamma-GAD, kr = 0.032, 0.17, and 0.27 min-1, and KD = 0.014, 0.018, and 0.04 microM). ATP was a strong competitive inhibitor of activation (Ki = 0.45, 0.18, and 0.39 microM for alpha-, beta-, and gamma-GAD). In contrast, Pi stimulated activation at 1-5 mM but inhibited at much higher concentrations. The results suggest that ATP is important in stabilizing the apoenzyme in brain and that ATP, Pi, and other compounds regulate its activation.  相似文献   

19.
C H Pedemonte  J H Kaplan 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7966-7973
Treatment of purified renal Na,K-ATPase with dihydro-4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (H2DIDS) produces both reversible and irreversible inhibition of the enzyme activity. The reversible inhibition is unaffected by the presence of saturating concentrations of the sodium pump ligands Na+,K+, Mg2+, and ATP, while the inactivation is prevented by either ATP or K+. The kinetics of protection against inactivation indicate that K+ binds to two sites on the enzyme with very different affinities. Na+ ions with high affinity facilitate the inactivation by H2DIDS and prevent the protective effect of K+ ions. The H2DIDS-inactivated enzyme no longer exhibits a high-affinity nucleotide binding site, and the covalent binding of fluorescein isothiocyanate is also greatly reduced, but phosphorylation by Pi is unaffected. The kinetics of inactivation by H2DIDS were first order with respect to time and H2DIDS concentration. The enzyme is completely inactivated by the covalent binding of one H2DIDS molecule at pH 9 per enzyme phosphorylation site, or two H2DIDS molecules at pH 7.2. H2DIDS binds exclusively to the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase, locking the enzyme in an E2-like conformation. The profile of radioactivity, following trypsinolysis and SDS-PAGE, showed H2DIDS attachment to a 52-kDa fragment which also contains the ATP binding site. These results suggest that H2DIDS treatment modifies a specific conformationally sensitive amino acid residue on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase, resulting in the loss of nucleotide binding and enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

20.
A new ATP analog, adenosine-5-N'-(2,4-dinitro-5-fluorophenyl) phosphohydrazide (DNPH-AMP), has been synthesized, which is an irreversible inhibitor of Na,K-ATPase. Interaction of the analog with the enzyme in the presence of K+ is described by the scheme: [formula: see text] and corresponding kinetic constants k3 and Ki are found equal to 2.5 min-1 and 1.6 mM. In the presence of Na+ the time course of enzyme inactivation by DNPH-AMP is a biphasic curve in the semilogarithmic plot. The k3 and Ki values calculated for this case according to Fritzsch [Fritzsch (1985) J. Theor. Biol. 117, 397] are equal to 2.45 min-1 and 2.5 mM, respectively. ATP transforms the K(+)-type of Na,K-ATPase inactivation into the one that takes place in the presence of Na+.  相似文献   

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