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1.
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   

2.
Bass gill microsomal preparations contain a Mg2+-dependent Na+-stimulated ATPase activity in the absence of K+, whose characteristics are compared with those of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase of the same preparations. The activity at 30 degrees C is 11.3 mumol Pi X mg-1 protein X hr-1 under optimal conditions (5 mM MgATP, 75 mM Na+, 75 mM HEPES, pH 6.0) and exhibits a lower pH optimum than the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. The Na+ stimulation of ATPase is only 17% inhibited by 10-3M ouabain and completely abolished by 2.5 mM ethacrinic acid which on the contrary cause, respectively, 100% and 34% inhibition of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. Both Na+-and (Na+ + K+)-stimulated activities can hydrolyze nucleotides other than ATP in the efficiency order ATP greater than CTP greater than UTP greater than GTP and ATP greater than CTP greater than GPT greater than UTP, respectively. In the presence of 10(-3)M ouabain millimolar concentrations of K+ ion lower the Na+ activation (90% inhibition at 40 mM K+). The Na+-ATPase is less sensitive than (Na+ + K+)-ATPase to the Ca2+ induced inhibition as the former is only 57.5% inhibited by a concentration of 1 X 10(-2)M which completely suppresses the latter. The thermosensitivity follows the order Mg2+--greater than (Na+ + K+)--greater than Na+-ATPase. A similar break of the Arrhenius plot of the three enzymes is found. Only some of these characteristics do coincide with those of a Na+-ATPase described elsewhere. A presumptive physiological role of Na+-ATPase activity in seawater adapted teleost gills is suggested.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The (Na+ + K+)ATPase is inhibited by the bee venom polypeptide, melittin. KCl and NaCl protect the enzyme from melittin inhibition. Analysis of the K+ and Na+ protection against melittin inhibition suggested a kinetic model which was consistent with slowly reversible melittin binding, and mutually exclusive binding of melittin with K+ and Na+. Accordingly, in the absence of salt, the KI for melittin inhibition = 1.2 microM, and the protection by KCl occurs with a KA,KCl = 0.6 mM. The protection by NaCl occurs with a KA,NaCl = 15 mM. Melittin inhibition of enzyme activity is due to direct interactions with the (Na+ + K+)ATPase, as demonstrated by photolabeling with [125I]azidosalicylyl melittin, which labeled the alpha subunit, but not the beta subunit of the (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Melittin and KCl reduced the extent of labeling. In non-covalent binding studies using [125I]azidosalicylyl melittin, the stoichiometry of binding was 1.6 melittin per (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Ligand-induced conformational changes of FITC-labeled (Na+ + K+)ATPase were examined in the presence and absence of melittin. K+ alone or melittin alone caused a fluorescence intensity quenching consistent with formation of an E2 form of the enzyme. The NaCl-induced (E2----E1) fluorescence intensity changes were maximal when the enzyme was treated with K+. NaCl-induced fluorescence changes did not occur when the enzyme was treated with melittin in the absence of K+. However, when K+ was present before the addition of melittin, NaCl-induced fluorescence intensity increases were observed, which were dependent upon the concentration of K+ in the preincubation mixture. The results of the labeling and conformational studies support the kinetic model and suggest a mechanism for inhibition of ion pumps by (poly)peptides.  相似文献   

5.
1. High concentrations of ATP inhibit completely the activity of (Na+, K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) prepared from sheep brain. 2. The inhibition depends on the concentration of total ATP, i.e. complexed ATP+ free ATP. 3. The inhibition by high ATP concentrations persists in the absence of K+, and is then independent of the Na+ concentration between 2 and 140 mM Na+. 4. Raising the K+ concentration at 20 mM Na+ increases the ATP concentration required for the maximal hydrolysis rate. 5. The Hill number for the inhibition process is about three. 6. The inhibition by ATP is temperature-dependent, in that as the temperature is increased, higher ATP concentrations are required for inhibition.  相似文献   

6.
Oligomycin inhibition of the maximal hydrolysis activity of ox brain Na+/K(+)-ATPase was studied at varying NaCl concentrations and it was found that for a given amount of live enzyme, the observed inhibition of a particular total oligomycin concentration decreased as the amount of added, (heat-) denatured enzyme increased. In the present article we derive a scale factor for the oligomycin concentration, i.e., the fraction of the total concentration of oligomycin which is free in solution, as a function of the enzyme concentration used. This fraction decreased linearly with the protein concentration and may attain quite small values. We also study the Na(+)-dependence of the hydrolysis rate at saturating substrate concentrations ([Mg2+] = [ATP] = 3 mM), in the presence as well as the absence of KCl, at various concentrations of oligomycin. These data may be explained if it is assumed that the sole effect of oligomycin is to confer upon the enzyme an increased affinity for Na+, i.e., oligomycin merely enhances the inhibitory effect of Na+ on the (maximal) activity seen at high Na(+)-concentrations. The increased Na(+)-affinity in the presence of oligomycin should result in activation of the hydrolysis rate measured under conditions where Na(+)-activation is predominant, i.e., at low Na(+)-concentration and sub-saturating substrate concentrations. This prediction is verified for both Na(+)-ATPase and for Na+/K(+)-ATPase. This proposed action of oligomycin seems to be corroborated also by other evidence discussed in the text.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Inhibition by vanadate of the K+-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity catalyzed by the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase partially purified from pig kidney showed competitive behavior with the substrate, K+ and Mg2+ acted as cofactors in promoting that inhibition. Ligands which inhibited the K+-dependent p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis (Na+, nucleotide polyphosphates, inorganic phosphate) protected against inhibition by vanadate. The magnitude of that protection was proportional to the inhibition produced in the absence of vanadate. In the presence of only p-nitrophenyl phosphate and Mg2+, or when the protective ligands were tested alone, the activation of p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis by K+ followed a sigmoid curve in the presence as well in the absence of vanadate. However, the combination of 100 mM NaCl and 3 mM ATP resulted in a biphasic effect of K+ on the p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis in the presence of vanadate. After an initial rise at low K+ concentration, the p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity declined at high K+ concentrations; this decline became more pronounced as the vanadate concentration was increased. This biphasic response was not seen when a nonphosphorylating ATP analog was combined with Na+ (which favors the nucleotide binding) or with inorganic phosphate (a requirement for K+ - K+ exchange). Experiments with inside-out resealed vesicles from human red cells showed that in the absence of Na+ plus ATP, K+ promoted vanadate inhibition of p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity in a nonbiphasic manner, acting at cytoplasmic sites. On the other hand, in the presence of Na+ plus ATP, the biphasic response of p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis is due to K+ acting on extracellular sites. In vanadate-poisoned intact red blood cells, the biphasic response of the ouabain-sensitive Rb+ influx as a function of the external Rb+ concentration failed to develop when there was no Na+ in the extracellular media. In addition, in the absence of extracellular Na+, external Rb+ did not influence the magnitude of inhibition. The present findings indicate that external K+ favors vanadate inhibition by displacing Na+ from unspecified extracellular membrane sites.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Media prepared with CDTA and low concentrations of Ca2+, as judged by the lack of Na+-dependent phosphorylation and ATPase activity of (Na+ +K+)-ATPase preparations are free of contaminant Mg2+. In these media, the Ca2+-ATPase from human red cell membranes is phosphorylated by ATP, and a low Ca2+-ATPase activity is present. In the absence of Mg2+ the rate of phosphorylation in the presence of 1 microM Ca2+ is very low but it approaches the rate measured in Mg2+-containing media if the concentration of Ca2+ is increased to 5 mM. The KCa for phosphorylation is 2 microM in the presence and 60 microM in the absence of Mg2+. Results are consistent with the idea that for catalysis of phosphorylation the Ca2+-ATPase needs Ca2+ at the transport site and Mg2+ at an activating site and that Ca2+ replaces Mg2+ at this site. Under conditions in which it increases the rate of phosphorylation, Ca2+ is without effect on the Ca2+-ATPase activity in the absence of Mg2+ suggesting that to stimulate ATP hydrolysis Mg2+ accelerates a reaction other than phosphorylation. Activation of the E1P----E2P reaction by Mg2+ is prevented by Ca2+ after but not before the synthesis of E1P from E1 and ATP, suggesting that Mg2+ stabilizes E1 in a state from which Mg2+ cannot be removed by Ca2+ and that Ca2+ stabilizes E1P in a state insensitive to Mg2+. The response of the Ca2+-ATPase activity to Mg2+ concentration is biphasic, activation with a KMg = 88 microM is followed by inhibition with a Ki = 9.2 mM. Ca2+ at concentration up to 1 mM acts as a dead-end inhibitor of the activation by Mg2+, and Mg2+ at concentrations up to 0.5 mM acts as a dead-end inhibitor of the effects of Ca2+ at the transport site of the Ca2+-ATPase.  相似文献   

11.
The authors evidence a Mg2+ dependent ATPase activity stimulated by Na+ in absence of K+ in bass gill microsomes. As this stimulated ATPase shows different features from "baseline" activity measured in the absence of both Na+ and K+ ions (Mg2+-ATPase) and from 1mM ouabain sensitive (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, it has been ascribed to a distinct Na+-ATPase. In the present paper the optimal conditions for bass gill Na+-ATPase assay and the temperature dependence of the enzyme are reported. Moreover the Na+-ATPase appears to be insensitive to 1mM ouabain and 100% inhibited by 2,5mM ethacrynic acid. It is suggested a parallel diffusion of Na+- and (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and a possible physiological role of Na+ATPase in osmoregulation.  相似文献   

12.
The ATPase activities were studied in rat erythrocytes permeabilized with saponin. The concentrations of calcium and magnesium ions were varied within the range of 0.1-60 microM and 50-370 microM, respectively, by using EGTA-citrate buffer. The maximal activity of Ca2(+)-ATPase of permeabilized erythrocytes was by one order of magnitude higher, whereas the Ca2(+)-binding affinity was 1.5-2 times higher than that in erythrocyte ghosts washed an isotonic solution containing EGTA. Addition of the hemolysate restored the kinetic parameters of ghost Ca2(+)-ATPase practically completely, whereas in the presence of exogenous calmodulin only part of Ca2(+)-ATPase activity was recovered. Neither calmodulin nor R24571, a highly potent specific inhibitor of calmodulin-dependent reactions, influenced the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity of permeabilized erythrocytes. At Ca2+ concentrations below 0.7 microM, ouabain (0.5-1 mM) activated whereas at higher Ca2+ concentrations it inhibited the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity. Taking this observation into account the Na+/K(+)-ATPase was determined as the difference of between the ATPase activities in the presence of Na+ and K+ and in the presence of K+ alone. At physiological concentration of Mg2+ (370 microM), the addition of 0.3-1 microM Ca2+ increased Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity by 1.5-3-fold. Higher concentrations of this cation inhibited the enzyme. At low Mg2+ concentration (e.g., 50 microM) only Na+/K(+)-ATPase inhibition by Ca2+ was seen. It was found that at [NaCl] less than 20 mM furosemide was increased ouabain-inhibited component of ATPase in Ca2(+)-free media. This activating effect of furosemide was enhanced with a diminution of [Na+] upto 2 mM and did not reach the saturation level unless the 2 mM of drug was used. The activating effect of furosemide on Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity confirmed by experiments in which the ouabain-inhibited component was measured by the 86Rb+ influx into intact erythrocytes.  相似文献   

13.
Inorganic lead ion in micromolar concentrations inhibits Electrophorus electroplax microsomal (Na+ + K+)-adenosine triphosphatase ((Na+ + K+)-ATPase) and K+-p-nitrophenylphosphatase (NPPase). Under the same conditions, the same concentrations of PbCl2 that inhibit ATPase activity also stimulate the phosphorylation of electroplax microsomes in the absence of added Na+. Enzyme activity is protected from inhibition by increasing concentrations of microsomes, ATP, and other metal ion chelators. The kinetics follow the pattern of a reversible noncompetitive inhibitor. No kinetic evidence is elicited for interactions of Pb2+ with Na+, K+, Mg2+, ATP, or p-nitrophenylphosphate. Na+- ATPase, in the absence of K+, and (Na+ + K+)-NPPase activity at low [K+] are also inhibited. ATP inhibition of NPPase is not reversed by Pb2+. The calculated concentrations of free [Pb2+] that produce 50% inhibition are similar for ATPase and NPPase activities. Pb2+ may act at a single independent binding site to produce both stimulation of the kinase and inhibition of the phosphatase activities.  相似文献   

14.
In order to characterize low affinity ATP-binding sites of renal (Na+,K+) ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+)ATPase, the effects of ATP on the splitting of the K+-sensitive phosphoenzymes were compared. ATP inactivated the dephosphorylation in the case of (Na+,K+)ATPase at relatively high concentrations, while activating it in the case of (Ca2+)ATPase. When various nucleotides were tested in place of ATP, inactivators of (Na+,K+)ATPase were found to be activators in (Ca2+)ATPase, with a few exceptions. In the absence of Mg2+, the half-maximum concentration of ATP for the inhibition or for the activation was about 0.35 mM or 0.25 mM, respectively. These values are comparable to the previously reported Km or the dissociation constant of the low affinity ATP site estimated from the steady-state kinetics of the stimulation of ATP hydrolysis or from binding measurements. By increasing the concentration of Mg2+, but not Na+, the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Na+,K+)ATPase was reduced. On the other hand, Mg2+ did not modify the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Ca2+)ATPase. During (Na+,K+)ATPase turnover, the low affinity ATP site appeared to be exposed in the phosphorylated form of the enzyme, but the magnesium-complexed ATP interacted poorly with the reactive K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme, which has a tightly bound magnesium, probably because of interaction between the divalent cations. In the presence of physiological levels of Mg2+ and K+, ATP appeared to bind to the (Na+,K+)ATPase only after the dephosphorylation, while it binds to the (Ca2+)-ATPase before the dephosphorylation to activate the turnover.  相似文献   

15.
MnCl2 was partially effective as a substitute for MgCl2 in activating the K+- dependent phosphatase reaction catalyzed by a purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase enzyme preparation from canine kidney medulla, the maximal velocity attainable being one-fourth that with MgCl2. Estimates of the concentration of free Mn2+ available when the reaction was half-maximally stimulated lie in the range of the single high-affinity divalent cation site previously identified (Grisham, C.M. and Mildvan, A.S. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 3187--3197). MnCl2 competed with MgCl2 as activator of the phosphatase reaction, again consistent with action through a single site. However, with MnCl2 appreciable ouabain-inhibitable phosphatase activity occurred in the absence of added KCl, and the apparent affinities for K+ as activator of the reaction and for Na+ as inhibitor were both decreased. For the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction substituting MnCl2 for MgCl2 was also partially effective, but no stimulation in the absence of added KCl, in either the absence or presence of NaCl, was detectable. Moreover, the apparent affinity for K+ was increased by the substitution, although that for Na+ was decreased as in the phosphatase reaction. Substituting MnCl2 also altered the sensitivity to inhibitors. For both reactions the inhibition by ouabain and by vanadate was increased, as was binding of [48V] -vanadate to the enzyme; furthermore, binding in the presence of MnCl2 was, unlike that with MgCl2, insensitive to KCl and NaCl. Inhibition of the phosphatase reaction by ATP was decreased with 1 mM but not 10 mM KCl. Finally, inhibition of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction by Triton X-100 was increased, but that by dimethylsulfoxide decreased after such substitution. These findings are considered in terms of Mn2+ at the divalent cation site being a better selector than Mg2+ of the E2 conformational states of the enzyme, states also selected by K+ and by dimethylsulfoxide and reactive with ouabain and vanadate; the E1 conformational states, by contrast, are those selected by Na+ and ATP, and also by Triton X-100.  相似文献   

16.
Specific effects of spermine on Na+,K+-adenosine triphosphatase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Specific effects of spermine on Na+,K+-ATPase were observed using an enzyme partially purified from rabbit kidney microsomes by extraction with deoxycholate. 1. Spermine competed with K+ for K+-dependent, ouabain-sensitive nitrophenylphosphatase. The K1 for spermine was 0.075 mm in the presence of 1 mM Mg2+ and 5 mM p-nitrophenylphosphate at pH 7.5. 2. spermine activated Na+,K+-ATPase over limited concentration ranges of K+ and Na+ in the presence of 0.05 mM ATP. The spermine concentration required for half maximal activation was 0.055 mM in the presence of 1 mM K+, 10 mM Na+, 1 mM Mg2+, and 0.05 mM ATP. 3. The activation of Na+,K4-ATPase was not due to substitution of spermine for K+, Na+, or Mg2+. 4. When the concentration of K+ or Na+ was extremely low, or in excess, spermine did not activate Na+,K+-ATPase, but inhibited it slightly. 5. Plots of 1/v vs. 1/[ATP] at various concentrations of spermine showed that spermine decreased the Km for ATP without changing the Vmax. 6. Plots of 1/v vs. 1/[ATP] at concentrations of K+ from 0.05 mM to 0.5 mM showed that K+ increased the Km for ATP with increase in the Vmax in the presence of 0.2 mM spermine similarly to that in the absence of spermine. The contradictory effects of spermine on this enzyme system suggest that the K+-dependent monophosphatase activity does not reflect the second half (the dephosphorylation step) of the Na+,K+-ATPase catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPase was reconstituted into artificial phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes by means of a freeze-thaw-sonication technique. Upon addition of MgATP, active H+ transport was observed, with a maximal rate of 2.1 mumol X mg-1 X min-1, requiring the presence of 100 mM K+ at the intravesicular site. However, in the absence of ATP an H+-K+ exchange with a maximal rate of 0.12 mumol X mg-1 X min-1 was measured, which could be inhibited by the well-known ATPase inhibitors vanadate and omeprazole, giving the first evidence of a passive K+-H+ exchange function of gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPase. An Na+-H+ exchange activity was also measured, which was fully inhibited by 1 mM amiloride. Simultaneous reconstitution of Na+/H+ antiport and (H+ + K+)-ATPase could explain why reconstituted ATPase appeared less cation-specific than the native enzyme (Rabon, E.C., Gunther, R.B., Soumarmon, A., Bassilian, B., Lewin, M.J.M. and Sachs, G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10200-10212).  相似文献   

18.
The influence of Tl+ on Na+ transport and on the ATPase activity in human erythrocytes was studied. 0.1-1.0 mM Tl+ added to a K+-free medium inhibited the ouabain-sensitive self-exchange of Na+ and activated both the ouabain-sensitive 22Na outward transport and the transport related ATPase. 5-10mM external Tl+ caused inhibition of the ouabain-sensitive 22Na efflux as well as the (Na+ plus Tl+)-ATPase. Competition between the internal Na+ and rapidly penetrating thallous ions at the inner Na+-specific binding sites of the erythrocyte membrane could account for the inhibitory effect of Tl+. An increase of the internal Na+ concentration in erythrocytes or in ghosts protected the system against the inhibitory effect of high concentration of Tl+. A protective effect of Na+ was also demonstrated on the (Na+ plus Tl+)-ATPase of fragmented erythrocyte membranes studied at various Na+ and Tl+ concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
Vanadate was a potent inhibitor of the membrane-bound (Ca+Mg)-ATPase from rat brain, the concentration required for 50% inhibition under conditions optimal for enzymatic activity being 3 M. Vanadate inhibition increased with the MgCl2 concentration, half-maximal inhibition occurring at 2 mM MgCl2, near the MgCl2 concentration required for half-maximal activation of the ATPase activity. MnCl2 could substitute for MgCl2, and at concentrations of 1 mM (Ca+Mn)-ATPase activity was greater than (Ca+Mg)-ATPase activity, although sensitivity to vanadate was less. Vanadate inhibition increased also with the KCl concentration, half-maximal inhibition occurring at 8 mM, again near the concentration required for half-maximal activation of ATPase activity. By contrast, NaCl stimulated (Ca+Mg)-ATPase activity without potentiating vanadate inhibition. These effects of cations on ATPase activity and vanadate inhibition resemble properties of certain transport ATPases and thus suggest mechanistic and functional similarities.  相似文献   

20.
The Na(+)-ATPase activity of Na+,K(+)-ATPase in the absence of K+ was least dependent on the sodium concentration when the pH was 9.5. Around 40% of the phosphoenzyme formed from ATP in the presence of 0.5 mM MgCl2 at alkaline pH was insensitive to both KCl and ADP. High-Na+ chase reversed this insensitivity, i.e., the phosphoenzyme became sensitive to KCl or ADP. On the other hand, phosphorylation at 0.1 mM MgCl2 instead of 0.5 mM showed at least 95% sensitivity to KCl. These observations suggest that ADP- and KCl-insensitive phosphoenzyme was formed when excess Mg++ was present during phosphorylation at alkaline pH. This phosphoenzyme might be an intermediate in the process of ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

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