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1.
The role of the phospholipid environment in modulating the activity of the rat brain synaptic plasma membrane (SPM) Ca2(+)-ATPase was investigated by its reconstitution into different phospholipids. Retention of activity of the solubilized Ca2(+)-ATPase depended on addition of exogenous phospholipids. As the cholate concentration used for solubilization of native SPM increased, a larger excess of exogeneous phospholipids, relative to membrane protein, had to be added to maintain optimal activity. Highest ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport activity was obtained when reconstitution was carried out in calf brain phospholipids (BPLs) followed by soybean phospholipids (SPLs) and the lowest in egg PC; reconstitution at a 40:1 weight ratio of exogenous phospholipids to native SPM protein resulted in ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport of 40.0 +/- 4.16, 23.4 +/- 8.48, and 11.54 +/- 2.31 nmol of Ca2+ (mg of protein)-1 (5 min)-1, respectively. Partial substitution of egg PC with BPLs led to an increase in the activity of the reconstituted Ca2+ pump. The highest ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake was obtained when ratios of 15:25 or 10:30 egg PC to BPLs were used. Testing the individual phospholipids participating in the BPL mixture showed that addition of PS to egg PC led to a consistent increase in Ca2+ pump activity. Substitution of 50% of the PC with PS resulted in a 3.8-fold higher ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake than that obtained in egg PC alone. No other phospholipid tested--PE, SM, or PI--had a similar effect. Increasing the proportion of PS within the BPL mixture above its original content led to a gradual decrease in the reconstituted SPM Ca2+ pump activity. Enrichment of asolectin with PS led first to increased Ca2+ pump activity; then, as the proportion of PS increased, Ca2+ transport of the reconstituted pump decreased. An increased proportion of PE, SM, or PI within the BPLs or asolectin, above their original contents, resulted in decreased Ca2+ transport. These results indicate that optimal SPM Ca2+ pump activity requires the combined presence of a critical amount of PC and PS within the reconstituted membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase is the calcium pump that extrudes calcium ions from cells using ATP hydrolisis for the maintenance of low Ca2+ concentrations in the cell. Calmodulin stimulates Ca2+-ATPase by binding to the autoinhibitory enzyme domain, which allows the access of cytoplasmic ATP and Ca2+ to the active and transport cites. Our kinetic model predicts damped oscillations in the enzyme activity and interprets the known nonmonotonous kinetic behavior of the enzyme in the presence of calmodulin. For the parameters close to the experimental ones, the kinetic model explains the changes in frequency and damping factor of the oscillatory enzyme activity, as dependent on calmodulin concentration. The calculated pre-steady-state curves fit well the known experimental data. The kinetic analysis allows us to assign Ca2+-ATPase to the hysteretic enzymes exhibiting activity oscillations in open systems.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of phospholipids was tested on the p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of the Ca2+ pump. Acidic phospholipids like phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol inhibited the phosphatase activity, while neutral phospholipids like phosphatidylcholine did not. This result contrasts sharply with the known activating effect of acidic phospholipids on the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity of the pump. It is known that the phosphatase activity of the Ca2+ pump can be elicited either by calmodulin and Ca2+ or by ATP and Ca2+. Unlike calmodulin, acidic phospholipids failed to stimulate the phosphatase activity. Furthermore, calmodulin-activated phosphatase was completely inhibited by acidic phospholipids. Maximal inhibition of the ATP-activated phosphatase was only 70%. Inhibition by acidic phospholipids was non-competitive regarding to calmodulin, suggesting that acidic phospholipids and calmodulin do not bind to the same domain of the pump. The presence of Ca2+ was essential for the inhibition, and the apparent affinity for Ca2+ for this effect was increased by acidic phospholipids. Results are consistent with the idea that acidic phospholipids stabilize an enzyme-Ca complex lacking phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

4.
The Ca2+-transport system of human erythrocyte membranes was solubilized by deoxycholate in the presence of the nonionic detergent Tween 20 and was purified by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The method yields a functional enzyme, which as compared with the erythrocyte membrane was purified 207-fold based on specific activity, and about 330-fold based on protein content. The activity of the isolated enzyme can be increased about 9-fold by the addition of calmodulin, resulting in a specific activity of 10.1 mumoles/mg . min at 37 degrees C. Triton X-100 and deoxycholate stimulate the calmodulin-deficient Ca2+-ATPase in a concentration dependent manner, which results in a loss of the calmodulin-sensitivity. The Ca2+-transport ATPase could be reconstituted after solubilization of the ATPase by deoxycholate and controlled dialysis near room temperature. The system was reconstituted to form membraneous vesicles capable of energized Ca2+ accumulation. The membrane vesicles showed a protein to lipid ratio (approx. 60% protein and 40% lipid) similar to that of the original erythrocyte membrane. The stimulation by calmodulin of the calmodulin-depleted membrane-bound and partially purified Ca2+-ATPase is strongly time dependent. At a Ca2+-concentration of 40 microM and low calmodulin concentrations, approx. 120 min are required to regain full activity. This time period is decreased to about 15 min in the presence of a high excess of calmodulin. Vice versa, at fixed concentrations of calmodulin, the time necessary for regain of full activity is decreased as the Ca2+ concentrations is increased. The dependence of the Ca2+-ATPase activity on the calmodulin concentration shows strong deviation from Michaelis-Menten kinetics at Ca2+ concentrations below (4--10 microM) and above (200 microM) the optimum concentration of 40 microM. Mathematical analysis of the results at 200 microM Ca2+ leads to the assumption that 4 calmodulin molecules interact with one oligomer of Ca2+-ATPase consisting of 4 identical subunits.  相似文献   

5.
The Ca2+ signaling protein calmodulin (CaM) stimulates Ca2+ pumping in the plasma-membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) by binding to an autoinhibitory domain, which then dissociates from the catalytic domain of PMCA to allow full activation of the enzyme. We measured single-molecule fluorescence trajectories with polarization modulation to track the conformation of the autoinhibitory domain of PMCA pump bound to fluorescently labeled CaM. Interchange of the autoinhibitory domain between associated and dissociated conformations was detected at a physiological Ca2+ concentration of 0.15 microM, where the enzyme is only partially active, but not at 25 microM, where the enzyme is fully activated. In previous work we showed that the conformation of the autoinhibitory domain in PMCA-CaM complexes could be monitored by the extent of modulation of single-molecule fluorescence generated with rotating excitation polarization. In the present work, we determined the timescale of association and dissociation of the autoinhibitory domain with the catalytic regions of the PMCA. Association of the autoinhibitory domain was rare at a high Ca2+ concentration (25 microM). At a lower Ca2+ concentration (0.15 microM), conformations of the autoinhibitory domain interchanged with a dissociation rate of 0.042 +/- 0.011 sec(-1) and an association rate of 0.023 +/- 0.006 sec-1. The results indicate that the response time of PMCA upon a reduction in Ca2+ is limited to tens of seconds by autoinhibitory dynamics. This property may reduce the sensitivity of PMCA to transient reductions in intracellular Ca2+. We suggest that the dynamics of the autoinhibitory domain may play a novel role in regulating PMCA activity.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the influence of different sterols and phospholipids on the activities of the cardiac sarcolemmal Na+-Ca2+ exchanger and Na+,K+-ATPase and the sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+-ATPase in reconstituted proteoliposomes. When either the solubilized Na+-Ca2+ exchanger or the Na+,K+-ATPase is reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine (PC):phosphatidylserine (30:50 by weight) vesicles, high cholesterol levels (20% by weight) are required for activity to be expressed. This sterol requirement is highly specific for cholesterol. Several cholesterol analogues with minor structural changes are unable to support Na+-Ca2+ exchange or Na+,K+-ATPase activities. When solubilized sarcolemma is reconstituted into PC:cardiolipin vesicles, however, the requirement for cholesterol is lost. Substantial activity can be obtained in the complete absence of cholesterol or in the presence of several cholesterol analogues. Thus, sterol/protein interactions can be highly dependent on the phospholipid environment. In contrast, the skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+-ATPase functions equally well in the presence or absence of cholesterol after reconstitution into either PC:phosphatidylserine or PC:cardiolipin proteoliposomes. Phospholipid requirements of the transporters were also examined. The sarcolemmal Na+-Ca2+ exchanger, Na+,K+-ATPase, and the sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+-ATPase all function optimally in the presence of phosphatidylserine or cardiolipin after reconstitution. Thus, the sarcolemmal cation transporters have similar sterol and phospholipid requirements and may have structural similarities in their hydrophobic regions. The sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+ pump evolved in a low cholesterol membrane and has different lipid interactions. These findings may have general applicability to other plasma membrane and endoplasmic reticular enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of controlled proteolysis on the plasma membrane (PM)Ca2+-ATPase was studied at the molecular level in PM purified from radish (Raphanus sativus L.) seedlings. Two new methods for labeling the PM Ca2+-ATPase are described. The PM Ca2+-ATPase can be selectively labeled by treatment with micromolar fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), a strong inhibitor of enzyme activity. Both inhibition of activity and FITC binding to the PM Ca2+-ATPase are suppressed by millimolar MgITP. The PM Ca2+-ATPase maintains the capability to bind calmodulin also after sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and blotting; therefore, it can be conveniently identified by 125l-calmodulin overlay in the presence of calcium. With both methods a molecular mass of 133 kD can be calculated for the PM Ca2+-ATPase. FITC-labeled PM Ca2+-ATPase co-migrates with the phosphorylated intermediate of the enzyme[mdash]labeled by incubation with [[gamma]-32P]GTP in the presence of calcium[mdash]on acidic sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Controlled trypsin treatment of purified PM determines a reduction of the molecular mass of the PM Ca2+-ATPase from 133 to 118 kD parallel to the increase of enzyme activity. Only the 133-kD but not the 118-kD PM Ca2+-ATPase binds calmodulin. These results indicate that trypsin removes from the PM Ca2+-ATPase an autoinhibitory domain that contains the calmodulin-binding domain of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Regulation of erythrocyte Ca2+ pump activity by protein kinase C   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Using either inside-out vesicles (IOV) prepared from human erythrocytes or purified Ca2+-ATPase from the same source, the effects of protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme) on Ca2+ transport and Ca2+-ATPase activity were measured. Incubation of IOV with protein kinase C in the presence, but not absence, of either 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate or diolein led to a Ca2+-dependent stimulation of ATP-dependent calcium uptake. The effect was a 5-7-fold increase of Vmax without a significant change in the apparent Km for Ca2+. By comparison, the effect of calmodulin was a 14-fold stimulation of Vmax and a 4-fold reduction in apparent Km. The effect of protein kinase C and calmodulin on Ca2+ uptake were nearly additive. Stimulation of IOV Ca2+ transport by protein kinase C was entirely reversible by treatment of activated IOV with alkaline phosphatase. Incubation of purified Ca2+-ATPase with protein kinase C in the presence of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate or diolein led to a stimulation of Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity. These results indicate that protein kinase C stimulates the activity of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump by a direct effect on the pump protein.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane oxidation may contribute to cataractogenesis. In our pursuit to understand the etiology of cataracts, we assessed the effect of membrane oxidation products on the activity of the lens epithelium calcium pump. Microsome preparations from bovine lens epithelium were oxidized to varying degrees with a ferrous and ferric ascorbate system to generate hydrogen peroxide and superoxide. Ca2+ -ATPase activity was measured using a colorometric assay. Lipid oxidation was quantified by infrared spectroscopy. Ca2+ -ATPase activity decreased as a function of ascorbate concentration between 0 and 200 microM. The level of Ca2+ -ATPase inhibition was correlated to both the level of lipid oxidation and the degree of lipid hydrocarbon chain order. At 25 degrees C when lipids are more ordered, the Ca2+ -ATPase activity was similar to that observed in the oxidized system measured at 37 degrees C. Glutathione, mercaptoethanol, and iodoacetate were able to reverse the oxidative inhibition of the calcium pump, suggesting that the ascorbate/iron oxidant directly oxidized the protein sulfhydryl moieties. To further probe the mechanism of Ca2+ ATPase inhibition, hydrogen peroxide was used to oxidize muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ -ATPase reconstituted in its native lipid vesicles, egg phosphatidylcholine, and dihydrosphingomyelin, with saturated hydrocarbon chains. In these systems, oxidation inhibited the Ca2+ -ATPase pump by 60-80%. There was no statistical difference between the level of oxidative inhibition and the percentage of dihydrosphingomyelin. Because dihydrosphingomyelin cannot be oxidized, whereas egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) can, and because the percentage of inhibition was the same for reconstituted systems using either lipid, the mechanism of inhibition is likely not via a secondary process involving oxidation-induced lipid structural changes or products of lipid oxidation.  相似文献   

10.
Plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase is the pump that extrudes calcium ions from cells using ATP hydrolysis to maintain low Ca2+ concentrations in the cell. Calmodulin stimulates Ca2+-ATPase by binding to the autoinhibitory enzyme domain, which allows the access of cytoplasmic ATP and Ca2+ to the catalytic and transport sites. Our kinetic model predicts damped oscillations of the enzyme activity and interprets the known nonmonotonic kinetic behavior of the enzyme in the presence of calmodulin. For parameters close to experimental data, the kinetic model explains the dependence of the frequency and damping factor of the oscillatory enzyme activity on the calmodulin concentration. The calculated pre-steady-state curves fit well to known experimental data. Kinetic analysis allows us to assign Ca2+-ATPase to hysteretic enzymes exhibiting activity oscillations in open systems.  相似文献   

11.
Calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-pump ATPase of human smooth muscle sarcolemma   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
L M Popescu  P Ignat 《Cell calcium》1983,4(4):219-235
An enzymatically active Ca2+-stimulated ATPase has been isolated from the sarcolemmal sheets of human smooth muscle (myometrium). Ca2+-ATPase activity was quantitated in an assay medium which simulated the characteristic free ionic concentrations of the cytosol. New computer programs for calculating the composition of solutions containing metals (Ca, Mg, Na, K) and ligands (EGTA, ATP), based on the updated stability constants, were used. In detergent-soluble form the enzyme has a high Ca2+-affinity expressed by an apparent Km (Ca2+) of 0.25 +/- 0.04 microM. The maximum specific activity (about 20 nmol of Pi/mg protein/min) was found in the micromolar domain of free-Ca2+ concentrations, the same levels required for normal maximal contractions in smooth muscle. The variation of free-Ca2+ concentration in the assay medium over 4 orders of magnitude (pCa 9 to pCa 5) resulted in a sigmoidal dependence of enzymatic activity, with a Hill coefficient of 1.4, which suggested the regulation of Ca2+-ATPase by allosteric effectors. The presence and the activator role of endogenous calmodulin in smooth muscle sarcolemma was proved by calmodulin-depletion experiments and by using suitable anticalmodulinic concentrations of trifluoperazine. The addition of exogenous calmodulin restored the enzyme activity. Apparently, the concentration of calmodulin in isolated smooth muscle sarcolemma is about 0.1% of sarcolemmal proteins, as deduced from the comparison of calmodulin-depletion and calmodulin-readdition experiments. Calmodulin increased significantly the enzyme Ca2+-affinity and Vmax (by a factor of about 10). At variance with the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase, the sarcolemmal Ca2+-ATPase is extremely sensitive to orthovanadate, half-maximal inhibition being observed at 0.8 microM vanadate. In conclusion, the Ca2+-ATPase isolated from smooth muscle sarcolemma appears very similar to the well-known Ca2+-pump ATPases of erythrocyte membrane, heart sarcolemma or axolemma. We suggest that this high-affinity Ca2+-ATPase represents the calmodulin-regulated Ca2+-extrusion pump of the smooth muscle sarcolemma.  相似文献   

12.
The Ca2+ pump of the plasma membrane of human red blood cells is associated with the activity of a (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. Both the ATPase and the pump are stimulated above basal activities by calmodulin, an ubiquitous Ca2+-binding protein. Calmodulin isolated from human red blood cells was shown to be equipotent and equieffective with that isolated from beef brain. Half-maximal activation of ATPase (isolated red blood cell membranes, 37 C) and transport (inside-out red blood cell membrane vesicles, 25 C) were obtained with 2.5 and 4.4 nM calmodulin, respectively. Ca2+ dependence of Ca2+ transport was measured in the absence and in the presence of 50 nM calmodulin. At all Ca2+ concentrations above 2 X 10(-7) M Ca2+, the rate of transport was greater in the presence of calmodulin. The results implicate calmodulin in the regulation of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump, but the mechanism(s) remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
A plasma membrane-enriched fraction from rat myometrium shows ATP-Mg2+-dependent active calcium uptake which is independent of the presence of oxalate and is abolished by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Ca2+ loaded into vesicles via the ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake was released by extravesicular Na+. This showed that the Na+/Ca2+ exchange and the Ca2+ uptake were both occurring in plasma membrane vesicles. In a medium containing KCl, vanadate readily inhibited the Ca2+ uptake (K1/2 5 microM); when sucrose replaced KCl, 400 microM-vanadate was required for half inhibition. Only a slight stimulation of the calcium pump by calmodulin was observed in untreated membrane vesicles. Extraction of endogenous calmodulin from the membranes by EGTA decreased the activity and Ca2+ affinity of the calcium pump; both activity and affinity were fully restored by adding back calmodulin or by limited proteolysis. A monoclonal antibody (JA3) directed against the human erythrocyte Ca2+ pump reacted with the 140 kDa Ca2+-pump protein of the myometrial plasma membrane. The Ca2+-ATPase activity of these membranes is not specific for ATP, and is not inhibited by mercurial agents, whereas Ca2+ uptake has the opposite properties. Ca2+-ATPase activity is also over 100 times that of calcium transport; it appears that the ATPase responsible for transport is largely masked by the presence of another Ca2+-ATPase of unknown function. Measurements of total Ca2+-ATPase activity are, therefore, probably not directly relevant to the question of intracellular Ca2+ control.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of regucalcin, which is a regulatory protein of Ca(2+) signaling, on Ca(2+)-ATPase activity in isolated rat renal cortex mitochondria was investigated. The presence of regucalcin (50, 100, and 250 nM) in the enzyme reaction mixture led to a significant increase in Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. Regucalcin significantly stimulated ATP-dependent (45)Ca(2+) uptake by the mitochondria. Ruthenium red (10(-6) M) or lanthunum chloride (10(-6) M), an inhibitor of mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake, markedly inhibited regucalcin (100 nM)-increased mitochondrial Ca(2+)-ATPase activity and (45)Ca(2+) uptake. The effect of regucalcin (100 nM) in elevating Ca(2+)-ATPase activity was completely prevented by the presence of digitonin (10(-2)%), a solubilizing reagent of membranous lipids, vanadate, an inhibitor of phosphorylation of ATPase, or dithiothreitol (50 mM), a protecting reagent of the sulfhydryl (SH) group of the enzyme. The activating effect of regucalcin (100 nM) on Ca(2+)-ATPase activity was not further enhanced by calmodulin (0.30 microM) or dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10(-4) M), which could increase Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. Trifluoperazine (TFP; 50 microM), an antagonist of calmodulin, significantly decreased Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. The activating effect of regucalcin on the enzyme was also seen in the presence of TFP, indicating that regucalcin's effect is not involved in mitochondrial calmodulin. The present study demonstrates that regucalcin can stimulate Ca(2+)-pump activity in rat renal cortex mitochondria, and that the protein may act on an active site (SH group) related to phosphorylation of mitochondrial Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

16.
The plasma membrane calcium-ATPase (PMCA) helps to control cytosolic calcium levels by pumping out excess Ca2+. PMCA is regulated by the Ca2+ signaling protein calmodulin (CaM), which stimulates PMCA activity by binding to an autoinhibitory domain of PMCA. We used single-molecule polarization methods to investigate the mechanism of regulation of the PMCA by CaM fluorescently labeled with tetramethylrhodamine. The orientational mobility of PMCA-CaM complexes was determined from the extent of modulation of single-molecule fluorescence upon excitation with a rotating polarization. At a high Ca2+ concentration, the distribution of modulation depths reveals that CaM bound to PMCA is orientationally mobile, as expected for a dissociated autoinhibitory domain of PMCA. In contrast, at a reduced Ca2+ concentration a population of PMCA-CaM complexes appears with significantly reduced orientational mobility. This population can be attributed to PMCA-CaM complexes in which the autoinhibitory domain is not dissociated, and thus the PMCA is inactive. The presence of these complexes demonstrates the inadequacy of a two-state model of Ca2+ pump activation and suggests a regulatory role for the low-mobility state of the complex. When ATP is present, only the high-mobility state is detected, revealing an altered interaction between the autoinhibitory and nucleotide-binding domains.  相似文献   

17.
The plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase in neuronal tissue plays an important role in fine tuning of the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. The enzyme exhibits a high degree of tissue specificity and is regulated by several mechanisms. Here we analysed the relationship between separate modes of Ca(2+)-ATPase regulation, i.e., reversible phosphorylation processes mediated by protein kinases A and C, protein phosphatases PP1 and PP2A, and stimulation by calmodulin. The activity of PKA- or PKC-phosphorylated Ca(2+)-ATPase was influenced by the further addition of calmodulin, and this effect was more pronounced for PKC-phosphorylated calcium pump. In both cases the fluorescence study revealed the increased calmodulin binding, and for PKA-mediated phosphorylation it was correlated with a higher affinity of calcium pump for calmodulin. The incubation of Ca(2+)-ATPase with CaM prior to protein kinases action revealed that CaM presence counteracts the stimulatory effect of PKA and PKC. Under the in vitro assay cortical Ca(2+)-ATPase was a substrate for PP1 and PP2A. Protein phosphatases decreased both the basal activity of Ca(2+)-ATPase and its affinity for calmodulin. Fluorescence analysis confirmed the lowered ability of dephosphorylated Ca(2+)-ATPase for calmodulin binding. These results may suggest that interaction of CaM with calcium pump and its stimulatory action could be a partly separate phenomenon that is dependent on the phosphorylation state of Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

18.
Purified Ca(2+)-stimulated, Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase (Ca(2+)-ATPase) from human erythrocytes was phosphorylated with a stoichiometry of about 1 mol of phosphate/mol of ATPase at both threonine and serine residues by purified rat brain type III protein kinase C. In the presence of calmodulin, the phosphorylation was markedly reduced. Labeled phosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP was retained on an 86-kDa calmodulin-binding tryptic fragment of Ca(2+)-ATPase but not on 82- and 77-kDa non-calmodulin-binding fragments. Similarly, fragmentation of the phosphorylated Ca(2+)-ATPase by calpain I revealed that calmodulin-binding fragments (127 and 125 kDa) retained phosphate label whereas a non-calmodulin-binding fragment (124 kDa) did not. The calmodulin-binding domain, located about 12 kDa from the carboxyl terminus of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, was thus located as a site of protein kinase C phosphorylation. A synthetic peptide corresponding to a segment of the calmodulin-binding domain (H2 N-R-G-L-N-R-I-Q-T-Q-I-K-V-V-N-COOH) was indeed phosphorylated at the single threonine residue within this sequence. The additional serine phosphorylation site was carboxyl terminal to the calmodulin domain. Phosphorylation by purified type III protein kinase C (canine heart) antagonized the calmodulin activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, particularly at lower Ca2+ concentrations (0.2-1.0 microM). By contrast, a purified but unresolved protein kinase C isoenzyme mixture from rat brain stimulated the activity of Ca(2+)-ATPase prepared in asolectin, but not glycerol, by more than 2-fold in the presence of the ionophore A23187, without increasing its Ca2+ sensitivity. The results clearly indicate that human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase is a substrate of protein kinase C, but the effect of phosphorylation on the activity of the enzyme depends on the isoenzyme form of protein kinase C used and on the lipid associated with the Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

19.
Calmodulin has been shown to stimulate the initial rates of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, when it is present in the reaction assay media for these activities. To determine whether the stimulatory effect of calmodulin is mediated directly through its interaction with the Ca2+-ATPase, or indirectly through phosphorylation of phospholamban by an endogenous protein kinase, two approaches were taken in the present study. In the first approach, the effects of calmodulin were studied on a Ca2+-ATPase preparation, isolated from cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, which was essentially free of phospholamban. The enzyme was preincubated with various concentrations of calmodulin at 0 degrees C and 37 degrees C, but there was no effect on the Ca2+-ATPase activity assayed over a wide range of [Ca2+] (0.1-10 microM). In the second approach, cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were prephosphorylated by an endogenous protein kinase in the presence of calmodulin. Phosphorylation occurred predominantly on phospholamban, an oligomeric proteolipid. The sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were washed prior to assaying for Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-ATPase activity in order to remove the added calmodulin. Phosphorylation of phospholamban enhanced the initial rates of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase, and this stimulation was associated with an increase in the affinity of the Ca2+-pump for calcium. The EC50 values for calcium activation of Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-ATPase were 0.96 +/- 0.03 microM and 0.96 +/- 0.1 microM calcium by control vesicles, respectively. Phosphorylation decreased these values to 0.64 +/- 0.12 microM calcium for Ca2+-uptake and 0.62 +/- 0.11 microM calcium for Ca2+-ATPase. The stimulatory effect was associated with increases in the apparent initial rates of formation and decomposition of the phosphorylated intermediate of the Ca2+-ATPase. These findings suggest that calmodulin regulates cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum function by protein kinase-mediated phosphorylation of phospholamban.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of phosphorylation by cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (G-kinase) on the activity of the plasmalemmal Ca2+-transport ATPase was studied on isolated plasma membranes and on the ATPase purified from pig erythrocytes and from the smooth muscle of pig stomach and pig aorta. Incubation with G-kinase resulted, in both smooth-muscle preparations, but not in the erythrocyte ATPase, in a higher Ca2+ affinity and in an increase in the maximal rate of Ca2+ uptake. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase) did not exert such an effect. The stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-dependent ATPase activity of the purified Ca2+ pump reconstituted in liposomes depended on the phospholipid used for reconstitution. The stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity by G-kinase was only observed in the presence of phosphatidylinositol (PI). G-kinase, but not A-kinase, stimulated the phosphorylation of PI to phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP) in a preparation of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase obtained by calmodulin affinity chromatography from smooth muscle, but not in a similar preparation from erythrocytes. Adenosine inhibited both the phosphorylation of PI and the stimulation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase by G-kinase. In the absence of G-kinase the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was stimulated by the addition of PIP, but not by PI. In contrast with previous results of Furukawa & Nakamura [(1987) J. Biochem (Tokyo) 101, 287-290], no convincing evidence for a phosphorylation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was found. Evidence is presented showing that the apparent phosphorylation occurs in a contaminant protein, possibly myosin light-chain kinase. It is proposed that G-kinase stimulates the plasmalemmal Ca2+ pump of smooth-muscle cells indirectly via the phosphorylation of an associated PI kinase.  相似文献   

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