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1.
The primary sequence of non-gastric H,K-ATPase differs much more between species than that of Na,K-ATPase or gastric H,K-ATPase. To investigate whether this causes species-dependent differences in enzymatic properties, we co-expressed the catalytic subunit of human non-gastric H,K-ATPase in Sf9 cells with the beta(1) subunit of rat Na,K-ATPase and compared its properties with those of the rat enzyme (Swarts et al., J. Biol. Chem. 280, 33115-33122, 2005). Maximal ATPase activity was obtained with NH(4)(+) as activating cation. The enzyme was also stimulated by Na(+), but in contrast to the rat enzyme, hardly by K(+). SCH 28080 inhibited the NH(4)(+)-stimulated activity of the human enzyme much more potently than that of the rat enzyme. The steady-state phosphorylation level of the human enzyme decreased with increasing pH, [K(+)], and [Na(+)] and nearly doubled in the presence of oligomycin. Oligomycin increased the sensitivity of the phosphorylated intermediate to ADP, demonstrating that it inhibited the conversion of E(1)P to E(2)P. All three cations stimulated the dephosphorylation rate dose-dependently. Our studies support a role of the human enzyme in H(+)/Na(+) and/or H(+)/NH(4)(+) transport but not in Na(+)/K(+) transport.  相似文献   

2.
Recent studies have suggested that the colonic H+,K+-ATPase (HKalpha2) can secrete either Na+ or H+ in exchange for K+. If correct, this view would indicate that the transporter could function as either a Na+ or a H+ pump. To investigate this possibility a series of experiments was performed using apical membranes from rat colon which were enriched in colonic H+,K+-ATPase protein. An antibody specific for HKalpha2 was employed to determine whether HKalpha2 functions under physiological conditions as a Na+-dependent or Na+-independent K+-ATPase in this same membrane fraction. K+-ATPase activity was measured as [gamma-32P]ATP hydrolysis. The Na+-dependent K+-ATPase accounted for approximately 80% of overall K+-ATPase activity and was characterized by insensitivity to Sch-28080 but partial sensitivity to ouabain. The Na+-independent K+-ATPase activity was insensitive to both Sch-28080 and ouabain. Both types of K+-ATPase activity substituted NH4+ for K+ in a similar manner. Furthermore, our results demonstrate that when incubated with native distal colon membranes, the blocking antibody inhibited dramatically Na+-dependent K+-ATPase activity. Therefore, these data demonstrate that HKalpha2 can function in native distal colon apical membranes as a Na+-dependent K+-ATPase. Elucidation of the role of the pump as a transporter of Na+ versus H+ or NH4+ versus K+ in vivo will require additional studies.  相似文献   

3.
To better comprehend the mechanisms of ionic regulation, we investigate the modulation by Na+, K+, NH4(+) and ATP of the (Na+, K+)-ATPase in a microsomal fraction from Callinectes ornatus gills. ATP hydrolysis obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with KM=0.61+/-0.03 mmol L(-1) and maximal rate of V=116.3+/-5.4 U mg(-1). Stimulation by Na+ (V=110.6+/-6.1 U mg(-1); K0.5=6.3+/-0.2 mmol L(-1)), Mg2+ (V=111.0+/-4.7 U mg(-1); K0.5=0.53+/-0.03 mmol L(-1)), NH4(+) (V=173.3+/-6.9 U mg(-1); K0.5=5.4+/-0.2 mmol L(-1)) and K+ (V=116.0+/-4.9 U mg(-1); K0.5=1.5+/-0.1 mmol L(-1)) followed a single saturation curve, although revealing site-site interactions. In the absence of NH4(+), ouabain (K(I)=74.5+/-1.2 micromol L(-1)) and orthovanadate inhibited ATPase activity by up to 87%; the inhibition patterns suggest the presence of F0F1 and K+-ATPases but not Na+-, V- or Ca2+-ATPase as contaminants. (Na+, K+)-ATPase activity was synergistically modulated by K+ and NH4(+). At 10 mmol L(-1) K+, increasing NH4(+) concentrations stimulated maximum activity to V=185.9+/-7.4 U mg(-1). However, at saturating NH4(+) (50 mmol L(-1)), increasing K+ concentrations did not stimulate activity further. Our findings provide evidence that the C. ornatus gill (Na+, K+)-ATPase may be particularly well suited for extremely efficient active NH4(+) excretion. At elevated NH4(+) concentrations, the enzyme is fully active, regardless of hemolymph K+ concentration, and K+ cannot displace NH4(+) from its exclusive binding sites. Further, the binding of NH4(+) to its specific sites induces an increase in enzyme apparent affinity for K+, which may contribute to maintaining K+ transport, assuring that exposure to elevated ammonia concentrations does not lead to a decrease in intracellular potassium levels. This is the first report of modulation by ammonium ions of C. ornatus gill (Na+, K+)-ATPase, and should further our understanding of NH4(+) excretion in benthic crabs.  相似文献   

4.
We previously demonstrated that the alpha-subunit of human nongastric H,K-ATPase (Atp1al1) can assemble with the gastric H,K-ATPase beta-subunit (betaHK) into an active ion pump upon coexpression in Xenopus oocytes. To gain insight into enzymatic functions, we have analyzed the Atp1al1-betaHK complex using a baculovirus expression system. The efficient formation of the functional Atp1al1-betaHK complex in membranes of Sf-21 insect cells was obtained upon co-infection with recombinant baculoviruses expressing Atp1al1 and betaHK. Expression of either protein alone did not produce active ATPase. The effects of K(+), Na(+), pH, and ATP and inhibitors on ATPase activity of the recombinant Atp1al1-betaHK complex were analyzed. The Atp1al1-betaHK complex was shown to exhibit significant ATPase activity in nominally K(+)-free medium. The addition of K(+) stimulated the ATP hydrolysis up to 3-fold with K(m) approximately 116 microM K(+). The ATPase activity was moderately sensitive to ouabain and to SCH 28080 with apparent K(i) values in K(+)-free medium of approximately 64 microM and approximately 93 microM, respectively. Potassium exhibited strong antagonism toward both inhibitors. Assays of the ouabain-sensitive ATPase activity revealed inhibitory effects of Na(+) with the apparent K(i) of approximately 24 mM in the absence of added K(+) and with K(i) within the range of 60-70 mM in the presence of > or = 1 mM K(+). Thus, the human nongastric H,K-ATPase represented by the recombinant Atp1al1-betaHK complex exhibits enzymatic properties of K(+)-dependent ATPase sensitive to ouabain, SCH 28080, and Na(+). It differs from Na,K-ATPase in cation dependence and differs from gastric H,K-ATPase and Na,K-ATPase in sensitivity to inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
Scopadulcic acid B (SA-B), a novel diterpenoid, is a main ingredient of the Paraguayan traditional medicinal herb "Typychá kuratú (Scoparia dulcis L.). SA-B and its debenzoyl derivative, diacetyl scopadol (DAS), specifically inhibit ATP hydrolysis of gastric H+,K(+)-ATPase. Both compounds inhibit the K(+)-dependent dephosphorylation step of the enzyme without any effect on the phosphorylation step. SA-B is a mixed-type inhibitor with respect to the activating cation, K+. SA-B lowers the affinity of H+,K(+)-ATPase to K+ and decreases the maximal velocity of ATP hydrolysis, whereas DAS is an uncompetitive inhibitor with respect to K+. Furthermore, the effects of SA-B and DAS on conformational states of the ATPase were studied by measuring the changes in the fluorescence intensity of the fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled enzyme. The fluorescence study shows that SA-B primarily binds to the E2K form in the presence of Mg2+ and stabilizes the form and that DAS stabilizes the E2PK form. Therefore, the chemical modification of SA-B, debenzoylation, induced the changes in the pattern of inhibition of H+,K(+)-ATPase. Furthermore, the inhibition mechanisms of SA-B and DAS were different from those of omeprazole, which is an irreversible inhibitor, and SCH 28080, which is a reversible, competitive inhibitor with respect to K+. DAS also inhibited the K(+)-dependent p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity, and the inhibition was competitive with respect to K+, indicating that the K(+)-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity does not represent the partial reaction step of H+,K(+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

6.
Asn792 present in M5 of gastric H,K-ATPase is highly conserved within the P-type ATPase family. A direct role in K+ binding was postulated for Na,K-ATPase but was not found in a recent model for gastric H,K-ATPase (Koenderink, J. B., Swarts, H. G. P., Willems, P. H. G. M., Krieger, E., and De Pont, J. J. H. H. M. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 16417-16424). Therefore, its role in K+ binding and E1/E2 conformational equilibrium in gastric H,K-ATPase was studied by site-directed mutagenesis and expression in Sf9 cells. N792Q and N792A, but not N792D and N792E, had a markedly reduced K+ affinity in both the ATPase and dephosphorylation reactions. In addition, N792A shifted the conformational equilibrium to the E1 form. In double mutants, the effect of N792A on K+ sensitivity was overruled by either E820Q (K(+)-independent activity) or E343D (no dephosphorylation activity). Models were made for the mutants based on the E2 structure of Ca(2+)-ATPase. In the wild-type model the acid amide group of Asn792 has hydrogen bridges to Lys791, Ala339, and Val341. Comparison of the effects of the various mutants suggests that the hydrogen bridge between the carbonyl oxygen of Asn792 and the amino group of Lys791 is essential for the K+ sensitivity and the E2 preference of wild-type enzyme. Moreover, there was a high positive correlation (r = 0.98) between the in silico calculated energy difference of the E2 form (mutants versus wild type) and the experimentally measured IC50 values for vanadate, which reflects the direction of the E2<-->E1 conformational equilibrium. These data strongly support the validity of the model in which Asn792 participates in the hydrogen bond network around the K(+)-binding pocket.  相似文献   

7.
Uncoupling the red cell sodium pump by proteolysis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In situ proteolysis of Na,K-ATPase was studied using inside-out red cell membrane vesicles. Proteolysis of the enzyme in its "E1" conformation with either trypsin or chymotrypsin inactivated cation translocation more than ATP hydrolysis. This was evident both in the absence of intravesicular alkali cations when Na-ATPase was compared to ATP-dependent 22Na+ influx, and in the presence of K+ when Na+/K+ exchange was compared to (Na+ + K+)-activated ATPase. This differential loss in pump versus hydrolysis was observed also when the activities of only intact, non-leaky vesicles were compared and therefore reflects intramolecular uncoupling rather than nonspecific leakage. Although oligomycin and thimerosal, like trypsin and chymotrypsin, inhibit the enzyme's conformational step(s), neither effect uncoupling. It is concluded that specific cleavage(s) of Na,K-ATPase, at least as it exists in situ, alters the reaction sequence with respect to the normal ordered mechanism. Accordingly, cytoplasmic Na+ and extracellular K+ bind to the enzyme, stimulate phosphorylation (ATP + E1----E1P + ADP) and dephosphorylation (E2P----E2 + Pi), respectively, but each is then released to the same side from which it had bound; presumably release occurs prior to the conformational transitions of E1P to E2P and E2 to E1. This conclusion is supported by experiments showing that, ar micromolar ATP concentration, the hydrolytic activity (Na-ATPase) of the trypsinized but not the unmodified enzyme is stimulated by K+, consistent with earlier experiments (Hegyvary, C., and Post, R. L. (1971) J. Biol. Chem. 246, 5234-5240) showing that the K X E2 to K X E1 transition is slower than the E2 to E1 transition.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The presence of a cation inhibitory site on the dephosphoform of the H+, K+ -ATPase was confirmed by comparing the effects of K+ and NH4+ on overall activity and on phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Inhibition of ATPase activity was pronounced at high cation/ATP ratios, but NH4+ was much less effective. At 60 mM cation, although the ATPase activity was greater in the presence of NH4+ (17.1 mumol/mg.h) as compared to K+ (5.1 mumol/mg.h), dephosphorylation of preformed phosphoenzyme was faster with K+ (2101 min-1) than with NH4+ (1401 min-1). Increasing K+ concentrations at the cytosolic face of the enzyme, at constant ATP, decreased the rate of phosphorylation from 1343 to 360 min-1 at 25 mM K+. Increasing ATP concentrations in the presence of constant K+ concentrations accelerated ATPase activity and increased the steady-state phosphoenzyme level. Therefore, inhibition by cations was due to cation stabilization of a dephospho form of the enzyme at a cytosolically accessible cation-binding site. ATP promoted cation dissociation from this site. In ion-permeable vesicles, increasing K+ concentrations, at constant ATP, activated and then inhibited ATPase activity, with a K0.5(I) of 22 mM. In intact, ion-impermeable inside-out vesicles, in the presence of valinomycin, ATPase activity increased up to 175 mM K+. Collapse of this potential by the addition of the electrogenic protonophore 3,3',4', 5-tetrachlorosalicylanilide restored the K+ inhibition of ATPase activity. Thus, the cation inhibition of the ATPase activity appears to be voltage-sensitive; and hence, its connection to the voltage sensitivity of acid secretion demonstrated in intact gastric mucosa is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Defining the structural and catalytic properties of the ion transport site(s) of enzyme-phosphorylating ATPases is of key importance in understanding the mechanism of ion transport by these enzymes. In the case of the H+, K(+)-ATPase, SCH 28080 (3-(cyanomethyl)-2-methyl-8-(phenylmethoxy)imidazo[1,2a]-pyridine) has been shown to act as a high affinity, extracytosolic, K(+)-competitive inhibitor of Mg2+, K(+)-ATPase activity (Wallmark, B., Briving, C., Fryklund, J., Munson, K., Jackson, R., Mendlein, J., Rabon, E., and Sachs, G. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2077-2084). To define the nature of the SCH 28080-binding site in relation to the catalytic cycle of the enzyme, we have investigated the effects of this potential K+ transport site probe on the steady-state and partial reactions of the H+, K(+)-ATPase. In the absence of K+, SCH 28080 inhibits Mg2(+)-ATPase activity with high affinity (apparent Ki = 30 nM). Inhibition is due to K(+)-like prevention of phosphoenzyme formation. SCH 28080 has no effect on Mg2(+)-catalyzed dephosphorylation. SCH 28080, at concentrations less than 0.5 microM, increases the apparent Km for K+ for Mg2+, K(+)-ATPase activity with little effect on the maximum velocity. At higher concentrations of SCH 28080, reversal of inhibition by higher K+ concentrations is not complete, due to inhibition of ATPase activity by high K+. In contrast, SCH 28080 inhibits K(+)-stimulated dephosphorylation by competitively displacing K+ from phosphoenzyme with an extracytosolic conformation of the monovalent cation site (E2P) at low concentrations of SCH 28080 and K+. At higher concentrations, 10 microM SCH 28080 and 50 mM K+, a slowly dephosphorylating complex with both SCH 28080 and K+ bound to E2P may form which represents a small fraction of the total E2P (15-25%). Preincubation of SCH 28080 with E2P completely blocks K(+)-stimulated dephosphorylation, and K+ is unable to reverse this preincubation effect, indicating that the SCH 28080 dissociation rate is at least as slow as K(+)-independent dephosphorylation of E2P. These findings indicate that SCH 28080 inhibits K(+)-stimulated ATPase activity by competing with K+ for binding to E2P and blocking K(+)-stimulated dephosphorylation. In the absence of K+, SCH 28080 has a higher apparent affinity for E2P, but it permits K(+)-independent dephosphorylation. Since the dissociation rate of SCH 28080 from the enzyme is slow, phosphoenzyme formation is prevented by SCH 28080 remaining bound to the extracytosolic conformation of the monovalent cation site, thereby reducing the steady-state level of phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of detergents and free fatty acids on the K(+)-activated ATPase activity and on the steady-state phosphorylation level of pig gastric H,K-ATPase were studied. Unsaturated free fatty acids inhibited the K(+)-activated ATPase activity, due to inactivation of the enzyme (long-term effects) and to a decrease in the K(+)-sensitive dephosphorylation rate (short-term effects). The degree of inhibition depended on the reaction conditions: the protein concentration, the temperature and the ligands used. No effect was observed when saturated- or methylated unsaturated fatty acids were tested. Free fatty acids and the detergent C12E8 increased the steady-state ATP phosphorylation level, indicating the presence of vesicular structures in the H,K-ATPase preparations. At higher concentrations these compounds inactivated H,K-ATPase, which was measured as a decrease in phosphorylation capacity. By combining the data from the ATP phosphorylation level in the absence and presence of C12E8 (without inactivation) and the data from the K(+)-activated ATPase activity with and without ionophore the tightness of vesicular preparations and the orientation of H,K-ATPase was determined. A rather simple method for the isolation of H,K-ATPase is reported, which yields highly purified H,K-ATPase preparations with a ATP phosphorylation capacity of 3.9 nmol P per mg protein or 0.57 mol P per mol alpha beta protomer. This number suggests that each alpha-subunit H,K-ATPase can be phosphorylated at the same time.  相似文献   

12.
Palytoxin (PTX) inhibits the (Na(+) + K+)-driven pump and simultaneously opens channels that are equally permeable to Na+ and K+ in red cells and other cell membranes. In an effort to understand the mechanism by which PTX induces these fluxes, we have studied the effects of PTX on: 1) K+ and Na+ occlusion by the pump protein; 2) phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of the enzyme when a phosphoenzyme is formed from ATP and from P(i); and 3) p-nitro phenyl phosphatase (p-NPPase) activity associated with the (Na+, K+)-ATPase. We have found that palytoxin 1) increases the rate of deocclusion of K+(Rb+) in a time- and concentration-dependent manner, whereas Na+ occluded in the presence of oligomycin is unaffected by the toxin; 2) makes phosphorylation from P(i) insensitive to K+, and 3) stimulates the p-NPPase activity. The results are consistent with the notion that PTX produces a conformation of the Na+, K(+)-pump that resembles the one observed when ATP is bound to its low-affinity binding site. Further, they suggest that the channels that are formed by PTX might arise as a consequence of a perturbation in the ATPase structure, leading to the loss of control of the outside "gate" of the enzyme and hence to an uncoupling of the ion transport from the catalytic function of the ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
A monoclonal antibody (mAb50c) against the native porcine renal Na+/K(+)-transporting adenosinetriphosphatase (EC 3.6.1.37, ATP phosphohydrolase) (Na+/K(+)-ATPase) was characterized. The antibody could be classified as a conformation-dependent antibody, since it did not bind to Na+/K(+)-ATPase denatured by detergent and its binding was affected by the normal conformational changes of the enzyme induced by ligands. The binding was the greatest in the presence of Na+, ATP or Mg2+ (E1 form), slightly less in the presence of K+ (E2K form) and the least when the enzyme was phosphorylated, especially in the actively hydrolyzing form in the presence of Na+, Mg2+ and ATP. The antibody inhibited both the Na+,K(+)-ATPase activity and the K(+)-dependent p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity by 25%, but it had no effect on Na(+)-dependent ATPase activity. The antibody partially inhibited the fluorescence changes of the enzyme labeled with 5'-isothiocyanatofluorescein after the addition of orthophosphate and Mg2+, and after the addition of ouabain. Proteolytic studies suggest that a part of the epitope is located on the cytoplasmic surface of the N-terminal half of the alpha-subunit.  相似文献   

14.
G Blanco  R J Melton  G Sánchez  R W Mercer 《Biochemistry》1999,38(41):13661-13669
Different isoforms of the sodium/potassium adenosinetriphosphatase (Na,K-ATPase) alpha and beta subunits have been identified in mammals. The association of the various alpha and beta polypeptides results in distinct Na,K-ATPase isozymes with unique enzymatic properties. We studied the function of the Na,K-ATPase alpha4 isoform in Sf-9 cells using recombinant baculoviruses. When alpha4 and the Na pump beta1 subunit are coexpressed in the cells, Na, K-ATPase activity is induced. This activity is reflected by a ouabain-sensitive hydrolysis of ATP, by a Na(+)-dependent, K(+)-sensitive, and ouabain-inhibitable phosphorylation from ATP, and by the ouabain-inhibitable transport of K(+). Furthermore, the activity of alpha4 is inhibited by the P-type ATPase blocker vanadate but not by compounds that inhibit the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase or the gastric H,K-ATPase. The Na,K-ATPase alpha4 isoform is specifically expressed in the testis of the rat. The gonad also expresses the beta1 and beta3 subunits. In insect cells, the alpha4 polypeptide is able to form active complexes with either of these subunits. Characterization of the enzymatic properties of the alpha4beta1 and alpha4beta3 isozymes indicates that both Na,K-ATPases have similar kinetics to Na(+), K(+), ATP, and ouabain. The enzymatic properties of alpha4beta1 and alpha4beta3 are, however, distinct from the other Na pump isozymes. A Na, K-ATPase activity with similar properties as the alpha4-containing enzymes was found in rat testis. This Na,K-ATPase activity represents approximately 55% of the total enzyme of the gonad. These results show that the alpha4 polypeptide is a functional isoform of the Na,K-ATPase both in vitro and in the native tissue.  相似文献   

15.
The primary sequence of non-gastric H,K-ATPase differs much more between species than that of Na,K-ATPase or gastric H,K-ATPase. To investigate whether this causes species-dependent differences in enzymatic properties, we co-expressed the catalytic subunit of human non-gastric H,K-ATPase in Sf9 cells with the β1 subunit of rat Na,K-ATPase and compared its properties with those of the rat enzyme (Swarts et al., J. Biol. Chem. 280, 33115-33122, 2005). Maximal ATPase activity was obtained with NH4+ as activating cation. The enzyme was also stimulated by Na+, but in contrast to the rat enzyme, hardly by K+. SCH 28080 inhibited the NH4+-stimulated activity of the human enzyme much more potently than that of the rat enzyme. The steady-state phosphorylation level of the human enzyme decreased with increasing pH, [K+], and [Na+] and nearly doubled in the presence of oligomycin. Oligomycin increased the sensitivity of the phosphorylated intermediate to ADP, demonstrating that it inhibited the conversion of E1P to E2P. All three cations stimulated the dephosphorylation rate dose-dependently. Our studies support a role of the human enzyme in H+/Na+ and/or H+/NH4+ transport but not in Na+/K+ transport.  相似文献   

16.
S. cervi showed particulate bound Ca2+ ATPase and Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities while Mg2+ ATPase was detected in traces. ATPase of S. cervi was also differentiated from the nonspecific p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity. Female parasite and microfilariae exhibited higher Ca2+ ATPase and Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities than the male adults and the enzyme Na+,K(+)-ATPase was mainly concentrated in the gastrointestinal tract of the filarial parasite. Na+,K(+)-ATPase of the filariid was ouabain-sensitive while Ca2(+)-ATPase activity was regulated by concentration of Ca2+ ions and inhibited by EGTA. Phenothiazines, viz. trifluoperazine, promethazine and chlorpromazine caused significant inhibition of Ca2+ ATPase and Na+,K(+)-ATPase. Diethylcarbamazine was a potent inhibitor of these ATPases. Mebendazole, levamisole and centperazine also caused significant inhibition of the ATPases indicating this enzyme system as a common target for the action of anthelmintic drugs.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
D M Chipman  A Lev 《Biochemistry》1983,22(19):4450-4459
Glutaraldehyde treatment of electroplax membrane preparations of Na,K-ATPase leads to irreversible changes in the enzymic behavior of the protein, which are not due to modification of the active site. When the glutaraldehyde treatment is carried out in a medium containing K+ and without Na+, the "K+-modified enzyme" so produced shows the following changes in enzymic properties: The steady-state phosphorylation by ATP and the rate of ATP-ADP exchange are decreased to approximately 40% of control, while Na,K-ATPase activity decreases to approximately 15% of control. Phosphatase activity is decreased very little, but the potassium activation parameters of the reaction are changed, from K0.5 approximately equal to 5 mM and nH = 1.9 in control to K0.5 approximately equal to 0.5 mM and nH = 1 in K+-modified enzyme. KI(app) for nucleotide inhibition of phosphatase activity is increased significantly. Changes in the cation dependence of the ATPase reaction are also observed. All of these effects can be explained by assuming that the cross-linking of surface groups in protein subunits when they are in conformation E2 shifts the intrinsic conformational equilibrium of the enzyme toward E2. We considered the simplest mathematical model for the coupling between K+ binding and the conformational equilibrium, with equivalent potassium sites that must be simultaneously in the same state. If one assumes that the potassium activation of phosphatase activity in the K+-modified enzyme reflects the affinity for K+ of E2, the behavior of the phosphatase activity in the native enzyme can be fit if there are only two potassium sites, whose affinity is 80-fold higher in E2 than in E1, and the equilibrium constant for E2 in equilibrium E1 is about 250. The same sites can explain the activation of dephosphorylation during ATP hydrolysis. Independent of the model chosen, potassium ions must be required for the catalytic action of form E2 and cannot be merely "allosteric activators". The enzyme modified with glutaraldehyde in a medium containing Na+ also has interesting properties, but their rationalization is less straightforward. The Na,K-ATPase activity is inhibited more than the "partial reactions", as in the K+-modified enzyme. We suggest that this is a generally expected result of modifications of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Gastric H(+),K(+)-ATPase consists of alpha-subunit with 10 transmembrane domains and beta-subunit with a single transmembrane domain. We constructed cDNAs encoding chimeric beta-subunits between the gastric H(+),K(+)-ATPase and Na(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunits and co-transfected them with the H(+),K(+)-ATPase alpha-subunit cDNA in HEK-293 cells. A chimeric beta-subunit that consists of the cytoplasmic plus transmembrane domains of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit and the ectodomain of H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit assembled with the H(+),K(+)-ATPase alpha-subunit and expressed the K(+)-ATPase activity. Therefore, the whole cytoplasmic and transmembrane domains of H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit were replaced by those of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit without losing the enzyme activity. However, most parts of the ectodomain of H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit were not replaced by the corresponding domains of Na(+), K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit. Interestingly, the extracellular segment between Cys(152) and Cys(178), which contains the second disulfide bond, was exchangeable between H(+),K(+)-ATPase and Na(+), K(+)-ATPase, preserving the K(+)-ATPase activity intact. Furthermore, the K(+)-ATPase activity was preserved when the N-terminal first 4 amino acids ((67)DPYT(70)) in the ectodomain of H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit were replaced by the corresponding amino acids ((63)SDFE(66)) of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit. The ATPase activity was abolished, however, when 4 amino acids ((76)QLKS(79)) in the ectodomain of H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit were replaced by the counterpart ((72)RVAP(75)) of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit, indicating that this region is the most N-terminal one that discriminates the H(+),K(+)-ATPase beta-subunit from that of Na(+), K(+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
1. Branchial Na+K+-ATPase specific activity is some 20% greater in hyposaline adapted Opsanus beta than in SW specimens. 2. Ouabain insensitive ATPase (Mg2+-ATPase) specific activities were similar, while whole body activity differences in low salinity and SW adapted fish could be accounted for by the 30% difference in extractable gill protein. 3. NH+4 ion was 15% more effective at dephosphorylation of the microsomal Na-dependent phosphoenzyme than either Rb+ or K+, and revealed a maximal ATPase affinity (Km = 0.2 mM) within the physiological range of blood [K+]. 4. Similar properties as pH optima, ATP and Mg2+ Km's, ouabain sensitivity, percent recoveries and subcell distribution indicated that the NH+4-stimulation acts through the Na+ K+-ATPase carrier enzyme and may be responsible for the Na+/NH+4 exchange in Opsanus beta.  相似文献   

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