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1.
Time-resolved measurements of charge translocation and phosphorylation kinetics during the pre-steady state of the NaK-ATPase reaction cycle are presented. NaK-ATPase-containing microsomes prepared from the electric organ of Electrophorus electricus were adsorbed to planar lipid bilayers for investigation of charge translocation, while rapid acid quenching was used to study the concomitant enzymatic partial reactions involved in phosphoenzyme formation. To facilitate comparison of these data, conditions were standardized with respect to pH (6.2), ionic composition, and temperature (24 degrees C). The different phases of the current generated by the enzyme are analyzed under various conditions and compared with the kinetics of phosphoenzyme formation. The slowest time constant (tau 3(-1) approximately 8 s-1) is related to the influence of the capacitive coupling of the adsorbed membrane fragments on the electrical signal. The relaxation time associated with the decaying phase of the electrical signal (tau 2(-1) = 10-70 s-1) depends on ATP and caged ATP concentration. It is assigned to the ATP and caged ATP binding and exchange reaction. A kinetic model is proposed that explains the behavior of the relaxation time at different ATP and caged ATP concentrations. Control measurements with the rapid mixing technique confirm this assignment. The rising phase of the electrical signal was analyzed with a kinetic model based on a condensed Albers-Post cycle. Together with kinetic information obtained from rapid mixing studies, the analysis suggests that electroneutral ATP release, ATP and caged ATP binding, and exchange and phosphorylation are followed by a fast electrogenic E1P-->E2P transition. At 24 degrees C and pH 6.2, the rate constant for the E1P-- >E2P transition in NaK-ATPase from eel electric organ is > or = 1,000 s- 1.  相似文献   

2.
We have used admittance analysis together with the black lipid membrane technique to analyze electrogenic reactions within the Na(+) branch of the reaction cycle of the Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase. ATP release by flash photolysis of caged ATP induced changes in the admittance of the compound membrane system that are associated with partial reactions of the Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase. Frequency spectra and the Na(+) dependence of the capacitive signal are consistent with an electrogenic or electroneutral E(1)P <--> E(2)P conformational transition which is rate limiting for a faster electrogenic Na(+) dissociation reaction. We determine the relaxation rate of the rate-limiting reaction and the equilibrium constants for both reactions at pH 6.2-8.5. The relaxation rate has a maximum value at pH 7.4 (approximately 320 s(-1)), which drops to acidic (approximately 190 s(-1)) and basic (approximately 110 s(-1)) pH. The E(1)P <--> E(2)P equilibrium is approximately at a midpoint position at pH 6.2 (equilibrium constant approximately 0.8) but moves more to the E(1)P side at basic pH 8.5 (equilibrium constant approximately 0.4). The Na(+) affinity at the extracellular binding site decreases from approximately 900 mM at pH 6.2 to approximately 200 mM at pH 8.5. The results suggest that during Na(+) transport the free energy supplied by the hydrolysis of ATP is mainly used for the generation of a low-affinity extracellular Na(+) discharge site. Ionic strength and lyotropic anions both decrease the relaxation rate. However, while ionic strength does not change the position of the conformational equilibrium E(1)P <--> E(2)P, lyotropic anions shift it to E(1)P.  相似文献   

3.
Quenched-flow mixing was used to characterize the kinetic behavior of the intermediate reactions of the skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca-ATPase (SERCA1) at 2 and 21 degrees C. At 2 degrees C, phosphorylation of SR Ca-ATPase with 100 microM ATP labeled one-half of the catalytic sites with a biphasic time dependence [Mahaney, J. E., Froehlich, J. P., and Thomas, D. D. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 4864-4879]. Chasing the phosphoenzyme (EP) with 1.66 mM ADP 10 ms after the start of phosphorylation revealed mostly ADP-insensitive E2P (95% of EP(total)), consistent with its rapid formation from ADP-sensitive E1P. The consecutive relationship of the phosphorylated intermediates predicts a decrease in the proportion of E1P ([E1P]/[EP(total)]) with increasing phosphorylation time. Instead, after 10 ms the proportion of E1P increased and that of E2P decreased until they reached a constant 1:1 stoichiometry ([E1P]:[E2P] approximately 1). At 21 degrees C, phosphorylation displayed a transient overshoot associated with an inorganic phosphate (P(i)) burst, reflecting increased turnover of E2P at the higher temperature. The P(i) burst exceeded the decay of the EP overshoot, suggesting that rephosphorylation of the enzyme occurs before the recycling step (E2 --> E1). This behavior and the reversed order of accumulation of phosphorylated intermediates at 2 degrees C are not compatible with the conventional linear consecutive reaction mechanism: E1 + ATP --> E1.ATP --> E1P + ADP --> E2P --> E2.P(i) --> E1 + P(i). Solubilization of the Ca-ATPase into monomers using the nonionic detergent C(12)E(8) gave a pattern of phosphorylation in which E1P and E2P behave like consecutive intermediates. Kinetic modeling of the C(12)E(8)-solubilized SR Ca-ATPase showed that it behaves according to the conventional Ca-ATPase reaction mechanism, consistent with monomeric catalytic function. We conclude that the nonconforming features of native SERCA1 arise from oligomeric protein conformational interactions that constrain the subunits to a staggered or out-of-phase mode of operation.  相似文献   

4.
Kinetics studies of the cardiac Ca-ATPase expressed in Sf21 cells (Spodoptera frugiperda insect cells) have been carried out to test the hypotheses that phospholamban inhibits Ca-ATPase cycling by decreasing the rate of the E1.Ca to E1'.Ca transition and/or the rate of phosphoenzyme hydrolysis. Three sample types were studied: Ca-ATPase expressed alone, Ca-ATPase coexpressed with wild-type phospholamban (the natural pentameric inhibitor), and Ca-ATPase coexpressed with the L37A-phospholamban mutant (a more potent monomeric inhibitor, in which Leu(37) is replaced by Ala). Phospholamban coupling to the Ca-ATPase was controlled using a monoclonal antibody against phospholamban. Gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting confirmed an equivalent ratio of Ca-ATPase and phospholamban in each sample (1 mol Ca-ATPase to 1.5 mol phospholamban). Steady-state ATPase activity assays at 37 degrees C, using 5 mM MgATP, showed that the phospholamban-containing samples had nearly equivalent maximum activity ( approximately 0.75 micromol. nmol Ca-ATPase(-1).min(-1) at 15 microM Ca(2+)), but that wild-type phospholamban and L37A-phospholamban increased the Ca-ATPase K(Ca) values by 200 nM and 400 nM, respectively. When steady-state Ca-ATPase phosphoenzyme levels were measured at 0 degrees C, using 1 microM MgATP, the K(Ca) values also shifted by 200 nM and 400 nM, respectively, similar to the results obtained by measuring ATP hydrolysis at 37 degrees C. Measurements of the time course of phosphoenzyme formation at 0 degrees C, using 1 microM MgATP and 268 nM ionized [Ca(2+)], indicated that L37A-phospholamban decreased the steady-state phosphoenzyme level to a greater extent (45%) than did wild-type phospholamban (33%), but neither wild-type nor L37A-phospholamban had any effect on the apparent rate of phosphoenzyme formation relative to that of Ca-ATPase expressed alone. Measurements of inorganic phosphate (P(i)) release concomitant with the phosphoenzyme formation studies showed that L37A-phospholamban decreased the steady-state rate of P(i) release to a greater extent (45%) than did wild-type phospholamban (33%). However, independent measurements of Ca-ATPase dephosphorylation after the addition of 5 mM EGTA to the phosphorylated enzyme showed that neither wild-type phospholamban nor L37A-phospholamban had any effect on the rate of phosphoenzyme decay relative to Ca-ATPase expressed alone. Computer simulation of the kinetics data indicated that phospholamban and L37A-phospholamban decreased twofold and fourfold, respectively, the equilibrium binding of the first Ca(2+) ion to the Ca-ATPase E1 intermediate, rather than inhibiting rate of the E.Ca to E'.Ca transition or the rate of phosphoenzyme decay. Therefore, we conclude that phospholamban inhibits Ca-ATPase cycling by decreasing Ca-ATPase Ca(2+) binding to the E1 intermediate.  相似文献   

5.
Na,K-ATPase-enriched membrane fragments adsorbed to lipid bilayers were used to study electrogenic Na+ movements induced by enzyme phosphorylation when ATP was photo-released from inactive caged ATP, and simultaneously by externally applied alternating voltages which allowed the measurement of small ATP-induced membrane admittance changes. A detailed analysis of frequency dependence of the capacitance and conductance increments showed that the observed process consists of more than one electrogenic step. The frequency dependence could be described by the sum of two Lorentzian functions and a constant term. The faster process (approximately 2000 s(-1)) was assigned to the release of the first extracellular Na+ ion. The corner frequency of the slower Lorentzian (about 30 s(-1)) coincided with the reciprocal exponential time constant of the falling phase of the transient current, which can be assigned to the conformational transition. Preferentially, the slower process showed a dependence on the ion concentration of choline salts with different anions. The effectiveness of the used chaotropic anions to decelerate the kinetics decreased in agreement with the Hofmeister series, I- > Br- > Cl-. This observation matches their effect on the partition between two phosphoenzyme states of the Na,K-ATPase, as established previously.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the separate roles of lipid, detergent and protein-protein interaction for stability and catalytic properties of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase solubilized in the non-ionic detergent octa(ethylene glycol) monododecyl ether (C12E8). The use of large-zone high-performance liquid chromatography permitted us to define the self-association state of Ca-ATPase peptide at various detergent, phospholipid and protein concentrations, and also during enzymatic turnover with ATP. Conditions were established for monomerization of Ca-ATPase in the presence of a high concentration of phospholipid relative to detergent. The lipid-saturated monomeric preparation was relatively resistant to inactivation in the absence of Ca2+, whereas delipidated enzyme in monomeric or in oligomeric form was prone to inactivation. Kinetics of phosphoenzyme turnover were examined in the presence and absence of Mg2+. Dephosphorylation rates were sensitive to Mg2+, irrespective of whether the peptide was present in soluble monomeric form or was membrane-bound. C12E8-solubilized monomer without added phospholipid was, however, characterized by a fast initial phase of dephosphorylation in the absence of Mg2+. This was not observed with monomer saturated with phospholipid or with monomer solubilized in myristoylglycerophosphocholine or deoxycholate. The mechanism underlying this difference was shown to be a C12E8-induced acceleration of conversion of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P) to ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P). The phosphoenzyme isomerization rate was also found to be enhanced by low-affinity binding of ATP. This was demonstrated both in membrane-bound and in soluble monomeric Ca-ATPase. Our results indicate that a single peptide chain constitutes the target for modulation of phosphoenzyme turnover by Mg2+ and ATP, and that detergent effects, distinct from those arising from disruption of protein-protein contacts, are the major determinants of kinetic differences between C12E8-solubilized and membrane-bound enzyme preparations.  相似文献   

7.
P(3)-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-oxo]ethyl ATP (pHP-caged ATP) has been investigated for its application as a phototrigger for the rapid activation of electrogenic ion pumps. The yield of ATP after irradiation with a XeCl excimer laser (lambda = 308 nm) was determined at pH 6.0-7.5. For comparison, the photolytic yields of P(3)-[1-(2-nitrophenyl)]ethyl ATP (NPE-caged ATP) and P(3)-[1, 2-diphenyl-2-oxo]ethyl ATP (desyl-caged ATP) were also measured. It was shown that at lambda = 308 nm pHP-caged ATP is superior to the other caged ATP derivatives investigated in terms of yield of ATP after irradiation. Using time-resolved single-wavelength IR spectroscopy, we determined a lower limit of 10(6) s(-1) for the rate constant of release of ATP from pHP-caged ATP at pH 7.0. Like NPE-caged ATP, pHP-caged ATP and desyl-caged ATP bind to the Na(+), K(+)-ATPase and act as competitive inhibitors of ATPase function. Using pHP-caged ATP, we investigated the charge translocation kinetics of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase at pH 6.2-7.4. The kinetic parameters obtained from the electrical measurements are compared to those obtained with a technique that does not require caged ATP, namely parallel stopped-flow experiments using the voltage-sensitive dye RH421. It is shown that the two techniques yield identical results, provided the inhibitory properties of the caged compound are taken into account. Our results demonstrate that under physiological (pH 7.0) and slightly basic (pH 7.5) or acidic (pH 6. 0) conditions, pHP-caged ATP is a rapid, effective, and biocompatible phototrigger for ATP-driven biological systems.  相似文献   

8.
Recombinant and purified Thermotoga maritima CopA sustains ATPase velocity of 1.78-2.73 micromol/mg/min in the presence of Cu+ (pH 6, 60 degrees C) and 0.03-0.08 micromol/mg/min in the absence of Cu+. High levels of enzyme phosphorylation are obtained by utilization of [gamma-32P]ATP in the absence of Cu+. This phosphoenzyme decays at a much slower rate than observed with Cu.E1 approximately P. In fact, the phosphoenzyme is reduced to much lower steady state levels upon addition of Cu+, due to rapid hydrolytic cleavage. Negligible ATPase turnover is sustained by CopA following deletion of its N-metal binding domain (DeltaNMBD) or mutation of NMBD cysteines (CXXC). Nevertheless, high levels of phosphoenzyme are obtained by utilization of [gamma-3)P]ATP by the DeltaNMBD and CXXC mutants, with no effect of Cu+ either on its formation or hydrolytic cleavage. Phosphoenzyme formation (E2P) can also be obtained by utilization of Pi, and this reaction is inhibited by Cu+ (E2 to E1 transition) even in the DeltaNMBD mutant, evidently due to Cu+ binding at a (transport) site other than the NMBD. E2P undergoes hydrolytic cleavage faster in DeltaNMBD and slower in CXXC mutant. We propose that Cu+ binding to the NMBD is required to produce an "active" conformation of CopA, whereby additional Cu+ bound to an alternate (transmembrane transport) site initiates faster cycles including formation of Cu.E1 approximately P, followed by the E1 approximately P to E2-P conformational transition and hydrolytic cleavage of phosphate. An H479Q mutation (analogous to one found in Wilson disease) renders CopA unable to utilize ATP, whereas phosphorylation by Pi is retained.  相似文献   

9.
1. Conditions for binding of [gamma-32P]ATP to bovine brain Na+,K+-stimulated ATPase were investigated by the indirect technique of measuring the initial rate of 32P-labelling of the active site of the enzyme. 2. At 100 muM [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2, approximately the same very high rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme was obtained irrespective of whether [gamma-32P]ATP was added to the enzyme simultaneously with, or 70 ms in advance of the addition of NaCl. A comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was obtained at 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP without preincubation. However, on preincubation of the enzyme with 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP a rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme almost as rapid as at 100 muM[gamma-32P]ATP was observed. 3. A transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was discovered. It appeared in the presence of K+, under conditions which allowed extensive binding of [gamma-32P]-ATP. The amount of [gamma-32P]ATP that could be bound to the enzyme seemed to equal the amount of [32P] phosphorylatable sites. 4. The formation of the transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was inhibited by ADP. The transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was concluded mainly to represent the K+-insensitive and ADP-sensitive E1-32P. 5. When KCl was present in the enzyme solution before the addition of NaCl only a comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was observed. On preincubation of the enzyme with [gamma-32]ATP an increase in the rate of formation of [32P] phosphoenzyme was obtained, but there was no transient [32P]-phosphoenzyme. The transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was, however, detected when the enzyme solution contained NaCl in addition to KCl and the phosphorylation was started by the addition of [gamma-32P]ATP.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of formation of the ADP-sensitive (EP) and ADP-insensitive (E*P) phosphoenzyme intermediates of the CaATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) were investigated by means of the quenched-flow technique. At 21 degrees C, addition of saturating ADP to SR vesicles phosphorylated for 116 ms with 10 microM ATP gave a triphasic pattern of dephosphorylation in which EP and E*P accounted for 33% and 60% of the total phosphoenzyme, respectively. Inorganic phosphate (Pi) release was less than stoichiometric with respect to E*P decay and was not increased by preincubation with Ca2+ ionophore. The fraction of E*P present after only 6 ms of phosphoenzyme formation was similar to that at 116 ms, indicating that isomerization of EP to E*P occurs very rapidly. Comparison of the time course of E*P formation with intravesicular Ca2+ accumulation measured by quenching with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid + ADP revealed that Ca2+ release on the inside of the vesicle was delayed with respect to E*P formation. Since Ca2+ should dissociate rapidly dissociation from the low-affinity transport sites, these results suggest that Ca2+ remains "occluded" after phosphoenzyme isomerization and that a subsequent slow transition controls the rate of Ca2+ release at the intravesicular membrane surface. Analysis of the forward and reverse rate constants for the EP to E*P transition gave an expected steady-state distribution of phosphoenzymes strongly favoring the ADP-insensitive form. In contrast, the observed ratio of EP to E*P was about 1:2. To account for this discrepancy, a mechanism is proposed in which stabilization of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme is brought about by a conformational interaction between adjacent subunits in a dimer.  相似文献   

11.
J R Petithory  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4493-4497
The calcium adenosinetriphosphatase of sarcoplasmic reticulum, preincubated with Ca2+ on the vesicle exterior (cE X Ca2), reacts with 0.3-0.5 mM Mg X ATP to form covalent phosphoenzyme (E approximately P X Ca2) with an observed rate constant of 220 s-1 (pH 7.0, 25 degrees C, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgSO4, 23 microM free external Ca2+, intact SR vesicles passively loaded with 20 mM Ca2+). If the phosphoryl-transfer step were rate-limiting, with kf = 220 s-1, the approach to equilibrium in the presence of ADP, to give 50% EP and kf = kr, would follow kobsd = kf + kr = 440 s-1. The reaction of cE X Ca2 with 0.8-1.2 mM ATP plus 0.25 mM ADP proceeds to 50% completion with kobsd = 270 s-1. This result shows that phosphoryl transfer from bound ATP to the enzyme is not the rate-limiting step for phosphoenzyme formation from cE X Ca2. The result is consistent with a rate-limiting conformational change of the cE X Ca2 X ATP intermediate followed by rapid (greater than or equal to 1000 s-1) phosphoryl transfer. Calcium dissociates from cE X Ca2 X ATP with kobsd = 80 s-1 and ATP dissociates with kobsd = 120 s-1 when cE X Ca2 X ATP is formed by the addition of ATP to cE X Ca2. However, when E X Ca2 X ATP is formed in the reverse direction, from the reaction of E approximately P X Ca2 and ADP, Ca2+ dissociates with kobsd = 45 s-1 and ATP dissociates with kobsd = 35 s-1. This shows that different E X Ca2 X ATP intermediates are generated in the forward and reverse directions, which are interconverted by a conformational change.  相似文献   

12.
An increase in light scattering (3.5 +/- 0.2%) was observed when pig kidney Na+,K+-ATPase preparations modified with N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl] maleimide were phosphorylated by ATP in the presence of 2 M Na+ with Mg2+ to form ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P), which had a negative fluorescence intensity (-1.5 +/- 0.3%). Addition of K+ or ouabain to E1P reduced the light scattering to the original level observed in the absence of ATP. Stopped flow measurements showed that the fluorescence change accompanying the E1P formation (t1/2 = 0.1 s) occurred preceding the light-scattering change (t1/2 = 1 s). Oligomycin affected the rate of the scattering increase little, but it diminished the effect of K+ on E1P to reduce the light scattering and increase the fluorescence. The addition of 2 M Na+ to K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P) immediately decreased the fluorescence (t1/2 = 0.02 s) to form E1P which was followed by a slow increase in the light scattering (t1/2 = 0.25 s). Oligomycin reduced both rates of the above changes accompanying the transition of E2P to E1P. The data suggest the sequential appearance of species of E1P that precede E2P formation during the hydrolysis of ATP.  相似文献   

13.
The Na/K-ATPase has been shown to bind 1 and 0.5 mol of (32)P/mol of alpha-chain in the presence [gamma-(32)P]ATP and [alpha-(32)P]ATP, respectively, accompanied by a maximum accumulation of 0.5 mol of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (NaE1P) and potassium-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P). The former accumulation was followed by the slow constant liberation of P(i), but the latter was accompanied with a rapid approximately 0.25 mol of acid-labile P(i) burst. The rubidium (potassium congener)-occluded enzyme (approximately 1.7 mol of rubidium/mol of alpha-chain) completely lost rubidium on the addition of sodium + magnesium. Further addition of approximately 100 microM [gamma-(32)P]ATP and [alpha-(32)P]ATP, both induced 0.5 mol of (32)P-ATP binding to the enzyme and caused accumulation of approximately 1 mol of rubidium/mol of alpha-chain, accompanied by a rapid approximately 0.5 mol of P(i) burst with no detectable phosphoenzyme under steady state conditions. Electron microscopy of rotary-shadowed soluble and membrane-bound Na/K-ATPases and an antibody-Na/K-ATPase complex, indicated the presence of tetraprotomeric structures (alphabeta)(4). These and other data suggest that Na/K-ATP hydrolysis occurs via four parallel paths, the sequential appearance of (NaE1P:E.ATP)(2), (E2P:E.ATP:E2P:E. ADP/P(i)), and (KE2:E.ADP/P(i))(2), each of which has been previously referred to as NaE1P, E2P, and KE2, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphorylation of red cell membranes at ambient temperatures with micromolar [32P]ATP in the presence of Na ions produced phosphoenzyme that was dephosphorylated rapidly upon the addition of ADP or K ions. However, as first observed by Blostein (1968, J. Biol. Chem., 243:1957), the phosphoenzyme formed at 0 degrees C under otherwise identical conditions was insensitive to the addition of K ions but was dephosphorylated rapidly by ADP. This suggested that the conformational transition from ADP-sensitive, K-insensitive Na pump phosphoenzyme (E1 approximately P) to K-sensitive, ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2P) is blocked at 0 degrees C. Since the ATP:ADP exchange reaction is a partial reaction of the overall enzyme cycle dependent upon the steady state level of E1 approximately P that is regulated by [Na], we examined the effects of temperature on the curve relating [Na] to ouabain-sensitive ATP:ADP exchange. The characteristic triphasic curve seen at higher temperatures when [Na] was between 0.5 and 100 mM was not obtained at 0 degrees C. Simple saturation was observed instead with a K0.5 for Na of approximately 1 mM. The effect of increasing temperature on the ATP:ADP exchange at fixed (150 mM) Na was compared with the effect of increasing temperature on (Na + K)-ATPase activity of the same membrane preparation. It was observed that (a) at 0 degrees C, there was significant ouabain-sensitive ATP:ADP exchange activity, (b) at 0 degrees C, ouabain-sensitive (Na + K)-ATPase activity was virtually absent, and (c) in the temperature range 5-37 degrees C, there was an approximately 300-fold increase in (Na + K)-ATPase activity with only a 9-fold increase in the ATP:ADP exchange. These observations are in keeping with the suggestion that the E1 approximately P----E2P transition of the Na pump in human red cell membranes is blocked at 0 degrees C. Previous work has shown that the inhibitory effect of Na ions and the low-affinity stimulation by Na of the rate of ATP:ADP exchange occur at the extracellular surface of the Na pump. The absence of both of these effects at 0 degrees C, where E1 approximately P is maximal, supports the idea that external Na acts through sites on the E2P form of the phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles adsorbed on a black lipid membrane generate an electrical current after a fast increment of the concentration of ATP. This demonstrates directly that the sarcoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase from skeletal muscle acts as an electrogenic ion pump. The increment of the concentration of ATP is achieved by the photolysis of caged ATP (P3-1-(2-nitro)phenylethyl adenosine 5'-triphosphate) a protected analogue of ATP (Kaplan, J.H. et al. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 1929-1935), which is split into ATP and 2-nitroso acetophenone. The release of ATP leads to a transient current flow across the lipid membrane indicating that the vesicles are capacitatively coupled to the underlying lipid membrane. In addition to this transient signal, a stationary current flow is obtained in the presence of ionophores which increase the conductance of the bilayer system and prevent the accumulation of Ca2+ in the lumen of the vesicles. The direction of the transient and the stationary current is in accordance with the concept that Ca2+ is pumped into the lumen of the vesicles. The transient current depends on the concentration of ATP, Ca2+ and Mg2+ as would be the case for a current generated by the sarcoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase. Its amplitude is half-maximal at 10 microM ATP and 1 microM Ca2+. At Ca2+ concentrations above 0.1 mM the amplitude of the current signal declines again. The Mg2+ concentration dependence of the current amplitude at a constant ATP concentration indicates that the MgATP complex is the substrate for the activation of the current. The pump current is inhibited by vanadate and ADP. No current signal is observed if caged ATP is replaced by caged ADP. However, the release of ADP from caged ADP generates a pump current in the presence of an ATP generating system such as creatine phosphate and creatine kinase.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetics of pump currents generated by the Na+,K+-ATPase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Purified Na+,K+-ATPase from pig kidney was attached to black lipid membranes. Pump currents of the enzyme could be measured with a time resolution of approx. 1 ms by releasing ATP from caged ATP with a UV laser flash. Analysis of the transient currents shows that a slow non-electrogenic step is followed by an electrogenic transition with a rate constant of 100 s-1 (22 degrees C). The exponential components found in the transient currents are compared to transitions in the Albers-Post scheme.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphorylation of shark rectal Na,K-ATPase by ATP in the presence of Na(+) was characterized by chemical quench experiments and by stopped-flow RH421 fluorescence. The appearance of acid-stable phosphoenzyme was faster than the rate of fluorescence increase, suggesting that of the two acid-stable phosphoenzymes formed, RH421 exclusively detects formation of E(2)-P, which follows formation of E(1)-P. The stopped-flow RH421 fluorescence response to ATP phosphorylation was biphasic, with a major fast phase with k(obs) approximately 90 s(-1) and a minor slow phase with a k(obs) of approximately 9 s(-1) (20 degrees C, pH 7.4). The observed rate constants for both the slow and the fast phase could be fitted with identical second-degree functions of the ATP concentration with apparent binding constants of approximately 3.1 x 10(7) M(-1) and 1. 8 x 10(5) M(-1), respectively. Increasing [ADP] decreased k(obs) for the rate of the RH421 fluorescence response to ATP phosphorylation. This could be accounted for by the reaction of ADP with the initially formed E(1)-P followed by a conformational change to E(2)-P. The biphasic stopped-flow RH421 responses to ATP phosphorylation could be simulated, assuming that in the absence of K(+) the highly fluorescent E(2)-P is slowly transformed into the "K(+)-insensitive" E'(2)-P subconformation forming a side branch of the main cycle.  相似文献   

18.
We have observed two modes each of ADP and K+ regulation of phosphoenzyme (EP) intermediates formed in the early phase of skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum hydrolysis of ATP at 20 degrees C, using, for the first time, a five-syringe quench flow apparatus for transient-state kinetic measurements. The total acid-stable EP formed for 20.5 and 116 ms in the K+ medium appears to be composed of either two monomers in rapid equilibrium, E1P in equilibrium E'1P, or a dimer of the two subunits, PE1E'1P. The ADP-sensitive E1P may form an acid-labile ADP X E1P (or ATP X E1) complex rapidly, giving ATP as a consequence of acid quenching. The ADP may also induce decomposition of the ADP-reactive E'1P. Monomeric and dimeric mechanisms are introduced to account for the hyperbolic relation between the rate constant of the ADP-induced E'1P decomposition and [ADP], consistent with the fact that the E'1P may also give ATP in the presence of ADP. As to the K+ effects, the K+, which is bound to the unphosphorylated enzyme and possibly becomes occluded during EP formation, may either facilitate the one-to-one E1P in equilibrium E'1P equilibrium or maintain the dimeric functional unit. The subsequent forward transformation of the E'1P to the ADP-insensitive K+-sensitive E'2P, possibly the rate-determining step for the catalytic cycle, is found to be K+ independent. The major effect of the K+ in the medium is its catalytic cleavage of the E'2P, which is detected as the missing EP under these conditions. When K+ is not involved in the EP formation, the forward sequential transformation E1P----E'1P----E'2P----E2P or PE1E'1P----PE'2E2P is apparent in the time range from 20.5 to 116 ms after EP formation, and the E'2P may accumulate in the K+ devoid medium and be detected as the major component of the total acid-stable EP. The Mg2+-sensitive E2P represents the EP missing in the medium containing no ADP and K+.  相似文献   

19.
A M Hanel  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1991,30(47):11320-11330
The internalization of 45Ca by the calcium-transporting ATPase into sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles from rabbit muscle was measured during a single turnover of the enzyme by using a quench of 7 mM ADP and EGTA (25 degrees C, 5 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 40 mM MOPS.Tris, pH 7.0). Intact vesicles containing either 10-20 microM or 20 mM Ca2+ were preincubated with 45Ca for approximately 20 s and then mixed with 0.20-0.25 mM ATP and excess EGTA to give 70% phosphorylation of Etot with the rate constant k = 300 s-1. The two 45Ca ions bound to the phosphoenzyme (EP) become insensitive to the quench with ADP as they are internalized in a first-order reaction with a rate constant of k = approximately 30 s-1. The first and second Ca2+ ions that bind to the free enzyme were selectively labeled by mixing the enzyme and 45Ca with excess 40Ca, or by mixing the enzyme and 40Ca with 45Ca, for 50 ms prior to the addition of ATP and EGTA. The internalization of each ion into loaded or empty vesicles follows first-order kinetics with k = approximately 30 s-1; there is no indication of biphasic kinetics or an induction period for the internalization of either Ca2+ ion. The presence of 20 mM Ca2+ inside the vesicles has no effect on the kinetics or the extent of internalization of either or both of the individual ions. The Ca2+ ions bound to the phosphoenzyme are kinetically equivalent. A first-order reaction for the internalization of the individual Ca2+ ions is consistent with a rate-limiting conformational change of the phosphoenzyme with kc = 30 s-1, followed by rapid dissociation of the Ca2+ ions from separate independent binding sites on E approximately P.Ca2; lumenal calcium does not inhibit the dissociation of calcium from these sites. Alternatively, the Ca2+ ions may dissociate sequentially from E approximately P.Ca2 following a rate-limiting conformational change. However, the order of dissociation of the individual ions can not be distinguished. An ordered-sequential mechanism for dissociation requires that the ions dissociate much faster (k greater than or equal to 10(5) s-1) than the forward and reverse reactions for the conformational change (k-c = approximately 3000 s-1). Finally, the Ca2+ ions may exchange their positions rapidly on the phosphoenzyme (kmix greater than or equal to 10(5) s-1) before dissociating. A Hill slope of nH = 1.0-1.2, with K0.5 = 0.8-0.9 mM, for the inhibition of turnover by binding of Ca2+ to the low-affinity transport sites of the phosphoenzyme was obtained from rate measurements at six different concentrations of Mg2+.  相似文献   

20.
T Friedrich  E Bamberg    G Nagel 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(5):2486-2500
The giant-patch technique was used to study the Na+,K(+)-ATPase in excised patches from rat or guinea pig ventricular myocytes. Na+,K(+)-pump currents showed a saturable ATP dependence with aK(m) of approximately 150 microM at 24 degrees C. The pump current can be completely abolished by ortho-vanadate. Dissociation of vanadate from the enzyme in the absence of extracellular Na+ was slow, with a Koff of 3.10(-4) S-1 (K1 approximately 0.5 microM, at 24 degrees C). Stationary currents were markedly dependent on intracellular pH, with a maximum at pH 7.9. Temperature-dependence measurements of the stationary pump current yielded an activation energy of approximately 100 kJ mol-1. Partial reactions in the transport cycle were investigated by generating ATP concentration jumps through photolytic release of ATP from caged ATP at pH 7.4 and 6.3. Transient outward currents were obtained at pH 6.3 with a fast rising phase followed by a slower decay to a stationary current. It was concluded that the fast rate constant of approximately 200 s-1 at 24 degrees C (pH 6.3) reflects a step rate-limiting the electrogenic Na+ release. Simulating the data with a simple three-state model enabled us to estimate the turnover rate under saturating substrate concentrations, yielding rates (at pH 7.4) of approximately 60 s-1 and 200 s-1 at 24 degrees C and 36 degrees C, respectively.  相似文献   

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