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1.
Localization of selective proteolytic splits in alpha-subunit of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is important for understanding the mechanism of active Na+,K+-transport. Proteolytic fragments of alpha-subunit from pig kidney were purified by chromatography in NaDodSO4 on TSK 3000 SW columns. NH2-terminal amino acid sequences of fragments as determined in a gas phase sequenator were unambiguously located within the total sequence of alpha-subunit from sheep kidney (Shull, C.E., et al. (1985) Nature 316, 691-695) and pig kidney (Ovchinnikov, Y.A., et al. (1985) Proc. Acad. Sci. USSR 285, 1490-1495). The primary chymotryptic split in the E1-form is located between Leu-266 and Ala-267 while the tryptic cleavage site appears to be between Arg-262 and Ile-263 (Bond 3). Tryptic cleavage in the initial fast phase of inactivation of the E1-form is located between Lys-30 and Glu-31 (Bond 2). In the E2-form, primary tryptic cleavage is between Arg-438 and Ala-439 (Bond 1). Chymotryptic cleavage between Leu-266 and Ala-267 stabilizes the E1-form of the protein without affecting the sites for binding of cations or nucleotides. Titration of fluorescence responses demonstrates the importance of the NH2-terminal for E1-E2 transition. Protonation of His-13 facilitates transition from E1- to E2-forms of the protein. Removal of His-13 after cleavage of bond 2 can explain the increase in apparent affinity of the cleaved enzyme for Na+ and the shift in poise of E1-E2 equilibrium in direction of E1-forms. The NH2-terminal sequence in renal alpha-subunit is not conserved in alpha + from rat neurolemma or in alpha-subunit from Torpedo or brine shrimp. A regulatory function of the NH2-terminal part of the alpha-subunit may thus be a unique feature of the alpha-subunit in (Na+ + K+)-ATPase from mammalian kidney.  相似文献   

2.
Purified dog kidney (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) was inactivated with high concentrations of 2-mercaptoethanol at 50-55 degrees C. The inactivation was prevented by NaCl or KCl, with KCl being more effective than NaCl (the former ion being about one order more efficient under a typical set of experimental conditions). A disulfide bond in the beta-subunit of the enzyme protein was prevented from reductive cleavage by NaCl or KCl in accordance with protection of the enzyme activity. Choline chloride did not exert a significant protective effect over a similar concentration range. (Na+ + K+)-ATPase was also inactivated with high concentrations of 2-mercaptoethanol in the presence of low concentrations of dodecyl sulfate. This inactivation was also prevented by NaCl or KCl, with the latter being again more efficient than the former. These results indicate that Na+ and K+ bound to their respective ion-binding sites on the alpha-subunit exert a protective effect on a disulfide bond on the beta-subunit. This suggests some sort of interaction between the alpha- and the beta-subunits.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate whether nongastric H+-K+-ATPases transport Na+ in exchange for K+ and whether different beta-isoforms influence their transport properties, we compared the functional properties of the catalytic subunit of human nongastric H+-K+-ATPase, ATP1al1 (AL1), and of the Na+-K+-ATPase alpha1-subunit (alpha1) expressed in Xenopus oocytes, with different beta-subunits. Our results show that betaHK and beta1-NK can produce functional AL1/beta complexes at the oocyte cell surface that, in contrast to alpha1/beta1 NK and alpha1/betaHK complexes, exhibit a similar apparent K+ affinity. Similar to Na+-K+-ATPase, AL1/beta complexes are able to decrease intracellular Na+ concentrations in Na+-loaded oocytes, and their K+ transport depends on intra- and extracellular Na+ concentrations. Finally, controlled trypsinolysis reveals that beta-isoforms influence the protease sensitivity of AL1 and alpha1 and that AL1/beta complexes, similar to the Na+-K+-ATPase, can undergo distinct K+-Na+- and ouabain-dependent conformational changes. These results provide new evidence that the human nongastric H+-K+-ATPase interacts with and transports Na+ in exchange for K+ and that beta-isoforms have a distinct effect on the overall structural integrity of AL1 but influence its transport properties less than those of the Na+-K+-ATPase alpha-subunit.  相似文献   

4.
Inside-out membrane vesicles derived from human red cells were used to probe the effects of controlled tryptic digestion on the sodium pump as it exists in situ. Digestion of the enzyme in its E1 conformation resulted in several alterations which are generally similar to those reported for the purified kidney enzyme, namely (i) greater loss in overall hydrolytic activity compared to level of phosphoenzyme intermediate and (ii) cleavage of the alpha-subunit by trypsin as well as chymotrypsin at the cytoplasmic surface to yield a fragment of approx. 78 kDa. Tryptic digestion effected similar rates of inactivation of pump-mediated Na+-K+(Rb+) exchange, (ATP- plus ADP)-dependent Na+-Na+ exchange and, in the absence extracellular alkali cation, 'uncoupled' Na+ flux (Na+/0 flux). Alteration in the Na+:Rb+(K+) stoichiometry following trypsin cleavage could not be detected. The conformational transitions of phosphoenzyme and dephosphoenzyme are affected similarly by trypsin, as evidenced by similar inactivation rates of reactions through the 'forward' sequence involving the E1P to E2P transition as well as through the 'reserve' sequence involving the E1 to E2 transition.  相似文献   

5.
1. Fluorescence measurements have shown that formycin triphosphate (FTP) or formycin diphosphate (FDP) bound to (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) in Na+-containing media can be displaced by the following ions (listed in order of effectiveness): Tl+, K+, Rb+, NH4+, Cs+. 2. The differences between the nucleotide affinities displayed by the enzyme in predominantly Na+ and predominantly K+ media in the absence of phosphorylation, are thought to reflect changes in enzyme conformation. These changes can therefore be monitored by observing the changes in fluorescence that accompany net binding or net release of formycin nucleotides. 3. The transition from a K+-bound form (E2-(K)) to an Na+-bound form (E1-Na) is remarkably slow at low nucleotide concentrations, but is accelerated if the nucleotide concentration is increased. This suggests that the binding of nucleotide to a low-affinity site on E2-(K) accelerates its conversion to E1-Na; it supports the hypothesis that during the normal working of the pump, ATP, acting at a low affinity site, accelerates the conversion of dephosphoenzyme, newly formed by K+-catalysed hydrolysis of E2P, to a form in which it can be phosphorylated in the presence of Na+. 4. The rate of the reverse transformation, E1-Na to E2-(K), varies roughly linearly with the K+ concentration up to the highest concentration at which the rate can be measured (15 mM). Since much lower concentrations of K+ are sufficient to displace the equilibrium to the K-form, we suggest that the sequence of events is: (i) combination of K+ with low affinity (probably internal) binding sites, followed by (ii) spontaneous conversion of the enzyme to a form, E2-(K), containing occluded K+. 5. Mg2+ or oligomycin slows the rate of conversion of E1-Na to E2-(K) but does not significantly affect the rate of conversion of E2-(K) to E1-Na. 6. In the light of these and previous findings, we propose a model for the sodium pump in which conformational changes alternate with trans-phosphorylations, and the inward and outward fluxes of both Na+ and K+ each involve the transfer of a phosphoryl group as well as a change in conformation between E1 and E2 forms of the enzyme or phosphoenzyme.  相似文献   

6.
A Abbott  W J Ball 《Biochemistry》1992,31(45):11236-11243
Monoclonal antibody M7-PB-E9 binds the sheep kidney Na+,K(+)-ATPase alpha-subunit with high affinity (Kd = 3 nM) and inhibits enzyme turnover in competition with ATP, and, like ATP, in the presence of Mg2+, it stimulates the rate of ouabain binding [Ball, W. J. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2275-2281]. In this study, covalent attachment of fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC) at (or near) the enzyme's ATP binding site did not alter the antibody's affinity for alpha nor did bound antibody alter the anisotropy of (r = 0.36) or the solvent accessibility of iodide to bound FITC. Further, in its E1Na+ conformation (4 mM NaCl), the enzyme's affinity for the ATP congener eosin was unaltered by the bound antibody (Kd = 9 nM). In contrast, partial E2 conformations induced by KCl lowered eosin affinities (0.2 mM KCl, Kd = 28 nM; 0.4 mM, Kd = 86 nM), and M7-PB-E9 reduced these affinities further (Kd = 66 and 130 nM, respectively). By monitoring the fluorescence changes of the FITC-labeled enzyme, the antibody was found to assist several ligand-induced conformational transitions from E1 (E1Na+ or E1Tris) to E2 (E2K+, E2-P(i)Mg2+, or E2Mg2+.ouabain) states, and inhibit the E2K(+)-->E1Na+ transition. Antibody binding alone, however, did not appear to significantly alter enzyme conformation. The antibody therefore is not directed against the ATP site but binds to a region of alpha distinct from any ligand binding site and which plays an important role in the E1<-->E2 transitions.  相似文献   

7.
The ATP hydrolysis dependent Na+-Na+ exchange of reconstituted shark (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is electrogenic with a transport stoichiometry as for the Na+-K+ exchange, suggesting that translocation of extracellular Na+ is taking place via the same route as extracellular K+. The preparation thus offers an opportunity to compare the sided action of Na+ and K+ on the affinity for ATP in a reaction in which the intermediary steps in the overall reaction seems to be the same without and with K+. With Na+ but no K+ on the two sides of the enzyme, the ATP-activation curve is hyperbolic and the affinity for ATP is high. Extracellular K+ in concentrations of 50 microM (the lowest tested) and up gives biphasic ATP activation curves, with both a high- and a low-affinity component for ATP. Cytoplasmic K+ also gives biphasic ATP-activation curves, however, only when the K+ concentration is 50 mM or higher (Na+ + K+ = 130 mM). The different ATP-activation curves are explained from the Albers-Post scheme, in which there is an ATP-dependent and an ATP-independent deocclusion of E2(Na2+) and E2(K2+), respectively, and in which the dephosphorylation of E2-P is rate limiting in the presence of Na+ (but no K+) extracellular, whereas in the presence of extracellular K+ it is the deocclusion of E2(K2+) which is rate limiting.  相似文献   

8.
A theoretical treatment of the voltage dependence of electroneutral Na+-Na+ and K+-K+ exchange mediated by the Na+/K+ pump is given. The analysis is based on the Post-Albers reaction scheme in which the overall transport process is described as a sequence of conformational transitions and ion-binding and ion-release steps. The voltage dependence of the exchange rate is determined by a set of 'dielectric coefficients' reflecting the magnitude of charge translocations associated with individual reaction steps. Charge movement may result from conformational changes of the transport protein and/or from migration of ions in an access channel connecting the binding sites with the aqueous medium. It is shown that valuable mechanistic information may be obtained by studying the voltage dependence of transport rates at different (saturating and nonsaturating) ion concentrations.  相似文献   

9.
1. Monitoring protein conformations of purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with intrinsic fluorescence we have examined if altered conformational responses accompany the defective catalytic and transport processes in selectively modified 'invalid' (Na+ + K+)-ATPase which is obtained by graded tryptic digestion of the Na+ form of the protein. 2. The protein fluorescence intensity of the K+ form (E2K) of both control and invalid (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is 2--3% higher than that of the Na+ form (E1Na). By varying the NaCl concentration we found evidence for different fluorescence intensities of the two phosphoenzymes; E2P has the same fluorescence intensity as E2K and the intensity of E1P is similar to that of E1Na. The fraction of phosphoenzyme present as E2P can therefore be determined as the amplitude of the fluorescence change accompanying phosphorylation in the absence of K+ divided by the amplitude of the full response to K+. 3. Titration of the fluorescence responses of the invalid (Na+ + K+)-ATPase shows that the tryptic split alters the noise of the equilibria between the cation-bound conformations, E1Na and E2K, and between the phosphoforms, E1P and E2P, in the direction of the E1 forms. 4. Vanadate binds to the Mg2+-bound form of E2K and prevents further changes in fluorescence intensity of the protein. The conformative responses of invalid (Na+ + K+)-ATPase are insensitive to vanadate in agreement with the reduced vanadate binding affinity of this enzyme. 5. The defective conformative response of the invalid (Na+ + K+)-ATPase in relation to its catalytic defects, reduced Na+ transport, and insensitivity to vanadate suggest that the transitions between Na+ forms (E1) and K+ forms (E2) of the protein are coupled to the catalytic and transport reactions of the (Na+ + K+)-pump.  相似文献   

10.
The (Na+ + K+)ATPase is inhibited by the bee venom polypeptide, melittin. KCl and NaCl protect the enzyme from melittin inhibition. Analysis of the K+ and Na+ protection against melittin inhibition suggested a kinetic model which was consistent with slowly reversible melittin binding, and mutually exclusive binding of melittin with K+ and Na+. Accordingly, in the absence of salt, the KI for melittin inhibition = 1.2 microM, and the protection by KCl occurs with a KA,KCl = 0.6 mM. The protection by NaCl occurs with a KA,NaCl = 15 mM. Melittin inhibition of enzyme activity is due to direct interactions with the (Na+ + K+)ATPase, as demonstrated by photolabeling with [125I]azidosalicylyl melittin, which labeled the alpha subunit, but not the beta subunit of the (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Melittin and KCl reduced the extent of labeling. In non-covalent binding studies using [125I]azidosalicylyl melittin, the stoichiometry of binding was 1.6 melittin per (Na+ + K+)ATPase. Ligand-induced conformational changes of FITC-labeled (Na+ + K+)ATPase were examined in the presence and absence of melittin. K+ alone or melittin alone caused a fluorescence intensity quenching consistent with formation of an E2 form of the enzyme. The NaCl-induced (E2----E1) fluorescence intensity changes were maximal when the enzyme was treated with K+. NaCl-induced fluorescence changes did not occur when the enzyme was treated with melittin in the absence of K+. However, when K+ was present before the addition of melittin, NaCl-induced fluorescence intensity increases were observed, which were dependent upon the concentration of K+ in the preincubation mixture. The results of the labeling and conformational studies support the kinetic model and suggest a mechanism for inhibition of ion pumps by (poly)peptides.  相似文献   

11.
Two kinds of ATP binding sites were found to exist on the ATPase molecule. One was the catalytic site (1 mol/mol phosphorylation site) and its apparent dissociation constant for ATP was about 1 microM. The other was the regulatory site(s) and its apparent dissociation constant for ATP was equal to or higher than about 0.2 mM. The affinities of both sites for AMPPNP were three times lower than those for ATP. The affinity of the ATPase for ATP was reduced by the addition of KCl, but unaffected by the addition of NaCl. As thermodynamically expected, the affinity of the Na+-binding sites for Na+ ions was almost completely unaffected by the addition of ATP, which markedly decreased that of the K+-binding sites for K+ and Rb+ ions. In the absence of KCl, Na+ ions were bound very rapidly to the Na+-binding sites [(1979) J. Biochem. 86, 509--523]. However, Na+ ions were bound very slowly to the enzyme preincubated with 50 microM KCl, and the Na+ binding was markedly accelerated by the addition of ATP or AMPPNP at concentrations much higher than several microM. On the other hand, in the presence of 50 microM KCl, 1 mol of ATP was bound to the catalytic site with the same dissociation constant as that in the absence of KCl, and another 1 mol of ATP bound with a dissociation constant of about 0.1 mM. Therefore, we concluded that the Na+ binding to the enzyme in a K+ form is markedly accelerated by the binding at ATP to the regulatory site.  相似文献   

12.
To delineate better the reaction sequence of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and illuminate properties of the active site, kinetic data were fitted to specific quantitative models. For the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction, double-reciprocal plots of velocity against ATP (in the millimolar range), with a series of fixed KCl concentrations, are nearly parallel, in accord with the ping pong kinetics of ATP binding at the low-affinity sites only after Pi release. However, contrary to requirements of usual formulations, Pi is not a competitor toward ATP. A new steady-state kinetic model accommodates these data quantitatively, requiring that under usual assay conditions most of the enzyme activity follows a sequence in which ATP adds after Pi release, but also requiring a minor alternative pathway with ATP adding after K+ binds but before Pi release. The fit to the data also reveals that Pi binds nearly as rapidly to E2 X K X ATP as to E2 X K, whereas ATP binds quite slowly to E2 X P X K: the site resembles a cul-de-sac with distal ATP and proximal Pi sites. For the K+-nitrophenyl phosphatase reaction also catalyzed by this enzyme, the apparent affinities for both substrate and Pi (as inhibitor) decrease with higher KCl concentrations, and both Pi and TNP-ATP appear to be competitive inhibitors toward substrate with 10 mM KCl but noncompetitive inhibitors with 1 mM KCl. These data are accommodated quantitatively by a steady-state model allowing cyclic hydrolytic activity without obligatory release of K+, and with exclusive binding of substrate vs. either Pi or TNP-ATP. The greater sensitivity of the phosphatase reaction to both Pi and arsenate is attributable to the weaker binding by the occluded-K+ enzyme form occurring in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction sequence. The steady-state models are consistent with cyclical interconversion of high- and low-affinity substrate sites accompanying E1/E2 transitions, with distortion to low-affinity sites altering not only affinity and route of access but also separating the adenine- and phosphate-binding regions, the latter serving in the E2 conformation as the active site for the phosphatase reaction.  相似文献   

13.
E A Shapiro  M G Grinfel'dt 《Tsitologiia》1985,27(10):1164-1171
The Na+ and K+ equilibrium distribution between the medium and glycerinated muscle fibres of the frog has been investigated under equal concentrations of NaCl and KCl in solutions. Concentrations of NaCl and KCl varied from 0.5-1.5 mkM till 50 mM. Ion strength (0.11) was constant owing to the imidazol--HCl buffer. The binding of Na+ and K+ by model fibres occurred in accordance with the Langmur equation. Two kinds of cation-binding sites were found. The one with a low limiting ion sorption (A infinity approximately 1.3 mmol/kg dry weight of fibres) and high affinities (-delta F0 approximately 4.3 kcal/mol) was saturated at 0.5 mM concentrations (Na+ = K+) in the medium, and the other--with A infinity exceeding the previous one by an order and low -delta F0 (2.5 kcal/mol) was discovered at Na+, K+-1-10 mM. At ion concentrations equal to 0.5-1 mM the Langmur-binding is disturbed. At Na+-K+ less than or equal to 1 mM Na+ bound:K+ bound approximately to 1:1. At higher concentrations of cations Na+ bound:K+ bound approximately equal to 3:2. It is concluded that at least part of the sites in model fibres is capable of interacting only with Na+, but not with K+. It is supposed that at equal concentrations of Na+ and K+ in the medium the cations are bound by Na+, K+-ATPase of glycerinated muscle fibres.  相似文献   

14.
We previously reported that the bumetanide-sensitive Na(+)-K(+)-2Cl- cotransporter (NKCC1) is involved in the hepatic Na+ and K+ sensor mechanism. In the present study, we examined the effects of a high-NaCl or high-KCl diet on hepatic Na+ and K+ receptor sensitivity and NKCC1 expression in the liver of Sprague-Dawley rats. RT-PCR and Western blots were used to measure NKCC1 mRNA and protein expression, respectively. Infusion of hypertonic NaCl or isotonic KCl + NaCl solutions into the portal vein increased hepatic afferent nerve activity (HANA) in a Na+ or K+ dose-dependent manner. After 4 wk on a high-NaCl or high-KCl diet, HANA responses were attenuated compared with animals fed a normal diet, and NKCC1 expression was reduced. These results show that a high-NaCl or high-KCl diet decreases NKCC1 expression in the liver, and it might cause a reduction in hepatic Na(+)- and K(+)-receptor sensitivity.  相似文献   

15.
Treatment of the canine renal Na,K-ATPase with N-(2-nitro-4-isothiocyanophenyl)-imidazole (NIPI), a new imidazole-based probe, results in irreversible loss of enzymatic activity. Inactivation of 95% of the Na,K-ATPase activity is achieved by the covalent binding of 1 molecule of [3H]NIPI to a single site on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase. The reactivity of this site toward NIPI is about 10-fold greater when the enzyme is in the E1Na or sodium-bound form than when it is in the E2K or potassium-bound form. K+ ions prevent the enhanced reactivity associated with Na+ binding. Labeling and inactivation of the enzyme is prevented by the simultaneous presence of ATP or ADP (but not by AMP). The apparent affinity with which ATP prevents the inactivation by NIPI at pH 8.5 is increased from 30 to 3 microM by the presence of Na+ ions. This suggests that the affinity with which native enzyme binds ATP (or ADP) at this pH is enhanced by Na+ binding to the enzyme. Modification of the single sodium-responsive residue on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase results in loss of high affinity ATP binding, without affecting phosphorylation from Pi. Modification with NIPI probably alters the adenosine binding region without affecting the region close to the phosphorylated carboxyl residue aspartate 369. Tightly bound (or occluded) Rb+ ions are not displaced by ATP (4 mM) in the inactivated enzyme. Thus modification of a single residue simultaneously blocks ATP acting with either high or low affinity on the Na,K-ATPase. These observations suggest that there is a single residue on the alpha-subunit (probably a lysine) which drastically alters its reactivity as Na+ binds to the enzyme. This lysine residue is essential for catalytic activity and is prevented from reacting with NIPI when ATP binds to the enzyme. Thus, the essential lysine residue involved may be part of the ATP binding domain of the Na,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of the present work was to study the Mg2+-Na+/K+-ATPase interaction that was proposed to lead to the formation of a stable Mg-enzyme complex during phosphorylation from ATP. Instead of Mg we used Mn, which can replace Mg as essential activator of Na+/K+-ATPase activity. The amounts of steady-state Mn bound to the enzyme were estimated at 0 degree C on the basis of the 54Mn remaining in the effluent after passing the reaction mixture through a cation exchange resin column. As a function of the MnCl2 concentration, the amount of Mn retained by the enzyme in the absence and presence of ATP showed a saturable and a linear component; the slope of the linear component was the same in both instances (0.016 nmol/mg per microM). The ATP-dependent Mn binding could be adjusted to a hyperbolic function with a Km of 0.76 microM. The ratio [ATP-dependent E-Mn]/[E-P] measured at 5 microM MnCl2 and 5 microM ATP was not different from 1.0, both in native (Mn-E2-P) as well as in a chymotrypsin treated enzyme (Mn-E1-P). When the Mn.E-P complex was allowed to react with KCl (E2-P form) or ADP (E1-P form), the enzyme was dephosphorylated and simultaneously lost the strongly bound Mn in such a way that the ratio [ATP-dependent E-Mn]/[E-P] remained 1:1. These results show the existence of strongly bound Mn ions to Na+/K+-ATPase during phosphorylation by ATP. That binding is (i) of high affinity for Mn, (ii) probably on a single site, and (iii) with a stoichiometry Mn-Pi of 1:1.  相似文献   

17.
We studied conformational changes of purified renal sodium plus potassium ion-transport adenosine triphosphatase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate. Fluorescein covalently binds to the alpha-subunit of the enzyme and inhibits the ATPase but not the p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity. Four unphosphorylated and three phosphorylated conformations were distinguished by the level of fluorescence and by the rate of its change (relative fluorescence is shown in percentages). Fluorescence of the ligand-free form (E1, 100%) was increased by Na+ (E1.Na form, 103%) and quenched by K+ (E2.K, 78%) at a site of high affinity (K0.5 for K+ = 0.07 mM). Mg2+ did not alter fluorescence of E1 or E1.Na but raised that of E2.K (E2.K.Mg form, 85-90%). Addition of excess Na+ to the E2.K.Mg form restored high fluorescence but the rate of transition from E2.K.Mg to E1.Na became progressively slower with increasing Mg2+ concentration. Two phosphorylated conformations, (E2-P).Mg (82%) and (E2-P).Mg.K (82%) were differentiated by a faster turnover of the latter form. A third conformation, (E2-P).Mg.ouabain, had the lowest fluorescence (56%) and its formation allowed the binding of ouabain to the phosphoenzyme. Reversible blocking of sulfhydryl groups with thimerosal inhibited the formation of E2.K and (E2-P).Mg.ouabain but not that of the other conformations of the fluorescein-enzyme. The thimerosal-treated fluorescein-enzyme retained K+-p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity, inhibition of this activity by ouabain and ouabain binding. The unphosphorylated enzyme had low (K0.5 = 1.2 mM) and the phosphoenzyme had high affinity (K0.5 = 0.03 - 0.09 mM) for Mg2+ in the absence of nucleotides. Since low and high affinity for Mg2+ alternates as the enzyme turns over, Mg2+ may be bound and released sequentially during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

18.
To test the hypothesis that Na+/K+-ATPase works as an (alpha beta)2-diprotomer with interacting catalytic alpha-subunits, tryptic digestion of pig kidney enzyme, that had been inactivated with substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues, was performed. This led to the demonstration of coexisting C-terminal Na+-like 80-kDa as well as K+-like 60-kDa peptides and N-terminal 40-kDa peptides of the alpha-subunit. To localize the ATP binding sites on tryptic peptides, studies with radioactive MgATP complex analogues were performed: Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP specifically modified the E2ATP (low affinity) binding site of Na+/K+-ATPase with an inactivation rate constant (k2) of 12 x 10-3.min-1 at 37 degrees C and a dissociation constant (Kd) of 207 +/- 28 microm. Tryptic digestion of the [gamma32P]Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP-inactivated and photolabelled alpha-subunit (Mr = 100 kDa) led, in the absence of univalent cations, to a K+-like C-terminal 60-kDa fragment which was labelled in addition to an unlabelled Na+-like C-terminal 80-kDa fragment. Tryptic digestion of [alpha32P]-or [gamma32P]Cr(H2O)4ATP - bound to the E1ATP (high affinity) site - led to the labelling of a Na+-like 80-kDa fragment besides the immediate formation of an unlabelled K+-like N-terminal 40-kDa fragment and a C-terminal 60-kDa fragment. Because a labelled Na+-like 80-kDa fragment cannot result from an unlabelled K+-like 60-kDa fragment, and because unlabelled alpha-subunits did not show any catalytic activity, the findings are consistent with a situation in which Na+- and K+-like conformations are stabilized by tight binding of substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues to the E1ATP and E2ATP sites. Hence, all data are consistent with the hypothesis that ATP binding induces coexisting Na+ and K+ conformations within an (alphabeta)2-diprotomeric Na+/K+-ATPase.  相似文献   

19.
Recent work in our laboratory on the purification and characterization of the (sodium + potassium)-activated adenosinetriphosphatase (NaK ATPase) has been reviewed. Two enzymes have been purified, that from the rectal salt gland of the spiny dogfish, Squalus acanthias and that from the electric organ of the electric eel, Electrophorus electricus. The enzyme appears to consist of two catalytic subunits of molecular weight of about 95,000 and one glycoprotein with a molecular weight of about 50,000. The amino acid composition, N-terminal amino acids, and the carbohydrate composition of these subunits have been determined. The phospholipid composition of the holoenzyme has also been determined. The protein component shows very little variation with evolution, but the carbohydrate and phospholipid components show considerable variation. It has been possible to form vesicles from the purified enzyme from Squalus acanthias and to demonstrate the ATP-dependent, ouabain inhibitable, coupled uphill transports of Na+ and K+. The properties of these transports are very similar to those observed previously in intact erythrocytes or resealed erythrocyte ghosts with respect to asymmetries of binding sites, stoichiometries of Na+ and K+ transported, Na+-Na+ exchange, and K+-K+ exchange. It is concluded that the NaK ATPase is the molecular machine for effecting Na+ and K+ transport in the intact cell membrane.  相似文献   

20.
MnCl2 was partially effective as a substitute for MgCl2 in activating the K+- dependent phosphatase reaction catalyzed by a purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase enzyme preparation from canine kidney medulla, the maximal velocity attainable being one-fourth that with MgCl2. Estimates of the concentration of free Mn2+ available when the reaction was half-maximally stimulated lie in the range of the single high-affinity divalent cation site previously identified (Grisham, C.M. and Mildvan, A.S. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 3187--3197). MnCl2 competed with MgCl2 as activator of the phosphatase reaction, again consistent with action through a single site. However, with MnCl2 appreciable ouabain-inhibitable phosphatase activity occurred in the absence of added KCl, and the apparent affinities for K+ as activator of the reaction and for Na+ as inhibitor were both decreased. For the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction substituting MnCl2 for MgCl2 was also partially effective, but no stimulation in the absence of added KCl, in either the absence or presence of NaCl, was detectable. Moreover, the apparent affinity for K+ was increased by the substitution, although that for Na+ was decreased as in the phosphatase reaction. Substituting MnCl2 also altered the sensitivity to inhibitors. For both reactions the inhibition by ouabain and by vanadate was increased, as was binding of [48V] -vanadate to the enzyme; furthermore, binding in the presence of MnCl2 was, unlike that with MgCl2, insensitive to KCl and NaCl. Inhibition of the phosphatase reaction by ATP was decreased with 1 mM but not 10 mM KCl. Finally, inhibition of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction by Triton X-100 was increased, but that by dimethylsulfoxide decreased after such substitution. These findings are considered in terms of Mn2+ at the divalent cation site being a better selector than Mg2+ of the E2 conformational states of the enzyme, states also selected by K+ and by dimethylsulfoxide and reactive with ouabain and vanadate; the E1 conformational states, by contrast, are those selected by Na+ and ATP, and also by Triton X-100.  相似文献   

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