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1.
1. Both the Ca(2+)-pump ATPase and the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase of the erythrocyte membrane can, when assayed under appropriate conditions, be activated by Ca(2+) in the micromolar range. We have therefore compared the mechanisms and affinities for Ca(2+) activation of the two enzymes in human erythrocyte membranes, to see whether the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase would be active in normal healthy erythrocytes. 2. At physiological ionic strength and in the presence of calmodulin, the Ca(2+)-pump ATPase was activated by Ca(2+) in a highly co-operative manner, with half-maximal activation occurring at about 0.3mum-Ca(2+). At an optimal Ca(2+) concentration, calmodulin stimulated the Ca(2+)-sensitive ATPase activity about 10-fold. 3. Ca(2+) activated the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase in a non-co-operative manner. The Ca(2+) requirements for breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate were identical, which supports our previous conclusion that Ca(2+) activates a single polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase that degrades both lipids with equal facility. Added calmodulin did not affect the activity of the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase. 4. At low ionic strength in the absence of Mg(2+), half-maximal activation of the phosphodiesterase was at about 3mum-Ca(2+). The presence of 1mm-Mg(2+) shifted the Ca(2+) activation curve to the right, as did elevation of the ionic strength. When the Ca(2+)-pump ATPase and the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase were assayed in the same incubations and under conditions of intracellular ionic strength and Mg(2+) concentration, the ATPase was fully activated at 3mum-Ca(2+), whereas no polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase activity was detected below 100mum-Ca(2+). 5. The Ca(2+)-pump ATPase of the erythrocyte membrane normally maintains the Ca(2+) concentration of healthy erythrocytes below approx. 0.1mum. It therefore seems unlikely that the polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase of the erythrocyte membrane ever expresses its activity in a healthy erythrocyte.  相似文献   

2.
Purified protein kinase (cyclic AMP-dependent) inhibitor (PKI) from bovine heart stimulated Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase activity in human erythrocytes, the stimulation being maximal at 2mug/0.6ml. By contrast, PKI from rabbit skeletal muscle had no effect. Bovine heart PKI stimulated Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase by increasing the Ca(2+)-sensitivity of the enzyme. This contrasted with the stimulation by calmodulin, which increased the maximum velocity of the Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase in addition to its effect on the Ca(2+)-sensitivity. Both membrane-bound and Triton X-100-solubilized Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase activities were stimulated by PKI, indicating that the stimulation did not require an intact membrane structure. At low Ca(2+) concentration the stimulation by PKI and saturating concentrations of calmodulin were additive, suggesting that the two effectors acted by distinct mechanisms. Although 5mum-cyclic AMP inhibited Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase activity by about 20% when measured at low ATP concentrations, probably by stimulation of phosphorylation by an endogenous protein kinase, the stimulation by PKI (about 100%) was not solely due to its antagonism of the protein kinase. This interpretation was supported by a number of observations. First, modification of arginine residues of bovine heart PKI abolished its inhibition of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, but had no effect on the stimulation of Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase. Secondly, trifluoperazine (20mum) antagonized the stimulation of Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase by PKI, similarly to its antagonism of calmodulin stimulation, but it did not affect the inhibition of protein kinase by PKI. We conclude that different mechanisms are involved in the inhibition of protein kinase and the stimulation of Ca(2+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase by PKI.  相似文献   

3.
A severalfold activation of calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity by micromolar concentrations of calmodulin was observed in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles obtained from canine ventricles. This activation was seen in the presence of 120 mM KCl. The ratio of moles of calcium transported per mol of ATP hydrolyzed remained at about 0.75 when calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity were measured in the presence and absence of calmodulin. Thus, the efficiency of the calcium transport process did not change. Stimulation of calcium transport by calmodulin involves the phosphorylation of one or more proteins. The major 32P-labeled protein, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gel electrophoresis, was the 22,000-dalton protein called phospholamban. The Ca2+ concentration dependency of calmodulin-stimulated microsomal phosphorylation corresponded to that of calmodulin-stimulated (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity. Proteins of 11,000 and 6,000 daltons and other proteins were labeled to a lesser extent. A similar phosphorylation pattern was obtained when microsomes were incubated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase and ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. Phosphorylation produced by added cAMP-dependent protein kinase and calmodulin was additive. These studies provided further evidence for Ca2+-dependent regulation of calcium transport by calmodulin in sarcoplasmic reticulum that could play a role in the beat-to-beat regulation of cardiac relaxation in the intact heart.  相似文献   

4.
Purified Ca(2+)-stimulated, Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase (Ca(2+)-ATPase) from human erythrocytes was phosphorylated with a stoichiometry of about 1 mol of phosphate/mol of ATPase at both threonine and serine residues by purified rat brain type III protein kinase C. In the presence of calmodulin, the phosphorylation was markedly reduced. Labeled phosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP was retained on an 86-kDa calmodulin-binding tryptic fragment of Ca(2+)-ATPase but not on 82- and 77-kDa non-calmodulin-binding fragments. Similarly, fragmentation of the phosphorylated Ca(2+)-ATPase by calpain I revealed that calmodulin-binding fragments (127 and 125 kDa) retained phosphate label whereas a non-calmodulin-binding fragment (124 kDa) did not. The calmodulin-binding domain, located about 12 kDa from the carboxyl terminus of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, was thus located as a site of protein kinase C phosphorylation. A synthetic peptide corresponding to a segment of the calmodulin-binding domain (H2 N-R-G-L-N-R-I-Q-T-Q-I-K-V-V-N-COOH) was indeed phosphorylated at the single threonine residue within this sequence. The additional serine phosphorylation site was carboxyl terminal to the calmodulin domain. Phosphorylation by purified type III protein kinase C (canine heart) antagonized the calmodulin activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase, particularly at lower Ca2+ concentrations (0.2-1.0 microM). By contrast, a purified but unresolved protein kinase C isoenzyme mixture from rat brain stimulated the activity of Ca(2+)-ATPase prepared in asolectin, but not glycerol, by more than 2-fold in the presence of the ionophore A23187, without increasing its Ca2+ sensitivity. The results clearly indicate that human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase is a substrate of protein kinase C, but the effect of phosphorylation on the activity of the enzyme depends on the isoenzyme form of protein kinase C used and on the lipid associated with the Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

5.
The calmodulin activation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) in human erythrocyte membranes was studied in the range of 1 nM to 40 microM of purified calmodulin. The apparent calmodulin-affinity of the ATPase was strongly dependent on Ca2+ and decreased approx. 1000-times when the Ca2+ concentration was reduced from 112 to 0.5 microM. The data of calmodulin (Z) activation were analyzed by the aid of a kinetic enzyme model which suggests that 1 molecule of calmodulin binds per ATPase unit and that the affinities of the calcium-calmodulin complexes (CaiZ) decreases in the order of Ca3Z greater than Ca4Z greater than Ca2Z greater than or equal to CaZ. Furthermore, calmodulin dissociates from the calmodulin-saturated Ca2+-ATPase in the range of 10(-7)-10(-6) M Ca2+, even at a calmodulin concentration of 5 microM. The apparent concentration of calmodulin in the erythrocyte cytosol was determined to be 3 to 5 microM, corresponding to 50-80-times the cellular concentration of Ca2+-ATPase, estimated to be approx. 10 nmol/h membrane protein. We therefore conclude that most of the calmodulin is dissociated from the Ca2+-transport ATPase in erythrocytes at the prevailing Ca2+ concentration (probably 10(-7)-10(-8) M) in vivo, and that the calmodulin-binding and subsequent activation of the Ca2+-ATPase requires that the Ca2+ concentration rises to 10(-6)-10(-5) M.  相似文献   

6.
A calmodulin inhibitor, trifluoperazine, suppresses ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake into microsomes prepared from bovine aortic smooth muscle. From this microsomal preparation which we expected to contain calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-transport ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3], we purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase by calmodulin affinity chromatography. The protein peak eluted by EDTA had calmodulin-dependent (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase activity. The major band (135,000 daltons) obtained after sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) accounted for about 80% of the total protein eluted. This major band was phosphorylated by [gamma-32P]ATP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. All the 32P incorporated into the major band was released by hydroxylaminolysis. The ATPase reconstituted in soybean phospholipid liposomes showed ATP, calmodulin-dependent Ca2+ uptake. The affinity of the ATPase for Ca2+, Km, was 7 microM and the maximum ATPase activity was 1.4 mumol/mg/min. These values were changed to 0.17 microM and 3.5 mumol/mg/min, respectively by the addition of calmodulin. The activity of the purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase was inhibited by orthovanadate, and the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was about 1.8 microM which is close to that of plasma membrane ATPases. Judging from the effect of orthovanadate and the molecular weight, the purified (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase was considered to have originated from the plasma membrane not from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

7.
A plasma membrane Ca(2+)-pump ATPase preparation purified from porcine aorta was incubated with cGMP-dependent protein kinase (G-kinase) under the conditions under which dose-dependent stimulation of the enzyme by G-kinase was observed. Several proteins were phosphorylated, but two isoforms of plasma membrane Ca(2+)-pump ATPase with molecular masses of 135- and 145-kDa were not phosphorylated. The protein that was phosphorylated by G-kinase and identified in our previous study as the 135-kDa isoform of Ca(2+)-pump ATPase, on the basis of its almost identical mobility on SDS-PAGE, was found to be another protein with a molecular mass of 138 kDa. Fractionation of the enzyme preparation after incubation with G-kinase by a newly developed calmodulin affinity chromatographic method resulted in the separation of all the G-kinase substrates from the two isoforms of plasma membrane Ca(2+)-pump ATPase. These results suggest that the direct phosphorylation of the Ca(2+)-pump ATPase does not occur in association with the stimulation of the plasma membrane Ca(2+)-pump ATPase by G-kinase.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of calmodulin on the formation and decomposition of the Ca2+-dependent phosphoprotein intermediate of the (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-dependent ATPase in erythrocyte membranes was investigated. In the presence of 60 microM-Ca2+ and 25 microM-MgCl2, calmodulin (0.5-1.5 microgram) did not alter the steady-state concentration of the phosphoprotein, but increased its rate of decomposition. Higher calmodulin concentrations significantly decreased the steady-state concentration of phosphoprotein. Calmodulin (0.5-1.7 microgram) increased Ca2+-transport ATPase activity by increasing the turnover rate of its phosphoprotein intermediate. Increasing the MgCl2 concentration from 25 microM to 250 microM increased the (Mg2+ + Ca2+)-dependent ATPase activity, but decreased the concentration of the phosphoprotein intermediate. Similarly to calmodulin, MgCl2 increased the turnover rate of the Ca2+-transport ATPase complex (about 3-fold). At the higher MgCl2 concentration calmodulin did not further affect the decomposition of the phosphoprotein intermediate. It was concluded that both calmodulin and MgCl2 increase the turnover of the Ca2+-pump by enhancing the decomposition of the Ca2+-dependent phosphoprotein intermediate.  相似文献   

9.
A Mg-dependent adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activated by submicromolar free Ca2+ was identified in detergent-dispersed rat liver plasma membranes after fractionation by concanavalin A-Ultrogel chromatography. Further resolution by DE-52 chromatography resulted in the separation of an activator from the enzyme. The activator, although sensitive to trypsin hydrolysis, was distinct from calmodulin for it was degraded by boiling for 2 min, and its action was not sensitive to trifluoperazine; in addition, calmodulin at concentrations ranging from 0.25 ng-25 micrograms/assay had no effect on enzyme activity. Ca2+ activation followed a cooperative mechanism (nH = 1.4), half-maximal activation occurring at 13 +/- 5 nM free Ca2+. ATP, ITP, GTP, CTP, UPT, and ADP displayed similar affinities for the enzyme; K0.5 for ATP was 21+/- 9 microM. However, the highest hydrolysis rate (20 mumol of Pi/mg of protein/10 min) was observed at 0.25 mM ATP. For all the substrates tested kinetic studies indicated that two interacting catalytic sites were involved. Half-maximal activity of the enzyme required less than 12 microM total Mg2+. This low requirement for Mg2+ of the high affinity (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase was probably the major kinetic difference between this activity and the nonspecific (Ca2+ or Mg2+)ATPase. In fact, definition of new assay conditions, i.e. a low ATP concentration (0.25 mM) and the absence of added Mg2+, allowed us to reveal the (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPase activity in native rat liver plasma membranes. This enzyme belongs to the class of plasma membrane (Ca2+-Mg2+)ATPases dependent on submicromolar free Ca2+ probably responsible for extrusion of intracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

10.
The purified calmodulin dependent (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (CaMg ATPase) from porcine antral smooth muscle transports Ca2+ after reconstitution in lipid vesicles indicating that this enzyme is indeed a Ca2+-transport ATPase. For CaMg ATPase reconstituted in asolectin vesicles a good correlation was found between the time course of Ca2+ accumulation and the corresponding changes in CaMg ATPase activity. The ATPase activity was stimulated 8-fold by A23187, which further indicates a tight coupling between ATP hydrolysis and Ca2+ transport. Asolectin vesicles with incorporated enzyme accumulated Ca2+ with a ratio approaching one Ca2+ ion transported for each ATP hydrolyzed. For CaMg ATPase reconstituted in phosphatidylcholine vesicles on the other hand, Ca2+ transport and CaMg ATPase were poorly coupled as is shown by the approximately 3.5 fold stimulation by A23187. The activity of the CaMg ATPase when reconstituted in asolectin vesicles was stimulated 1.25 fold by calmodulin while in phosphatidylcholine a value of 4.25 was obtained. The CaMg ATPase activity of the enzyme reconstituted either in asolectin or phosphatidylcholine was, after its stimulation by A23187, still further stimulated by detergent by a factor of 5.  相似文献   

11.
A reconstitution system allowed us to measure the ATPase activity of specific isoforms of the plasma membrane Ca(2+) pump continuously, and to measure the effects of adding or removing calmodulin. The rate of activation by calmodulin of isoform 4b was found to be very slow, with a half-time (at 235 nM calmodulin and 0.5 microM free Ca(2+)) of about 1 min. The rate of inactivation of isoform 4b when calmodulin was removed was even slower, with a half-time of about 20 min. Isoform 4a has a lower apparent affinity for calmodulin than 4b, but its activation rate was surprisingly faster (half time about 20 s). This was coupled with a much faster inactivation rate, consistent with its low affinity. A truncated mutant of isoform 4b also had a more rapid activation rate, indicating that the downstream inhibitory region of full-length 4b contributed to its slow activation. The results indicate that the slow activation is due to occlusion of the calmodulin-binding domain of 4b, caused by its strong interaction with the catalytic core. Since the activation of 4b occurs on a time scale comparable to that of many Ca(2+) spikes, this phenomenon is important to the function of the pump in living cells. The slow response of 4b indicates that this isoform may be the appropriate one for cells which respond slowly to Ca(2+) signals.  相似文献   

12.
Electrophorus electroplax microsomes were examined for Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity. In addition to the previously reported low-affinity ATPase, a high-affinity (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase was found. At low ATP and Mg2+ concentrations (200 microM or less), the high-affinity (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase exhibits an activity of 18 nmol Pi mg-1 min-1 with 0.58 microM Ca2+. At higher ATP concentrations (3 mM), the low-affinity Ca2+-ATPase predominates, with an activity of 28 nmol Pi mg-1 min-1 with 1 mM Ca2+. In addition, Mg2+ can also activate the low-affinity ATPase (18 nmol Pi mg-1 min-1). The high-affinity ATPase hydrolyzes ATP at a greater rate than it does GTP, ITP, or UTP and is insensitive to ouabain, oligomycin, or dicyclohexylcarbodiimide inhibition. The high-affinity enzyme is inhibited by vanadate, trifluoperazine, and N-ethylmaleimide. Added calmodulin does not significantly stimulate enzyme activity; rinsing the microsomes with EGTA does not confer calmodulin sensitivity. Thus the high-affinity ATPase from electroplax microsomes is similar to the (Ca2+,Mg2+)-ATPase reported to be associated with Ca2+ transport, based on its affinity for calcium and its response to inhibitors. The low-affinity enzyme hydrolyzes all tested nucleoside triphosphates, as well as diphosphates, but not AMP. Vanadate and N-ethylmaleimide do not inhibit the low-affinity enzymes. The low-affinity enzyme reflects a nonspecific nucleoside triphosphatase, probably an ectoenzyme.  相似文献   

13.
A Ca(2+)-ATPase with an apparent Km for free Ca2+ = 0.23 microM and Vmax = 44 nmol Pi/mg/min was detected in a rat parotid plasma membrane-enriched fraction. This Ca(2+)-ATPase could be stimulated without added Mg2+. However, the enzyme may require submicromolar concentrations of Mg2+ for its activation in the presence of Ca2+. On the other hand, Mg2+ could substitute for Ca2+. The lack of a requirement for added Mg2+ distinguished this Ca(2+)-ATPase from the Ca(2+)-transporter ATPase in the plasma membranes and the mitochondrial Ca(2+)-ATPase. The enzyme was not inhibited by several ATPase inhibitors and was not stimulated by calmodulin. An antibody which was raised against the rat liver plasma membrane ecto-ATPase, was able to deplete this Ca(2+)-ATPase activity from detergent solubilized rat parotid plasma membranes, in an antibody concentration-dependent manner. Immunoblotting analysis of the pellet with the ecto-ATPase antibody revealed the presence of a 100,000 molecular weight protein band, in agreement with the reported ecto-ATPase relative molecular mass. These data demonstrate the presence of a Ca(2+)-ATPase, with high affinity for Ca2+, in the rat parotid gland plasma membranes. It is distinct from the Ca(2+)-transporter, and immunologically indistinguishable from the plasma membrane ecto-ATPase.  相似文献   

14.
In this work we report an unusual pattern of activation by calmodulin on the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase from basolateral membranes of kidney proximal tubule cells. The activity of the ATPase depleted of calmodulin is characterized by a high Ca2+ affinity (Km = 2.2-3.4 microM) and a biphasic dependence on ATP concentration. The preparation responded to the addition of calmodulin by giving rise to a new Ca2+ site of very high affinity (Km less than 0.05 microM). Calmodulin antagonists had diverse effects on ATPase activity. Compound 48/80 inhibited calmodulin-stimulated activity by 70%, whereas calmidazolium did not modify this component. In the absence of calmodulin, 48/80 still acted as an antagonist, increasing the Km for Ca2+ to 5.7 microM and reducing enzyme turnover by competing with ATP at the low affinity regulatory site. Calmidazolium did not affect Ca2+ affinity, but it did displace ATP from the regulatory site. At fixed Ca2+ (30 microM) and ATP (5 mM) concentrations, Pi protected against 48/80 and potentiated inhibition by calmidazolium. At 25 microM ATP, Pi protected against calmidazolium inhibition. We propose that the effects of ATP and Pi arise because binding of the drugs to the ATPase occurs mainly on the E2 forms.  相似文献   

15.
To understand how the plasma membrane Ca(2+) pump (PMCA) behaves under changing Ca(2+) concentrations, it is necessary to obtain information about the Ca(2+) dependence of the rate constants for calmodulin activation (k(act)) and for inactivation by calmodulin removal (k(inact)). Here we studied these constants for isoforms 2b and 4b. We measured the ATPase activity of these isoforms expressed in Sf9 cells. For both PMCA4b and 2b, k(act) increased with Ca(2+) along a sigmoidal curve. At all Ca(2+) concentrations, 2b showed a faster reaction with calmodulin than 4b but a slower off rate. On the basis of the measured rate constants, we simulated mathematically the behavior of these pumps upon repetitive changes in Ca(2+) concentration and also tested these simulations experimentally; PMCA was activated by 500 nm Ca(2+) and then exposed to 50 nm Ca(2+) for 10 to 150 s, and then Ca(2+) was increased again to 500 nm. During the second exposure to 500 nm Ca(2+), the activity reached steady state faster than during the first exposure at 500 nm Ca(2+). This memory effect is longer for PMCA2b than for 4b. In a separate experiment, a calmodulin-binding peptide from myosin light chain kinase, which has no direct interaction with the pump, was added during the second exposure to 500 nm Ca(2+). The peptide inhibited the activity of PMCA2b when the exposure to 50 nm Ca(2+) was 150 s but had little or no effect when this exposure was only 15 s. This suggests that the memory effect is due to calmodulin remaining bound to the enzyme during the period at low Ca(2+). The memory effect observed in PMCA2b and 4b will allow cells expressing either of them to remove Ca(2+) more quickly in subsequent spikes after an initial activating spike.  相似文献   

16.
The basic kinetic properties of the solubilized and purified Ca2+-translocating ATPase from human erythrocyte membranes were studied. A complex interaction between the major ligands (i.e., Ca2+, Mg2+, H+, calmodulin and ATP) and the enzyme was found. The apparent affinity of the enzyme for Ca2+ was inversely proportional to the concentration of free Mg2+ and H+, both in the presence or absence of calmodulin. In addition, the apparent affinity of the enzyme for Ca2+ was significantly increased by the presence of calmodulin at high concentrations of MgCl2 (5 mM), while it was hardly affected at low concentrations of MgCl2 (2 mM or less). In addition, the ATPase activity was inhibited by free Mg2+ in the millimolar concentration range. Evidence for a high degree of positive cooperativity for Ca2+ activation of the enzyme (Hill coefficient near to 4) was found in the presence of calmodulin in the slightly alkaline pH range. The degree of cooperativity induced by Ca2+ in the presence of calmodulin was decreased strongly as the pH decreased to acid values (Hill coefficient below 2). In the absence of calmodulin, the Hill coefficient was 2 or slightly below over the whole pH range tested. Two binding affinities of the enzyme for ATP were found. The apparent affinity of the enzyme for calmodulin was around 6 nM and independent of the Mg2+ concentration. The degree of stimulation of the ATPase activity by calmodulin was dependent on the concentrations of both Ca2+ and Mg2+ in the assay system.  相似文献   

17.
The (Ca2+ + Mg2+) ATPase of dog heart sarcolemma (Caroni, P., and Carafoli, E. (1980) Nature 283, 765-767) has been characterized. The enzyme possesses an apparent Km (Ca2+) of 0.3 +/- 02 microM, a Vmax of Ca2+ transport of 31 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein/min, and an apparent Km (ATP) of 30 microM. It is only slightly influenced by monovalent cations and is highly sensitive to orthovanadate (Ki = 0.5 +/- 0.1 microM). The high vanadate sensitivity has been used to distinguish the sarcolemmal and the contaminating sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-dependent ATPase in heart microsomal fractions. Calmodulin has been shown to be present in heart sarcolemma. Its depletion results in the transition of the Ca2+-pumping ATPase to a low Ca2+ affinity; readdition of calmodulin reverses this effect. The Na+/Ca2+ exchange system was not affected by calmodulin. The results of calmodulin extraction can be duplicated by using the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine. The calmodulin-depleted Ca2+-ATPase has been solubilized from the sarcolemmal membrane and "purified" on a calmodulin affinity chromatography column. One major (Mr = 150,000) and 3 minor protein bands could be eluted from the column with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). The major protein band (72%) has Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity and can be phosphorylated by [gamma]32P]ATP in a Ca2+-dependent reaction.  相似文献   

18.
A unique cytoplast preparation from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells (G. V. Henius, P. C. Laris, and J. D. Woodburn (1979) Exp. Cell. Res. 121, 337-345), highly enriched in plasma membranes, was employed to characterize the high-affinity plasma membrane calcium-extrusion pump and its associated adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase). An ATP-dependent calcium-transport system which had a high affinity for free calcium (K0.5 = 0.040 +/- 0.005 microM) was identified. Two different calcium-stimulated ATPase activities were detected. One had a low (K0.5 = 136 +/- 10 microM) and the other a high (K0.5 = 0.103 +/- 0.077 microM) affinity for free calcium. The high-affinity enzyme appeared to represent the ubiquitous high-affinity plasma membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (calcium-stimulated, magnesium-dependent ATPase) seen in normal cells. Both calcium transport and the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase were significantly stimulated by the calcium-dependent regulatory protein calmodulin, especially when endogenous activator was removed by treatment with the calcium chelator ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether) N,N'-tetraacetic acid. Other similarities between calcium transport and the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase included an insensitivity to ouabain (0.5 mM), lack of activation by potassium (20 mM), and a requirement for magnesium. These similar properties suggested that the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase represents the enzymatic basis of the high-affinity calcium pump. The calcium pump/enzyme system was inhibited by orthovanadate at comparatively high concentrations (calcium transport: K0.5 congruent to 100 microM; (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase: K0.5 greater than 100 microM). Upon Hill analysis, the tumor cell (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase failed to exhibit cooperative activation by calcium which is characteristic of the analogous enzyme in the plasma membrane of normal cells.  相似文献   

19.
We have used four mutant calmodulins to study the regulation of human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase by the calmodulin-dependent pathway; the conserved Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains of calmodulin (Glu31, Glu67, Glu104, or Glu140) was replaced by Ala. At pCa 7, where unmodified calmodulin maximally activates the erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase, all four mutants stimulated Ca(2+)-ATPase activity to the same maximal velocity. However, the concentrations of mutant calmodulins required for half-maximal activation (KCaM) were significantly higher than that for unmodified calmodulin and were strongly dependent on the domain in which the mutated Glu was located; substitution in either the first or second Ca(2+)-binding domain had little effect (2-3-fold increase in KCaM), whereas substitution in either the third or fourth domain resulted in a dramatic, 25-71-fold increase in KCaM. The same order of sensitivity was observed when the Ca2+ dependence of enzyme activation was measured at a constant 100 nM concentration of mutant calmodulin. These data point to dramatic differences in the functional significance of the replacement of the Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The 2 Glu residues located in the carboxyl-terminal half of calmodulin (particularly Glu140) are crucial for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase at physiologically significant Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

20.
The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-dependent ATPase of human erythrocyte membranes was solubilized with deoxycholate and purified by calmodulin affinity chromatography to yield a functional enzyme. The method gave an enzyme purified 207-fold as compared with that of the erythrocyte membranes. The molecular weight of the ATPase was in the range 135 000-150 000, as revealed by a single major band after electrophoresis on dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gels. The isolated enzyme was highly sensitive to calmodulin, since the activity was increased about 9-fold. At 37 degrees C and in the presence of calmodulin the purified ATPase had a specific activity of 10.1 mumol/min per mg of protein. Triton X-100 or deoxycholate stimulated the calmodulin-deficient enzyme in a concentration-dependent fashion whereby the calmodulin-sensitivity was lost. The purification method is suitable for studying the lipid-sensitivity of the ATPase, since the lipids can easily be exchanged without a significant loss of activity. A purification procedure described by Niggli, Penniston & Carafoli [(1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 9955-9958] resulted in an enzyme that indeed was pure but was lacking a predominant feature, namely the modulation by calmodulin.  相似文献   

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