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1.
Understanding the regulatory properties of the activities of the V-type adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) on tonoplast membranes is important in determining the mechanisms by which this enzyme controls cytoplasmic and vacuolar pH. The possible existence of a regulatory site for adenine nucleotides was examined by comparing the effects of ADP, adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) and 3'- o -(4-benzoyl) benzoyladenine 5'-triphosphate (BzATP) to those of the 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of AMP (oAMP) and ATP by using highly purified tonoplast vesicles from maize ( Zea mays L. cv. FRB 73) roots. The addition of either AMP-PNP or BzATP reversibly inhibited the initial rate of proton transport catalyzed by the H+-ATPase in a concentration-dependent manner. Less than 20 μ M AMP-PNP or 50 μ M BzATP was sufficient to inhibit half the initial rate of proton transport in the presence of 2 m M ATP and an excess of Mg. Both analogs increased the Km for ATP and reduced the maximum enzyme velocity. The presence of ADP also inhibited proton transport. The characteristics of ADP-induced inhibition were similar to those of BzATP and AMP-PNP. The addition of the periodated derivative of AMP (oAMP) irreversibly inhibited the ATPase in a concentration and time-dependent manner similar to that reported previously (Chow et al. 1992, Plant Physiology 98: 44–52). Irreversible inhibition by oAMP reduced the maximum velocity of the tonoplast ATPase and was prevented by the addition of ATP. The presence of ADP, AMP-PNP or BzATP had no effect on irreversible inhibition by oAMP. The effects of ADP, AMP-PNP and BzATP on the kinetics of ATP utilization and the lack of protection against inhibition by oAMP argue in favor of at least two types of nucleotide binding sites on the V-type ATPase from maize root tonoplast membranes.  相似文献   

2.
N F Phillips 《Biochemistry》1988,27(9):3314-3320
Pyruvate,phosphate dikinase from Propionibacterium shermanii is strongly inhibited by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC). The time course of inactivation is biphasic, but the dependence of the pseudo-first-order rate constants on the inhibitor concentration indicates the formation of a reversible complex with the enzyme prior to covalent modification. The substrate/product nucleotide pairs MgATP and MgAMP protected against inactivation, while in the absence of Mg2+, both the nucleotides were ineffective. Previously, an essential lysine at the ATP/AMP subsite of the enzyme from Bacteroides symbiosus had been implicated by use of the 2',3'-dialdehyde of AMP (oAMP) [Evans, C. T., Goss, N. H., & Wood, H. G. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5809]. The inhibition by FITC was competitive with MgAMP, and a multiple inhibition analysis plot indicated that binding of oAMP and FITC was mutually exclusive. These observations suggest that FITC and oAMP bind at the nucleotide binding site and probably to the same reactive lysine that is modified by oAMP. With peptide mapping by high-performance liquid chromatography, FITC was found to be a suitable probe for isolating the peptide from the ATP/AMP subsite.  相似文献   

3.
3'-O-(4-Benzoyl)benzoyl ADP (BzADP) was used as a photoaffinity label for covalent binding of adenine nucleotide analogs to the nucleotide binding site(s) of the thermophilic bacterium PS3 ATPase (TF1). As with the CF1-ATPase (Bar-Zvi, D. and Shavit, N. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 765, 340-356) noncovalently bound BzADP is a reversible inhibitor of the TF1-ATPase. BzADP changes the kinetics of ATP hydrolysis from noncooperative to cooperative in the same way as ADP does, but, in contrast to the effect on the CF1-ATPase, it has no effect on the Vmax. In the absence of Mg2+ 1 mol BzADP binds noncovalently to TF1, while with Mg2+ 3 mol are bound. Photoactivation of BzADP results in the covalent binding of the analog to the nucleotide binding site(s) on TF1 and correlates with the inactivation of the ATPase. Complete inactivation of the TF1-ATPase occurs after covalent binding of 2 mol BzADP/mol TF1. Photoinactivation of TF1 by BzADP is prevented if excess of either ADP or ATP is present during irradiation. Analysis by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate of the Bz[3H]ADP-labeled TF1-ATPase shows that all the radioactivity is incorporated into the beta subunit.  相似文献   

4.
1. A membrane vesicle fraction containing a high (K+ + H+)-ATPase activity was isolated from porcine gastric mucosa. The enzyme has a pH optimum of 7.0 and is stimulated by T1+, K+, Rb+ and NH4+ with KA values of 0.13, 2.7, 7.6 and 26 mM, respectively, at this pH. 2. Incubation of the isolated membrane fraction with butanedione leads to inactivation of the (K+ + H+)-ATPase activity. The pH-dependence of the (K+ + H+)-ATPase activity. The pH-dependence of the inactivation and the reversibility of the reaction, observed after removal of excess butanedione and borate, indicate that modification of arginine is involved. 3. The inactivation of (K+ + H+)-ATPase activity by butanedione is time-dependent and follows second-order kinetics. From the dependence of the inactivation rate on the reagent concentration it appears that a single arginine residue is involved in the inactivation of the (K+ + H+)-ATPase activity. 4. ATP, deoxy-ATP, ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP), but not CTP, GTP and ITP which are poor substrates, protect the enzyme against butanedione inactivation, suggesting that the essential arginine residue is located in the ATP binding centre. 5. In the presence of Mg2+ the butanedione inactivation is increased, and the protection by ATP, deoxy-ATP and ADP (but not that by AMPPNP) is less pronounced. This suggests that Mg2+ induces a conformational change in the enzyme, exposing the arginine group and coinciding with phosphorylation and subsequent release of ADP from its binding site.  相似文献   

5.
The Neurospora crassa plasma membrane H+-ATPase is rapidly inactivated in the presence of diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP). The reaction is pseudo-first-order showing time- and concentration-dependent inactivation with a second-order rate constant of 385-420 M-1.min-1 at pH 6.9 and 25 degrees C. The difference spectrum of the native and modified enzyme has a maximum near 240 nm, characteristic of N-carbethoxyhistidine. No change in the absorbance of the inhibited ATPase at 278 nm or in the number of modifiable sulfhydryl groups is observed, indicating that the inhibition is not due to tyrosine or cysteine modification, and the inhibition is irreversible, ruling out serine residues. Furthermore, pretreatment of the ATPase with pyridoxal phosphate/NaBH4 under the conditions of the DEP treatment does not inhibit the ATPase and does not alter the DEP inhibition kinetics, indicating that the inactivation by DEP is not due to amino group modification. The pH dependence of the inactivation reaction indicates that the essential residue has a pKa near 7.5, and the activity lost as a result of H+-ATPase modification by DEP is partially recovered after hydroxylamine treatment at 4 degrees C. Taken together, these results strongly indicate that the inactivation of the H+-ATPase by DEP involves histidine modification. Analyses of the inhibition kinetics and the stoichiometry of modification indicate that among eight histidines modified per enzyme molecule, only one is essential for H+-ATPase activity. Finally, ADP protects against inactivation by DEP, indicating that the essential residue modified may be located at or near the nucleotide binding site.  相似文献   

6.
The Mg2+-induced low-affinity nucleotide binding by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase has been further investigated. Both heat treatment (50-65 degrees C) and treatment with N-ethylmaleimide reduce the binding capacity irreversibly without altering the Kd value. The rate constant of inactivation is about one-third of that for the high-affinity site and for the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. Thermodynamic parameters (delta H degree and delta S degree) for the apparent affinity in the ATPase reaction (Km ATP) and for the true affinity in the binding of AdoPP[NH]P (Kd and Ki) differ greatly in sign and magnitude, indicating that one or more reaction steps following binding significantly contribute to the Km value, which thus is smaller than the Kd value. Ouabain does not affect the capacity of low-affinity nucleotide binding, but only increases the Kd value to an extent depending on the nucleotide used. GTP and CTP appear to be most sensitive, ATP and ADP intermediately sensitive and AdoPP[NH]P and AMP least sensitive to ouabain. Ouabain reduces the high-affinity nucleotide binding capacity without affecting the Kd value. The nucleotide specificity of the low-affinity binding site is the same for binding (competition with AdoPP[NH]P) and for the ATPase activity (competition with ATP): AdoPP[NH]P greater than ATP greater than ADP greater than AMP. The low-affinity nucleotide binding capacity is preserved in the ouabain-stabilized phosphorylated state, and the Kd value is not increased more than by ouabain alone. It is inferred that the low-affinity site is located on the enzyme, more specifically its alpha-subunit, and not on the surrounding phospholipids. It is situated outside the phosphorylation centre. The possible functional role of the low-affinity binding is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The role of tightly bound ADP on chloroplast ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Isolated chloroplast coupling factor 1 ATPase is known to retain about 1 mol of tightly bound ADP/mol of enzyme. Some experimental results have given evidence that the bound ADP is at catalytic sites, but this view has not been supported by observations of a slow replacement of the bound ADP when CaATP or MgATP is added. The experiments reported in this paper show why a slow replacement of ADP bound at a catalytic site can occur. When coupling factor 1, labeled with tightly bound [3H]ADP, is exposed to Mg2+ or Ca2+ prior to the addition of MgATP or CaATP, a pronounced lag in the onset of ATP hydrolysis is observed, and only slow replacement of the [3H]ADP occurs. Mg2+ or Ca2+ can induce inhibition very rapidly, as if an inhibited form of the enzyme results whenever the enzyme with tightly bound ADP encounters Mg2+ or Ca2+ prior to ATP. The inhibited form can be slowly reactivated by incubation with EDTA, although some irreversible loss in activity is encountered. In contrast, when MgATP or CaATP is added to enzyme depleted of Mg2+ and Ca2+ by incubation with EDTA, a rapid onset of ATP hydrolysis occurs and most of the tightly bound [3H]ADP is released within a few seconds, as expected for binding at a catalytic site. The Mg2+-induced inhibition of both the ATPase activity and the lack of replacement of tightly bound [3H] ADP can be largely prevented by incubation with Pi under conditions favoring Pi addition to the site containing the tightly bound ADP. Our and other results can be explained if enzyme catalysis is greatly hindered when MgADP or CaADP without accompanying Pi is tightly bound at one of the three catalytic sites on the enzyme in a high affinity conformation.  相似文献   

8.
Inactivation of the membrane-bound ATPase by tight ADP binding was studied under nonenergized conditions. The energy state of the system was controlled either by omitting MgCl2, preventing ATP hydrolysis, or by addition of an uncoupler which dissipates the . In the absence of Mg2+, ATP prevents the inactivation of the enzyme by ADP, in a competitive manner. This effect of ATP resembles that of GDP with Mg2+ present. In the presence of nigericin, Mg2+, and ATP, inactivation occurs after a 10–15-sec interval, during which the enzyme is able to hydrolyze ATP at a relatively rapid rate. The degree of inactivation is proportional to the level of bound ADP detected. This behavior is different from that of the coupled ATPase (no uncoupler added), where inactivation is attained only upon exhaustion of the ATP by its hydrolysis, despite the finding that ADP binds tightly to the active ATPase at all stages of the reaction. Higher levels of tightly bound ADP were detected in the presence of an uncoupler. We suggest that the interval during which the enzyme becomes inactive is that required for the enzyme to generate and bind ADP, and to change from the active to the inactive conformation. These results support the mechanism suggested previously for the modulation of the ATPase by tight nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

9.
1. Incubation of purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase EC 3.6.1.3) from rabbit kidney outer medulla with butanedione in borate buffer leads to reversible inactivation of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. 2. The reaction shows second-outer kinetics, suggesting that modification of a single amino acid residue is involved in the inactivation of the enzyme. 3. The pH dependence of the reaction and the effect of borate ions strongly suggest that modification of an arginine residue is involved. 4. Replacement of Na+ by K+ in the butanedione medium decreases inactivation. 5. ATP, ADP and adenylyl imido diphosphate, particularly in the presence of trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid to complex Mg2+, protect the enzyme very efficiently against inactivation by butanedione. 6. The (Na+ + Mg2+)-dependent phosphorylation capacity of the enzyme is inhibited in the same degree as the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity by butanedione. 7. The K+-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity is much less inhibited than the (Na+ + K+)ATPase activity. 8. The ATP stimulation of the K+-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity is inhibited by butanedione to the same extent as the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. 9. Modification of sulfhydryl groups with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) protects partially against the inactivating effect of butanedione. 10. The results suggest that an arginine residue is present in the nucleotide binding centre of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
D. Bar-Zvi  N. Shavit 《BBA》1982,681(3):451-458
Inactivation of the chloroplast ATPase upon tight nucleotide binding was studied with several adenine nucleotide analogs. Compared with ADP, the other nucleoside diphosphates were less effective in the follwing order: IDP >?-ADP > 1-oxido-ADP > GDP. The nucleotide analogs compete with ADP for binding to the tight nucleotide-binding site(s) on the ATPase and also prevent further inactivation by ADP. AdoPP[NH]P also causes inactivation but has a lower affinity than ADP. [3H]GDP binds tightly to the ATPase, but the resulting enzyme-GDP complex is more readily dissociable than the enzyme-ADP complex. Although both nucleotides appear to bind to the same site, the catalytic and binding properties of the coresponding nucletide-enzyme complexes differ. Binding of GDP also decreases the rate and extent of the sontaneous decay of the activated enzyme. PPi decreases the rate of inacivation caused by ADP and also the level of tigthly buond ADP. Based on these results, we suggest that two different confomations of the ATPase exist which contain tigthly bound ADP. The active conformation is conveted to the inactive conformation in the absence of a continued supply of energy by illumination or ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

11.
We have shown previously (Brooker, R.J., and Slayman, C.W. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12051-12055; Brooker, R. J., and Slayman, C. W. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 222-226) that the plasma membrane [H+]-ATPase of Neurospora crassa is inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), which reacts at an essential nucleotide-protectable site on the Mr = 104,000 polypeptide. The present study demonstrates that Mg2+ has a biphasic effect on NEM inhibition. At low concentrations (0.01-0.1 mM, Mg2+ decreases the sensitivity of the enzyme to NEM, while at high concentrations (greater than 1 mM), it enhances sensitivity. These effects are seen in the presence or absence of nucleotides (ATP, ADP). Mg2+ also acts in a concentration-dependent way to influence the degradation of the ATPase by trypsin. Low concentrations of Mg2+ have little or no effect on tryptic inactivation of ATPase activity or on the disappearance of the Mr = 104,000 polypeptide and the stepwise appearance of Mr = 100,000 and 91,000 tryptic fragments. High concentrations of Mg2+ decrease the rate of inactivation, and a new fragment of Mr = 98,000 is seen. Taken together, the NEM and trypsin results indicate that the Neurospora [H+]-ATPase possesses high and low affinity Mg2+ binding sites which affect the conformation of the enzyme. The divalent cation specificity of the sites has also been investigated. Co2+, Mn2+, and (to a lesser extent) Ni2+ mimic the behavior of Mg2+, but Ca2+ has a different effect, at least at the high affinity site. It appears to bind to that site, based on its ability to inhibit ATP hydrolysis (in the presence of Mg2+), but does not offer protection against NEM inhibition. The results suggest a way in which Ca2+ may serve as a physiological regulator of the ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
Treatment of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase of Neurospora crassa with the arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal or 2,3-butanedione at 30 degrees C, pH 7.0, leads to a marked inhibition of ATPase activity. MgATP, the physiological substrate of the enzyme, protects against inactivation. MgADP, a competitive inhibitor of ATPase activity with a measured Ki of 0.11 mM, also protects, yielding calculated KD values of 0.125 and 0.115 mM in the presence of phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione, respectively. The excellent agreement between Ki and KD values makes it likely that MgADP exerts its protective effect by binding to the catalytic site of the enzyme. Loss of activity follows pseudo-first order kinetics with respect to phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione concentration, and double log plots of pseudo-first order rate constants versus reagent concentration yield slopes of 0.999 (phenylglyoxal) and 0.885 (2,3-butanedione), suggesting that the modification of one reactive site/mol of H+-ATPase is sufficient for inactivation. This stoichiometry has been confirmed by direct measurements of the incorporation of [14C]phenylglyoxal. Taken together, the results support the notion that one arginine residue, either located at the catalytic site or shielded by a conformational change upon nucleotide binding, plays an essential role in Neurospora H+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

13.
C H Pedemonte  J H Kaplan 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7966-7973
Treatment of purified renal Na,K-ATPase with dihydro-4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (H2DIDS) produces both reversible and irreversible inhibition of the enzyme activity. The reversible inhibition is unaffected by the presence of saturating concentrations of the sodium pump ligands Na+,K+, Mg2+, and ATP, while the inactivation is prevented by either ATP or K+. The kinetics of protection against inactivation indicate that K+ binds to two sites on the enzyme with very different affinities. Na+ ions with high affinity facilitate the inactivation by H2DIDS and prevent the protective effect of K+ ions. The H2DIDS-inactivated enzyme no longer exhibits a high-affinity nucleotide binding site, and the covalent binding of fluorescein isothiocyanate is also greatly reduced, but phosphorylation by Pi is unaffected. The kinetics of inactivation by H2DIDS were first order with respect to time and H2DIDS concentration. The enzyme is completely inactivated by the covalent binding of one H2DIDS molecule at pH 9 per enzyme phosphorylation site, or two H2DIDS molecules at pH 7.2. H2DIDS binds exclusively to the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase, locking the enzyme in an E2-like conformation. The profile of radioactivity, following trypsinolysis and SDS-PAGE, showed H2DIDS attachment to a 52-kDa fragment which also contains the ATP binding site. These results suggest that H2DIDS treatment modifies a specific conformationally sensitive amino acid residue on the alpha-subunit of the Na,K-ATPase, resulting in the loss of nucleotide binding and enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of Mg2+ and nucleotides on the dephosphorylation process of the (K+ + H+)-ATPase phosphoenzyme have been studied. Phosphorylation with [gamma-32P]ATP is stopped either by addition of non-radioactive ATP or by complexing of Mg2+ with EDTA. The dephosphorylation process is slow and monoexponential when dephosphorylation is initiated with ATP. When phosphorylation is stopped by complexing of Mg2+ the dephosphorylation process is fast and biexponential. The discrepancy could be explained by a nucleotide mediated inhibition of the dephosphorylation process. The I0.5 for ATP for this inhibition is 0.1 mM and that for ADP is 0.7 mM, suggesting that a low-affinity binding site is involved. When Mg2+ is present in millimolar concentrations in addition to the nucleotides the dephosphorylation process is enhanced. Evidence has been obtained that Mg2+ acts through lowering the affinity for ATP. In contrast to K+, Mg2+ does not stimulate dephosphorylation in the absence of nucleotides. Mg2+ and nucleotides show the same interaction in the dephosphorylation process of a phosphoenzyme generated from inorganic phosphate. These findings suggest the presence of a low-affinity nucleotide binding site on the phosphoenzyme, as is found in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase phosphoenzyme. This low-affinity binding site may function as a feed-back mechanism in proton transport.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetics of inhibition of ATPase activity of pure mouse Mdr3 P-glycoprotein upon incubation with MgADP and vanadate were studied along with the trapping of [14C]ADP in presence of vanadate. The presence of verapamil strongly magnified both effects. Inhibition of ATPase was also increased by several other drugs known to bind to drug-binding sites. Inhibition by ADP-vanadate was slow and depended cooperatively on nucleotide binding. Stoichiometry of [14C]ADP trapping by vanadate was 1 mol/mol P-glycoprotein at full inhibition. Catalytic site mutants prevented [14C]ADP trapping, whereas interdomain signal communication mutants reduced it in approximate correlation with their effects upon drug stimulation of ATPase. In explanation of the results, we propose that a "closed conformation" involving dimerization and interdigitation of the two nucleotide-binding domains is necessary to allow inhibition by ADP-vanadate. The results suggest that such a conformation occurs naturally during ATP hydrolysis. It is proposed that in order for the catalytic transition state to form, the two nucleotide-binding domains dimerize to form an integrated single entity containing two bound ATP with just one of the two ATP being hydrolyzed per dimerization event.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase with the Mg.ATP analogues Rh(H2O)4ATP and Co(NH3)4ATP have been examined. Co(NH3)4ATP slowly inactivates Ca(2+)-ATPase in a first order process, with a rate constant of 1.13 x 10(-3) s-1 and an apparent inactivation constant, KI, of 32 mM. Rh(H2O)4ATP likewise inactivates sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, but the plot of reciprocal apparent inactivation rate constants versus 1/[Rh(H2O)4ATP] is biphasic. The chi-intercepts of this plot yield apparent inactivation constants for the inhibition of Ca(2+)-ATPase by Rh(H2O)4ATP of KI1 = 30 microM and KI2 = 221 microM. The corresponding values of k2, the maximal first-order rate constant for inhibition in these two phases, are 1.16 and 2.19 x 10(-4)s-1. Tridentate Rh(H2O)3ATP also inhibits Ca(2+)-ATPase, but only after much longer incubation times. Ca(2+)-ATPase inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of radioactivity from gamma-32P into an acid-precipitable enzyme. Both processes were dependent on the presence of Ca2+ ions and were quenched by excess ATP. The first-order rate constant for inactivation of Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity in this experiment was 2.19 x 10(-4)s-1, and the first-order rate constant for Ca(2+)-dependent E-P formation was 2.07 x 10(-4)s-1, in excellent agreement with the value for inactivation. A linear relationship is observed between ATPase inactivation and E-P formation. Moreover, atomic absorption analysis demonstrates that the phosphorylation of Ca(2+)-ATPase by Rh(H2O)4ATP is accompanied by incorporation and tight binding of rhodium, with a stoichiometry of one rhodium incorporated per ATPase molecule phosphorylated. The characteristics of ATPase inactivation and phosphorylation (i.e., Ca2+ dependence, ATP competition, agreement of rate constants, and stoichiometric rhodium incorporation) suggest that Rh(H2O)4ATP is binding to the catalytic nucleotide site on Ca(2+)-ATPase and producing a highly stable, phosphorylated intermediate.  相似文献   

17.
The ATP analog 6-[(3-carboxy-4-nitrophenyl)thiol]-9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurine 5'-triphosphate (Nbs6ITP) is slowly hydrolyzed at pH 7.4 by the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, whereas it binds covalently at pH 8.5 and inhibits the enzyme irreversibly. Time courses of irreversible inhibition could only be fitted to a model in which the enzyme can exist in two slowly interchangeable states, one of which is enzymatically active and binds Nbs6ITP first reversibly and then covalently. Arguments that the covalent binding occurs at a low affinity nucleotide binding site are: (a) similarity of the Ki Nbs6ITP for the reversible and the irreversible inhibition and of K0.5 for ATP protection; (b) stoichiometry of covalent Nbs6ITP binding per alpha subunit of 0.8; and (c) change of complex substrate dependence of the enzyme to a Michaelis-Menten type after Nbs6ITP modification. This change in kinetics and the finding that the Nbs6ITP inactivation at a low affinity nucleotide binding site is increased by micromolar ADP concentrations indicates that the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase contains two different nucleotide binding sites. Since studies of nucleotide effects on enzyme inactivation by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) did not confirm the hypothesis of an SH-group in a nucleotide binding site, Nbs6ITP may bind to another functional group, e.g. to an OH-group of tyrosine.  相似文献   

18.
The trypsin-activated Ca2+ -ATPase of spinach chloroplast membranes was completely inhibited by treatment with naphthylglyoxal, a fluorescent compound that should bind covalently to arginine residues. The inhibition followed apparent first-order kinetics. The apparent order of reaction with respect to inhibitor concentration gave values near unity, suggesting that inactivation is a consequence of modifying one arginine residue per active site. Partial protection against naphthylglyoxal was afforded by ADP and ATP, with either less or no protection by other nucleotide bases. At inhibition levels less than complete, the Km for ATP was not affected but the Vmax of the enzyme was diminished. The light-dependent exchange of tightly bound nucleotides on the membrane-bound enzyme was not inhibited by naphthylglyoxal treatment, indicating significant retention of the conformational response of the enzyme to the membrane high-energy state. Using [3H]naphthylglyoxal, the extent of inhibition was a linear function of the amount of naphthylglyoxal bound up to 60% inhibition. The curves extrapolated to 2 mol naphthylglyoxal bound, associated with complete inhibition of ATPase. The radioactive naphthylglyoxal was distributed equally between α- and β-subunits.  相似文献   

19.
The recent finding that the presence of ATP at non-catalytic sites of chloroplast F1-ATPase (CF1) is necessary for ATPase activity (Milgrom, Y. M., Ehler, L. L., and Boyer, P. D. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265,18725-18728) prompted more detailed studies of the effect of noncatalytic site nucleotides on catalysis. CF1 containing at noncatalytic sites less than one ADP or about two ATP was prepared by heat activation in the absence of Mg2+ and in the presence of ADP or ATP, respectively. After removal of medium nucleotides, the CF1 preparations were used for measurement of the time course of nucleotide binding from 10 to 100 microM concentrations of 3H-labeled ADP, ATP, or GTP. The presence of Mg2+ strongly promotes the tight binding of ADP and ATP at noncatalytic sites. For example, the ADP-heat-activated enzyme in presence of 1 mM Mg2+ binds ADP with a rate constant of 0.5 x 10(6) M-1 min-1 to give an enzyme with two ADP at noncatalytic sites with a Kd of about 0.1 microM. Upon exposure to Mg2+ and ATP the vacant noncatalytic site binds an ATP rapidly and, as an ADP slowly dissociates, a second ATP binds. The binding correlates with an increase in the ATPase activity. In contrast the tight binding of [3H]GTP to noncatalytic sites gives an enzyme with no ATPase activity. The three noncatalytic sites differ in their binding properties. The noncatalytic site that remains vacant after the ADP-heat-activated CF1 is exposed to Mg2+ and ADP and that can bind ATP rapidly is designated as site A; the site that fills with ATP as ADP dissociates when this enzyme is exposed to Mg2+ and ATP is called site B, and the site to which ADP remains bound is called site C. Procedures are given for attaining CF1 with ADP at sites B and C, with GTP at sites A and/or B, and with ATP at sites A, B, and/or C, and catalytic activities of such preparations are measured. For example, little or no ATPase activity is found unless ATP is at site A, but ADP can remain at site C with no effect on ATPase. Maximal GTPase activity requires ATP at site A but about one-fifth of maximal GTPase is attained when GTP is at sites A and B and ATP at site C. Noncatalytic site occupancy can thus have profound effects on the ATPase and GTPase activities of CF1.  相似文献   

20.
The arginine-specific reagent phenylglyoxal inactivated the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase of red beet. Inactivation by phenylglyoxal followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and a double log plot of the t1/2 of inactivation versus phenylglyoxal concentration yielded a slope of 1.18. Neither inorganic anions nor DIDS protected from phenylglyoxal-mediated inactivation of the H(+)-ATPase. Indeed, Cl- stimulated the rate of phenylglyoxal-mediated H(+)-ATPase inactivation relative to SO4(2-). ATP, but not MgATP or ADP, protected from phenylglyoxal-mediated inactivation and inactivation resulted in a decrease in the Vmax of the H(+)-ATPase with little effect on the Km. Collectively, these results are consistent with phenylglyoxal-mediated inactivation of the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase resulting from modification of a single arginine residue in the catalytic nucleotide binding site of the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. Stimulation of phenylglyoxal-mediated inactivation by Cl- indicates that exposure of the phenylglyoxal-sensitive functional arginine residue is enhanced in the presence of Cl-. The failure of MgATP to protect from phenylglyoxal inactivation suggests that ATP, rather than MgATP, binds directly to the catalytic site and that Mg2+ may act to promote catalysis subsequent to ATP binding.  相似文献   

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