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1.
Phosphorylation of human erythrocyte ghost membrane proteins was found to be affected by micromolar calcium concentrations. Increasing Ca2+ concentration to 0.2 microM decreased spectrin (band 2) phosphorylation to 30 +/- 6% of control (to which no calcium was added). Decreasing calcium concentration by adding EGTA (0.2mM) to the standard membrane preparation increased spectrin phosphorylation to 575% control. This effect of Ca2+ was more pronounced at higher temperature. At 0 degree C, Ca2+ (0.05mM) had no effect on protein phosphorylation. Sodium fluoride like EGTA caused a four to five fold increase in phosphorylation. Pyrophosphate, a phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibator, had no effect. Once spectrin was phosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP the addition of Ca2+ or EGTA did not decrease or increase its phosphorylation. It is suggested that calcium regulates spectrin phosphorylation either by decreasing kinase activity or by decreasing substrate availability.  相似文献   

2.
Brain spectrin reassociates in in vitro binding assays with protein(s) in highly extracted brain membranes quantitatively depleted of ankyrin and spectrin. These newly described membrane sites for spectrin are biologically significant and involve a protein since (a) binding occurs optimally at physiological pH (6.7-6.9) and salt concentrations (50 mM), (b) binding is abolished by digestion of membranes with alpha-chymotrypsin, (c) Scatchard analysis is consistent with a binding capacity of at least 50 pmol/mg total membrane protein, and highest affinity of 3 nM. The major ankyrin-independent binding activity of brain spectrin is localized to the beta subunit of spectrin. Brain membranes also contain high affinity binding sites for erythrocyte spectrin, but a 3-4 fold lower capacity than for brain spectrin. Some spectrin-binding sites associate preferentially with brain spectrin, some with erythrocyte spectrin, and some associate with both types of spectrin. Erythrocyte spectrin contains distinct binding domains for ankyrin and brain membrane protein sites, since the Mr = 72,000 spectrin-binding fragment of ankyrin does not compete for binding of spectrin to brain membranes. Spectrin binds to a small number of ankyrin-independent sites in erythrocyte membranes present in about 10,000-15,000 copies/cell or 10% of the number of sites for ankyrin. Brain spectrin binds to these sites better than erythrocyte spectrin suggesting that erythrocytes have residual binding sites for nonerythroid spectrin. Ankyrin-independent-binding proteins that selectively bind to certain isoforms of spectrin provide a potentially important flexibility in cellular localization and time of synthesis of proteins involved in spectrin-membrane interactions. This flexibility has implications for assembly of the membrane skeleton and targeting of spectrin isoforms to specialized regions of cells.  相似文献   

3.
A spectrin-dependent ATPase of the human erythrocyte membrane   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Removal of spectrin from erythrocyte membranes results in the simultaneous loss of a calcium-stimulated, magnesium-dependent ATPase with an apparent KD for Ca2+ of 1 microM. This ATPase activity with high Ca2+ affinity is specifically reconstituted by addition of purified spectrin to spectrin-depleted membranes, and the reconstituted activity is directly proportional to the amount of spectrin that is reassociated with the membranes. Spectrin binding and activation of the high Ca2+ affinity Mg2+-ATPase are proportionally inhibited by thermal denaturation, trypsin digestion, or treatment of the membranes with thiol-reactive reagents. Binding of calmodulin to the Ca2+ pump ATPase requires that calmodulin contains bound ca2+. By contrast, spectrin binding to the erythrocyte membrane is Ca2+-independent. Direct assay of calmodulin is purified spectrin and absence of chlorpromazine inhibition of reconstitution demonstrate that activation of the high Ca2+ affinity ATPase resulting from spectrin binding is not a result of contamination of spectrin by calmodulin. Additional evidence that the spectrin-activated ATPase is an entity separate and distinct from the Ca2+ pump is provided by other characteristics of the activation phenomenon. It is suggested that spectrin constitutes part of an ATPase which may function as a component of the "cytoskeleton" controlling erythrocyte shape and membrane flexibility.  相似文献   

4.
M M Hosey  M Tao 《Biochemistry》1977,16(21):4578-4583
This report describes the substrate and phosphoryl donor specificities of solubilized erythrocyte membrane cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP)-independent protein kinases toward human and rabbit erythrocyte membrane proteins. Three types of substrate preparations have been utilized: heat-inactivated ghosts, isolated spectrin, and 2,3-dimethylmaleic anhydride (DMMA)-extracted membranes. A 30 000-dalton protein kinase, extracted from either human or rabbit erythrocyte membranes, catalyzes the phosphorylation of heat-inactivated membranes in the presence of ATP. The resulting phosphorylation profile is analogous to that of the autophosphorylation of membranes with ATP (in the absence of cAMP). These kinases also phosphorylate band 2 of isolated spectrin and band 3, but not glycophorin, in the DMMA-extracted ghosts. The ability of the 30 000-dalton kinases to use GTP as a phosphoryl donor appears to be related to the substrate or some other membrane factor. A second kinase, which is 100 000 daltons and derived from rabbit erythrocyte membranes, uses ATP or GTP to phosphorylate membrane proteins 2, 2.1, 2.9-3 in heat-inactivated ghosts, band 2 in isolated spectrin, glycophorin, and to a lesser extent, band 3 in the DMMA-extracted ghosts.  相似文献   

5.
The distributions of ankyrin, spectrin, band 3, and glycophorin A were examined in Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes by immunoelectron microscopy to determine whether movement of parasite proteins and membrane vesicles between the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and erythrocyte surface membrane involves internalization of host membrane skeleton proteins. Monospecific rabbit antisera to spectrin, band 3 and ankyrin and a mouse monoclonal antibody to glycophorin A reacted with these erythrocyte proteins in infected and uninfected human erythrocytes by immunoblotting. Cross-reacting malarial proteins were not detected. The rabbit sera also failed to immunoprecipitate [3H]isoleucine labeled malarial proteins from Triton X-100 and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) extracts of infected erythrocytes. These three antibodies as well as the monoclonal antibody to glycophorin A bound to the membrane skeleton of infected and uninfected erythrocytes. The parasitophorous vacuole membrane was devoid of bound antibody, a result indicating that this membrane contains little, if any, of these host membrane proteins. With ring-, trophozoite- and schizont-infected erythrocytes, spectrin, band 3 and glycophorin A were absent from intracellular membranes including Maurer's clefts and other vesicles in the erythrocyte cytoplasm. In contrast, Maurer's clefts were specifically labeled by anti-ankyrin antibody. There was a slight, corresponding decrease in labeling of the membrane skeleton of infected erythrocytes. A second, morphologically distinct population of circular, vesicle-like membranes in the erythrocyte cytoplasm was not labeled with anti-ankyrin antibody. We conclude that membrane movement between the host erythrocyte surface membrane and parasitophorous vacuole membrane involves preferential sorting of ankyrin into a subpopulation of cytoplasmic membranes.  相似文献   

6.
In the preceding paper (Sheetz, M. and S.J. Singer. 1977. J Cell Biol. 73:638-646) it was shown that erythrocyte ghosts undergo pronounced shape changes in the presence of mg-ATP. The biochemical effects of the action of ATP are herein examined. The biochemical effects of the action of ATP are herein examined. Phosphorylation by ATP of spectrin component 2 of the erythrocyte membrane is known to occur. We have shown that it is only membrane protein that is significantly phosphorylated under the conditions where the shape changes are produced. The extent of this phosphorylation rises with increasing ATP concentration, reaching nearly 1 mol phosphoryle group per mole of component 2 at 8mM ATP. Most of this phosphorylation appears to occur at a single site on the protein molecule, according to cyanogen bromide peptide cleavage experiments. The degree of phosphorylation of component 2 is apparently also regulated by a membrane-bound protein phosphatase. This activity can be demonstrated in erythrocyte ghosts prepared from intact cells prelabeled with [(32)P]phosphate. In addition to the phosphorylation of component 2, some phosphorylation of lipids, mainly of phosphatidylinositol, is also known to occur. The ghost shape changes are, however, shown to be correlated with the degree of phosphorylation of component 2. In such experiment, the incorporation of exogenous phosphatases into ghosts reversed the shape changes produced by ATP, or by the membrane-intercalating drug chlorpromazine. The results obtained in this and the preceding paper are consistent with the proposal that the erythrocyte membrane possesses kinase and phosphates activities which produce phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of a specific site on spectrin component 2 molecules; the steady-state level of this phosphorylation regulates the structural state of the spectrin complex on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane, which in turn exerts an important control on the shape of the cell.  相似文献   

7.
Summary— The membrane skeleton, responsible for shape and mechanical properties of the red cell, was purified by the Triton extraction procedure in presence of 5 mM, 150 mM or 600 mM NaCl. The proportion of spectrin, protein 4.1 and actin present in erythrocyte skeletons does not depend on the molarity of NaCl used. In contrast ankyrin, protein band 3 and protein 4.2 are removed from skeletons as the ionic strength increased. Solubilization assays of membrane skeletons were used to study protein interactions inside the skeleton. Solubilization was performed by Tris, a non-selective disruptive reagent, or by p-mercuribenzene sulfonic acid (PMBS), which principally release spectrin and actin. Tris action was assessed by calculation of the percentage of solubilized proteins, which increased proportionally with Tris molarity. PMBS action was kinetically determined as the decrease in skeleton turbidity. With these two reagents, we observed a lower dissociation of skeletons prepared with high ionic strength buffer. Erythrocyte pretreatment with okadaic acid, an inhibitor of serine-threonine phosphatases, revealed a phosphorylation-induced skeleton gelation and a better resistance to Tris-solubilization.  相似文献   

8.
To analyse the role of native structures of membrane proteins in their structural modifications induced by the elevated intracellular free Ca2+ levels, we have studied the Ca(2+)-mediated effects on membrane skeletal proteins in human erythrocytes that were loaded with Ca2+ using the ionophore A23187 after their pretreatment with the sulphydryl oxidizing agent, diamide. The diamide treatment not only induced polymerization of the major membrane skeletal protein, spectrin, in the erythrocytes, but it also promoted intersubunit crosslinking within the tetramers and dimers of this protein. Loading of these diamide-treated cells with Ca2+ failed to induce significant structural modifications of spectrin as well as polypeptide 4.1, another major membrane skeletal protein, as compared to the erythrocytes that were loaded with Ca2+ without the diamide pretreatment. These results have been interpreted to suggest that the Ca(2+)-induced membrane skeletal protein changes in erythrocytes depend on both the shape and relative orientation of these proteins within the membrane skeleton.  相似文献   

9.
Brain spectrin, through its beta subunit, binds with high affinity to protein-binding sites on brain membranes quantitatively depleted of ankyrin (Steiner, J., and Bennett, V. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14417-14425). In this study, calmodulin is demonstrated to inhibit binding of brain spectrin to synaptosomal membranes. Submicromolar concentrations of calcium are required for inhibition of binding, with half-maximal effects at pCa = 6.5. Calmodulin competitively inhibits binding of spectrin to protein(s) in stripped synaptosomal membranes, with Ki = 1.3 microM in the presence of 10 microM calcium. A reversible receptor-mediated process, and not proteolysis, is responsible for inhibition since the effect of calcium/calmodulin is reversed by the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine and by chelation of calcium with sodium [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. The target of calmodulin is most likely the spectrin attachment protein(s) rather than spectrin itself since: (a) membrane binding of the brain spectrin beta subunit, which does not associate with calmodulin, is inhibited by calcium/calmodulin, and (b) red cell spectrin which binds calmodulin very weakly, is inhibited from interacting with membrane receptors in the presence of calcium/calmodulin. Ca2+/calmodulin inhibited association of erythrocyte spectrin with synaptosomal membranes but had no effect on binding of erythrocyte or brain spectrin to ankyrin in erythrocyte membranes. These experiments demonstrate the potential for differential regulation of spectrin-membrane protein interactions, with the consequence that Ca2+/calmodulin can dissociate direct spectrin-membrane interactions locally or regionally without disassembly of the areas of the membrane skeleton stabilized by linkage of spectrin to ankyrin. A membrane protein of Mr = 88,000 has been identified that is dissociated from spectrin affinity columns by calcium/calmodulin and is a candidate for the calmodulin-sensitive spectrin-binding site in brain.  相似文献   

10.
Basolateral membrane vesicles were prepared from purified proximal and distal tubules of the rabbit kidney. The properties of the ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport were investigated. In both membranes, there was a high affinity, ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport system (Km = 0.1 microM). The optimal concentration of Mg2+ was 0.5 mM and the optimal concentration of ATP was 1 mM. The nucleotide specificity and pH dependence of the Ca2+ transport in both membranes were similar. In basolateral membrane vesicles, calmodulin had no effect on Ca2+ transport. However, in basolateral membrane vesicles depleted of calmodulin, exogenous calmodulin increased the Ca2+ transport by increasing maximal velocity. There were no major differences in the properties of the ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport system in these two membranes. These findings are discussed in relation to why parathyroid hormone differentially modulates Ca2+ transport in these two segments of the nephron.  相似文献   

11.
The process of the formation of vesicles from pigeon erythrocyte membranes was studied. Mildly alkaline solutions of low ionic strength, which reduce human erythrocyte membranes to small vesicles depleted of spectrin and other proteins, have no such effect on pigeon erythrocyte ghosts. A distinct phase of removal of membrane proteins, including spectrin, began to occur only when pigeon erythrocyte membranes were exposed to 0.2 mM EDTA adjusted to pH values above 10.2. Vesicles which demonstrated Na+-dependent amino acid transport were generated between the pH values 10.8 and 11.4. The results show that peripheral proteins, notably spectrin, maintain the integrity of the pigeon erythrocyte ghost. The interaction of these proteins with the membrane is rather different from that well studied in the human erythrocyte ghost and the possible significance of this for the pigeon erythrocyte is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
C M Cohen  S F Foley 《Biochemistry》1984,23(25):6091-6098
Ternary complex formation between the major human erythrocyte membrane skeletal proteins spectrin, protein 4.1, and actin was quantified by measuring cosedimentation of spectrin and band 4.1 with F-actin. Complex formation was dependent upon the concentration of spectrin and band 4.1, each of which promoted the binding of the other to F-actin. Simultaneous measurement of the concentrations of spectrin and band 4.1 in the sedimentable complex showed that a single molecule of band 4.1 was sufficient to promote the binding of a spectrin dimer to F-actin. However, the molar ratio of band 4.1/spectrin in the complex was not fixed, ranging from approximately 0.6 to 2.2 as the relative concentration of added spectrin to band 4.1 was decreased. A mole ratio of 0.6 band 4.1/spectrin suggests that a single molecule of band 4.1 can promote the binding of more than one spectrin dimer to an actin filament. Saturation binding studies showed that in the presence of band 4.1 every actin monomer in a filament could bind at least one molecule of spectrin, yielding ternary complexes with spectrin/actin mole ratios as high as 1.4. Electron microscopy of such complexes showed them to consist of actin filaments heavily decorated with spectrin dimers. Ternary complex formation was not affected by alteration in Mg2+ or Ca2+ concentration but was markedly inhibited by KCl above 100 mM and nearly abolished by 10 mM 2,3-diphosphoglycerate or 10 mM adenosine 5'-triphosphate. Our data are used to refine the molecular model of the red cell membrane skeleton.  相似文献   

13.
Two species of PtdIns 4-kinase with molecular masses of 50 kDa and 45 kDa were detected in human erythrocyte membranes using SDS/PAGE. These enzymes were purified to near homogeneity and found to display very similar enzymatic characteristics. The purification scheme consisted of solubilization from erythrocyte membranes in the presence of Triton X-100, followed by Cibacron-blue-Sephadex, phosphocellulose and Mono Q anion-exchange chromatography. The final step in the purification protocol was preparative SDS/PAGE, followed by electroelution and renaturation of the enzyme. This procedure afforded an about 4000-fold purification of the enzyme from erythrocyte membranes. Characterization of the [32P]PtdInsP products formed by the purified PtdIns kinases indicated that these enzymes specifically phosphorylated the D-4 position of the inositol ring. The Km values of both PtdIns 4-kinase species for PtdIns and ATP were found to be 0.2 mM and 0.1 mM, respectively. The enzymes are both activated by Mg2+, and inhibited by Ca2+ and by adenosine. The potential importance of these effectors for the regulation of PtdIns phosphorylation in cells is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Physicochemical properties of mixtures of spectrin and actin extracted from human erythrocyte ghosts have been correlated with ultrastructural changes observed in freeze-fractured erythrocyte membranes. (1) Extracted mixtures of spectrin and actin have a very low solubility (less than 30 mug/ml) near their isoelectric point, pH 4.8. These mixtures are also precipitated by low concentrations of Ca2+, Mg2+, polylysine or basic proteins. (2) All conditions which precipitate extracts of spectrin and actin also induce aggregation of the intramembrane particles in spectrin-depleted erythrocyte ghosts. Precipitation of the residual spectrin molecules into small patches on the cytoplasmic surface of the ghost membrane is thought to be the cause of particle aggregations, implying an association between the spectrin molecules and the intramembrane particles. (3) When fresh ghosts are exposed to conditions which precipitate extracts of spectrin and actin, only limited particle aggregation occurs. Instead, the contraction of the intact spectrin meshwork induced by the precipitation conditions compresses the lipid bilayer of the membrane, causing it to bleb off particle-free, protein-free vesicles. (4) The absence of protein in these lipid vesicles implies that all the proteins of the erythrocyte membrane are immobilized by association with either the spectrin meshwork or the intramembrane particles.  相似文献   

15.
1. Endogenous proteolysis in human erythrocyte membranes was studied in human erythrocyte membranes incubated at 37 degrees C by monitoring changes in 2-D electrophoretic pattern of membrane polypeptides and in the spectra of maleimide-spin labeled membranes. 2. A strong effect of exogenous proteases derived from contaminating other blood elements was found, resulting in formation of specific spots on 2-D electropherograms, requiring very careful leukocyte removal in investigations of red cell membrane protein composition and proteolysis. 3. Studies of the effects of protease inhibitors and Ca2+ confirmed a complex pattern of endogenous red cell membrane proteolysis ("self-digestion") involving many substrates and enzymes. 4. A promoting effect of high concentrations (150 mM) of Ca2+ on endogenous red cell membrane proteolysis was found.  相似文献   

16.
Protein kinase [EC 2.7.1.37] of human erythrocyte membranes was solubilized with 0.5 M NaCl in 5 mM phosphate buffer, pH 6.7 at 4 degrees C and purified on a CM-Sephadex C-50 column, followed by affinity chromatography on a histone-Sepharose 4B column. The purified protein kinase gave a single band (molecular weight; 41,000) on examination by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The optimum pH of the enzyme was 8.0 and a millimolar range of concentration of Mg2+ was required for its maximum activity. Histone and protamine were well phosphorylated by the protein kinase but casein and phosvitin were poor phosphate acceptors for the enzyme. The enzymic activity was not stimulated by cyclic AMP (cAMP). A cAMP-finding protein from human erythrocyte membranes inhibited the activity of the protein kinase, but the activity was restored with cAMP. A heat stable protein inhibitor from rabbit skeletal muscle also inhibited this enzyme. From these observations, this protein kinase seemed to be a catalytic subunit of the membrane bound cAMP-dependent protein kinase. This enzyme was strongly inhibited with Ca2+ in the presence of 1 mM MgCl2. Various sulfhydryl reagents and polyamines also had inhibitory activity on the protein kinase. Natural substrates of the enzyme were investigated using heat treated membranes and 0.5 M NaCl extracted membrane residues. Band 4.1, 4.2, and 4.5 proteins were phosphorylated but band 2 (spectrin) and band 3 proteins were poor substrates for this protein kinase.  相似文献   

17.
Renal basal-lateral and brush border membrane preparations were phosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP. The 32P-labeled membrane proteins were analysed on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The phosphorylated intermediates formed in different conditions are compared with the intermediates formed in well defined membrane preparations such as erythrocyte plasma membranes and sarcoplasmic reticulum from skeletal muscle, and with the intermediates of purified renal enzymes such as (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and alkaline phosphatase. Two Ca2+-induced, hydroxylamine-sensitive phosphoproteins are formed in the basal-lateral membrane preparations. They migrate with a molecular radius Mr of about 130 000 and 100 000. The phosphorylation of the 130 kDa protein was stimulated by La3+-ions (20 microM) in a similar way as the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase from erythrocytes. The 130 kDa phosphoprotein also comigrated with the erythrocyte (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. In addition in the same preparation, another hydroxylamine-sensitive 100 kDa phosphoprotein was formed in the presence of Na+. This phosphoprotein comigrates with a preparation of renal (Na+ + K+)-ATPase. In brush border membrane preparations the Ca2+-induced and the Na+-induced phosphorylation bands are absent. This is consistent with the basal-lateral localization of the renal Ca2+-pump and Na+-pump. The predominant phosphoprotein in brush border membrane preparations is a 85 kDa protein that could be identified as the phosphorylated intermediate of renal alkaline phosphatase. This phosphoprotein is also present in basal-lateral membrane preparations, but it can be accounted for by contamination of those membranes with brush border membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The ATP production of human erythrocytes in the steady state (approximately 2 mmoles . 1 cells-1 . h-1, 37 degrees C, pHi 7.2) is maintained by glycolysis and the ATP consumption is essentially limited to the cell membrane. About 25% of the ATP consumption is used for ion transport ATPases. The bulk of the ATP consuming processes in intact erythrocytes remains poorly understood. "Isotonic" erythrocyte membranes prepared under approximate intracellular conditions after freeze-thaw hemolysis have high (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase activities (80% of the total membrane ATPase activity). There is a great discrepancy between the high capacity of the (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase in isotonic membranes and the actual activity in the intact cell. The (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase of isotonic membranes has a "high" Ca2+-affinity (Ka less than 0.5 microM) and a "low" Mg-ATP affinity (Km approximately 760 microM). This state of (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase is caused by the association of calmodulin and 30000 Dalton polypeptides (ATP affinity modulator protein). Hypotonic washings of isotonic membranes result in a loss of the 30 kD polypeptides. EGTA (0.5 mM) extracts derived from isotonic membranes contain the 30 kD modulator protein and restore the properties of the (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase of hypotonic membrane preparations to the isotonic characteristics. The Mg-ATP affinity modulator protein is assumed to form a complex with calmodulin and (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

19.
Calcium ions promote the rapid transfer of the terminal phosphate of ATP to a protein of human erythrocyte membranes. The concentration of Ca2+ for half-maximal effect is 7 muM. At nonlimiting ATP concentrations the level of 32P incorporated by the membranes is independent of the presence or absence of Mg2+. The number of phosphorylating sites in a single erythrocyte membrane is about 700. The influence of pH on the rate of hydrolysis of the bound phosphate and its rapid release on exposure to hydroxylamine are both consistent with an acylphosphate bond. The phosphate in the protein undergoes rapid turnover. Enzymatic splitting of the phosphate is stimulated by Mg2+ but not by Ca2+. It is proposed that Mg2+ accelerates the splitting of the phosphate by favoring the conversion of the phosphoprotein from a state of low reactivity to a state of high reactivity towards water. The reactions described probably are intermediate steps in the hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by the Ca2+-dependent ATPase of human erythrocyte membranes.  相似文献   

20.
A K Verma  J T Penniston 《Biochemistry》1984,23(21):5010-5015
The highly purified Ca2+-pumping ATPase from human erythrocyte membranes displays two p-nitrophenylphosphatase (NPPase) activities: one of these requires calmodulin and low concentrations of Ca2+, while the other requires ATP and higher Ca2+ concentrations. The free Ca2+ concentrations required for the expression of the two NPPase activities differed very substantially. Both activities required high free Mg2+ concentrations and displayed simple hyperbolic kinetics toward p-nitrophenyl phosphate (NPP) with a Km in the range of 5-20 mM. Study of the dependence of the calmodulin-stimulated NPPase on Mg2+ and NPP indicated that the Mg-NPP complex is not the substrate of the enzyme. Under conditions optimal for ATP-requiring NPPase (1 mM free Ca2+), the Ca2+-ATPase displayed simple hyperbolic kinetics with a low Km for ATP. NPP competitively inhibited this activity, and the apparent Ki for NPP was less than 1 mM, much lower than the Km for NPP as a substrate. If NPP were inhibiting the ATPase by binding at the same site at which NPP is hydrolyzed, the apparent Ki for NPP as inhibitor would be the same as the Km for NPP as substrate. (Under these circumstances, the apparent Ki and the Km can be directly compared, since NPP was being hydrolyzed under both circumstances.) Since Ki was much lower than Km, NPP must have been inhibiting at another site; thus, these data show the existence of two types of NPP sites on the enzyme, one at which NPP is hydrolyzed and the other at which it inhibits ATP hydrolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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