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Ca2+ uptake, Ca2+-ATPase activity, phosphoprotein formation and phosphate turnover in a microsomal fraction of smooth muscle
Authors:L Raeymaekers  W Hasselbach
Abstract:Vesicles capable of phosphate-stimulated calcium uptake were isolated from the microsomal fraction of the smooth muscle of the pig stomach according to a previously described procedure which consists in increasing the density of the vesicles by loading them with calcium phosphate and isolating them by centrifugation Raeymaekers, L., Agostini, B., and Hasselbach, W. (1981) Histochemistry, 70, 139--150]. These vesicles, which contain calcium phosphate deposits, are able to accumulate an additional amount of calcium. This calcium uptake is accompanied by calcium-stimulated ATPase activity and by the formation of an acid-stable phosphoprotein. The acid-denatured phosphoprotein is dephosphorylated by hydroxylamine, which indicates that an acylphosphate is formed. This phosphoprotein probably represents a phosphorylated transport intermediate similar to that seen with the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle. As with the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles, this vesicular fraction catalyses an exchange between inorganic phosphate and the gamma-phosphate of ATP (ATP-Pi exchange) which is dependent on the presence of intravesicular calcium, and an exchange of phosphate between ATP and ADP (ATP-ADP exchange). The results further indicate that the turnover rate of the calcium pump, calculated from the ratio of calcium-stimulated ATPase activity to the steady-state level of phosphoprotein, is similar to that of Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle.
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