Ca2+ transport against its electrochemical gradient in cytochrome oxidase vesicles reconstituted with mitochondrial hydrophobic proteins |
| |
Authors: | R N Rosier D A Tucker S Meerdink I Jain T E Gunter |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Radiation Biology and Biophysics, School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14642 USA |
| |
Abstract: | Cytochrome oxidase vesicles have recently been shown to accumulate Ca2+ in an energy-dependent manner. Energization of these vesicles with internally trapped cytochrome c and externally added ascorbate and phenazine methylsulfate generated an internally positive membrane potential and prevented Ca2+ influx (R. N. Rosier and T. E. Gunter, 1980, FEBS Lett.109, 99–103). In contradistinction, when cytochrome oxidase vesicles were reconstituted with complex V, a mitochondrial protein fraction containing the uncoupler binding site (Y. Hatefi, D. L. Stiggall, Y. Galante and W. G. Hanstein, 1974, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.61, 313–321), both Ca2+ uptake and generation of an internally positive membrane potential were observed. The uptake was specifically dependent on energization of electron transport. Control experiments verified that the energization conditions used produced appropriately oriented membrane potentials. Other partially purified hydrophobic mitochondrial protein complexes were found to be less effective than complex V. The reconstituted system showed cation selectivity since Ca2+, Mn2+, and Rb+ were transported, while Na+ was not. Low levels of uncoupler, which did not affect oxidation rates, were found to partially inhibit Ca2+ uptake regardless of the membrane potential polarity. Uncoupling levels of uncoupler markedly inhibited Ca2+ uptake in internally negative cytochrome oxidase vesicles; however, inhibition in internally positive cytochrome oxidase vesicles was less relative to that at lower levels of uncoupler. The uncoupling combination of nigericin, valinomycin, and K+ was inhibitory to uptake regardless of membrane potential polarity. A reconstituted system of oxidative phosphorylation, which contains a hydrophobic protein fraction, energized with cytochrome oxidase similarly accumulated Ca2+ despite formation of an internally positive membrane potential. The results suggest that cytochrome oxidase, when coupled to appropriate hydrophobic mitochondrial proteins, can act as an electrogenic Ca2+ pump deriving its energy directly from electron transport. |
| |
Keywords: | To whom reprint requests and correspondence should be addressed. |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|