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Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy reveals sodium pump dimers in live cells
Authors:Jaroslava Seflova  Nima R Habibi  John Q Yap  Sean R Cleary  Xuan Fang  Peter M Kekenes-Huskey  L Michel Espinoza-Fonseca  Julie B Bossuyt  Seth L Robia
Institution:1.Department of Cell and Molecular Physiology, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, Illinois, USA;2.Department of Pharmacology, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA;3.Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Center for Arrhythmia Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Abstract:The sodium-potassium ATPase (Na/K-ATPase, NKA) establishes ion gradients that facilitate many physiological functions including action potentials and secondary transport processes. NKA comprises a catalytic subunit (alpha) that interacts closely with an essential subunit (beta) and regulatory transmembrane micropeptides called FXYD proteins. In the heart, a key modulatory partner is the FXYD protein phospholemman (PLM, FXYD1), but the stoichiometry of the alpha–beta–PLM regulatory complex is unknown. Here, we used fluorescence lifetime imaging and spectroscopy to investigate the structure, stoichiometry, and affinity of the NKA-regulatory complex. We observed a concentration-dependent binding of the subunits of NKA–PLM regulatory complex, with avid association of the alpha subunit with the essential beta subunit as well as lower affinity alpha–alpha and alpha–PLM interactions. These data provide the first evidence that, in intact live cells, the regulatory complex is composed of two alpha subunits associated with two beta subunits, decorated with two PLM regulatory subunits. Docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations generated a structural model of the complex that is consistent with our experimental observations. We propose that alpha–alpha subunit interactions support conformational coupling of the catalytic subunits, which may enhance NKA turnover rate. These observations provide insight into the pathophysiology of heart failure, wherein low NKA expression may be insufficient to support formation of the complete regulatory complex with the stoichiometry (alpha-beta-PLM)2.
Keywords:sodium pump  regulation  phospholemman  heart failure  FRET  dimerization  FXYD protein  protein-protein interactions  docking  molecular dynamics
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