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1.
The effect of trifluoroperazine on the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The inhibitory effect of trifluoroperazine (25-200 microM) on the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium pump was studied in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles isolated from skeletal muscle. It was found that the lowest effective concentrations of trifluoroperazine (10 microM) displaces the Ca2+ dependence of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase to higher Ca2+ concentrations. Higher trifluoroperazine concentrations (100 microM) inhibit the enzyme even at saturating Ca2+. If trifluoroperazine is added to vesicles filled with calcium in the presence of ATP, inhibition of the catalytic cycle is accompanied by rapid release of accumulated calcium. ATPase inhibition and calcium release are produced by identical concentrations of trifluoroperazine and, most likely, by the same enzyme perturbation. These effects are related to partition of trifluoroperazine ino the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane, and consequent alteration of the enzyme assembly within the membrane structure, and of the bilayer surface properties. The effect of trifluoroperazine was also studied on dissociated ('chemically skinned') cardiac cells undergoing phasic contractile activity which is totally dependent on calcium uptake and release by sarcoplasmic reticulum, and is not influenced by inhibitors of slow calcium channels. It was found that trifluoroperazine interferes with calcium transport by sarcoplasmic reticulum in situ, as well as with the role of sarcoplasmic reticulum in contractile activation.  相似文献   

2.
The dependence of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles upon the concentration of pentobarbital shows a biphasic pattern. Concentrations of pentobarbital ranging from 2 to 8 mM produce a slight stimulation, approximately 20-30%, of the ATPase activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles made leaky to Ca2+, whereas pentobarbital concentrations above 10 mM strongly inhibit the activity. The purified ATPase shows a higher sensitivity to pentobarbital, namely 3-4-fold shift towards lower values of the K0.5 value of inhibition by this drug. These effects of pentobarbital are observed over a wide range of ATP concentrations. In addition, this drug shifts the Ca2+ dependence of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity towards higher values of free Ca2+ concentrations and increases several-fold the passive permeability to Ca2+ of the sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes. At the concentrations of pentobarbital that inhibit this enzyme in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane, pentobarbital does not significantly alter the order parameter of these membranes as monitored with diphenylhexatriene, whereas the temperature of denaturation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase is decreased by 4-5 C degrees, thus, indicating that the conformation of the ATPase is altered. The effects of pentobarbital on the intensity of the fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum also support the hypothesis of a conformational change in the enzyme induced by millimolar concentrations of this drug. It is concluded that the inhibition of the sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase by pentobarbital is a consequence of its binding to hydrophobic binding sites in this enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of thapsigargin (TG), a specific inhibitor of intracellular Ca(2+)-ATPases, were studied on vesicular fragments of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. Inhibition of Ca2+ transport and ATPase activity was observed following stoichiometric titration of the membrane bound enzyme with TG. When Ca2+ binding to the enzyme was measured in the absence of ATP, or when one cycle of Ca(2+)-dependent enzyme phosphorylation by ATP was measured under conditions preventing turnover, protection against TG by Ca2+ was observed. The protection by Ca2+ disappeared if the phosphoenzyme was allowed to undergo turnover, indicating that a state reactive to TG is produced during enzyme turnover, whereby a dead end complex with TG is formed. Enzyme phosphorylation with Pi, ATP synthesis, and Ca2+ efflux by the ATPase in its reverse cycling were also inhibited by TG. However, under selected conditions (millimolar Ca2+ in the lumen of the vesicles, and 20% dimethyl sulfoxide in the medium) TG permitted very low rates of enzyme phosphorylation with Pi and ATP synthesis in the presence of ADP. It is concluded that the mechanism of ATPase inhibition by TG involves mutual exclusion of TG and high affinity binding of external Ca2+, as well as strong (but not total) inhibition of other partial reactions of the ATPase cycle. TG reacts selectively with the state acquired by the ATPase in the absence of Ca2+. This state is obtained either by enzyme exposure to EGTA, or by utilization of ATP and consequent displacement of bound Ca2+ during catalytic turnover.  相似文献   

4.
A severalfold activation of calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity by micromolar concentrations of calmodulin was observed in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles obtained from canine ventricles. This activation was seen in the presence of 120 mM KCl. The ratio of moles of calcium transported per mol of ATP hydrolyzed remained at about 0.75 when calcium transport and (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity were measured in the presence and absence of calmodulin. Thus, the efficiency of the calcium transport process did not change. Stimulation of calcium transport by calmodulin involves the phosphorylation of one or more proteins. The major 32P-labeled protein, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gel electrophoresis, was the 22,000-dalton protein called phospholamban. The Ca2+ concentration dependency of calmodulin-stimulated microsomal phosphorylation corresponded to that of calmodulin-stimulated (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-activated ATPase activity. Proteins of 11,000 and 6,000 daltons and other proteins were labeled to a lesser extent. A similar phosphorylation pattern was obtained when microsomes were incubated with cAMP-dependent protein kinase and ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. Phosphorylation produced by added cAMP-dependent protein kinase and calmodulin was additive. These studies provided further evidence for Ca2+-dependent regulation of calcium transport by calmodulin in sarcoplasmic reticulum that could play a role in the beat-to-beat regulation of cardiac relaxation in the intact heart.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The effects of cardiotoxin on the ATPase activity and Ca2+-transport of guinea pig erythrocyte and rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase (E.C.3.6.1.3) were investigated. Erythrocyte (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was inhibited by cardiotoxin in a time- and dose-dependent fashion and inhibition appears to be irreversible. Micromolar calcium prevented this inhibitory effect. Specificity for (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase inhibition by cardiotoxin was indicated since a homologous neurotoxin had no effect. Cardiotoxin did not affect (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity from sarcoplasmic reticulum, but Ca2+-transport was 50% inhibited. This inhibition was not due to an increased Ca2+-efflux and could be the result of an intramolecular uncoupling of ATPase activity from Ca2+-transport. Inhibition of Ca2+-transport by cardiotoxin could not be prevented by millimolar concentrations of Ca2+. It is suggested that the biological effects of cardiotoxin could be a consequence of inhibition of plasma membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPases.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphorylation of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane vesicles by exogenous c-AMP and c-AMP-dependent protein kinase stimulates calcium uptake and Ca2+-dependent ATP hydrolysis by 40-50% and results in the incorporation of 32P into a 22-KDa protein, phospholamban. Treatment of the membrane with DOC (0.0002% or 5 X 10(-6) M) solubilizes phospholamban from the membrane and induces a 90% inhibition of basal calcium uptake. This inhibition cannot be attributed to an alteration in vesicle integrity or membrane permeability. The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase remains associated with the membrane fraction and exhibits optimal levels of Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis. Phosphorylation prior to DOC treatment allows retention of the phospholamban in the membrane, concomitant with maintenance of the calcium transport activity. The results presented suggest that phospholamban is involved in the maintenance of basal calcium transport function in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum and that its phosphorylation stimulates Ca2+ transport.  相似文献   

8.
The vanadate inhibition of the Ca(2+)-ATPase activity was analysed both in intact sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles and in the presence of low concentrations of Tween 20, using ATP and p-nitrophenyl phosphate as substrates. The saturation of the internal low-affinity calcium-binding sites protects the enzyme against vanadate inhibition, because: (1) p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis is not inhibited by vanadate in intact vesicles, but inhibition developed after solubilization with detergents; (2) the vanadate inhibition of the p-nitrophenyl phosphate hydrolysis in solubilized preparations is prevented by free Ca2+ concentrations higher than 10(-3) M and vanadate competes with calcium (10(-5)-10(-3) M); and (3) the vanadate inhibition of ATP hydrolysis is decreased with an increase in vesicular Ca2+ concentration. The presence of magnesium ions is indispensable for the vanadate effect. The vanadate inhibition is non-competitive with respect to Mg-p-nitrophenyl phosphate and uncompetitive with respect to Mg-ATP. However, in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide, which facilitates phosphorylation of the enzyme, the inhibition is converted to a competitive one with respect to a substrate. The results suggest, that in the process of enzyme operation vanadate interacts with the unliganded E form of Ca(2+)-ATPase, occupying probably an intermediate position between the E2 and E1 forms, with the formation of an E2 Van complex, that imposes the inhibition on the Ca(2+)-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

9.
In sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles or in the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase purified from sarcoplasmic reticulum, quercetin inhibited ATP hydrolysis, Ca2+ uptake, ATP-Pi exchange, ATP synthesis coupled to Ca2+ efflux, ATP-ADP exchange, and steady state phosphorylation of the ATPase by inorganic phosphate. Steady state phosphorylation of the ATPase by ATP was not inhibited. Quercetin also inhibited ATP and ADP binding but not the binding of Ca2+. The inhibition of ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport by quercetin was reversible, and ATP, Ca2+, and dithiothreitol did not affect the inhibitory action of quercetin.  相似文献   

10.
Steady-state ATPase activity, calcium binding, formation of phosphorylated enzyme intermediate with ATP in the presence of Ca2+, or with Pi in the absence of Ca2+, and association of ATPase molecules into bidimensional crystals, were studied using vesicular fragments of sarcoplasmic reticulum. The vesicles were exposed to increasing concentrations of urea in order to produce stepwise perturbations of protein structure and to test the effect of such perturbations on the partial reactions and crystallization pattern of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase. It was found that low concentrations of urea produce specific inhibition of Pi binding and enzyme phosphorylation with Pi (but not with ATP). Intermediate concentrations of urea reduce calcium binding affinity and cooperativity, while the ability of the enzyme to be phosphorylated with ATP and to form dimeric arrays is retained. These observations demonstrate that the sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase is sensitive to physical perturbations producing specific and reversible changes in the Pi and calcium binding domains. These changes interfere with enzyme turnover, indicating that conformational effects related to binding and dissociation of Pi and calcium are tightly coupled to catalysis and energy transduction. Higher concentrations of urea produce irreversible denaturation, accompanied by total inhibition of calcium binding, enzyme phosphorylation with ATP, and association of ATPase chains in bidimensional crystals. Under these conditions, protein unfolding is manifested by a sharp reduction in the fluorescence of intrinsic tryptophan residues and of a covalently bound probe. These observations suggest that dimeric association and a tendency to form bidimensional crystals correspond to a basic property of the enzyme, which is linked to its native structure and whose character may change in the presence of ligands and/or during the catalytic cycle. On the other hand, the decavanadate-induced crystallization pattern cannot be interpreted in terms of a mechanistic relationship of ATPase dimerization with one of the intermediate states of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

11.
Ionomycin, a recently discovered calcium ionophore, inhibits the ATP-dependent active Ca2+ transport of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles at concentrations as low as 10(-8) to 10(-6) M. The effect is due to an increase in the Ca2+ permeability of the membrane which is also observed on liposomes. The inhibition of Ca2+ uptake is accompanied by an increase in the Ca2+-sensitive ATPase activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles.  相似文献   

12.
Preincubation of thapsigargin with sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles in the presence of high Ca(2+) or the addition of high Ca(2+) to microsomal vesicles preincubated with thapsigargin in the absence of Ca(2+) allowed full enzyme phosphorylation by ATP. However, the enzyme activity was not protected by high Ca(2+) even when the samples were subjected to gel filtration before ATP addition. Our data indicate that: (i) the enzyme in the Ca(2+)-bound conformation can be stabilized in the presence of thapsigargin; (ii) the conformational transition from the Ca(2+)-free to the Ca(2+)-bound state can be elicited by Ca(2+) when thapsigargin is present; (iii) thapsigargin binding occurs whether or not the enzyme is in the presence of Ca(2+), and so a ternary complex enzyme-Ca(2+)-thapsigargin may be formed; (iv) thapsigargin can be dissociated from the enzyme with a slow kinetics after dilution under drastic conditions; (v) the kinetics of Ca(2+) binding is clearly slowed down by thapsigargin; and (vi) thapsigargin does not affect the hydrolysis rate of phosphorylating substrates when measured in the absence of Ca(2+), indicating that thapsigargin specifically inhibits the Ca(2+)-dependent activity.  相似文献   

13.
Thapsigargin is found to be a potent inhibitor of the intracellular Ca2+ pump proteins from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), cardiac SR, and brain microsomes. For skeletal muscle SR, the molar ratio of thapsigargin to Ca2+ pump protein for complete inhibition (MRc) of the Ca2+ loading rate, Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity, and formation of phosphorylated intermediate (EP) was approximately 1. When the Ca2+ pump protein of low affinity to Ca2+ (E2 state) was pretreated with thapsigargin, ATP and Ca2+ binding to the Ca2+ pump protein was completely inhibited. In the presence of Ca2+ (E1 state), Ca2+ pump protein was protected from inactivation by thapsigargin with respect to Ca2+ binding and EP formation. The MRc for brain microsomes, which mediate Ca2+ uptake into intracellular (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-releasable) Ca2+ pools, is likewise stoichiometric. Approximately 30% of Ca2+ loading activity of brain microsomes was insensitive to thapsigargin, indicating the presence of other Ca2+ pumping system(s). The MRc for heart is 3.8, indicating that the Ca2+ pump of cardiac SR is less sensitive to thapsigargin. Phosphorylation of cardiac SR with protein kinase A increased the sensitivity to thapsigargin to MRc of 2.8. In summary, we find that: 1) thapsigargin is the most effective inhibitor of the Ca2+ pump protein of intracellular membranes (SR and endoplasmic reticulum); 2) its primary inhibitory action appears to inactivate the E2 form of the enzyme preferentially; 3) cardiac SR shows lesser sensitivity to thapsigargin than skeletal muscle SR and brain microsomes; protein kinase A treatment of cardiac SR enhances the sensitivity to the drug.  相似文献   

14.
LaATP is shown to be an effective inhibitor of the calcium ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum because the binding of LaATP to cE.Ca2 results in the formation of lanthanum phosphoenzyme, which decays slowly. Steady-state activity of the calcium ATPase in leaky sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles is inhibited 50% by 0.16 microM LaCl3 (15 nM free La3+, 21 nM LaATP) in the presence of 25 microM Ca2+ and 49 microM MgATP (5 mM MgSO4, 100 mM KCl, 40 mM 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid, pH 7.0, 25 degrees C). However, 50% inhibition of the uptake of 45Ca and phosphorylation by [gamma-32P]ATP in a single turnover experiment requires 100 microM LaCl3 (28 microM free La3+) in the presence of 25 microM Ca2+; this inhibition is reversed by calcium but inhibition of steady-state turnover is not. Therefore, binding of La3+ to the cytoplasmic calcium transport site is not responsible for the inhibition of steady-state ATPase activity. The addition of 6.7 microM LaCl3 (1.1 microM free La3+) has no effect on the rate of dephosphorylation of phosphoenzyme formed from MgATP and enzyme in leaky vesicles, while 6.7 mM CaCl2 slows the rate of phosphoenzyme hydrolysis as expected; 6.7 microM LaCl3 and 6.7 mM CaCl2 cause 95 and 98% inhibition of steady-state ATPase activity, respectively. This shows that inhibition of ATPase activity in the steady state is not caused by binding of La3+ to the intravesicular calcium transport site of the phosphoenzyme. Inhibition of ATPase activity by 2 microM LaCl3 (0.16 microM free La3+, 0.31 microM LaATP) requires greater than 5 s, which corresponds to approximately 50 turnovers, to reach a steady-state level of greater than or equal to 80% inhibition. Inhibition by La3+ is fully reversed by the addition of 0.55 mM CaCl2 and 0.50 mM EGTA; this reactivation is slow with t1/2 approximately 9 s. Two forms of phosphoenzyme are present in reactions that are partially inhibited by La3+: phosphoenzyme with Mg2+ at the catalytic site and phosphoenzyme with La3+ at the catalytic site, which undergo hydrolysis with observed rate constants of greater than 4 and 0.05 s-1, respectively. We conclude, therefore, that La3+ inhibits steady-state ATPase activity under these conditions by replacing Mg2+ as the catalytic ion for phosphoryl transfer. The slow development of inhibition corresponds to the accumulation of lanthanum phosphoenzyme. Initially, most of the enzyme catalyzes MgATP hydrolysis, but the fraction of enzyme with La3+ bound to the catalytic site gradually increases because lanthanum phosphoenzyme undergoes hydrolysis much more slowly than does magnesium phosphoenzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the effect of the local anesthetic procaine on the activity of the calcium pump protein of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles. Procaine slowed down the rate of calcium uptake by SR vesicles without enhancing the vesicles' passive permeability. This slowing of the unidirectional pumping rate was reflected by the inhibition of the maximal rate of the transport-coupled Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. The inhibition was dependent on Mg2+ concentration; at optimal (i.e. low) concentrations of magnesium, half-maximal inhibition occurred with procaine concentrations close to 15-20 mM. Inhibition of ATPase was not mediated by a change in the properties of the bulk lipid phase. Procaine moderately reduced the true affinity of ATPase for ATP, whereas equilibrium binding of calcium to ATPase in the absence of ATP was virtually not modified by procaine. In fast-kinetics studies, we explored the various intermediate steps in the ATPase catalytic cycle, in order to determine which of them were targets for inhibition by procaine. We found that procaine slowed down ATPase dephosphorylation, an effect which is at least partly responsible for the observed inhibition of overall ATPase activity. In contrast, procaine accelerated the calcium-induced transconformation of unphosphorylated ATPase in the absence of ATP, and altered neither the rate of the Ca(2+)-dependent phosphorylation of ATPase, nor the rate of the dissociation of Ca2+ from phosphorylated ATPase towards the SR lumen, a critical step, the rate of which was measured by a novel fast-filtration method. These results are discussed with respect to the possible site(s) of binding of this amphiphile on the ATPase, and in relation to the contribution of individual steps in the catalytic cycle to the rate limitation of unperturbed SR ATPase activity.  相似文献   

16.
In order to characterize low affinity ATP-binding sites of renal (Na+,K+) ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+)ATPase, the effects of ATP on the splitting of the K+-sensitive phosphoenzymes were compared. ATP inactivated the dephosphorylation in the case of (Na+,K+)ATPase at relatively high concentrations, while activating it in the case of (Ca2+)ATPase. When various nucleotides were tested in place of ATP, inactivators of (Na+,K+)ATPase were found to be activators in (Ca2+)ATPase, with a few exceptions. In the absence of Mg2+, the half-maximum concentration of ATP for the inhibition or for the activation was about 0.35 mM or 0.25 mM, respectively. These values are comparable to the previously reported Km or the dissociation constant of the low affinity ATP site estimated from the steady-state kinetics of the stimulation of ATP hydrolysis or from binding measurements. By increasing the concentration of Mg2+, but not Na+, the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Na+,K+)ATPase was reduced. On the other hand, Mg2+ did not modify the effect of ATP on the phosphoenzyme of (Ca2+)ATPase. During (Na+,K+)ATPase turnover, the low affinity ATP site appeared to be exposed in the phosphorylated form of the enzyme, but the magnesium-complexed ATP interacted poorly with the reactive K+-sensitive phosphoenzyme, which has a tightly bound magnesium, probably because of interaction between the divalent cations. In the presence of physiological levels of Mg2+ and K+, ATP appeared to bind to the (Na+,K+)ATPase only after the dephosphorylation, while it binds to the (Ca2+)-ATPase before the dephosphorylation to activate the turnover.  相似文献   

17.
Hexachlorocyclohexanes have been shown to inhibit the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase of muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum reconstituted into bilayers of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine. However, for the ATPase reconstituted into bilayers of dimyristoleoylphosphatidylcholine, a pattern of activation at low concentration followed by inhibition at higher concentration is seen for hexachlorocyclohexanes and alkanes such as decane and hexadecane. The ATPase in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles is also inhibited by the hexachlorocyclohexanes. The effects of hexachlorocyclohexanes on activity are largely independent of concentrations of Ca2+ and ATP. Inhibition is more marked at lower temperatures. The hexachlorocyclohexanes quench the tryptophan fluorescence of the ATPase, and the quenching can be used to obtain partition coefficients into the membrane system. As for simple lipid bilayers, partition exhibits a negative temperature coefficient. Binding is related to effects on ATPase activity.  相似文献   

18.
The mycotoxin, cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), inhibits the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase (EC 3.6.1.38) and Ca2+ transport activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum (Goeger, D. E., Riley, R. T., Dorner, J. W., and Cole, R. J. (1988) Biochem. Pharmacol. 37, 978-981). We found that at low ATP concentrations (0.5-2 microM) the inhibition of ATPase activity was essentially complete at a CPA concentration of 6-8 nmol/mg protein, indicating stoichiometric reaction of CPA with the Ca2+-ATPase. Cyclopiazonic acid caused similar inhibition of the Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis in intact sarcoplasmic reticulum and in a purified preparation of Ca2+-ATPase. Cyclopiazonic acid also inhibited the Ca2+-dependent acetylphosphate, p-nitrophenylphosphate and carbamylphosphate hydrolysis by sarcoplasmic reticulum. ATP protected the enzyme in a competitive manner against inhibition by CPA, while a 10(5)-fold change in free Ca2+ concentration had only moderate effect on the extent of inhibition. CPA did not influence the crystallization of Ca2+-ATPase by vanadate or the reaction of fluorescein-5'-isothiocyanate with the Ca2+-ATPase, but it completely blocked at concentrations as low as 1-2 mol of CPA/mol of ATPase the fluorescence changes induced by Ca2+ and [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid (EGTA) in FITC-labeled sarcoplasmic reticulum and inhibited the cleavage of Ca2+-ATPase by trypsin at the T2 cleavage site in the presence of EGTA. These observations suggest that CPA interferes with the ATP-induced conformational changes related to Ca2+ transport. The effect of CPA on the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase appears to be fairly specific, since the kidney and brain Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.37), the gastric H+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.36), the mitochondrial F1-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.34), the Ca2+-ATPase of erythrocytes, and the Mg2+-activated ATPase of T-tubules and surface membranes of rat skeletal muscle were not inhibited by CPA, even at concentrations as high as 1000 nmol/mg protein.  相似文献   

19.
Pretreatment of sarcoplasmic membranes with acetic or maleic anhydrides, which interact principally with amino groups, resulted in an inhibition of Ca2+ accumulation and ATPase activity. The presence of ATP, ADP or adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate in the modification medium selectively protected against the inactivation of ATPase activity by the anhydride but did not protect against the inhibition of Ca2+ accumulation. Acetic anhydride modification in the presence of ATP appeared to increase specifically the permeability of the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane to Ca2+ but not to sucrose, Tris, Na+ or Pi. The chemical modification stimulated a rapid release of Ca2+ from sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles passively or actively loaded with calcium, from liposomes reconstituted with the partially purified ATPase fraction but not from those reconstituted with the purified ATPase. The inactivation of Ca2+ accumulation by acetic anhydride (in the presence of ATP) was rapid and strongly pH-dependent with an estimated pK value above 8.3 for the reactive group(s). The negatively charged reagents pyridoxal 5-phosphate and trinitrobenzene-sulphonate, which also interact with amino groups, did not stimulate Ca2+ release. Since these reagents do not penetrate the sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes, it is proposed that Ca2+ release is promoted by modification of internally located, positively charged amino group(s).  相似文献   

20.
The Ca2+ + Mg2+-activated ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum exhibits complex kinetics of activation with respect to ATP. ATPase activity is pH-dependent, with similar pH-activity profiles at high and low concentrations of ATP. Low concentrations of Ca2+ in the micromolar range activate the ATPase, whereas activity is inhibited by Ca2+ at millimolar concentrations. The pH-dependence of this Ca2+ inhibition and the effect of the detergent C12E8 (dodecyl octaethylene glycol monoether) on Ca2+ inhibition are similar to those observed on activation by low concentrations of Ca2+. On the basis of these and other studies we present a kinetic model for the ATPase. The ATPase is postulated to exist in one of two conformations: a conformation (E1) of high affinity for Ca2+ and MgATP and a conformation (E2) of low affinity for Ca2+ and MgATP. Ca2+ binding to E2 and to the phosphorylated form E2P are equal. Proton binding at the Ca2+-binding sites in the E1 and E2 conformations explains the pH-dependence of Ca2+ effects. Binding of MgATP to the phosphorylated intermediate E1'PCa2 and to E2 modulate the rates of the transport step E1'PCa-E2'PCa2 and the return of the empty Ca2+ sites to the outside surface of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, as well as the rate of dephosphorylation of E2P. Only a single binding site for MgATP is postulated.  相似文献   

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