28 research outputs found

    Abstracts from the 3rd International Genomic Medicine Conference (3rd IGMC 2015)

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    Identification of electric-field-dependent steps in the Na+,K+-pump cycle

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    The charge-transporting activity of the Na+,K+-ATPase depends on its surrounding electric field. To isolate which steps of the enzyme's reaction cycle involve charge movement, we have investigated the response of the voltage-sensitive fluorescent probe RH421 to interaction of the protein with BTEA (benzyltriethylammonium), which binds from the extracellular medium to the Na+,K+-ATPase's transport sites in competition with Na+ and K+, but is not occluded within the protein. We find that only the occludable ions Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+ cause a drop in RH421 fluorescence. We conclude that RH421 detects intramembrane electric field strength changes arising from charge transport associated with conformational changes occluding the transported ions within the protein, not the electric fields of the bound ions themselves. This appears at first to conflict with electrophysiological studies suggesting extracellular Na+ or K+ binding in a high field access channel is a major electrogenic reaction of the Na+,K+-ATPase. All results can be explained consistently if ion occlusion involves local deformations in the lipid membrane surrounding the protein occurring simultaneously with conformational changes necessary for ion occlusion. The most likely origin of the RH421 fluorescence response is a change in membrane dipole potential caused by membrane deformation

    Capsazepine, a synthetic vanilloid that converts the Na,K-ATPase to Na-ATPase

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    Capsazepine (CPZ), a synthetic capsaicin analogue, inhibits ATP hydrolysis by Na,K-ATPase in the presence but not in the absence of K+. Studies with purified membranes revealed that CPZ reduced Na+-dependent phosphorylation by interference with Na+ binding from the intracellular side of the membrane. Kinetic analyses showed that CPZ stabilized an enzyme species that constitutively occluded K+. Low-affinity ATP interaction with the enzyme was strongly reduced after CPZ treatment; in contrast, indirectly measured interaction with ADP was much increased, which suggests that composite regulatory communication with nucleotides takes place during turnover. Studies with lipid vesicles revealed that CPZ reduced ATP-dependent digitoxigenin-sensitive 22Na+ influx into K+-loaded vesicles only at saturating ATP concentrations. The drug apparently abolishes the regulatory effect of ATP on the pump. Drawing on previous homology modeling studies of Na,K-ATPase to atomic models of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase and on kinetic data, we propose that CPZ uncouples an Na+ cycle from an Na+/K+ cycle in the pump. The Na+ cycle possibly involves transport through the recently characterized Na+-specific site. A shift to such an uncoupled mode is believed to produce pumps mediating uncoupled Na+ efflux by modifying the transport stoichiometry of single pump units

    Functional significance of the shark Na, K-ATPase N-terminal domain. Is the structurally variable N-terminus involved in tissue-specific regulation by FXYD-proteins?

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    The proteolytic profile after mild controlled trypsin cleavage of shark rectal gland Na,K-ATPase was characterized and compared to that of pig kidney Na,K-ATPase, and conditions for achieving N-terminal cleavage of the alpha-subunit at the T-2 trypsin cleavage site were established. Using such conditions, the shark enzyme N-terminus was much more susceptible to proteolysis than the pig enzyme. Nevertheless, the maximum hydrolytic activity was almost unaffected for the shark enzyme, whereas it was significantly decreased for the pig kidney enzyme. The apparent ATP affinity was unchanged for shark but increased for pig enzyme after N-terminal truncation. The main common effect following N-terminal truncation of shark and pig Na,K-ATPase is a shift in the E-1-E-2 conformational equilibrium toward El. The phosphorylation and the main rate-limiting E-2 - E-1 step are both accelerated after N-terminal truncation of the shark enzyme, but decreased significantly in the pig kidney enzyme. Some of the kinetic differences, like the acceleration of the phosphorylation reaction, following N-terminal truncation of the two preparations may be due to the fact that under the conditions used for N-terminal truncation, the C-terminal domain of the FXYD regulatory protein of the shark enzyme, PLMS or FXYD10, was also cleaved, whereas the gamma or FXYD2 of the pig enzyme was not. In the shark enzyme, N-terminal truncation of the a-subunit abolished association of exogenous PLMS with the a-subunit and the functional interactions were abrogated. Moreover, PKC phosphorylation of the preparation, which relieves PLMS inhibition of Na,K-ATPase activity, exposed the N-terminal trypsin cleavage site. It is suggested that PLMS interacts functionally with the N-terminus of the shark Na,K-ATPase to control the E-1-E-2 conformational transition of the enzyme and that such interactions may be controlled by regulatory protein kinase phosphorylation of the N-terminus. Such interactions are likely in shark enzyme where PLMS has been demonstrated by cross-linking to associate with the Na,K-ATPase A-domain.</p
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