Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: DrugBank:EXPT00572 (Asn)
11,732 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sodium- and potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (NaK-ATPase) was purified from nasal salt glands of the duck (Anas platyrhynchos). Enzyme of specific activity 2,000 to 2,300 mumol of Pi/mg/hour was routinely obtained by sodium dodecyl sulfate treatment of a microsomal fraction of gland homogenate in the presence of 3 mM ATP followed by pelleting of the enzyme through a sucrose density gradient. Purified NaK-ATPase was stable for over 3 months at -20 degree. By sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration chromatography purified NaK-ATPase was shown to contain two polypeptide chains of molecular weight 94,000 and 60,000, the smaller of which was a glycoprotein. Purified enzyme of activity 2,300 mumol of Pi/mg/hour bound 3,600 pmol of ouabain/mg of enzyme protein. Reaction with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+ gave 7,025 pmol of acyl phosphate/mg of enzyme protein. The turnover number calculated from phosphorylation data was 5,460 min-1. Amino acid analysis of the polypeptide components of duck salt gland enzyme after separation by gel filtration chromatography in sodium dodecyl sulfate demonstrated strong compositional homology with highly purified NaK-ATPase preparations from other organs and species. The NH2-terminal amino acid of the 94,000-dalton component was glycine and of the 60,000-dalton component, alanine. With a combination of manual sequencing and automated Edman degradation, the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of the 94,00-dalton catalytic subunit was found to be Gly-Arg-Asn-Lys-Tyr-Glu-Thr-Thr-Ala-()-Ser-Glu.
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PMID:Sodium- and potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase of the nasal salt gland of the duck (Anas platyrhynchos). Purification, characterization, and NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of the phosphorylating polypeptide. 13 47

The mitochondrial F1-ATPase is irreversibly inactivated by the adenine nucleotide analogue, p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-5'-adenosine. This inactivation is partly prevented by the presence of bound adenine nucleotides. Inactivations of the ATPase with p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]benzoyl-5'-adenosine were most efficiently accomplished with the nucleotide-free enzyme at pH 7.0, in a buffer containing 20% glycerol. Under these conditions, 4.2 g atoms of 14C are incorporated per 350,000 g of enzyme when the ATPase is inactivated by 90% by its reaction with 2 mM p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]benzoyl-5'-adenosine. Isolation of the component polypeptide chains of the labeled ATPase showed that all of the radioactivity was associated with the two largest subunits. The isolated alpha subunit contained 0.45 g atom of 14C/mol and the isolated beta subunit contained 0.88 g atom of 14C/mol. Hence, the inactivation can be correlated with the incorporation of 14C into the beta subunit. This suggests that the hydrolytic site of the enzyme resides on this subunit. The majority of the radioactivity in a tryptic digest of labeled beta subunit is contained ina tryptic peptide that has the following amino acid sequence: Ile-Met-Asp-Pro-Asn-Ile-Val-Gly-Ser-Glu-His-Tyr-Asp-Val-Ala-Arg, where Tyr is the radioactive derivative of the tyrosine residue that was sulfonylated during the inactivation.
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PMID:Identification of a tyrosine residue at a nucleotide binding site in the beta subunit of the mitochondrial ATPase with p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]-benzoyl-5'-adenosine. 15 Apr 16

The interaction of Escherichia coli F1 ATPase (ECF1) with several different monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specific for the alpha subunit has been examined. The epitopes for each of the mAbs have been localized by using molecular biological approaches to generate fragments of the alpha subunit. The binding of several of the mAbs has also been examined by cryoelectron microscopy of ECF1 Fab complexes. One of the mAbs, alpha II, bound in the region Asn 109-Val 153 without affecting ATPase activity. Most of the mAbs bound in the C-terminal third of the alpha subunit. MAb alpha 1 bound between residues Gln 443 and Trp 513. This mAb activated ATPase activity and was visualized in cryoelectron microscopy, superimposed on the alpha subunit, indicating that the epitope was on the top or bottom of ECF1 in the hexagonal projection. Other mAbs to the C-terminus, including alpha D which also activated the enzyme, reacted between Gly 371 and Trp 513 but failed to bind to small overlapping fragments within this sequence. The epitopes for these mAbs are probably formed by the folded polypeptide which occurs only in Western analysis when long stretches of the alpha subunit are present, suggesting that the C-terminus of alpha is a self-folding domain. In cryoelectron microscopy, Fab fragments for alpha D were seen extending from the sides of the ECF1 complex in hexagonal projection.
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PMID:Epitope mapping of monoclonal antibodies to the Escherichia coli F1 ATPase alpha subunit in relation to activity effects and location in the enzyme complex based on cryoelectron microscopy. 137 17

Site-specific mutagenesis was used to replace Glu309, Glu771, and Asp800 in the Ca(2+)-ATPase of rabbit fast twitch muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum with their corresponding amides. These residues are predicted to lie in the transmembrane domain and have been suggested as oxygen ligands for Ca2+ binding at high affinity sites (Clarke, D. M., Loo, T. W., Inesi, G., and MacLennan, D. H. (1989) Nature 339, 476-478). The Glu309----Gln and Asp800----Asn mutants were unable to form a phosphoenzyme from ATP at the Ca2+ concentrations examined (up to 12.5 mM), whereas the Glu771----Gln mutant phosphorylated from ATP at 2.5 mM Ca2+. In all three mutants, Ca2+ at concentrations well below 12.5 mM prevented or inhibited phosphorylation with Pi, suggesting that at least one calcium-binding site was functioning in each mutant. In the mutants Glu309----Gln and Glu771----Gln, the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate was unusually stable, as indicated by a very low rate of dephosphorylation observed in kinetic experiments and by an increased apparent affinity for Pi determined in equilibrium phosphorylation experiments. These data indicate a central role of Glu309 and Glu771 in the energy-transducing conformational changes and/or in the activation of phosphoenzyme hydrolysis.
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PMID:Functional consequences of alterations to Glu309, Glu771, and Asp800 in the Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum. 138 69

Use of the nonphosphorylating beta,gamma-bidentate chromium(III) complex of ATP to induce a stable Ca(2+)-occluded form of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase was combined with molecular sieve high performance liquid chromatography of detergent-solubilized protein to examine the ability of the Ca(2+)-ATPase mutants Gly-233-->Glu, Gly-233-->Val, Glu-309-->Gln, Gly-310-->Pro, Pro-312-->Ala, Ile-315-->Arg, Leu-319-->Arg, Asp-703-->Ala, Gly-770-->Ala, Glu-771-->Gln, Asp-800-->Asn, and Gly-801-->Val to occlude Ca2+. This provided a new approach to identification of amino acid residues involved in Ca2+ binding and in the closure of the gates to the Ca2+ binding pocket of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The "phosphorylation-negative" mutant Asp-703-->Ala and mutants of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate type were fully capable of occluding Ca2+, as was the mutant Gly-770-->Ala. Mutants in which carboxylic acid-containing residues in the putative transmembrane segments had been substituted ("Ca(2+)-site mutants") and mutant Gly-801-->Val were unable to occlude either of the two calcium ions. In addition, the mutant Gly-310-->Pro, previously classified as ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate type (Andersen, J.P., Vilsen, B., and MacLennan, D.H. (1992). J. Biol. Chem. 267, 2767-2774), was unable to occlude Ca2+, even though Ca(2+)-activated phosphorylation from MgATP took place in this mutant.
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PMID:CrATP-induced Ca2+ occlusion in mutants of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum. 146 90

The potassium-translocating Kdp-ATPase of Escherichia coli shares common functional properties with eukaryotic P-type ATPases. The KdpB subunit has been identified as the catalytic subunit forming the phosphorylated intermediate. Substitution of Asp-307 in KdpB by Glu, Asn, Gln, Tyr, His, Ala or Ser by site-directed mutagenesis and the subsequent transfer of the point mutations to the chromosome revealed that the mutants were not functioning with respect to cell growth at low K+ concentrations and ATPase activity as well as phosphorylation capacity of the purified Kdp complex. These findings indicate that Asp-307 in KdpB is the phosphorylation site of the Kdp-ATPase. In contrast, replacement of the close but non-conserved Asp-300 by Asn or Glu has no immediate influence on the enzyme functions tested. However, the Km for K+ of the ATPase activity has been increased 30-fold compared with the wild-type enzyme.
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PMID:The phosphorylation site of the Kdp-ATPase of Escherichia coli: site-directed mutagenesis of the aspartic acid residues 300 and 307 of the KdpB subunit. 147 95

The plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a prototype for the mutagenic analysis of structure-function relationships in P-type cation pumps. Because a functional H+ pump is required for viability, wild-type ATPase must be maintained in the plasma membrane for normal cell growth. Our expression strategy involves a rapid switch in expression from the wild-type ATPase gene to a mutant allele followed by entrapment of the newly synthesized mutant enzyme in an internal, secretory vesicle pool. The isolated vesicles prove to be ideally suited for the study of the catalytic and transport properties of the ATPase. Work to date has focused on conserved residues in the vicinity of the aspartyl-phosphate reaction intermediate. Substitution of Asp378 with Glu, Ser, or Asn and of Lys379 with Gln prevents normal biogenesis of the mutant ATPase. The more conservative Lys379----Arg mutation was tolerated, but with a sixfold loss of activity and substantial alterations in Km for ATP and Ki for vanadate. Nonconservative replacement of Thr380, Thr382, or Thr384 with Ala led to inactive enzyme, whereas the conservative change to Ser caused a two to threefold reduction in ATP hydrolysis and H(+)-pumping. Taken together, the results are consistent with an essential role for these invariant residues in phosphate-binding and ATP hydrolysis.
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PMID:Mutagenesis of the yeast plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. A novel expression system. 153 99

UvrA is the ATPase subunit of the DNA repair enzyme (A)BC excinuclease. The amino acid sequence of this protein has revealed, in addition to two zinc fingers, three pairs of nucleotide binding motifs each consisting of a Walker A and B sequence. We have conducted site-specific mutagenesis, ATPase kinetic analyses, and nucleotide binding equilibrium measurements to correlate these sequence motifs with activity. Replacement of the invariant Lys by Ala in the putative A sequences indicated that K37 and K646 but not K353 are involved in ATP hydrolysis. In contrast, substitution of the invariant Asp by Asn in the B sequences at positions D238, D513, or D857 had little effect on the in vivo activity of the protein. Nucleotide binding studies revealed a stoichiometry of 0.5 ADP/UvrA monomer while kinetic measurements on wild-type and mutant proteins showed that the active form of UvrA is a dimer with 2 catalytic sites which interact in a positive cooperative manner in the presence of ADP; mutagenesis of K37 but not of K646 attenuated this cooperativity. Loss of ATPase activity was about 75% in the K37A, 86% in the K646A mutant, and 95% in the K37A-K646A double mutant. These amino acid substitutions had only a marginal effect on the specific binding of UvrA to damaged DNA but drastically reduced its ability to deliver UvrB to the damage site. We find that the deficient UvrB loading activity of these mutant UvrA proteins results from their inability to associate with UvrB in the form of (UvrA)2(UvrB)1 complexes. We conclude that UvrA forms a dimer with two ATPase domains involving K37 and K646 and that the work performed by ATP hydrolysis is the delivery of UvrB to the damage site on DNA.
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PMID:Site-specific mutagenesis of conserved residues within Walker A and B sequences of Escherichia coli UvrA protein. 182 50

Site-specific mutagenesis of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase was used to investigate the functional roles of 18 amino acid residues located at or near the "hinge-domain," a highly conserved region of the cation-transporting ATPases. Mutation of Lys684 to arginine, alanine, histidine, and glutamine resulted in complete loss of calcium transport function and ATPase activity. For the Lys684----Ala, histidine, and glutamine mutants, this coincided with a loss of the ability to form a phosphorylated intermediate from ATP or Pi. The Lys684----Arg mutant retained the ability to phorphorylate from ATP with normal apparent affinity, demonstrating the importance of the positive charge. On the other hand, no phosphorylation was observed with Pi as substrate in this mutant. Examination of the partial reactions after phosphorylation from ATP in the Lys684----Arg mutant demonstrated a reduction of the rate of transformation of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate (E1P) to the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate (E2P), which could account for the loss of transport function. Once accumulated, the E2P intermediate was able to decompose rapidly in the presence of K+ at neutral pH. These results may be interpreted in terms of a preferential destabilization of protein phosphate interactions in the E2P form of this mutant. The Asp703----Ala and Asn-Asp707----Ala-Ala mutants were completely inactive and unable to form phosphoenzyme intermediates from ATP or Pi. In these mutants as well as in the Lys684----Ala mutant, nucleotides were found to protect with normal affinity against intramolecular cross-linking induced with glutaraldehyde, indicating that the nucleotide binding site was intact. Mutation of Glu646, Glu647, Asp659, Asp660, Glu689, Asp695, Glu696, Glu715, and Glu732 to alanine did not affect the maximum rates of calcium transport and ATP hydrolysis or the apparent affinities for calcium and ATP. Mutation of the 2 highly conserved proline residues, Pro681 and Pro709, as well as Lys728, to alanine resulted in partially inhibited Ca(2+)-ATPase enzymes with retention of the ability to form a phosphoenzyme intermediate from ATP or Pi and with normal apparent affinities for ATP and calcium. The proline mutants retained the biphasic ATP concentration dependence of ATPase activity, characteristic of the wild-type, and therefore the partial inhibition of turnover could not be ascribed to a disruption of the low affinity modulatory ATP site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional consequences of alterations to amino acids located in the hinge domain of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum. 183 54

Caldesmon is a major actin-binding protein identified in smooth muscle and many non-muscle cells. It also interacts with calmodulin and a number of other acidic proteins. We have shown previously that the polypeptide stretch from Val629 to Ser666 near the C terminus contains a calmodulin binding site (Wang, C.-L. A., Wang, L.-W. C., Xu, S., Lu, R. C., Saavedra-Alanis, V., and Bryan, J. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 9166-9172). On the other hand, Bartegi et al. (Bartegi, A., Fattoum, A., Derancourt, J., and Kassab, R. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 15231-15238) reported a cyanogen bromide fragment beginning at Trp659 which is also capable of binding both calmodulin and actin. A comparison of the overlapping sequence between these two peptides suggests that this calmodulin binding site is localized in a 7-residue segment, 659Trp-Glu-Lys-Gly-Asn-Val-Phe665. We have chemically synthesized an 18-residue peptide (GS17C, from Gly651 to Ser667 with an added cysteine at the C terminus) that contains this segment. This peptide was purified by high performance liquid chromatography and labeled with fluorescent probes at the terminal cysteine residue. We found that GS17C indeed binds calmodulin in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner (Kd = 8 x 10(-7) M) and appears to compete with caldesmon. Interestingly, this synthetic peptide also co-sediments with F-actin, binding to actin being displaceable by calmodulin, as in the case of the native caldesmon. But GS17C does not have any effect on the actomyosin ATPase activity, indicating that this peptide segment does not contain the inhibitory region.
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PMID:A calmodulin-binding peptide of caldesmon. 193 4


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