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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The interaction between Cl-, K+ and H2O fluxes were studied in the ventricular membrane of the choroid plexus epithelium from Necturus maculosus by means of ion-selective microelectrodes. The flux of H2O was measured by means of K+ electrodes as the dilution or concentration of intracellular choline ions, Ch+i. 2. In one series of experiments Cl- was readministered to the ventricular solution of tissues incubated in media with low Cl- concentrations. The resulting influx of Cl- was associated with an instantaneous influx of K+ and H2O. 3. Both the Cl- and the K+ influxes were reduced by the diuretic furosemide but were unaffected by inhibitors of Na+, K(+)-ATPase or changes in membrane potentials induced by Ba2+. Since the influx of K+ proceeds against its electrochemical gradient and is unaffected by changes in membrane potentials, the membrane exhibits secondary active, electroneutral transport of K+. 4. The influx of water, initiated simultaneously with the influx of K+ and Cl-, commenced before these ions had changed the osmolarity of the intracellular solution significantly. The influx of H2O could proceed against an osmotic gradient. The influx stopped when 100 mmol l-1 of mannitol was added to the ventricular solution at the same time as the Cl- ions. The influx of H2O was inhibited by K+ removal, furosemide or high external Ba2+ (10 mmol l-1), but not by strophanthidin, ouabain or low concentrations of Ba2+ (0.5 mmol l-1). The influx could not continue with other permeable anions, NO3-, acetate- or SCN-, replacing Cl-. 5. In another series of experiments Cl- was removed from the ventricular solution of tissues bathed in saline solutions with normal concentrations of Cl-. The resulting efflux of Cl- was associated with an instantaneous efflux of K+ and H2O. This efflux of H2O could proceed against an osmotic gradient of up to 70 mosmol l-1. This effect was inhibited by furosemide, in which case the water fluxes were entirely dependent on the osmotic gradients and the osmotic water permeability Lp of the ventricular membrane. 6. The data suggest that there is a coupling between the flux of KCl and of water in the ventricular membrane, which implies that the reflection coefficient sigma for KCl under the given circumstances is less than one. I suggest that the ability of leaky epithelia to transport against osmotic gradients depends on such a coupling, which derives from the properties of the proteins through which K+, Cl- and H2O leave the cell.
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PMID:Secondary active transport of water across ventricular cell membrane of choroid plexus epithelium of Necturus maculosus. 182 49

We prepared proton-transporting membrane vesicles from the avian osteoclast's ruffled membrane, a specialized region of the cell surface that acidifies the bone resorption space. We demonstrated a unique conductive Cl- permeability that is charge coupled to the vesicle H(+)-ATPase and is required for acidification. Ion replacement indicated an anion selectivity of Br- approximately Cl- greater than SO4(2-) greater than NO3- approximately SCN- in supporting acidification. The anion channel blocker 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (10 microM) was a competitive inhibitor of acidification and raised the Michaelis constant for ATP of the proton pump approximately 11-fold in 120 mM KCl. Inhibition was reversed by valinomycin, which provides an alternate path for charge neutralization. The Cl- dependence of acidification was nonlinear and yielded a Hill coefficient of 3-4, showing that it is distinct from a linear Cl- dependence reported for acidification of renal cortical endosomes. The K+ ionophore valinomycin augmented H+ transport in K2SO4, and not in KCl. Dependence of Cl- transport on membrane potential was confirmed by direct measurement of 36Cl- transport. We uncoupled charge transport from proton transport with a large excess of ammonia, which had no effect on 36Cl- accumulation in vesicles, and by measuring 36Cl- accumulation in response to a membrane diffusion potential, produced with a [K+] gradient and valinomycin in the absence of ATP. These experiments demonstrate that the electrogenic proton pump of the osteoclast ruffled membrane is charge coupled to a passive Cl- permeability in the same membrane.
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PMID:Passive chloride permeability charge coupled to H(+)-ATPase of avian osteoclast ruffled membrane. 182 26

We have studied the mechanism by which liver Golgi apparatus maintains the acidity of its contents, using a subcellular fraction from rat liver highly enriched in Golgi marker enzymes. Proton accumulation (measured by quenching of acridine-orange fluorescence) and anion-dependent ATPase were characterized and compared. Maximal ATPase and proton accumulation required ATP; GTP and other nucleotides gave 10% to 30% of maximal activity. Among anions, Cl- and Br- approximately doubled the activities; others were much less effective. Half-maximal increase of ATPase and H+ uptake required 55 mmol/L and 27 mmol/L Cl-, respectively. In predominantly chloride media, SCN- and NO3- markedly inhibited H+ uptake. Nitrate competitively inhibited both the chloride-dependent ATPase (apparent Ki 6 mmol/L) and proton uptake (apparent Ki 2 mmol/L). Nitrate and SCN- also inhibited uptake of 36Cl. Replacing K+ with Na+ had no effect on the initial rate of proton uptake but somewhat reduced the steady state attained. Replacement of K+ with NH4+ and choline reduced proton uptake without affecting ATPase. The ATPase and H+ uptake were supported equally well by Mg2+ or Mn2+. The ATPase was competitively inhibited by 4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyano-stilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (apparent Ki 39 mumol/L). Other agents inhibiting both H+ uptake and ATPase were N-ethylmaleimide, N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, chlorpromazine, diethylstilbestrol, Zn2+, Co2+ and Cu2+. In the Cl- medium, accumulated protons were released by ionophores at the relative rates, monensin = nigericin greater than valinomycin greater than carbonyl cyanide mchlorophenylhydrazone; the last of these also reduced ATPase activity. In the absence of Cl-, monensin and valinomycin both stimulated the ATPase. These results show a close association between ATPase activity and acidification of liver Golgi vesicles. They support a role for Cl- that depends on its uptake as a counter ion for H+ and suggest that it may also stimulate proton transport by a more direct effect on a component of the transport system.
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PMID:Proton accumulation and ATPase activity in Golgi apparatus-enriched vesicles from rat liver. 184 95

The F1 portion of H(+)-translocating ATPase as purified from membrane vesicles of Vibrio parahaemolyticus by a rapid procedure. The whole purification process (from culture of cells to purification of the enzyme) could be completed in 1 day. The F1-ATPase consists of five subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta and epsilon) like F1 of Escherichia coli and other microorganisms. The F1-ATPase of V. parahaemolyticus showed some interesting properties. Its activity was greatly stimulated by high concentrations (about 0.5 M) of SO4(2-), SO3(2-) and CH3COO-, their effects decreasing in this order. Among the anions tested, Cl- and NO3- were ineffective, or rather inhibitory, and cations had no significant effects. Ethanol (or methanol) stimulated the activity 2- to 3-fold. The activity was inhibited by 4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyanostilbene 2,2'-disulfonate (SITS) (an anion exchanger inhibitor), tetrachlorosalicylanilide (TCS) (an H+ conductor), azide and N-ethylmaleimide. Zinc inhibited the activity only slightly, although it strongly inhibited the ATPase activity in membrane vesicles.
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PMID:Rapid purification and characterization of F1-ATPase of Vibrio parahaemolyticus. 214 93

The degradation of insulin in isolated liver endosomes and the relationships of this process with ATP-dependent endosomal acidification have been studied. Incubation of endosomal fractions containing 125I-insulin in isotonic KCl at 30 degrees C resulted in a rapid loss of insulin integrity as judged from trichloroacetic acid precipitability, Sephadex G-50 chromatography, immunoreactivity and receptor binding ability, with a maximum at pH 5-6 (t1/2: 10, 10, 6 and 6 min, respectively). On a log/log plot, the amount of acid-soluble products generated was linearly related to the amount of insulin associated with endosomes (slope, 0.80). Upon incubation, virtually all acid-soluble products diffused out of endosomes as judged from their solubility in aqueous poly(ethyleneglycol). In permeabilized endosomes, intact insulin was also released in part extraluminally, but only when degradation was inhibited did this release increase with lowering pH. ATP shifted the pH for maximal insulin degradation to about 7.5-8.5 and caused endosomal acidification as judged from the uptake of acridine orange and the fluorescence of internalized fluorescein-labeled dextran and galactosylated bovine serum albumin (delta pH about 0.8-0.9). GTP, ITP and UTP exerted comparable effects but with lower potencies. The ability of ATP to alter the pH dependence of insulin degradation was maximal in the presence of Cl-, other anions being less effective (Br- greater than gluconate = SO4(2-) greater than NO3- = sucrose = mannitol) and/or inhibitory (NO3-). Na+, K+ and Li+ supported more effectively ATP-dependent insulin degradation than did choline. Divalent cations were required for the ATP effect (Mg2+ = Mn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Ni2+ = Zn2 greater than Ca2+). Little or no effects of ATP occurred in the presence of proton ionophores such as monensin and carbonyl cyanide chlorophenylhydrazone, and inhibitors of the proton ATPase such as N-ethylmaleimide. The abilities of nucleotides, ions and inhibitors to support or inhibit ATP-dependent insulin degradation were well correlated with their abilities to affect ATP-dependent acidification. The acidotropic agents chloroquine and quinacrine caused a leftward shift in the pH dependence of insulin degradation and a decrease in maximal degradation; in the presence of ATP, chloroquine almost completely inhibited degradation at pH 5-9. It is concluded that ATP-dependent acidification, in part by enhancing the dissociation of the insulin-receptor complex, is required for optimum degradation of insulin within liver endosomes.
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PMID:Degradation of insulin in isolated liver endosomes is functionally linked to ATP-dependent endosomal acidification. 214 19

Vacuolar H(+)-ATPase was isolated from highly purified bovine kidney brush border, using a previously described immunoaffinity method. The affinity purified enzyme had reconstitutively active ATP-induced acidification that was inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide. The brush border H(+)-ATPase had a single pH optimum of 7.3, and a single Km for ATP of 360 microM. The enzyme showed no lipid activation; it had a substrate preference of ATP greater than ITP greater than UTP greater than GTP much greater than CTP, with an ATP:GTP selectivity of 1.69. The brush border H(+)-ATPase required no monovalent anion or cation for activity and was inhibited by the oxyanions NO3(-1) much greater than SO4(-2); sulfite stimulated activity at low concentrations and inhibited at higher concentrations. The inhibition produced by nitrate could not be attributed to dissociation of subunits from the enzyme. The divalent or trivalent cation preference was Mn+2 much greater than Mg+2 much greater than Co+2 greater than Al+3 greater than Ca+2 much greater than Ba+2,Sr+2; 1 mM Zn+2 inhibited the enzyme completely, but Cu+2 inhibited only 49% of activity at concentrations up to 5 mM. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of the brush border H(+)-ATPase showed subunits at Mr 70,000, a doublet at 56,000, 45,000, 42,000, 38,000, 33,000, 31,000, 15,000, 14,000, and 12,000. On two-dimensional gels, the pl value for the Mr 70,000 subunit was 6.3, for the Mr 56,000 was 6.4, and for the Mr 31,000 was 7.5-8.5, and microheterogeneity was observed in the Mr 56,000 and 31,000 subunits. A comparison of kidney cortex brush border H(+)-ATPase with kidney cortex microsomal H(+)-ATPase revealed differences in pH optimum, Km for ATP, lipid dependence, substrate preference, divalent ion preference, copper sensitivity, and in microheterogeneity of the Mr 56,000 and 31,000 subunits, providing evidence that different functional and structural classes of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase are segregated to specific membrane compartments.
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PMID:Isolation and properties of bovine kidney brush border vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. A proton pump with enzymatic and structural differences from kidney microsomal H(+)-ATPase. 214 91

A well-characterized chicken osteoclast plasma membrane vesicle preparation manifested Mg2(+)-dependent ATP hydrolyzing activity of 0.213 mumol inorganic phosphate released per mg protein per minute (n = 7). The Mg2+ dependence showed a high-affinity component with a KMg of 1.293 microM and Vmax of 0.063 mumol Pi per mg protein per minute, and a low-affinity component with a KMg of 297.6 microM and a Vmax of 0.232 mumol Pi per mg protein per minute. The Mg2(+)-ATPase activity was inhibited by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD, 0.2 mM, 50.7%), N-ethylmaleimide (0.5 mM, 34.6%), nolinium bromide (1 mM, 29.9%), 4,4'-diisothiocyano-2,2'-stilbene sulfonic acid (DIDS, 1 mM, 45.1%), and p-chloromercuribenzoic acid (PCMB, 0.1 mM, 33.8%). Sodium orthovanadate (Na3 VO4) at 1 microM had no effect but caused 29.5% inhibition at 1 mM. Na+ could substitute for K+ without loss of activity, NO3- caused 19.5% inhibition when substituted for Cl-, and acetate replacement of Cl- resulted in 36.4% stimulation of Mg2(+)-ATPase. ATP, GTP, ITP, CTP, and ADP were all hydrolyzed effectively. DCCD (0.2 mM), NEM (0.5 mM), nolinium bromide (1 mM), and DIDS (50 microM) almost completely abolished proton transport as measured spectrofluorometrically by acridine orange quenching. Na3 VO4 (1 mM) had no effect, and duramycin (80 micrograms/ml) inhibited transport 52.7%. K+ replacement of Na+ caused a 79.2% increase in initial proton transport rate. NO3- and acetate substitution of Cl- resulted in a 46.1 and 55.7% decrease in transport, respectively. ATP supports transport far more effectively than the other nucleotides tested. ADP was ineffective. Experiments using the potassium ionophore, valinomycin, indicated that the proton pump functions electrogenically, with Cl- most likely cotransported by an anion transporter. The proton pump also seems to have at least one anion-sensitive site, elucidated by experiments in the presence of NO3- and Cl-.
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PMID:Biochemical characterization of an electrogenic vacuolar proton pump in purified chicken osteoclast plasma membrane vesicles. 216 21

The characteristics of the H+ pump in isolated rat renal endocytotic vesicles were studied by the delta pH-sensitive dye acridine orange, the voltage-sensitive dye 3,3'-dipropylthiadicarbocyanine iodide, and by a coupled optical ATPase assay. Intravesicular acidification depended on ATP and Mg2+ concentrations with half-maximal activations at 73 and 77 microM, respectively. CTP, GTP, UTP, and ITP partially supported acidification, but ADP and AMP did not. Ouabain, ethoxzolamide, levamisole, and vanadate did not inhibit H+ uptake into endocytotic vesicles. Oligomycin inhibited partially. Depending on concentration and preincubation time, Dio-9, filipin, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), and dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) inhibited H+ uptake completely. Filipin and, partially, DCCD acted nonspecifically by dissipating pH gradients. A specific cation was not required for the H+ pump; Zn2+ inhibited. Compared with mannitol, ATP-driven H+ uptake was stimulated by SCN- greater than Cl- greater than Br- greater than I- much greater than HPO4(2-) = gluconate = HCO3- = F-, but not by SO4(2-), NO3-, CH3COO-, S2O3(2-), and S4O6(2-). Chloride stimulated H+ uptake from the outside of the vesicles with an apparent Km of 27 mM. In the absence of Cl-, ATP-driven proton uptake was increased by intravesicular K+ and valinomycin, suggesting that the pump is electrogenic. The electrogenicity, however, could not be demonstrated with voltage-sensitive dyes. The vesicle membrane contains no significant K+ and Cl- conductances; only a conductance for H+ was found. The vesicles exhibited an ouabain-, oligomycin-, and vanadate-insensitive ATPase activity that was inhibited by DCCD and NEM. Our data indicate the presence of an electrogenic H+ pump in endocytotic vesicles from rat renal proximal tubules with similar characteristics as H+ pumps present in various intracellular (nonmitochondrial) membranes.
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PMID:Characteristics of the proton pump in rat renal cortical endocytotic vesicles. 242 58

Regulation of steady-state free Ca2+ concentration at rest and at stimulation have been studied in isolated permeabilized pancreatic acinar cells by measuring the free Ca2+ concentration of the surrounding incubation medium with a Ca2+-specific electrode. Ca2+ transport mechanisms have been further characterized in subcellular membrane fractions by measuring 45Ca2+ uptake into membrane vesicles and protein phosphorylation using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. (a) In permeabilized isolated acinar cells from exocrine glands, inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) releases Ca2+ from endoplasmic reticulum. (b) Secretagogue-induced Ca2+ release from permeabilized cells is accompanied by increased production of IP3. At rest, steady-state free Ca2+ concentration is regulated at 4 X 10(-7) mol/L by the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER). Ca2+ uptake into this pool is promoted by a (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase, and is dependent on cations and anions in the incubation medium in the order K+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+ greater than choline+ and Cl- greater than Br- greater than SO4(2-) = NO3- greater than I- greater than cyclamate- greater than SCN-, respectively. Similarly, Ca2+-stimulated 32P incorporation from [gamma 32P]ATP into a 130 kD protein intermediate of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase, as well as 32P liberation, indicating (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity, are cation dependent. While 32P incorporation is highest in the presence of choline, 32P liberation is higher with K+, as compared with Na+ or choline, indicating that K+ ions facilitate dephosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Intracellular messengers in stimulus-secretion coupling of pancreatic acinar cells. 243 35

The clathrin-coated vesicle proton-translocating complex is composed of a maximum of eight major polypeptides. Of these potential subunits, only the 17-kDa component, which is a proton pore, has been defined functionally (Sun, S.Z., Xie, X. S., and Stone, D. K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14790-14794). ATPase-and proton-pumping activities of the 200-fold purified proton-translocating complex are supported by Mg2+, whereas Ca2+ will only activate ATP hydrolysis. Like Mg2+-activated ATPase activity, Ca2+-supported ATP hydrolysis is inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, NO3-, and an inhibitory antibody and is stimulated by Cl- and phosphatidylserine. Thus, Ca2+ prevents coupling of ATPase activity to vectoral proton movement, and Ca2+-activated ATPase activity is a partial reaction useful for analyzing the subunit structure required for ATP hydrolysis. The 530-kDa holoenzyme was dissociated with 3 M urea and subcomplexes, and isolated subunits were partially resolved by glycerol gradient centrifugation. No combination of these components yielded Mg2+-activated ATPase or proton pumping. Ca2+-activated ATP hydrolysis was not catalyzed by a subcomplex containing the 70- and 58-kDa subunits but was restored by recombination of the 70-, 58-, 40-, and 33-kDa polypeptides, indicating that these are subunits of the clathrin-coated vesicle proton pump which are necessary for ATP hydrolysis.
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PMID:Partial resolution and reconstitution of the subunits of the clathrin-coated vesicle proton ATPase responsible for Ca2+-activated ATP hydrolysis. 245 21


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