Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The energy-dependent transport of solutes across the vacuolar membrane (tonoplast) of plant cells is driven by two H+ pumps: a vacuolar ("V-type") H(+)-
ATPase
(
EC 3.6.1.3
) and a H(+)-translocating (pyrophosphate-energized)
inorganic pyrophosphatase
(H(+)-PPase; EC 3.6.1.1). The H(+)-PPase, like the V-type H(+)-
ATPase
, is abundant and ubiquitous in the vacuolar membranes of plant cells, and both enzymes make a substantial contribution to the transtonoplast H(+)-electrochemical potential difference. Here, we report the cloning and sequence of cDNAs encoding the tonoplast H(+)-PPase of Arabidopsis thaliana. The protein predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNAs is constituted of 770 amino acids and has a molecular weight of 80,800. It is a highly hydrophobic integral membrane protein, and the structure derived from hydrophilicity plots contains at least 13 transmembrane spans. Since the tonoplast H(+)-PPase appears to be constituted of one polypeptide species and genomic Southern analyses indicate that the gene encoding the Mr 80,800 polypeptide is present in only a single copy in the genome of Arabidopsis, it is suggested that the H(+)-PPase has been cloned in its entirety. The lack of sequence identities between the tonoplast H(+)-PPase and any other characterized H+ pump or PPi-dependent enzyme implies a different evolutionary origin for this translocase.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and sequence of cDNA encoding the pyrophosphate-energized vacuolar membrane proton pump of Arabidopsis thaliana. 131 52
The membrane surrounding the central vacuole of plant cells contains an H(+)-translocating
ATPase
(H(+)-
ATPase
) and an H(+)-translocating
inorganic pyrophosphatase
(H(+)-PPase). Both enzymes are abundant and ubiquitous in plants but the H(+)-PPase is unusual in its exclusive use of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) as an energy source. The lack of sequence identity between the vacuolar H(+)-PPase and any other characterized ion pump implies a different evolutionary origin for this translocase. The existence of the vacuolar H(+)-PPase, in conjunction with increasing recognition of PPi as a key metabolite in plant systems, necessitates reconsideration of ATP as the primary energy source for membrane transport in plant cells.
...
PMID:Vacuolar H(+)-translocating pyrophosphatases: a new category of ion translocase. 132 78
Vacuole-rich fractions were isolated from Acetabularia acetabulum by Ficoll step gradient centrifugation. The tonoplast-rich vesicles showed ATP-dependent and pyrophosphate-dependent H(+)-transport activities. ATP-dependent H(+)-transport and
ATPase
activity were both inhibited by the addition of a specific inhibitor of vacuolar ATPase, bafilomycin B1. A 66 kDa polypeptide present in the preparation cross-reacted with the anti-IgG fractions against the alpha and beta subunits of Halobacterium halobium
ATPase
and with the antibody against the A subunit (68 kDa subunit) of mung bean vacuolar ATPase. A 56 kDa polypeptide present in the vacuole preparation showed cross-reactivity with the antibody against the B subunit (57 kDa) of mung bean vacuolar ATPase but not with the anti-beta subunit of H. halobium
ATPase
. A 73 kDa polypeptide cross-reacted with the antibody against
inorganic pyrophosphatase
of mung bean vacuoles. These results suggest that vacuolar membrane of A. acetabulum equipped energy transducing systems similar to those found in other plant vacuoles.
...
PMID:A vacuolar ATPase and pyrophosphatase in Acetabularia acetabulum. 166 Nov 54
Data from the literature have demonstrated that synaptosomal preparations from various sources can hydrolyze externally added ATP. Various authors characterized this activity as an ecto-ATPase. In the present report, we demonstrate that synaptosomal preparations obtained from the cerebral cortex of rats show
ATPase
activity that could not be dissociated from ADPase activity, suggesting that an ATP-diphosphohydrolase is involved in ATP and ADP hydrolysis. Furthermore, the ATP and ADP hydrolysis could not be attributed to associations of enzymes that could mimic an ATP-diphosphohydrolase because none of the following activities were detected in our assay conditions
inorganic pyrophosphatase
, adenylate kinase, or nonspecific phosphatases. A possible association between an
ATPase
and an ADPase was excluded on the basis of both the kinetics and much additional data on inhibitors, ion dependence, pH, etc. The present results demonstrate that in synaptosomal preparations from cerebral cortex an ATP-diphosphohydrolase is involved, at least in part, in ATP and ADP hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Characterization of an ATP diphosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.5) in synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats. 183 6
In the course of the odontogenesis of bovine incisors several clearly distinguishable phosphohydrolase activities are observed in the pulp and in dental hard tissues. Using various substrates and inhibitors, unspecific alkaline phosphatase, two isoenzymes of acid phosphatase, Ca2(+)-activated
ATPase
and
inorganic pyrophosphatase
are characterized. The enzymatic activity of alkaline phosphatase in pulp and hard tissues is significantly high at the beginning of dentine and enamel mineralization. The specific activity of this enzyme decreases quite fast with the beginning of root formation, then more slowly, until it reaches a constant final value. Histochemical studies show that during mineralization the maximum of alkaline phosphatase activity is in the subodontoblasts. Lower enzyme concentrations are found in the stratum intermedium and in the outer enamel epithelium during that process. The specific activities of
ATPase
, acid phosphatases and pyrophosphatase show little temporal variation during tooth development, but they also appear in a characteristic spatial pattern in the dental tissues.
...
PMID:Phosphohydrolase activities in developing and mature dental tissues. 216 43
The specific activity of the Mg2+-ATPase and the
(Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase
has been measured in a microsomal fraction from pig antral smooth muscle with the phosphate-release assay and the NADH-coupled enzyme assay, and the release of inorganic phosphate as a function of time is compared with the concomitant production of ADP. Both assays are found to overestimate the true Mg2+-ATPase activity. The adenylate kinase inhibitor P1,P5-di(adenosine-5'-)pentaphosphate (Ap5A) reduces the specific activity of the Mg2+-ATPase measured in the NADH-coupled enzyme assay to about half of its original value; however, it does not affect the specific activity of the Mg2+-ATPase in the Pi-release assay. The considerable overestimation of the Mg2+-ATPase activity in the NADH-coupled enzyme assay results from a combined action of an ATP pyrophosphatase (ATP in equilibrium AMP + PPi) and adenylate kinase activity contaminating the microsomes. The adenylate kinase activity in the microsomes catalyses the conversion of AMP formed by the ATP pyrophosphatase together with ATP into two ADP's. Also the phosphate-release assay is prone to an overestimation artefact because an
inorganic pyrophosphatase
will degrade the pyrophosphate and thus lead to additional Pi-production. Measurements of AMP and NAD+ production by HPLC confirmed our proposed reaction scheme. The same
(Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase
activity is found in both assays, because the
(Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase
activity is calculated from the difference in
ATPase
activity in the presence and absence of Ca2+, so that as a consequence the interfering activities are automatically subtracted.
...
PMID:Measurement of microsomal ATPase activities: a comparison between the inorganic phosphate-release assay and the NADH-coupled enzyme assay. 253 60
Mycelia of a low- and a high-production strain of Streptomyces aureofaciens were converted into protoplasts and divided into five subcellular fractions in order to localize exopolyphosphatases (EC 3.6.1.11),
triphosphatase
(EC 3.6.1.25),
inorganic diphosphatase
(EC 3.6.1.1), apyrase (EC 3.6.1.5) and glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.2). The highest specific activity of enzymes hydrolyzing polyphosphates was found in cytoplasmic vesicles and membranes. Triphosphatase was detected in the periplasmic fraction. Periplasmic vesicles and cytoplasm exhibited a high activity of diphosphatase. Apyrase was found mainly in the fractions of membranes and cytoplasmic vesicles. Glucokinase was a cytoplasmic enzyme. The enzymes were released from membrane structures into cytoplasm or periplasmic space if benzyl thiocyanate (10 microM) was present in the growth medium.
...
PMID:Subcellular localization of enzymes in Streptomyces aureofaciens and its alteration by benzyl thiocyanate. I. Phosphatases and ATP-glucokinase. 282 19
Intact synaptosomes isolated from the electric organ of the electric ray Torpedo marmorata contain, at their surface, enzyme activities for the hydrolysis of externally applied nucleoside phosphates. The diazonium salt of sulfanilic acid, as a low-molecular-weight, slowly permeating, covalent inhibitory agent, selectively blocks these enzyme activities and leaves intracellular lactate dehydrogenase intact. The ectoenzymes comprise both a nucleoside triphosphate and
diphosphate phosphohydrolase
, as well as a 5'-nucleotidase. Activity of nonspecific ectophosphatases is absent. The nucleoside
triphosphatase
hydrolyzes almost equally well ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP, and ITP and is activated to a similar degree by Mg2+ or Ca2+. It has a high affinity for ATP (Km for ATP in the presence of Mg2+, 75 microM; in the presence of Ca2+, 66 microM). Maximal rates in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+ were very similar (34.8 and 32.5 nmol of Pi/min/mg of synaptosomal protein, respectively). Either Mg-ATP or Ca-ATP can act as a true substrate. ADP inhibits hydrolysis of ATP, but AMP is without effect. The nucleoside
triphosphatase
is not inhibited significantly by a number of inhibitors of mitochondrial Mg2+-ATPase or of Ca2+ + Mg2+-ATPases. It is, however, considerably inhibited by filipin and quercitin. The capacity of intact synaptosomes to hydrolyze also extracellular ADP, GDP, AMP, GMP, and IMP suggests that the nucleoside
triphosphatase
is part of an enzyme chain that causes complete hydrolysis of the respective nucleoside triphosphate to the nucleoside. We conclude that the cholinergic nerve terminals of the Torpedo electric organ can hydrolyze ATP released on coexocytosis with acetylcholine via an ectonucleoside
triphosphatase
activity that is different from known endogenous nerve terminal ATPases. The final product of the hydrolysis, adenosine, can then be salvaged by the nerve terminal for resynthesis of ATP. Other possible physiological functions of the ectonucleotidases are discussed.
...
PMID:Ectonucleotidase activities associated with cholinergic synaptosomes isolated from Torpedo electric organ. 301 88
A procedure for the purification of the enzyme bile acid:CoA ligase from guinea pig liver microsomes was developed. Activity toward chenodeoxycholate, cholate, deoxycholate, and lithocholate co-purified suggesting that a single enzyme form catalyzes the activation of all four bile acids. Activity toward lithocholate could not be accurately assayed during the earlier stages of purification due to a protein which interfered with the assay. The purified ligase had a specific activity that was 333-fold enriched relative to the microsomal cell fraction. The purification procedure successfully removed several enzymes that could potentially interfere with assay procedures for ligase activity, i.e.
ATPase
, AMPase,
inorganic pyrophosphatase
, and bile acid-CoA thiolase. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the purified ligase gave a single band of approximately 63,000 Mr. A molecular size of 116,000 +/- 4,000 daltons was obtained by radiation inactivation analysis of the ligase in its native microsomal environment, suggesting that the functional unit of the ligase is a dimer. The purified enzyme was extensively delipidated by adsorption to alumina. The delipidated enzyme was extremely unstable but could be partially stabilized by the addition of phospholipid vesicles or detergent. However, such additions did not enhance enzymatic activity. Kinetic analysis revealed that chenodeoxycholate, cholate, deoxycholate, and lithocholate were all relatively good substrates for the purified enzyme. The trihydroxy bile acid cholate was the least efficient substrate due to its relatively low affinity for the enzyme. Bile acid:CoA ligase could also be solubilized from porcine liver microsomes and purified 180-fold by a modification of the above procedure. The final preparation contains three polypeptides as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The three peptides range in size from 50,000 to 59,000, somewhat smaller than the guinea pig enzyme. The functional size of the porcine enzyme in its native microsomal environment was determined by the technique of radiation inactivation analysis to be 108,000 +/- 5,000 daltons. Thus, the functional form of the porcine enzyme also appears to be a dimer.
...
PMID:Bile acid: CoASH ligases from guinea pig and porcine liver microsomes. Purification and characterization. 355 96
Two proteins (Mr = 145,000 and Mr = 130,000) of rat liver microsomal membrane are selectively phosphorylated in a characteristic biphasic time course by incubating the membrane with [gamma-32P]ATP in the absence of exogenously added Mg2+ (Lam, K. S., and Kasper, C. B. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 259-266). This endogenous phosphorylation system was solubilized with Triton X-100 and fractionated by chromatography with DEAE-cellulose and Sepharose 4B. The resulting preparation lacked both
ATPase
and
inorganic pyrophosphatase
activity, but retained its original character: the first phase occurred in the presence of ATP but the second phase was initiated after its depletion, implying the presence of a phosphodonor other than ATP. The putative phosphoryl donors were demonstrated to be ATP in the first phase and in the second phase tripolyphosphate, which is present in [gamma-32P]ATP preparations as a radioactive impurity. The latter conclusion was corroborated by results showing that tripolyphosphate purified from a commercial [gamma-32P]ATP and chemically synthesized [32P] tripolyphosphate were both capable of phosphorylating the two proteins and that the unlabeled tripolyphosphate competed effectively against the phosphodonor. A rapid dephosphorylation was observed in both phases upon removal of substrates during the reaction, indicating that there is a continuous turnover of the phosphoryl groups being transferred to the proteins. The second phase of phosphorylation maintained by the tripolyphosphate was shown to be reversibly inhibited by micromolar levels of ATP, ADP, and nonhydrolyzable analogues of these compounds. The implications of this unique phosphorylation system are discussed.
...
PMID:Tripolyphosphate is an alternative phosphodonor of the selective protein phosphorylation of liver microsomal membrane. 394 41
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>