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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)
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.
...
PMID:Inactivation and phosphorylation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase by Mg.ATP analogues Rh(III)-ATP and Co(III)-ATP. 153
The uncE114 mutation from Escherichia coli strain
KI1
(Nieuwenhuis, F. J. R. M., Kanner, B. I., Gutnick, D. L., Postma, P. W., and Van Dam, K. (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 325, 62-71) was characterized after transfer to a new genetic background. A defective H+-
ATPase
complex is formed in strains carrying the mutation. Based upon the genetic complementation pattern of other unc mutants by a lambda uncE114 transducing phage, and complementation of uncE114 recipients by an uncE+ plasmid (pCP35), the mutation was concluded to lie in the uncE gene. The uncE gene codes for the omega subunit ("dicyclohexylcarbodiimide binding protein") of the H+-
ATPase
complex. The mutation was defined by sequencing the mutant gene. The G----C transversion found results in a substitution of Glu for Gln at position 42 of the omega subunit in the Fo sector of the H+-
ATPase
. The substitution did not significantly impair H+ translocation by Fo or affect inhibition of H+ translocation by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Wild-type F1 was bound by uncE114 Fo with near normal affinity, but the functional coupling between F1 and Fo was disrupted. The uncoupling was indicated by an H+-leaky membrane, even when saturating levels of wild-type F1 were bound. Disassociation of F1 from Fo under conditions of assay did partially contribute to the H+ leakiness, but the major contributor to the high H+ conductance was Fo with bound F1. The F1 bound to uncE114 membranes exhibited normal
ATPase
activity, but ATP hydrolysis was uncoupled from H+ translocation and was resistant to inhibition by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. The F1 isolated from the uncE114 mutant was modified with partial loss of coupling function. However, this modification did not account for the uncoupled properties of the mutant Fo described above, since these properties were retained after reconstitution of mutant membrane (Fo) with wild-type F1.
...
PMID:H+-ATPase of Escherichia coli. An uncE mutation impairing coupling between F1 and Fo but not Fo-mediated H+ translocation. 285 83