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Query: EC:3.6.3.1 (Mg2+-ATPase)
1,484 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The properties of Mg2+-ATPase in the vacuole of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were studied, using purified intact vacuoles and right-side-out vacuolar membrane vesicles prepared by the method of Y. Ohsumi and Y. Anraku ((1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2079). The enzyme requires Mg2+ ion but not Ca2+ in. Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions inhibit the activity. The optimal pH is at pH 7.0. The enzyme hydrolyzes ATP, GTP, UTP, and CTP in this order and the Km value for ATP was determined as 0.2 mM. It does not hydrolyze ADP, adenosyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate, or p-nitrophenyl phosphate. ADP does not inhibit hydrolysis of ATP by the enzyme. The activities of intact vacuoles and of vacuolar membrane vesicles were stimulated 3- and 1.5-fold, respectively, by the protonophore uncoupler 3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxybenzilidenemalononitrile and the K+/H+ antiporter ionophore nigericin. Sodium azide at a concentration exerting an uncoupler effect also stimulated the activity. The activity was sensitive to the ATPase inhibitor N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, but not to sodium vanadate. The ATP-dependent formation of an electrochemical potential difference of protons, measured by the flow-dialysis method, was determined as 180 mV, with contribution of 1.7 pH units, interior acid, and of a membrane potential of 75 mV. It is concluded that the Mg2+-ATPase of vacuoles is a new marker enzyme for these organelles and is a N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-sensitive, H+-translocating ATPase whose catalytic site is exposed to the cytoplasm.
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PMID:Properties of H+-translocating adenosine triphosphatase in vacuolar membranes of SAccharomyces cerevisiae. 611 10

1. The plasma membrane of the flounder erythrocyte contains a Mg2+-dependent ATPase which is insensitive to ouabain. Mg2+ is part of the substrate, Mg-ATP, and Mg2+ also functions as a nonessential activator. 2. Ca2+, Mn2+ and Co2+ can replace Mg2+ as an activator of ATP hydrolysis. Cu2+ and Zn2+ abolish the Mg-dependent activity. It is shown that Ca2+ and Mg2+ activate the same enzyme and that Mg-ATP and Ca-ATP are mutually competitive. 3. The hydrolysis of ATP obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics whether or not the Mg2+-ATPase is fully activated by Mg2+. The KM values for Mg-ATP were found to be 0.13 and 0.43 mM respectively. 4. Free ATP acts as a competitive inhibitor towards Mg-ATP and the dissociation constant for the enzyme-ATP complex was determined to be about 0.55 mM. 5. The Mg2+ -ATPase has a low specificity and reacts with the common nucleoside triphosphates GTP, ITP, UTP and CTP. 6. The enzyme has a broad pH optimum ranging from 6.5 to 7.2 and an energy of activation of 13.5 kcal/mol between 0 and 30 degrees C. 7. The effect of some activators and inhibitors of membrane-bound ATPases are reported.
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PMID:The Mg2+-dependent ATPase from the erythrocyte plasma membrane of the flounder Platichthys flesus L. General properties and some observations on the steady state kinetics. 613 79

Transverse tubule membranes isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle have high levels of a Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase with Km values for Ca-ATP or Mg-ATP in the 0.2 mM range, but do not display detectable levels of ATPase activity activated by micromolar [Ca2+]. The transverse tubule enzyme is less temperature or pH dependent than the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum and hydrolyzes equally well ATP, ITP, UTP, CTP, and GTP. Of several ionic, non-ionic, and zwitterionic detergents tested, only lysolecithin solubilizes the transverse tubule membrane while preserving ATPase activity. After extraction of about 50% of the transverse tubule proteins by solubilization with lysolecithin most of the ATPase activity remains membrane bound, indicating that the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase is an intrinsic membrane enzyme. A second extraction of the remaining transverse tubule proteins with lysolecithin results in solubilization and partial purification of the enzyme. Sedimentation of the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase, partially purified by lysolecithin solubilization, through a continuous sucrose gradient devoid of detergent leads to additional purification, with an overall 3- to 5-fold purification factor. The purified enzyme preparation contains two main protein components of molecular weights 107,000 and 30,000. Cholesterol, which is highly enriched in the transverse tubule membrane, copurifies with the enzyme. Transverse tubule membrane vesicles also display ATP-dependent calcium transport which is not affected by phosphate or oxalate. The possibility that the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase is the enzyme responsible for the Ca2+ transport displayed by isolated transverse tubules is discussed.
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PMID:Characterization of the Ca2+- or Mg2+-ATPase of transverse tubule membranes isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle. 613 74

The properties of Ca2+-activated and Mg2+-activated ATPases of nerve endings from mouse brain were investigated. Ca2+ and Mg2+ each can activate ATP hydrolysis in synaptosomes and its subfractions. Both Ca2+-ATPase and Mg2+-ATPase exhibit high and low affinity for their respective cations. At millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ or Mg2+, several nucleoside triphosphates could serve as substrate for the two enzymes and their specific activities were about three to four times higher in synaptic vesicles than in synaptosomal plasma membranes (SPM). Both in SPM and in synaptic vesicles the relative activity in the presence of Ca2+ was in the order of CTP greater than UTP greater than GTP = ATP, but with Mg2+ the activity was higher with ATP than with the other three triphosphates. Mg2+-ATPase was more active than Ca2+-ATPase in SPM, but in synaptic vesicles the two enzymes exhibited similar activity. Kinetic studies revealed that Mg2+-ATPase was inhibited by excess ATP and not by excess Mg2+. The simultaneous presence of Na+ + K+ stimulated Mg2+-ATPase and inhibited Ca2+-ATPase activity in intact synaptosomes and SPM. The stimulation of Mg2+-ATPase by Na+ + K+ was further increased by increasing Mg2+ concentration and was inhibited by Ca2+ and by ouabain. When Ca2+ and Mg2+ are present together in SPM or synaptic vesicles, the total Pi liberated by the two cations may either increase or decrease, depending on their relative concentrations. Kinetic analyses indicate that Ca2+ and Mg2+ bind independently to the enzyme alone or together at different sites. The results suggest that Ca2+-ATPase and Mg2+-ATPase in SPM or synaptic vesicles may be separate and distinct systems.
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PMID:Characterization of calcium-activated and magnesium-activated ATPases of brain nerve endings. 614 28

Mg2+-ATPase activity was identified in the cytosol of human erythrocytes. A partial purification of this activity was achieved by an initial DEAE-Sephadex column chromatography, followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 and then a second DEAE-Sephadex chromatography procedure. The enzyme appeared in the void volume of the Sephadex G-100 column and was retained on an Amicon XM100A ultrafiltration membrane. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 113 000 from SD gels. The above purification protocol yielded an enzyme with an optimal pH between 7.6 and 8.2. The enzyme activity increased linearly between 30 and 44 degrees C. It was stable for several months at -20 degrees C. Magnesium was essential for activity, but the rate attainable with Mn2+ was at least as great as that due to Mg2+. No other divalent cation was able to substitute for Mg2+ or Mn2+. Neither low nor high Ca2+ concentrations significantly affected the enzymatic activity. Substrate specificity studies showed that ATP was the preferred substrate followed by CTP (46% of the rate produced by ATP). Hydrolysis of GTP, UTP, ITP and ADP was less than 10% of the rate seen with ATP. No phosphatase, pyrophosphatase, phosphodiesterase, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase or adenylate cyclase activity could be detected in this enzyme preparation. Calmodulin, which stimulates the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase of the human erythrocyte membrane, failed to enhance the Mg2+-ATPase activity. Of considerable interest, the activity of this Mg2+-ATPase was enhanced approximately 5-fold by low concentrations of mercuric ion, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and DTNB, but was much less sensitive to iodoacetamide.
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PMID:Partial purification and characterization of a novel Mg2+-dependent ATPase present in the cytosol from human erythrocytes. 615 Jul 30

Actomyosin complex was extracted from the brain cortex in a medium consisting of low salt, ATP, and EDTA, in the presence of protease inhibitors, followed by ammonium sulfate fractionation. Myosin was then purified from the actomyosin. Myosin obtained according to the procedure used was significantly contaminated with actin high (greater than 200,000 dalton) and low molecular weight proteins. Therefore, an alternative method based on affinity chromatography (Blue Dextran/Sepharose) and gel filtration (Sepharose 4B) was developed to purify myosin. This procedure yielded myosin that was greater than 95% pure as judged by electron microscopy and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The subunit composition of purified brain myosin was monitored by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel also containing a urea gradient. A closely migrating triplet in the heavy chain and three light chains, LC1, LC2, and LC3, of Mr 21,000, 19,000, and 17,000, respectively, were observed. These findings raise the possibility of the existence of myosin isoenzymes in the brain. Brain myosin formed bipolar thick filaments in 0.075 M KCl and MgCl2. At low ionic strength, the Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin was stimulated 3- to 3.5-fold in the presence of skeletal muscle f-actin. Brain myosin also hydrolyzed other nucleotides; the rate of hydrolysis was ITP greater than ATP approximately equal to CTP greater than GTP approximately equal to UTP. The substrate (ATP) saturation curve in the presence of 10 mM CaCl2 and 0.6 M KCl was complex and consisted of plateau regions. The Arrhenius plot of the Ca-ATPase data was linear, whereas with ITPase, it was biphasic with a break occurring around 20 degrees C.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of myosin from calf brain. 622 62

Two distinctly different ATPases have been reported to be endogenous to the mitotic apparatus: a Mg2+-ATPase resembling axonemal dynein, and a Ca2+-ATPase postulated to be bound in membranes. To examine the nature of the Mg2+-ATPase, we isolated membrane-free mitotic spindles from Stronglylocentrotus droebachiensis embryos by rapidly lysing these in a calcium-chelating, low-ionic-strength buffer (5 mM EGTA, 0.5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM PIPES, pH 6.8) that contained 1% Nonidet P-40. The fibrous isolated mitotic spindles closely resembled spindles in living cells, both in general morphology and in birefringence. In electron micrographs, the spindles were composed primarily of microtubules, free from membranes and highly extracted of intermicrotubular cytoplasmic ground substance. As analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), the pelleted spindles contain 18% tubulin, variable amounts of actin (2-8%), and an unidentified protein of 55 kdaltons in a constant weight ratio to tubulin (1:2.5). The isolated spindles also contained two polypeptides, larger than 300 kdaltons, that comigrated with egg dynein polypeptides, and ATPase activity (0.02 mumol Pi/mg . min) that closely resembled both flagellar and egg dynein. The spindle Mg2+-ATPase showed a ratio of Ca2+-/Mg2+-ATPase = 0.85, had minimal activity in KCl and EDTA, and cleaved GTP at 35% of the rate of ATP. The Mg2+-ATPase was insensitive to ouabain or oligomycin. The spindle Mg2+-ATPase was inhibited by sodium vanadate but, like egg dynein, was less sensitive to vanadate than flagellar dynein. The spindle Mg2+-ATPase does not resemble the mitotic Ca2+-ATPase described by others. We propose that the spindle Mg2+-ATPase is egg dynein. Bound carbohydrate on the two high-molecular-weight polypeptides of both egg dynein and the spindle enzyme suggest that these proteins may normally associate with membranes in the living cell.
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PMID:Dynein-like Mg2+-ATPase in mitotic spindles isolated from sea urchin embryos (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis). 644 5

Selective chemical modification was used to examine amino acid residues that might be critical for the operation of the gastric K+-stimulated ATPase. Modification of amino groups with the fluorigenic reagent 2-methoxy-2,4-diphenyl-3-dihydrofuranone resulted in selective inhibition of the K+-stimulated ATPase and H+-transporting activities of the gastric microsomes, while the Mg2+-atpase was not affected. Half-maximal inhibition occurred at about 3 microgram 2-methoxy-2,4-diphenyl-3-dihydrofuranone/ml at pH 8.5. ATP provided complete protection against inhibition; the apparent Km for ATP protection was about 50 microM. Nucleotide selectivity for protection was ATP greater than ADP greater than ITP greater than GTP greater than CTP greater than AMP. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis of the reacted microsomes showed that virtually all the fluorescent label was on the Mr 100 000 peptide band, a very small peptide, and aminolipids. In the presence of ATP there was about 75% reduction in the fluorescent label on the Mr 100 000 peptide, but no change in the labeling of the other components. The arginine specific reagent, butanedione, inhibited Mg2+-ATPase and K+-ATPase activities, with the former being much less reactive. Similar to 2-methoxy-2,4-diphenyl-3-dihydrofuranone, ATP provided complete protection from butanedione treatment. It is concluded that amino and guanidino groups are critical to the function of the K+-ATPase and may be actually at the ATP binding site.
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PMID:Chemical modification of gastric microsomal potassium-stimulated ATPase. 738 25

Acanthamoeba class I myosins are unconventional, single-headed myosins that express actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase and in vitro motility activities only when a single serine or threonine in the heavy chain is phosphorylated by myosin I heavy chain kinase (MIHCK). Some other, but not most, class I myosins have the same consensus phosphorylation site sequence, and the two known class VI myosins have a phosphorylatable residue in the homologous position, where most myosins have an aspartate or glutamate residue. Recently, we found that the catalytic domain of Acanthamoeba MIHCK has extensive sequence similarity to the p21-activated kinase (PAK)/STE20 family of kinases from mammals and yeast, which are activated by small GTP-binding proteins. The physiological substrates of the PAK/STE20 kinases are not well characterized. In this paper we show that PAK1 has similar substrate specificity as MIHCK when assayed against synthetic substrates and that PAK1 phosphorylates the heavy chain (1 mol of P(i) per mol) and activates Acanthamoeba myosin I as MIHCK does. These results, together with the known involvement of Acanthamoeba myosin I, yeast myosin I, STE20, PAK, and small GTP-binding proteins in membrane- and cytoskeleton-associated morphogenetic transformations and activities, suggest that myosins may be physiological substrates for the PAK/STE20 family and thus mediators of these events.
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PMID:p21-activated kinase has substrate specificity similar to Acanthamoeba myosin I heavy chain kinase and activates Acanthamoeba myosin I. 903 11

We studied the ATP dependence of NHE-1, the ubiquitous isoform of the Na+/H+ antiporter, using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique to apply nucleotides intracellularly while measuring cytosolic pH (pHi) by microfluorimetry. Na+/H+ exchange activity was measured as the Na(+)-driven pHi recovery from an acid load, which was imposed via the patch pipette. In Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) fibroblasts stably transfected with NHE-1, omission of ATP from the pipette solution inhibited Na+/H+ exchange. Conversely, ATP perfusion restored exchange activity in cells that had been metabolically depleted by 2-deoxy-D-glucose and oligomycin. In cells dialyzed in the presence of ATP, no "run-down" was observed even after extended periods, suggesting that the nucleotide is the only diffusible factor required for optimal NHE-1 activity. Half-maximal activation of the antiporter was obtained at approximately 5 mM Mg-ATP. Submillimolar concentrations failed to sustain Na+/H+ exchange even when an ATP regenerating system was included in the pipette solution. High ATP concentrations are also known to be required for the optimal function of other cation exchangers. In the case of the Na/Ca2+ exchanger, this requirement has been attributed to an aminophospholipid translocase, or "flippase.". The involvement of this enzyme in Na+/H+ exchange was examined using fluorescent phosphatidylserine, which is actively translocated by the flippase. ATP depletion decreased the transmembrane uptake of NBD-labeled phosphatidylserine (NBD-PS), indicating that the flippase was inhibited. Diamide, an agent reported to block the flippase, was as potent as ATP depletion in reducing NBD-PS uptake. However, diamide had no effect on Na+/H+ exchange, implying that the effect of ATP is not mediated by changes in lipid distribution across the plasma membrane. K-ATP and ATP gamma S were as efficient as Mg-ATP in sustaining NHE-1 activity, while AMP-PNP and AMP-PCP only partially substituted for ATP. In contrast, GTP gamma S was ineffective. We conclude that ATP is the only soluble factor necessary for optimal activity of the NHE-1 isoform of the antiporter. Mg2+ does not appear to be essential for the stimulatory effect of ATP. We propose that two mechanisms mediate the activation of the antiporter by ATP: one requires hydrolysis and is likely an energy-dependent event. The second process does not involve hydrolysis of the gamma-phosphate, excluding mediation by protein or lipid kinases. We suggest that this effect is due to binding of ATP to an as yet unidentified, nondiffusible effector that activates the antiporter.
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PMID:ATP dependence of Na+/H+ exchange. Nucleotide specificity and assessment of the role of phospholipids. 904 42


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