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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)

1. Effects of paracetamol treatment in vivo at subtoxic (375 mg kg-1 body weight) and toxic (750 mg kg-1 body weight) doses on energy metabolism in rat liver mitochondria were examined. 2. Paracetamol treatment resulted in a significant loss in body weights without affecting the liver protein contents. Toxic doses, however, resulted in 21% decrease in the yield of mitochondrial proteins. 3. Subtoxic doses of paracetamol did not, in general, affect the respiratory parameters in the liver mitochondria except in the case of succinate where both the state 3 respiration and the ADP-phosphorylation rates increased by 28%. 4. Toxic doses of paracetamol caused 25 to 47% decrease in the state 3 respiration rates depending on the substrate used. ADP/O ratios also decreased significantly with pyruvate + malate and succinate as the substrates. Consequently, ADP-phosphorylation was impaired significantly from 20 to 63%. 5. Subtoxic doses of paracetamol resulted in increased contents of cytochrome c + c1 while the toxic doses caused lowering of the cytochromes aa3 and b contents. 6. Glutamate and succinate dehydrogenase activities decreased in both the experimental groups while Mg2+-ATPase activity was impaired only after toxic dose-treatment. 7. The results show that toxic doses of paracetamol result in impaired energy coupling in the liver mitochondria. Effects of subtoxic doses were also demonstrable in terms of impaired dehydrogenases activities.
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PMID:Impaired mitochondrial oxidative energy metabolism following paracetamol-induced hepatotoxicity in the rat. 252 34

The characteristics and specificity of inactivation of the chloroplast F1-ATPase (CF1) with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzofurazan (Nbf-Cl) have been investigated. Inactivation of the octylglucoside-dependent Mg2+-ATPase activity of latent CF1 by Nbf-Cl can be correlated with the formation of about 1.2 mol of Nbf-O-Tyr per mole of enzyme. Following inactivation of CF1 with [14C]Nbf-Cl, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate revealed that the majority of the radioactive reagent incorporated is present in the beta subunit. Treatment of the enzyme with [14C]Nbf-Cl following dithiothreitol heat activation, led to similar labeling of the beta subunit and substantial incorporation of 14C into the gamma subunit. On complete inactivation, about 4 mol of Nbf-S-Cys is formed per mole of dithiothreitol-heat-activated CF1. Incorporation of 14C into the gamma subunit is prevented by prior treatment of the latent CF1 or of the dithiothreitol-heat-activated CF1 with iodoacetamide. Following incubation of the dithiothreitol-heat-activated CF1 with iodoacetamide, complete inactivation of the octylglucoside-dependent Mg2+-ATPase activity by Nbf-Cl can be correlated with the formation of about 1.2 mol of Nbf-O-Tyr per mole of enzyme. After stabilization of the [14C]Nbf-O-Tyr derivative by treatment with sodium dithionite, a labeled peptide was purified. Automatic Edman degradation of this peptide revealed the sequence V-X-V-P-A-D-(D). The majority of the radioactivity was cleaved in the second cycle, the position occupied in CF1 by Tyr-beta-328, which is homologous to Tyr-beta-311, the residue reactive with Nbf-Cl in the beef heart mitochondrial F1-ATPase. When CF1, modified at Tyr-beta-328 with Nbf-Cl, is incubated at pH 9.0, the Nbf-O-Tyr adduct is hydrolyzed, leading to concomitant recovery of the ATPase activity. In double labeling experiments, two-dimensional isoelectric focusing in the presence of urea followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicates that 2-azido-ADP, covalently bound at the tight ADP binding site, and the tyrosine modified by [14C]Nbf-Cl are located in different beta subunits.
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PMID:Selectivity of modification when latent and activated forms of the chloroplast F1-ATPase are inactivated by 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzofurazan. 252 17

The fluorescent reagent 9-anthroylnitrile (ANN) reacted preferentially with serine among various amino acids tested. When the myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) was incubated with ANN, the 9-anthroyl (AN) group was covalently incorporated into the S-1 heavy chain. The incorporation of the AN group was enhanced by the presence of ATP and ADP. In the presence of ATP, 0.98 mol of the AN group was maximally incorporated into S-1. The resulting S-1 derivative exhibited four absorption maxima in the range of 300-400 nm and fluoresced strongly with an emission maximum at 462 nm upon excitation at 390 nm. The spectral properties were similar to those of the AN-derivatives of serine and polyserine. When 0.98 mol of the AN group was incorporated into S-1, the K+- and Ca2+-ATPase activities decreased to 30%, while the Mg2+-ATPase activity increased to 220% of the original value. Tryptic digestion of the labeled S-1 revealed that the AN group was attached only to the NH2-terminal 23-kDa tryptic peptide of the S-1 heavy chain. Neither the 20-nor the 50-kDa peptide was labeled with ANN. The results suggest that a serine residue, which becomes more reactive in the presence of the nucleotide, is located in the 23-kDa tryptic peptide of S-1.
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PMID:Nucleotide-induced specific fluorescent labeling of the 23-kDa NH2-terminal tryptic peptide of myosin ATPase by the serine-reactive reagent 9-anthroylnitrile. 253 Feb 21

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.
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PMID:Measurement of microsomal ATPase activities: a comparison between the inorganic phosphate-release assay and the NADH-coupled enzyme assay. 253 60

Washing thylakoid membranes with 1 M LiCl causes the release of the beta subunit from the chloroplast energy transducing complex (CF1.CF0) in spinach chloroplasts. This protein purifies by size exclusion chromatography as a 180-kDa aggregate and, thus, is probably composed of a trimer of beta polypeptides. The purified aggregate binds ADP to a high and a low affinity site with dissociation constants of 15 and 202 microM, respectively. Mg2+ is required for ADP to bind to both sites. Manganese binds to the protein in a cooperative manner to at least two sites with high affinity. The beta subunit preparation catalyzes Mg2+-dependent ATP hydrolysis at rates which are comparable to other subunit-deficient CF1 preparations and is increased by treatments known to activate the Mg2+-ATPase activity of CF1. However, Ca2+ is not an effective cofactor for this reaction and treatments which activate the Ca2+-ATPase of CF1 are either ineffective or inhibitory.
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PMID:ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by a beta subunit preparation purified from the chloroplast energy transducing complex CF1.CF0. 253 70

H+-translocating, Mg2+-ATPase was solubilized from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the zwitterionic detergent N-tetradecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate and purified by glycerol density gradient centrifugation. Partially purified vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase, which had a specific activity of 18 units/mg of protein, was separated almost completely from acid phosphatase and alkaline phosphatase. The purified enzyme required phospholipids for maximal activity and hydrolyzed ATP, GTP, UTP, and CTP, with this order of preference. Its Km value for Mg2+-ATP was determined to be 0.21 mM and its optimal pH was 6.9. ADP inhibited the enzyme activity competitively, with a Ki value of 0.31 mM. The activity of purified ATPase was strongly inhibited by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide, tributyltin, 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzoxazole, diethylstilbestrol, and quercetin, but was not affected by oligomycin, sodium azide, sodium vanadate, or miconazole. It was not inhibited at all by antiserum against mitochondrial F1-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase inhibitor protein. These results indicated that vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase is different from either yeast plasma membrane H+-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase. The vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase was found to be composed of two major polypeptides a and b of Mr = 89,000 and 64,000, respectively, and a N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide binding polypeptide c of Mr = 19,500, whose polypeptide composition was also different from those of either plasma membrane H+-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase of S. cerevisiae.
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PMID:Purification and properties of H+-translocating, Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 285 69

The Mg2+-ATPase activities of bovine adrenal chromaffin granules were studied in highly purified preparations of granule ghosts and in intact organelles. The overall ATPase activity (150-250 nmol ADP min-1 mg-1) of the granule ghost preparations was inhibited less than 5% by the bathophenanthroline chelate of Fe(II), a potent inhibitor of mitochondrial F1-ATPase. This small inhibition can be accounted for by a very minor contamination with mitochondria or mitochondrial fragments. The overall ATPase activity of native granule ghosts was inhibited about 75% by N-ethylmaleimide, with half-maximal inhibition at about 20 microM. The titration curve was slightly shifted towards higher concentrations as compared to the inhibition curve for the proton pump activity, which was completely inhibited at 25 microM. N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide inhibited the overall ATPase activity by 75-80% at 1.1 mumol/mg protein, a concentration that completely abolished the proton pump activity. Low concentrations (10 microM) of vanadate inhibited the overall ATPase activity by about 15% but had no effect on the proton pump activity, which was partly inhibited only at higher vanadate concentrations. Our attempts to assign a function to the vanadate-sensitive and N-ethylmaleimide-insensitive ATPase have so far been unsuccessful. In particular, our assay for ATP diphosphohydrolase activity was negative, although the chromaffin granule ghosts revealed a low Mg2+-ADPase activity (11.8 nmol AMP min-1 mg-1 protein). In intact chromaffin granules the specific Mg2+-ATPase activity (50-70 nmol ADP min-1 mg-1) was stimulated 2-fold by uncouplers, as compared to 1.6-1.7-fold in granule ghosts. The degree of energy coupling was rather independent of the external pH (6.5 less than pH less than 8.0) and temperature (20-45 degrees C). As expected, partial inhibition (about 15%) of the overall ATPase activity by 10 microM vanadate increased the ATPase control ratio. ADP was found to be a potent inhibitor of the proton pump activity with MgATP as the substrate, and the effect can partly be explained by a competitive type of inhibition of the hydrolytic reaction. This effect of ADP explains some of the kinetic data reported for MgATP-dependent (H+-ATPase-dependent) reactions in this organelle, notably the energy-dependent accumulation and storage of catecholamines.
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PMID:Studies on Mg2+-dependent ATPase in bovine adrenal chromaffin granules. With special reference to the effect of inhibitors and energy coupling. 288 84

Various aspects of actin--myosin interaction were studied with actin preparations from two types of smooth muscle: bovine aorta and chicken gizzard, and from two types of sarcomeric muscle: bovine cardiac and rabbit skeletal. All four preparations activated the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal muscle myosin to the same Vmax, but the Kapp for the smooth muscle preparations was higher. At low KCl, pH 8.0 and millimolar substrate concentrations the Kapp values differed by a factor of 2.5. This differential behaviour of the four actin preparations correlates with amino acid substitutions at positions 17 and 89 of actin polypeptide chain, differentiating the smooth-muscle-specific gamma and alpha isomers from cardiac and skeletal-muscle-specific alpha isomers. This correlation provides evidence for involvement of the NH2-terminal portion of the actin polypeptide chain in the interaction with myosin. The differences in the activation of myosin ATPase by various actins were sensitive to changes in the substrate and KCl concentration and pH of the assay medium. Addition of myosin subfragment-1 or heavy meromyosin in the absence of nucleotide produced similar changes in the fluorescence of a fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)-iodoacetamide, attached at Cys-374, or 1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-diphosphate substituted for the bound ADP in actin protomers in gizzard and skeletal muscle F-actin. The results are consistent with an influence of the amino acid substitutions on ionic interactions leading to complex formation between actin and myosin intermediates in the ATPase cycle but not on the associated states.
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PMID:Identification of amino acid substitutions differentiating actin isoforms in their interaction with myosin. 293 50

Unfertilized sea urchin eggs contain a Mg2+-ATPase which shares physical and enzymatic characteristics with dynein, the enzyme which powers ciliary and flagellar movement. To further investigate the homology of the egg ATPase and axonemal dynein, ATP-binding subunits in preparations of each of the enzymes were identified using a photoaffinity probe of ATP, 8-azido-ATP (8-N3ATP), and three high molecular weight (HMW) polypeptide components of the two enzymes were compared by one-dimensional peptide mapping. Two heavy chains (A and B) of both the flagellar and egg ATPases bound [alpha-32P]8-N3ATP. The labeling of the HMW bands was specifically inhibited by ATP or ADP. Both the cytoplasmic ATPase and flagellar dynein utilized 8-N3ATP as a substrate indicating that the reagent binds to the active site. The two HMW ATP-binding polypeptides and one other HMW component of the egg ATPase were compared to flagellar dynein heavy chains by peptide mapping. Digestion of the egg versus flagellar HMW polypeptides with Staphylococcus V8 protease or alpha-chymotrypsin produced a highly similar group of peptides, and each pair of heavy chains was qualitatively estimated to be over 85% homologous. These data support the identification of the egg ATPase heavy chains as components of a cytoplasmic dynein and suggest that the HMW polypeptides form active enzymatic sites in flagellar and egg dynein which are substantially homologous.
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PMID:Homology of egg and flagellar dynein. Comparison of ATP-binding sites and primary structure. 293 92

A membrane fraction enriched in endoplasmic reticulum was prepared from rat parotid glands by using sucrose-gradient centrifugation. The fraction showed a 10-fold increase in specific activity of NADPH: cytochrome c reductase activity over that of tissue homogenates and minimal contamination with plasma membranes or mitochondria. The endoplasmic reticulum fraction possessed both Mg2+ -stimulated ATPase as well as Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase [( Ca2+ + Mg2+)-stimulated ATPase]activity. The Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase required 2-5 mM-Mg2+ for optimal activity and was stimulated by submicromolar concentrations of free Ca2+. The Km for free Ca2+ was 0.55 microM and the average Vmax. was 60 nmol/min per mg of protein. The Km for ATP was 0.11 mM. Other nucleotides, such as GTP, CTP or ADP, could not substitute for ATP in supporting the Ca2+-activated nucleotidase activity. Increasing the K+ concentration from 0 to 100 mM caused a 2-fold activation of the Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase. Trifluoperazine, W7 [N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloronaphthalene-1-sulphonamide] and vanadate inhibited the enzyme. The concentration of trifluoperazine and vanadate required for 50% inhibition of the ATPase were 52 microM and 28 microM respectively. Calmodulin, cyclic AMP, cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate had no effect on the ATPase. The properties of the Ca2+, Mg2+ -ATPase were distinct from those of the Mg2+-ATPase, but comparable with those reported for the parotid endoplasmic-reticulum Ca2+-transport system [Kanagasuntheram & Teo (1982) Biochem. J. 208, 789-794]. The results suggest that the Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase is responsible for driving the ATP-dependent Ca2+ accumulation by this membrane.
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PMID:The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-stimulated ATPase of the rat parotid endoplasmic reticulum. 294 71


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