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Query: HUMANGGP:021133 (ATP)
132,114 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) spectroscopy was used to estimate the percent of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and ATP bound to hemoglobin in intact human erythrocytes at 37 degrees C. Binding was assessed by comparing the chemical shifts (delta) of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and of ATP observed in intact cells with the delta values of these organic phosphates determined in model solutions closely simulating intracellular conditions, in which percent binding was directly evaluated by membrane ultrafiltration. The results showed that the percent of bound 2,3-diphosphoglycerate in intact cells varied with pH, the state of oxygenation, and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate concentration. The values ranged from 33% in cells incubated with glucose in air at an intracellular pH of 7.2 to 100% in cells incubated with inosine in N2 at a pH of 6.75. At the same 2,3-diphosphoglycerate concentration, a greater percentage of the compound appeared to be bound in erythrocytes than in the closely simulated model system. ATP was not significantly bound to hemoglobin under any condition examined, but appeared to be strongly complexed to Mg2+ inside the erythrocyte. The binding percentages for both 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and ATP in intact cells estimated by 31P NMR spectroscopy were lower than those calculated by others from individual association constants determined for the binding of different ligands to hemoglobin.
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PMID:Organic phosphate binding to hemoglobin in intact human erythrocytes determined by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 1 55

Nuclear magnetic relaxation methods were used to investigate the interaction of the inhibitor succinate with aspartate transcarbamylase from Escherichia coli. Over the pH range 7 to 9, the dissociation constant for succinate remains less than the inhibitor concentration used for most of this work (0.05 M). As a result, the enzyme predominantly exists in a single "gross" conformational state. Succinate binding to this enzyme state (generally known as the R form) parallels the behavior seen previously with the isolated catalytic subunit (Beard, C. B., and Schmidt, P.G. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 2255-2264). The pH and temperature dependence of succinate proton relaxation rates, 1/T2 - 1/T1, in the presence of carbamyl phosphate, is interpreted in terms of a binding mechanism involving three forms of the enzyme, differing by their states of protonation. The least protonated form of the enzyme does not interact with succinate, the singly protonated species binds succinate to form a rapidly dissociating complex, and the doubly protonated species undergoes a conformational isomerization upon succinate binding, yielding a slow exchange complex. Relaxation data provide sufficient information to determine pKa values of 7.2 and 8.9 for two ionizing groups, as well as the dissociation constant for succinate in the fast exchange complex, Kd =1.6 X 10(-2) M. Rate constants for the forward and reverse steps of the isomerization, 1.3 X 10(3) s-1 and 33 s-1, respectively, indicate a significantly slower reverse rate from that obtained in the earlier NMR study of the isolated catalytic subunit. In experiments where the succinate concentration was varied, the relaxation rates showed sigmoidal binding of that ligand to the fast exchange complex above pH 9.1, (a) indicating cooperative binding of succinate, and (b) suggesting that above pH 9.1, the system cannot be characterized by a single dissociation constant, ionization constant, or relaxation effect. CTP and ATP were tested for their ability to affect succinate binding to the fast exchange complex. Heterotropic interactions were observed for CTP but not for ATP. Addition of low concentrations of the transition state analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate to the enzyme-carbamyl phosphate-succinate complex sharply decreased the relaxation rate, indicating that the measurements are sensitive only to succinate bound specifically to the active site.
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PMID:Proton magnetic relaxation of aspartate transcarbamylase - succinate complexes. 1 60

High heat of enzymatic hydrolysis of triphosphoinositide phosphate bonds and of high-energy phosphates is observed using microcalorimetry. Heats of hydrolysis of triphosphoinositide, ADP and ATP sharply increase with increasing pH values from 6.6 to 7.4. Heat of hydrolysis of diphosphoinositide correlates with that of low-energy phosphates, pK4 and pK5 values for triphosphoinositide are found to be 7.4 and 9.3 respectively by means of potentiometric titration deltaGo' values for diphosphoinositide and triphosphoinositide are -3.5 and -7.1 kcal/mole respectively, taking into consideration the correction for heat neutralization-ionization during hydrolysis. Rapid triphosphoinositide hydrolysis takes place in 1% aqueous pyridine solution at 100 degrees C. In contrast to diphosphoinositide and monophosphoinositide, infrared spectra of triphosphoinositide have an additional absorption band at 930 cm(-1). 31P NMR method has revealed the presence of one diester and two monoester groups in the molecule of triphosphoinositide. The differences described between triphosphoinositide and other compounds with phosphomonoester groups are suggested to be due to electrostatic nonbounded interaction of vicinal diequatorial phosphate groups.
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PMID:[Properties of the high energy phosphate bonds of triphosphoinositide]. 2 24

ATP hydrolysis and proton translocation in chromaffin granules were followed using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance. The intragranular pH affects the resonance frequency of the gamma-phosphate of granular ATP. By measuring frequency vs. pH in solutions which simulate the intragranular matrix, this may be calibrated to give quantitative pH measurements. The pH in the resting granule is 5.65 +/- 0.15. This drops by 0.4 to 0.5 pH unit when ATP is added externally and protons are actively pumped into the granules. Because of differences in the composition and pH of the internal and external solutions, the resonances of internal and external nucleotides and Pi can be distinguished. Consequently, ATP hydrolysis and changes in internal pH may be observed simultaneously and continuously in a single sample of chromaffin granules. From the measured buffering capacity of a reconstituted intragranular solution, pH changes were converted into an absolute number of protons translocated. The net proton flux (protons translocated/ATP hydrolyzed) was about 1.0 immediately after external ATP addition but fell toward zero as the pH gradient increased to a new steady state. These 31P NMR results agree with intragranular pH measurements determined from methylamine distribution and with H+/ATP stoichiometries calculated from pH changes observed in the external medium.
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PMID:Phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance studies of active proton translocation in chromaffin granules. 3 Apr 75

The 31P-NMR technique was used for the monitoring of intracellular pH and studying its heterogeneity in the femoral biceps muscle of Rana catesbiana under anaerobic conditions. The value of intracellular pH of fresh muscle calculated from the chemical shift of intracellular inorganic phosphate (P1) was 7.3 on average and the line width of P1 was about 0.2 ppm. As the line width determined by the relaxation mechanism was 0.099 ppm, the P1 signal in fresh muscle was concluded to consist of overlapped narrow components, which indicated the heterogeneity of muscular pH (about 0.2 pH unit). Living muscle showed gradual acidification due to glycolysis and the decrease in heterogeneity. When glycolysis was suppressed by iodoacetic acid, slight alkalization due to the breakdown of creatine phosphate was observed. When the Lohmann reaction was suppressed by 2, 4-dinitro-1-fluorobenzene, rapid acidification accompanied by the appearance of a new acidic component was observed with the onset of ATP decrease. This new component was not detected in the muscle pretreated with glycerol to disrupt the transverse tubules. Therefore, it is likely that this new acidic component originates in the intracellular compartment, and not in the cellular difference.
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PMID:Intracellular pH measurement in frog muscle by means of 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance. 4 52

Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) can be used as a non-destructive method for the simultaneous observation of the major phosphate-containing metabolites (ATP, ADP, nucleotide monophosphate, Pi, sugar phosphate) and intracellular pH in isolated rat kidney. The time course of changes in these metabolites and in cellular pH in the ischaemic kidney are examined at two temperatures and in the presence of different flushing media. ATP is rapidly depleted while the pH change is slower and shows biphasic behaviour. Pi production and total nucleotide (ATP and ADP) depletion also occur on the same time-scale as the tissue acidification. The relation of these observations to tissue viability is discussed and the possibility of extending the measurements to human organs is considered.
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PMID:Non-destructive measurement of metabolites and tissue pH in the kidney by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance. 4 1

1. From NMR, IR and visible absorption studies of 2'(or 3')-O-(2, 4, 6-trinitrophenyl)-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP), 2'(or 3')-O-(2, 4, 6-trinitrophenyl) adenosine (TNP-Ad(, and 1-(2'-hydroxyethoxy)-2, 4, 6-trinitrobenzene (TNP-EG), it was concluded that there is an intramolecular interaction between the base and 2, 4, 6-trinitrophenyl (TNP) moieties in the TNP-ATP molecule. 2. A broad new absorption band was observed in the 530-630 nm region when excess indole was added to reaction mixtures containing TNP-ATP dissolved in 50% methanol or dimethyl sulfoxide. On addition of aromatic amino acid derivatives, methanol or dimethyl sulfoxide. On addition of aromatic amino acid derivatives, TNP-ATP and TNP-Ad underwent spectral shifts in the 400-550 nm region. The formation of a 1:1 complex apparently occurred between TNP-ATP and aromatic amino acid derivatives, and the complex with N-acetyltryptophan was stable in 50% methanol. The difference spectrum of TNP-EG vs. TNP-ATP closely resembled that induced by the addition of N-acetyltryptophan to the TNP-ATP solution. 3. The binding of 2'(or 3')-O-(2, 4, 6-trinitrophenyl)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (TNP-ADP) to heavy meromyosin (HMM) was studied by the rapid gel equilibrium method using Sephadex G-25. A dissociation constant of 1.4 muM and a maximum binding number of 1.8 were obtained in 0.15 M KCl, 10 mM MgCl2, and 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) at 25 degrees. TNP-ADP bound to the enzyme caused a characteristic spectral shift in the visible region. This spectral shift was explained in terms of an interaction between tryptophanyl residues and the adenine base of TNP-ADP bound to the enzyme. TNP-ADP quenched the tryptophanyl fluorescence, but TNP-EG and TNP-Ad did not. In the presence of 6 M guanidine hydrochloride, TNP-ADP scarcely quenched the tryptophanyl fluorescence, its effect being comparable to that of TNP-Ad.
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PMID:2' (or 3')-O-(2, 4, 6-trinitrophenyl)adenosine 5'-triphosphate as a probe for the binding site of heavy meromyosin ATPase. 13 93

The conformation of adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the manganese complex of pyruvate kinase from rabbit muscle was determined from six metal to nucleus distances derived by nuclear magnetic relaxation techniques. On the enzyme, no direct metal-ATP coordination exists. The phosphorous atoms of ATP are 4.9 to 5.1 A away from manganese, a distance which indicates either a predominantly (greater than or equal to 94%) second sphere complex or, less likely, a highly distorted inner sphere complex. Thus, water ligands or ligands from the protein might intervene between the ATP molecule and the divalent metal ion and facilitate their interaction. The metal-gammaP distance of 5 A for pyruvate kinase-bound ATP is equal to that found for the phosphorous atom of phosphoenolpyruvate and cobalt(II) on pyruvate kinase (Melamud, E., and Mildvan, A. S. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 8193-8201), which is consistent with the overlap in space of the P-enolpyruvate-phosphorus and the gammaP of ATP at the active site. This observation explains the competitive binding of these two substrates to the enzyme, as detected by NMR and by early kinetic studies. From the phosphorus data and from measurements of the relaxation rates of 3 protons of ATP in the pyruvate kinase-metal-ATP complex, the conformation of ATP was characterized as extended with distances of 6.0, 9.1, and 7.5 A from manganese to the H8, H2, and H'1 protons, respectively. The torsion angle about the glycosidic bond (chi) which defines the conformation of the enzyme-bound riboside and adenine rings was determined to be 30 degrees. In contrast, the conformation of the binary Mn(II)-ATP complex in solution is folded around the metal with direct manganese coordination of the alpha-, beta-, and gamma-phosphorus atoms, and with metal to proton distances of 4.5, 6.4, and 6.2 A for the H8, H2, and H'1 protons, suggesting a second sphere manganese-adenine interaction. The chi angle equals 90 degrees for the binary complex primarily because of the metal-base interaction. Thus, a profound change in the conformation and structure of Mn(II)-ATP from a folded chelate to an extended second sphere complex results when the nucleotide binds to pyruvate kinase.
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PMID:Nuclear magnetic relaxation studies of the conformation of adenosine 5'-triphosphate on pyruvate kinase from rabbit muscle. 17 14

The arginine kinase reaction, the reversible transfer of the terminal phosphoryl group of ATP to L-arginine, has been investigated by the technique of 31P NMR at catalytic and stoichiometric concentrations of the enzyme. Three of the four substrates, ATP, ADP, and P-arginine produce easily distinguishable resonances in the 31P NMR spectrum, thus permitting a determination of equilibrium constants from the integrated areas of the resonances. From the linewidths, the exchange rates between reactants and products may be evaluated. At pH 7.25 and a temperature of 12 degrees, the equilibrium constant at catalytic enzyme concentration: Keq = [MgADP] [P-arginine]/[MgATP] [L-arginine], is found to be 0.10 +/- 0.02 and that at stoichiometric enzyme concentration: K'eq = [E-MgADP] [E-P-arginine]/[E-MgATP] [E-arginine] to be 1.56 +/- 0.5. Thus, as the enzyme concentration increased, the production of P-arginine is increasingly favored. From the NMR line shapes in the presence of excess enzyme, the rate of the single step, the transfer of the phosphoryl group on the surface of the enzyme is found to be 192 +/- 15 s-1 in the forward direction, i.e. from E-MgATP, and 154 +/- 15 s-1 in the reverse direction from E-P-argine. At 12 degrees and pH 7.25, the rate of the overall reaction in the forward direction was determined from kinetic measurements to be 19 s-1, an order of magnitude slower than the rate measured by NMR. It can, therefore, be concluded that the interconversion of substrates on the surface of the enzyme is not the rate-determining step in the overal reaction. From the equilibrium constants and other known data the dissociation constant of P-arginine from its enzyme complex can be determined and is found to be 100 muM.
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PMID:31P NMR studies of the arginine kinase reaction. Equilibrium constants and exchange rates at stoichiometric enzyme concentration. 18 51

This paper reports on 1H and 31P NMR as well as EPR measurements of the labeling reagent of ATPase sites, "Co(III)-(phen)-ATP." This complex is found to be paramagnetic, as deduced both from its EPR spectrum and from the significant broadening, though almost unshifted, proton and phosphorus resonances. This paramagnetism is a result of the incorporation of the superoxide free-radical anion in the coordination sphere of the trivalent cobalt ion. Evidence for the presence of superoxide in the complex is based on competition experiments with cyanide, which is able to displace the superoxide anion. The latter was identified by its inducing effect on the photoreactivity of luminol. The displacement of superoxide by cyanide was accompanied by the abolition of the paramagnetism of the complex. The relative distances between the protons and phosphorus atoms of ATP and the superoxide anion in the complex were calculated using the NMR line-broadening data. Structural models compatible with the experimental results are proposed. Under conditions of excess of adenine nucleotides or phenanthroline, the coordinated ATP molecule becomes exchangeable. This phenomenon is attributed to the labilization of the cobaltic ion ligands induced by the superoxide anion.
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PMID:Structural and exchange properties of "Co(III)-phenanthroline-ATP": a labeling reagent for the active site of ATPases. 21 Aug 47


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