Transient state kinetic studies of phosphorylation by ATP and Pi of the calcium-dependent ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum

1979 ◽  
Vol 568 (2) ◽  
pp. 437-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adalberto Vieyra ◽  
Helena Maria Scofano ◽  
Horácio Guimarães-Motta ◽  
Ronald K. Tume ◽  
Leopoldo De Meis
1972 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 735-749 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Scarpa ◽  
Judith Baldassare ◽  
Giuseppe Inesi

X-537 A and A 23187, two antibiotics which form liphophilic complexes with divalent cations, function as ionophores in vesicular fragments of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Addition of either ionophore to SR preloaded with calcium in the presence of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), causes rapid release of calcium. Furthermore, net calcium accumulation by SR is prevented, when the ionophores are added to the reaction mixture before ATP. On the contrary, ATP-independent calcium binding to SR is not inhibited. This effect is specific for the two antibiotics and could not be reproduced, either by inactive derivatives, or by other known ionophores. Neither ionophore produces alterations of the electron microscopic appearance of SR membranes or inhibition of the calcium-dependent ATPase. In fact, the burst of ATP hydrolysis obtained on addition of calcium, is prolonged in the presence of the ionophores. Lanthanum inhibits ATP-independent calcium binding to SR, ATP-dependent calcium accumulation and calcium-dependent ATPase. However, addition of lanthanum to SR preloaded in the presence of ATP, does not cause calcium release. The reported experiments indicated that: (a) ATP-dependent calcium accumulation by SR results in primary formation of calcium ion gradients across the membrane. (b) Most of the accumulated calcium is not available for displacement by lanthanum on the outer surface of the membrane. (c) Calcium ionophores induce rapid equilibration of the gradients, by facilitating cation diffusion across the membrane.


1984 ◽  
Vol 221 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Ortiz ◽  
F García-Carmona ◽  
F García-Cánovas ◽  
J C Gómez-Fernández

Ca2+ + Mg2+-dependent ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum was inhibited by preincubation with vanadate. When the inhibited enzyme was preincubated in the presence of vanadate and assayed in its absence, a slow reactivation process was observed. This slow, hysteretic, process was exploited to study the influence of Ca2+ and ATP on the dissociation of vanadate. Ca2+ alone slowly displaced vanadate from the inhibited enzyme, and a rate constant of 0.1 min-1, at 25 degrees C, was calculated for this re-activation process. However, ATP re-activated with an apparent constant that hyperbolically depended on ATP concentration, and from it a rate constant for vanadate dissociation induced by ATP of 0.5 min-1 was calculated. It is deduced from the kinetic studies that ATP binds to the enzyme-vanadate complex, forming a ternary complex, with a dissociation constant of 4 microM, and that this binding accelerates vanadate dissociation. Binding experiments with [14C]ATP showed that ATP binds to the enzyme-vanadate complex with a dissociation constant of 12 microM, i.e. the affinities calculated with the isotope technique and the kinetic procedure are of the same order of magnitude.


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