scholarly journals A protein phosphatase associated with rat heavy gastric membranes enriched with (H+-K+)-ATPase influences membrane K+ transport activity.

1987 ◽  
Vol 262 (20) ◽  
pp. 9865-9871
Author(s):  
W B Im ◽  
D P Blakeman ◽  
J E Bleasdale ◽  
J P Davis
Chemistry ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-21
Author(s):  
Yu-Hao Li ◽  
Shao-Ping Zheng ◽  
Dawei Wang ◽  
Mihail Barboiu

Synthetic K+-binding macrocycles have potential as therapeutic agents for diseases associated with KcsA K+ channel dysfunction. We recently discovered that artificial self-assembled n-alkyl-benzoureido-15-crown-5-ether form selective ion-channels for K+ cations, which are highly preferred to Na+ cations. Here, we describe an impressive selective activation of the K+ transport via electrogenic macrocycles, stimulated by the addition of the carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone (FCCP) proton carrier. The transport performances show that both the position of branching or the size of appended alkyl arms favor high transport activity and selectivity SK+/Na+ up to 48.8, one of the best values reported up to now. Our study demonstrates that high K+/Na+ selectivity obtained with natural KcsA K+ channels is achievable using simpler artificial macrocycles displaying constitutional functions.


1985 ◽  
Vol 249 (1) ◽  
pp. C124-C128 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Lauf ◽  
C. M. Perkins ◽  
N. C. Adragna

The effects of incubation in anisosmotic media and of metabolic depletion on ouabain-resistant (OR) Cl--dependent K+ influxes stimulated by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) were studied in human red blood cells using Rb+ as K+ analogue. The NEM-stimulated but not the basal Rb+-Cl- influx measured in phosphate-buffered anisosmotic media was found to be cell volume dependent. When cellular ATP, [ATP]c, was lowered to less than 0.10 of its initial level by exposure to nonmetabolizable 2-deoxy-D-glucose, the NEM-stimulated but not the basal Cl--dependent Rb+ influxes were abolished. Metabolically depleted red blood cells subsequently repleted by incubation in glucose plus inosine regained the NEM-inducible Rb+ (K+) transport activity. The difference in the time course of ATP breakdown and Rb+ influx inhibition suggests that energization of the NEM-stimulated Rb+ flux by metabolism may involve factors additional to ATP.


1996 ◽  
Vol 270 (3) ◽  
pp. C898-C902 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Krarup ◽  
P. B. Dunham

Osmotic swelling of dog and other mammalian erythrocytes activates Cl-dependent K transport, K-Cl cotransport. This activation can be abolished by nanomolar concentrations of calyculin, a potent inhibitor of serine-threonine protein phosphatases. Therefore, K-Cl cotransport is probably activated by dephosphorylation by a type 1 and/or type 2A protein phosphatase (PP-1 and PP-2A, respectively). This was tested directly by incorporating exogenous protein phosphatases into resealed ghosts made from dog erythrocytes previously exposed to calyculin. K-Cl cotransport was nearly completely inhibited in the ghosts. Incorporation of PP-1 reconstituted K-Cl cotransport. Maximal reconstitution was up to 90% of the control flux in the ghosts and 0.1 U PP-1/ml lysate gave half-maximal reconstitution of cotransport. In contrast, PP-2A had no effect. This result with PP-1 provides direct evidence that K-Cl cotransport is activated by PP-1 in dog erythrocytes. Half-maximal activation of K-Cl cotransport required approximately 180 molecules of PP-1 per ghost.


1995 ◽  
Vol 198 (10) ◽  
pp. 2115-2125
Author(s):  
A Koch ◽  
D Moffett

A quantitative model was developed to explain the kinetics of tetramethylammonium (TMA+) movement into and out of the goblet cavities of posterior midgut cells of Manduca sexta based on the data of the accompanying paper, which indicated that TMA+ does not enter the goblet cavity directly from the lumen. The model has two cellular compartments between the lumen and goblet cavity; these have been tentatively identified as the columnar cell and goblet cell cytoplasm. Five transmembrane pathways are included: from lumen to columnar cell, from columnar cell to goblet cell, from goblet cell cytoplasm to goblet cell cavity, and across the basal membrane of each cell type. These pathways need not be channels; they could use endocytotic or exocytotic mechanisms or, in the case of the cell-to-cell passage, septate junctions. However, in all cases, transfer is proportional to the electrochemical gradient. The model was tested against the results obtained after exposure to TMA+ in short-circuited and open-circuited tissues as well as results from an open-circuited tissue that did not develop a large transepithelial potential. Although driving forces for TMA+ across the membrane barriers were quite different in the different experimental conditions, the transfer coefficients from lumen to columnar cell, from columnar to goblet cell and from both cells across the basal membrane were the same. The only transfer coefficient that changed between short-circuit and open-circuit conditions was that from goblet cell cytoplasm to goblet cavity. This value was high under short-circuit conditions (when K+ transport activity is high), but low under open-circuit conditions (when K+ transport activity is low). The model suggests a hypothesis in which TMA+ enters the goblet cavity by an indirect route across the cell membrane of columnar cells, and thence passes to the goblet cell cytoplasm through intercellular junctions. Results from experiments with cytochalasin E suggest that the actin-based cytoskeleton is involved in limiting cell­cell coupling. In this model, TMA+ passes from the goblet cell cytoplasm to the goblet cavity via the K+/nH+ antiport believed to mediate active transepithelial K+ transport. However, although actively transported K+ is believed to pass from goblet cavity to lumen, TMA+ cannot.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reyes Ródenas ◽  
Paula Ragel ◽  
Manuel Nieves-Cordones ◽  
Almudena Martínez-Martínez ◽  
Jesús Amo ◽  
...  

Abstract The high-affinity K+ transporter HAK5 from Arabidopsis is essential for K+ acquisition and plant growth at low micromolar K+ concentrations. Despite its functional relevance in plant nutrition, information about functional domains of HAK5 is scarce. Its activity is enhanced by phosphorylation via the AtCIPK23/AtCBL1-9 complex. Based on the recently published 3D-structure of the bacterial ortholog KimA from Bacillus subtilis, we have modeled AtHAK5 and, by a mutational approach, identified residues G67, Y70, G71, D72, D201, and E312 as essential for transporter function. According to the structural model, residues D72, D201, and E312 may bind K+, whereas residues G67, Y70, and G71 may shape the selective filter for K+, which resembles that of K+shaker-like channels. In addition, we show that phosphorylation of residue S35 by AtCIPK23 is required for reaching maximal transport activity. Serial deletions of the AtHAK5 C-terminus disclosed the presence of an autoinhibitory domain located between residues 571 and 633 together with an AtCIPK23-dependent activation domain downstream of position 633. Presumably, autoinhibition of AtHAK5 is counteracted by phosphorylation of S35 by AtCIPK23. Our results provide a molecular model for K+ transport and describe CIPK-CBL-mediated regulation of plant HAK transporters.


1999 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 561-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chatsri Deachapunya ◽  
Melissa Palmer-Densmore ◽  
Scott M. O'Grady

The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of insulin and insulin-like growth factor I on transepithelial Na+ transport across porcine glandular endometrial epithelial cells grown in primary culture. Insulin and insulin-like growth factor I acutely stimulated Na+ transport two- to threefold by increasing Na+-K+ ATPase transport activity and basolateral membrane K+ conductance without increasing the apical membrane amiloride-sensitive Na+ conductance. Long-term exposure to insulin for 4 d resulted in enhanced Na+ absorption with a further increase in Na+-K+ ATPase transport activity and an increase in apical membrane amiloride-sensitive Na+ conductance. The effect of insulin on the Na+-K+ ATPase was the result of an increase in Vmax for extracellular K+ and intracellular Na+, and an increase in affinity of the pump for Na+. Immunohistochemical localization along with Western blot analysis of cultured porcine endometrial epithelial cells revealed the presence of α-1 and α-2 isoforms, but not the α-3 isoform of Na+-K+ ATPase, which did not change in the presence of insulin. Insulin-stimulated Na+ transport was inhibited by hydroxy-2-naphthalenylmethylphosphonic acid tris-acetoxymethyl ester [HNMPA-(AM)3], a specific inhibitor of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity, suggesting that the regulation of Na+ transport by insulin involves receptor autophosphorylation. Pretreatment with wortmannin, a specific inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3–kinase as well as okadaic acid and calyculin A, inhibitors of protein phosphatase activity, also blocked the insulin-stimulated increase in short circuit and pump currents, suggesting that activation of phosphatidylinositol 3–kinase and subsequent stimulation of a protein phosphatase mediates the action of insulin on Na+-K+ ATPase activation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (8) ◽  
pp. 1211-1214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Landley Ziluo Zeng ◽  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Tianxiang Wang ◽  
Tianhu Li

Electron-withdrawing groups enhance ion transport activity by 160% and selectivity by >50%, leading to high K+/Na+ selectivity of 14.0.


1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (4) ◽  
pp. C773-C779 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. J. Van Winkle ◽  
A. L. Campione

Ouabain-resistant K+ transport activity was characterized primarily by measuring Rb+ uptake because 86Rb+ has a more convenient half-life than 42K+. Ouabain-resistant 86Rb+ uptake by mouse two-cell conceptuses and blastocysts was slowed by the K(+)-Na(+)-2Cl- cotransporter inhibitors bumetanide [inhibitory constant (Ki) = 400 nM] and furosemide (Ki approximately 10 microM), but it was insensitive to a variety of K+ channel blockers. This component of 86Rb+ transport was also inhibited by K+ and nonradioactive Rb+ and it was stimulated by Cl-. Nevertheless, neither 36Cl- nor 22Na+ uptake was inhibited by bumetanide, whereas 42K+ uptake was inhibited by both bumetanide and furosemide. Bumetanide-sensitive Rb+ transport in blastocysts had a Hill coefficient of 1.0 and a Michaelis constant value of 3.0 mM. By these criteria, preimplantation conceptuses contain a novel, bumetanide-sensitive K+ transport system that does not cotransport Cl- or Na+. Moreover, bumetanide-sensitive Rb+ uptake was 10 times faster in blastocysts when they were collapsed to expose the basal membrane of the trophectoderm to 86Rb+ in the medium. Therefore, the novel system may be located predominantly in the basal rather than in the apical membrane of the trophectoderm.


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