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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 262, Issue 1, 103-109, Jan, 1987
S Yoda and A Yoda
Fragmental Na,K-ATPase from the electric eel forms three phosphorylated
intermediates (EP) with MgATP and Na+: ADP-sensitive K+-insensitive EP
(E1P), ADP- and K+-sensitive EP (E*P), and K+-sensitive ADP-insensitive EP
(E2P). The EP composition varied with the Na+ concentration. In the
reconstituted Na,K-ATPase proteoliposomes (PL), the EP composition of the
inside-out form was controlled not only by the intravesicular
(extracellular) Na+ concentration, but also by the temperature and the
cholesterol content of the lipid bilayer. When the lipid bilayer of PL
contained less than 30 mol % cholesterol, the E*P content did not change
significantly while the E2P content increased with an elevation in
temperature (3-20 degrees C). In contrast, when the lipid bilayer contains
more than 35 mol % cholesterol, the E*P content increased while the E2P
content stayed less than 10% under the same temperature change. These
observations suggest that a high cholesterol content in the lipid bilayer
interferes with the E*P to E2P conversion. This cholesterol effect was
reversed by ionophores (monensin, nigericin, and A23187). Therefore,
E1P-rich EP, E*P-rich EP, or E2P-rich EP could be obtained in the PL under
a constant Na+ concentration by using various concentrations of cholesterol
and ionophores. The reaction between the proteoliposomal EPs and
digitoxigenin (lipid-soluble cardiac steroid) occurred in a single
turnover, thereby avoiding unphysiologically high Na+ concentrations. The
increase in the ADP- and K+-insensitive EP, which indicated formation of
the digitoxigenin-Na,K-ATPase complex, was equivalent to the decrease in
the E*P under six different sets of conditions, without any significant
change in the E1P and E2P contents. This result indicated that E*P is the
active intermediate of the Na,K- ATPase for cardiac steroid binding.
Although the E2P has been thought to be the active form for binding, it
cannot bind with the cardiac steroid in the presence of Na+ and in the
absence of free Mg2+.
Phosphorylated intermediates of Na,K-ATPase proteoliposomes controlled by bilayer cholesterol. Interaction with cardiac steroid
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