Functional consequences of glutamate, aspartate, glutamine, and asparagine mutations in the stalk sector of the Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum.

  1. D M Clarke,
  2. K Maruyama,
  3. T W Loo,
  4. E Leberer,
  5. G Inesi and
  6. D H MacLennan
  1. Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, Charles H. Best Institute, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

    Abstract

    Nucleotides encoding glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, or asparagine residues within the stalk sector of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase were altered by oligonucleotide-directed site-specific mutagenesis. The mutant cDNAs were expressed in COS-1 cells, and mutant Ca2+-ATPases were assayed for Ca2+ transport function and phosphoenzyme formation. Multiple mutations introduced into stalks, 1, 2, and 3 resulted in partial loss of Ca2+ transport function. In most cases, subsequent mutation of individual amino acids in the cluster had no effect on Ca2+ transport activity. In one cluster, however, it was possible to assign the reduction in Ca2+ transport activity to alterations of Asn111 and Asn114. The mutant Asn114 to alanine retained about 50% activity, whereas the change Asn111 to alanine retained only 10% activity. None of the mutations affected phosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP in the presence of Ca2+ or by inorganic phosphate in the absence of Ca2+. The combined experiments suggest that the reduced Ca2+ uptake observed in the Asn111 and Asn114 mutants was not due to a defect in enzyme activation by Ca2+ or in formation of the phosphorylated enzyme intermediate but rather to incompetent handling of the bound Ca2+ following ATP utilization. These results demonstrate that the acidic and amidated residues within the stalk region do not constitute the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites whose occupancy is required for enzyme activation. They may, however, act to sequester cytoplasmic Ca2+ and to channel it to domains that are involved in enzyme activation and cation translocation. Simultaneous mutation of 4 glutamate residues to alanine in the lumenal loop between transmembrane sequences M1 and M2 did not affect Ca2+ transport activity, indicating that acidic residues in this lumenal loop do not play an essential role in Ca2+ transport. Similarly, mutation of Glu192 and Asp196 in the beta-strand domain between stalk helices 2 and 3 did not affect Ca2+ transport activity, although mutation of Asp196 did diminish expression of the protein.

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