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AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

biochemistry, genetics and molecular biology

A Remarkably Stable Phosphorylated Form of Ca2+-ATPase Prepared from Ca2+-loaded and Fluorescein Isothiocyanate-labeled Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Vesicles

Journal of Biological Chemistry, Volume 276, No. 8, Year 2001

After the nucleotide binding domain in sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+-ATPase has been derivatized with fluorescein isothiocyanate at Lys-515, ATPase phosphorylation in the presence of a calcium gradient, with Ca2+ on the lumenal side but without Ca2+ on the cytosolic side, results in the formation of a species that exhibits exceptionally low probe fluorescence (Pick, U. (1981) FEBS Lett. 123, 131-136). We show here that, as long as the free calcium concentration on the cytosolic side is kept in the nanomolar range, this low fluorescence species is remarkably stable, even when the calcium gradient is subsequently dissipated by ionophore. This species is a Ca2+-free phosphorylated species. The kinetics of Ca2+ binding to it indicates that its transport sites are exposed to the cytosolic side of the membrane and retain a high affinity for Ca2+. Thus, in the ATPase catalytic cycle, an intrinsically transient phosphorylated species with transport sites occupied but not yet occluded must also have been stabilized by fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), possibly mimicking ADP. The low fluorescence mainly results from a change in FITC absorption. The Ca2+-free low fluorescence FITC-ATPase species remains stable after addition of thapsigargin in the absence or presence of decavanadate, or after solubilization with dodecylmaltoside. The remarkable stability of this phosphoenzyme species and the changes in FITC spectroscopic properties are discussed in terms of a putative FITC-mediated link between the nucleotide binding domain and the phosphorylation domain in Ca 2+-ATPase, and the possible formation of a transition state-like conformation with a compact cytosolic head. These findings might open a path toward structural characterization of a stable phosphorylated form of Ca 2+-ATPase for the first time, and thus to further insights into the pump's mechanism.
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Citations: 13
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