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The ATP-Mg2+ binding site and cytoplasmic domain interactions of Na+,K+-ATPase investigated with Fe2+-catalyzed oxidative cleavage and molecular modeling

Authors :
Keith Munson
Guy Patchornik
Steven J. D. Karlish
Rivka Goldshleger
George Sachs
Alla Shainskaya
Source :
Biochemistry. 41(39)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

This work utilizes Fe(2+)-catalyzed cleavages and molecular modeling to obtain insight into conformations of cytoplasmic domains and ATP-Mg(2+) binding sites of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase. In E(1) conformations the ATP-Fe(2+) complex mediates specific cleavages at 712VNDS (P domain) and near 440VAGDA (N domain). In E(2)(K), ATP-Fe(2+) mediates cleavages near 212TGES (A domain), near 440VAGDA, and between residues 460-490 (N domain). Cleavages at high ATP-Fe(2+) concentrations do not support suggestions for two ATP sites. A new reagent, fluorescein-DTPA, has been synthesized. The fluorescein-DTPA-Fe(2+) complex mediates cleavages similar to those mediated by ATP-Fe(2+). The data suggest the existence of N to P domain interactions in E(1)Na, with bound ATP-Fe(2+) or fluorescein-DPTA-Fe(2+), A-N, and A-P interactions in E(2)(K), and provide testable constraints for model building. Molecular models based on the Ca(2+)-ATPase structure are consistent with the predictions. Specifically, high-affinity ATP-Mg(2+) binding in E(1) is explained with the N domain tilted ca. 80 degrees toward the P domain, by comparison with well-separated N and P domains in the Ca-ATPase crystal structure. With ATP-Mg(2+) docked, bound Mg(2+) is close to both D710 (in 710DGVNDS) and D443 (in 440VAGDASE). D710 is known to be crucial for Mg(2+) binding. The cleavage and modeling data imply that D443 could also be a candidate for Mg(2+) binding. Comparison of E(1).ATP,Mg(2+) and E(2) models suggests an explanation of the high or low ATP affinities, respectively. We propose a scheme of ATP-Mg(2+) and Mg(2+) binding and N, P, and A domain interactions in the different conformations of the catalytic cycle.

Details

ISSN :
00062960
Volume :
41
Issue :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c38d53a2a96ae04e90d5da0c9259b1f0