Several calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) are located in plant plasma membranes where they phosphorylate enzymes and transporters, like the H(+)-ATPase and water channels, thereby regulating their activities. In order to determine which kinases phosphorylate the H(+)-ATPase, a calcium-dependent kinase was purified from beetroot (Beta vulgaris L.) plasma membranes by anion-exchange chromatography, centrifugation in glycerol gradients and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The kinetic parameters of this kinase were determined (V(max): 3.5 micromol mg(-1) min(-1), K(m) for ATP: 67 microM, K(m) for syntide 2: 15 microM). The kinase showed an optimum pH of 6.8 and a marked dependence on low-micromolar Ca(2+) concentrations (K(d): 0.77 microM). During the purification procedure, a 63-kDa protein with an isoelectric point of 4.7 was enriched. However, this protein was shown not to be a kinase by mass spectrometry. Kinase activity gels showed that a 50-kDa protein could be responsible for most of the activity in purified kinase preparations. This protein was confirmed to be a CDPK by mass spectrometry, possibly the red beet ortholog of rice CDPK2 and Arabidopsis thaliana CPK9, both found associated with membranes. This kinase was able to phosphorylate purified H(+)-ATPase in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner.
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Huazhong University of Science and Technology, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Luoyu Road 1037, 430074, Wuhan, CHINA.
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Department of Botony, P.S.R College of Education, Sivakasi, Tamilnadu India.
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