AI Article Synopsis

  • The study builds on previous research to propose that the Na,K-ATPase alpha-subunit exists as an alpha 2-dimer and examines how radiation inactivation affects this structure.
  • Findings indicate that the radiation inactivation sizes for the alpha-peptide and its activity show significant variations based on assay conditions, supporting the proposed dimeric organization.
  • The research concludes that the alpha-subunit can function independently in catalysis when stabilized by another alpha-subunit, negating the need for the beta-subunit in this process.

Article Abstract

This study is a direct continuation of Jensen, J., and Nørby, J. G., (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18063-18070. A new model in which we propose that the in situ organization of the Na,K-ATPase alpha-subunit is an alpha 2-dimer and which describes the stepwise degradation by radiation inactivation of this assembly is presented on the basis of the following findings. Radiation inactivation size for alpha-peptide integrity, normal nucleotide, vanadate and ouabain binding, and K-pNPPase activity is close to m(alpha) = 112 kDa; for Na-ATPase activity it is 135 kDa and for Na,K-ATPase activity it increases from 140 to about 195 kDa with increasing assay ATP concentration (equal to increasing average turnover). Normal Tl+ occlusion had the same radiation inactivation size as Vmax for Na,K-ATPase, i.e. about 195 kDa. The binding experiments disclosed radiation-produced molecules with active binding sites but with a lower than normal affinity. Radiation inactivation size for the total binding capacity of ADP and ouabain was therefore smaller than the size of an alpha-peptide, namely about 70 kDa, and for total Tl+ occlusion it was down to 40 kDa. We can explain all these observations by using a new approach to target size analysis and by assuming a dimeric organization of the alpha-subunit. Each alpha-peptide is degraded stepwise by first destruction of either a 42- or a 70-kDa domain, and the partly damaged peptide may retain biochemical activity. We conclude that there is no role for the beta-subunit in catalysis and that the alpha-peptide is organized as an alpha 2-dimer in the membrane with each alpha-subunit being able to perform complete catalytic cycles (and probably also active transport), provided that it is stabilized by an adjacent alpha-peptide or a sufficiently large fragment thereof.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

radiation inactivation
20
alpha 2-dimer
12
inactivation size
12
size alpha-peptide
8
195 kda
8
tl+ occlusion
8
kda
6
radiation
5
inactivation
5
size
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!