Kinetic effects of calcium and ADP on the phosphorylated intermediate of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase
- PMID: 2936732
Kinetic effects of calcium and ADP on the phosphorylated intermediate of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase
Abstract
The decomposition of 32P phosphorylated enzyme intermediate formed by incubation of sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase with [gamma-32P]ATP was studied following dilution of the reaction medium with a large excess of nonradioactive ATP. The phosphoenzyme decomposition includes two kinetic components. The fraction of intermediate undergoing slower decomposition is minimal in the presence of low (microM) Ca2+ and maximal in the presence of high (mM) Ca2+. A large fraction of phosphoenzyme undergoes slow decomposition when the Ca2+ concentration is high inside the vesicles, even if the Ca2+ concentration in the medium outside the vesicles is low. Parallel measurements of ATPase steady state velocity in the same experimental conditions indicate that the apparent rate constant for the slow component of phosphoenzyme decomposition is inadequate to account for the steady state ATPase velocity observed under the same conditions and cannot be the rate-limiting step in a single, obligatory pathway of the catalytic cycle. On the contrary, the steady state enzyme velocity at various Ca2+ concentrations is accounted for by the simultaneous contribution of both phosphoenzyme fractions undergoing fast and slow decomposition. Contrary to its slow rate of decomposition in the forward direction of the cycle, the phosphoenzyme pool formed in the presence of high Ca2+ reacts rapidly with ADP to form ATP in the reverse direction of the cycle. Detailed analysis of these experimental observations is consistent with a branched pathway following phosphoryl transfer from ATP to the enzyme, whereby the phosphoenzyme undergoes an isomeric transition followed by ADP dissociation, or ADP dissociation followed by the isomeric transition. The former path is much faster and is prevalent when the intravesicular Ca2+ concentration is low. When the intravesicular Ca2+ concentration rises, a pool of phosphoenzyme is formed by reverse equilibration through the alternate path. In the absence of ADP this intermediate decays slowly in the forward direction, and in the presence of ADP it decays rapidly in the reverse direction of the cycle.
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