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. 1970 Nov;120(1):15-24.
doi: 10.1042/bj1200015.

The role of bound potassium ions in the hydrolysis of low concentrations of adenosine triphosphate by preparations of membrane fragments from ox brain cerebral cortex

The role of bound potassium ions in the hydrolysis of low concentrations of adenosine triphosphate by preparations of membrane fragments from ox brain cerebral cortex

P S Goldfarb et al. Biochem J. 1970 Nov.

Abstract

1. The intrinsic Na(+), K(+), Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) contents of a preparation of membrane fragments from ox brain were determined by emission flame photometry. 2. Centrifugal washing of the preparation with imidazole-buffered EDTA solutions decreased the bound Na(+) from 90+/-20 to 24+/-12, the bound K(+) from 27+/-3 to 7+/-2, the bound Mg(2+) from 20+/-2 to 3+/-1 and the bound calcium from 8+/-1 to <1nmol/mg of protein. 3. The activities of the Na(+)+K(+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase and the Na(+)-dependent reaction forming bound phosphate were compared in the unwashed and washed preparations at an ATP concentration of 2.5mum (ATP/protein ratio 12.5pmol/mug). 4. The Na(+)-dependent hydrolysis of ATP as well as the plateau concentration of bound phosphate and the rate of dephosphorylation were decreased in the washed preparation. The time-course of formation and decline of bound phosphate was fully restored by the addition of 2.5mum-magnesium chloride and 2mum-potassium chloride. Addition of 2.5mum-magnesium chloride alone fully restored the plateau concentration of bound phosphate, but the rate of dephosphorylation was only slightly increased. Na(+)-dependent ATP hydrolysis was partly restored with 2.5mum-magnesium chloride; addition of K(+) in the range 2-10mum-potassium chloride then further restored hydrolysis but not to the control rate. 5. Pretreatment of the washed preparation at 0 degrees C with 0.5nmol of K(+)/mg of protein so that the final added K(+) in the reaction mixture was 0.1mum restored the Na(+)-dependent hydrolysis of ATP and the time-course of the reaction forming bound phosphate. 6. The binding of [(42)K]potassium chloride by the washed membrane preparation was examined. Binding in a solution containing 10nmol of K(+)/mg of protein was linear over a period of 20min and was inhibited by Na(+). Half-maximal inhibition of (42)K(+)-binding required a 100-fold excess of sodium chloride. 7. It was concluded (a) that a significant fraction of the apparent Na(+)-dependent hydrolysis of ATP observed in the unwashed preparation is due to activation by bound K(+) and Mg(2+) of the Na(+)+K(+)+Mg(2+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase system and (b) that the enzyme system is able to bind K(+) from a solution of 0.5mum-potassium chloride.

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References

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