Abstract

During Ca(2+) transport by sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, the conformation change of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1PCa(2)) to ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (E2PCa(2)) is followed by rapid Ca(2+) release into the lumen. Here, we find that in the absence of K(+), Ca(2+) release occurs considerably faster than E1PCa(2) to E2PCa(2) conformation change. Therefore, the lumenal Ca(2+) release pathway is open to some extent in the K(+)-free E1PCa(2) structure. The Ca(2+) affinity of this E1P is as high as that of the unphosphorylated ATPase (E1), indicating the Ca(2+) binding sites are not disrupted. Thus, bound K(+) stabilizes the E1PCa(2) structure with occluded Ca(2+), keeping the Ca(2+) pathway to the lumen closed. We found previously (Yamasaki, K., Wang, G., Daiho, T., Danko, S., and Suzuki, H. (2008) J. Biol. Chem. 283, 29144-29155) that the K(+) bound in E2P reduces the Ca(2+) affinity essential for achieving the high physiological Ca(2+) gradient and to fully open the lumenal Ca(2+) gate for rapid Ca(2+) release (E2PCa(2) → E2P + 2Ca(2+)). These findings show that bound K(+) is critical for stabilizing both E1PCa(2) and E2P structures, thereby contributing to the structural changes that efficiently couple phosphoenzyme processing and Ca(2+) handling.

Highlights

  • Danko, S., and Suzuki, H. (2008) J

  • ATPase in Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles was phosphorylated with MgATP in the presence of 0.1 M Kϩ, 10 ␮M Ca2ϩ, and Ca2ϩ-ionophore

  • The reaction reaches steady state within a few seconds, and almost all of the Ca2ϩ-ATPase is in the ADP-sensitive form of EP (E1P) because of the rate-limiting E1P to E2P transition followed by rapid E2P hydrolysis in the presence of Kϩ [29, 30]

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Summary

Introduction

During a single turnover, the bound 45Ca2ϩ ions in E1PCa2 formed in the absence of Kϩ are not released to the cytoplasmic side but to the lumen. Both in the presence and absence of Kϩ, at 0.1 s (first time point) immediately after the ATP/EGTA addition, nearly maximum EP is already formed (all E1PCa2, Fig. 3), and all of the bound 45Ca2ϩ is removed by the ADP chase.

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