Abstract

The nucleoside 5'-triphosphate (NTP) substrate specificities for Ca-stimulated ATPase and ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake activities have been examined in cardiac sarcolemma (SL) and sarcoplasmic (SR) membrane vesicles. The results indicate that SL membrane vesicles exhibit a much narrower range of NTP substrate specificities than SR membranes. In SR membrane vesicles, the Ca-stimulated Mg-dependent hydrolysis of ATP and dATP occurred at nearly equivalent rates, whereas the rates of hydrolysis of GTP, ITP, CTP, and UTP ranged from 16-33% of that for ATP. All of the above nucleotides also supported Ca2+ transport into SR vesicles; dATP was somewhat more effective than ATP while GTP, ITP, CTP, and UTP ranged from 28-30% of the activity for ATP. In the presence of oxalate, the initial rate of Ca accumulation with dATP was 4-fold higher than for ATP, whereas the activity for GTP, ITP, CTP, and UTP ranged from 35-45% of that for ATP. For the SL membranes, Ca-activated dATP hydrolysis occurred at 60% of the rate for ATP; GTP, ITP, CTP, and UTP were hydrolyzed by the SL preparations at only 7-9% of the rate for ATP. NTP-dependent Ca2+ uptake in SL membranes was supported only by ATP and dATP, with dATP 60% as effective as ATP. GTP, ITP, CTP, and UTP did not support the transport of Ca2+ by SL vesicles. The results indicate that the SL and SR membranes contain distinctly different ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport systems.

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