Abstract
The K +-stimulated ATPase activity associated with the purified gastric microsomes from the pig gastric mucosa can be completely inactivated by treatment with 15% ethanol for 60 s at 37 °C but not at 25 °C. Sequential exposure of the microsomes to 15% ethanol at 25 and 37 °C caused the release of 2.9 and 4.3% of the total membrane phospholipids, respectively, consisting entirely of phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine. The ethanol-treated (37 °C) membrane had high basal (with Mg 2+ as the only cation in the assay mixture) activity, which was further enhanced during reconstitution with phosphatidyl choline or phosphatidyl ethanolamine. The high basal activities could be reduced to the normal control level by assaying the enzyme in presence of the “activator protein,” partially purified from the soluble supernatant of the pig gastric cells. Phosphatidyl choline was somewhat more effective than phosphatidyl ethanolamine in the restoration of the activity of the ethanol-treated enzyme while phosphatidyl serine, phosphatidyl inositol, and sphingomyelin were without any effect. Synthetic phosphatidyl choline with various fatty acid substitutions were tested for their effectiveness in the restoration of the ethanol-inactivated enzyme. The distearoyl (18:0), dioleoyl (18:1), and dilinoleoyl (18:2) derivatives of phosphatidyl choline were almost equally effective while dipalmitoyl (16:0) phosphatidyl choline was somewhat less effective in the reconstitution process. Cholesterol appeared to interfere with phosphatidyl choline in the restoration of the activity of ethanol-treated enzyme. The fatty acid composition of phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine extracted by 15% ethanol at 37 °C was clearly different than those of the total microsome. Our data suggest that the phospholipids extracted by 15% ethanol at 37 °C are derived primarily from the immediate lipid environment of the enzyme and ATP together with Mg 2+ and K + help the partially delipidated enzyme to retain the appropriate conformation for the subsequent reconstitution. Furthermore, ethanol appears to either release or inactivate the membrane-associated activator protein, demonstrated to be essential for the K +-stimulated activity of the pig gastric ATPase.
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