Abstract

The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase transports Ca(2+) using the chemical energy derived from ATP hydrolysis. Part of the chemical energy is used to translocate Ca(2+) through the membrane (work) and part is dissipated as heat. The amount of heat produced during catalysis increases after formation of the Ca(2+) gradient across the vesicle membrane. In the absence of gradient (leaky vesicles) the amount of heat produced/mol of ATP cleaved is half of that measured in the presence of the gradient. After formation of the gradient, part of the ATPase activity is not coupled to Ca(2+) transport. We now show that NaF can impair the uncoupled ATPase activity with discrete effect on the ATPase activity coupled to Ca(2+) transport. For the control vesicles not treated with NaF, after formation of the gradient only 20% of the ATP cleaved is coupled to Ca(2+) transport, and the caloric yield of the total ATPase activity (coupled plus uncoupled) is 22.8 kcal released/mol of ATP cleaved. In contrast, the vesicles treated with NaF consume only the ATP needed to maintain the gradient, and the caloric yield of ATP hydrolysis is 3.1 kcal/mol of ATP. The slow ATPase activity measured in vesicles treated with NaF has the same Ca(2+) dependence as the control vesicles. This demonstrates unambiguously that the uncoupled activity is an actual pathway of the Ca(2+)-ATPase rather than a contaminating phosphatase. We conclude that when ATP hydrolysis occurs without coupled biological work most of the chemical energy is dissipated as heat. Thus, uncoupled ATPase activity appears to be the mechanistic feature underlying the ability of the Ca(2+)-ATPase to modulated heat production.

Highlights

  • The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2؉-ATPase transports Ca2؉ using the chemical energy derived from ATP hydrolysis

  • We show that NaF can impair the uncoupled ATPase activity with discrete effect on the ATPase activity coupled to Ca2؉ transport

  • For the control vesicles not treated with NaF, after formation of the gradient only 20% of the ATP cleaved is coupled to Ca2؉ transport, and the caloric yield of the total ATPase activity is 22.8 kcal released/mol of ATP cleaved

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Summary

Introduction

The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2؉-ATPase transports Ca2؉ using the chemical energy derived from ATP hydrolysis. For the control vesicles not treated with NaF, after formation of the gradient only 20% of the ATP cleaved is coupled to Ca2؉ transport, and the caloric yield of the total ATPase activity (coupled plus uncoupled) is 22.8 kcal released/mol of ATP cleaved. The ATPase uses the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to transport Ca2ϩ across the membrane converting chemical energy into osmotic energy. Uncoupled Ca2ϩ efflux and ATPase activities represent ramifications of the catalytic cycle that are detected only when a Ca2ϩ gradient is formed across the vesicle membrane. The main finding leading to this conclusion is that the amount of heat released during the hydrolysis of each ATP molecule varies depending on whether or not a gradient is formed across the vesicle membrane (15, 18, 20 –22).

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