Abstract

The stimulation of the (Ca 2+ + Mg 2+)ATPase of erythrocyte ghosts by calmodulin was observed not only in intact ghosts, but also in the solubilized (Triton X-100) and partially purified, reconstituted (phosphatidylserine liposomes) forms. Since the solubilized form of the enzyme migrated on Sepharose 6B at a position corresponding to a molecular weight of about 150,000, these results show that calmodulin stimulates by direct interaction with the ATPase complex. Additionally, the effects of calmodulin on erythrocyte ghosts prepared by the Dodge-EDTA method (hypotonic ghosts) and by the method of Ronner et al. (involving lysis followed by an isotonic wash repeated several times) were compared (P. Ronner, P. Gazzotti, and E. Carafoli, 1977, Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 179, 578–583) . The (Ca 2+ + Mg 2+)ATPase of the hypotonic ghosts was low and was stimulated by added calmodulin while that of the isotonic ghosts was high and changed only slightly upon calmodulin addition; this difference in response to calmodulin persisted in the solubilized and reconstituted forms. Hypotonic ghosts bound 125I-labeled calmodulin, while isotonic ghosts did not. This comparison of two types of ghosts showed that isotonic ghosts possess an intact calmodulin-(Ca 2+ + Mg 2+)ATPase complex, and that the calmodulin remained with the ATPase during solubilization and reconstitution. The isotonic preparation is a particularly useful method of preparing ghosts with an intact calmodulin-ATPase complex, since it requires no special equipment and produces an enzyme activity which is stable to freezing.

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