Abstract

Steady state turnover of Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum has generally been reported to have a bell-shaped pH profile, with an optimum near pH 7.0. While a free [Mg2+] of 2 mM is optimal for activity at pH 7.0, it was found that this level was markedly inhibitory (K1/2 = 2 mM) at pH 8.0, thus accounting for the generally observed low activity at high pH. High activity was restored at pH 8.0 using an optimum free [Mg2+] of 0.2 mM. The mechanism of the Mg2+-dependent inhibition at pH 8.0 was probed. Inhibition was not due to Mg2+ competition with Ca2+ for cytoplasmic transport sites nor to inhibition of formation of steady state phosphoenzyme from ATP. Mg2+ inhibited (K1/2 = 1.8 mM) decay of steady state phosphoenzyme; thus, the locus of inhibition was one of the phosphoenzyme interconversion steps. Transient kinetic experiments showed that Mg2+ competitively inhibited (Ki = 0.7 mM) binding of Ca2+ to lumenal transport sites, blocking the ability of Ca2+ to reverse the catalytic cycle to form ADP-sensitive, from ADP-insensitive, phosphoenzyme. The data were consistent with a hypothesis in which Mg2+ binds lumenal Ca2+ transport sites with progressively higher affinity at higher pH to form a dead-end complex; its dissociation would then be rate-limiting during steady state turnover.

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