Abstract

We investigated the effect of the local anesthetic procaine on the activity of the calcium pump protein of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles. Procaine slowed down the rate of calcium uptake by SR vesicles without enhancing the vesicles' passive permeability. This slowing of the unidirectional pumping rate was reflected by the inhibition of the maximal rate of the transport-coupled Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. The inhibition was dependent on Mg2+ concentration; at optimal (i.e. low) concentrations of magnesium, half-maximal inhibition occurred with procaine concentrations close to 15-20 mM. Inhibition of ATPase was not mediated by a change in the properties of the bulk lipid phase. Procaine moderately reduced the true affinity of ATPase for ATP, whereas equilibrium binding of calcium to ATPase in the absence of ATP was virtually not modified by procaine. In fast-kinetics studies, we explored the various intermediate steps in the ATPase catalytic cycle, in order to determine which of them were targets for inhibition by procaine. We found that procaine slowed down ATPase dephosphorylation, an effect which is at least partly responsible for the observed inhibition of overall ATPase activity. In contrast, procaine accelerated the calcium-induced transconformation of unphosphorylated ATPase in the absence of ATP, and altered neither the rate of the Ca(2+)-dependent phosphorylation of ATPase, nor the rate of the dissociation of Ca2+ from phosphorylated ATPase towards the SR lumen, a critical step, the rate of which was measured by a novel fast-filtration method. These results are discussed with respect to the possible site(s) of binding of this amphiphile on the ATPase, and in relation to the contribution of individual steps in the catalytic cycle to the rate limitation of unperturbed SR ATPase activity.

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