Abstract

Phospholemman (FXYD1) is a single-transmembrane protein regulator of Na,K-ATPase, expressed strongly in heart, skeletal muscle, and brain and phosphorylated by protein kinases A and C at Ser-68 and Ser-63, respectively. Binding of FXYD1 reduces Na,K-ATPase activity, and phosphorylation at Ser-68 or Ser-63 relieves the inhibition. Despite the accumulated information on physiological effects, whole cell studies provide only limited information on molecular mechanisms. As a complementary approach, we utilized purified human Na,K-ATPase (α1β1 and α2β1) reconstituted with FXYD1 or mutants S63E, S68E, and S63E,S68E that mimic phosphorylation at Ser-63 and Ser-68. Compared with control α1β1, FXYD1 reduces Vmax and turnover rate and raises K0.5Na. The phosphomimetic mutants reverse these effects and reduce K0.5Na below control K0.5Na. Effects on α2β1 are similar but smaller. Experiments in proteoliposomes reconstituted with α1β1 show analogous effects of FXYD1 on K0.5Na, which are abolished by phosphomimetic mutants and also by increasing mole fractions of DOPS in the proteoliposomes. Stopped-flow experiments using the dye RH421 show that FXYD1 slows the conformational transition E2(2K)ATP → E1(3Na)ATP but does not affect 3NaE1P → E2P3Na. This regulatory effect is explained simply by molecular modeling, which indicates that a cytoplasmic helix (residues 60-70) docks between the αN and αP domains in the E2 conformation, but docking is weaker in E1 (also for phosphomimetic mutants). Taken together with previous work showing that FXYD1 also raises binding affinity for the Na(+)-selective site III, these results provide a rather comprehensive picture of the regulatory mechanism of FXYD1 that complements the physiological studies.

Highlights

  • FXYD1 regulates Na,K-ATPase in heart and other tissues

  • The fact that FXYD1 expressed in E. coli is fully unphosphorylated [43], in contrast to FXYD1 expressed in P. pastoris, which is at least 50% phosphorylated on Ser-68 [41], allows analysis of the true kinetic effects of the unphosphorylated FXYD1 and the phosphomimetic mutants used in this study

  • The effects of FXYD1 and the phosphomimetic mutants on the steady-state Na,K-ATPase activities observed here using the purified proteins are largely consistent with the information from whole cell experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Results: Purified human isoforms (␣1␤1 and ␣2␤1) reconstituted with wild-type FXYD1 or phosphomimetic mutants S63E, S68E, and S63E,S68E provide detailed information on kinetic effects. Significance: A detailed picture emerges of the regulatory mechanism of FXYD1 that complements physiological studies. Phospholemman (FXYD1) is a single-transmembrane protein regulator of Na,K-ATPase, expressed strongly in heart, skeletal muscle, and brain and phosphorylated by protein kinases A and C at Ser-68 and Ser-63, respectively. We utilized purified human Na,K-ATPase (␣1␤1 and ␣2␤1) reconstituted with FXYD1 or mutants S63E, S68E, and S63E,S68E that mimic phosphorylation at Ser-63 and Ser-68. Taken together with previous work showing that FXYD1 raises binding affinity for the Na؉-selective site III, these results provide a rather comprehensive picture of the regulatory mechanism of FXYD1 that complements the physiological studies

Methods
Results
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Conclusion

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