Abstract

The activity of the cardiac Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1.1) is allosterically regulated by Ca(2+), which binds to two acidic regions in the cytosolically disposed central hydrophilic domain of the NCX protein. A mutation in one of the regulatory Ca(2+) binding regions (D447V) increases the half-activation constant (K(h)) for allosteric Ca(2+) activation from approximately 0.3 to > 1.8 microm. Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing the D447V exchanger showed little or no activity under physiological ionic conditions unless cytosolic [Ca(2+)] was elevated to > 1 microm. However, when cytosolic [Na(+)] was increased to 20 mm or more (using ouabain-induced inhibition of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase or the ionophore gramicidin), cells expressing the D447V mutant rapidly accumulated Ca(2+) or Ba(2+) when the reverse (Ca(2+) influx) mode of NCX activity was initiated, although initial cytosolic [Ca(2+)] was < 100 nm. Importantly, the time course of Ca(2+) uptake did not display the lag phase that reflects allosteric Ca(2+) activation of NCX activity in the wild-type NCX1.1; indeed, at elevated [Na(+)], the D447V mutant behaved similarly to the constitutively active deletion mutant Delta(241-680), which lacks the regulatory Ca(2+) binding sites. In cells expressing wild-type NCX1.1, increasing concentrations of cytosolic Na(+) led to a progressive shortening of the lag phase for Ca(2+) uptake. The effects of elevated [Na(+)] developed rapidly and were fully reversible. The activity of the D447V mutant was markedly inhibited when phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) levels were reduced. We conclude that when PIP2 levels are high, elevated cytosolic [Na(+)] induces a mode of exchange activity that does not require allosteric Ca(2+) activation.

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