Since Repke's proposal of Flip-Flop model of Na/K-ATPase in 1973, Askari, Schoner, Hayashi, Taniguchi, Froehlich, Clarke and their coworkers have indicated the oligomericity of the enzyme from reactivity to various ligand (2006, J. Biochem. 140, 599 and also see review 2001, J.Biochem.129, 335). One of the most compelling pieces of evidence in favor of the oligomeric nature of Na/K-ATPase and gastric H/K-ATPase is the simultaneous presence of EP:EATP with half site phosphorylation and nearly half site ATP binding (1999, J. Biol. Chem.274,31792, 2002, Biochemistry 41, 2438). Recently Hayashi and coworkers (2008, Biochemistry, 47, 6039), nicely, isolated soluble Tetraprotomer (T), Diprotomer (D) and Protomer (P) from C12E8-solubilized Na/K-ATPase and showed that Na/K-ATPase activity of T was around 50% of those of D, P and membrane bound enzyme. Each P, D and T bound ATP in the presence of excess EDTA with similar high affinity as the membrane bound enzyme. The binding of ATP and ouabain to T was 50-70% of those of P and D (Hayashi et al., unpublished data). Each retention time for T, D and P accompanying Mg2+-Na+-dependent ATP hydrolysis with or without K+ and that in the absence of ATP was little affected. We measured the amount of EATP and EP accompanying Mg2+-Na+-dependent ATP hydrolysis during the gel filtration in the presence of 12 micro M of [32P]ATP, which concentration nearly saturates EP formation in membrane bound enzyme but not EATP formation. The amount of EATP and EP in T, respectively, was 0.43±0.01 (n=3) and 0.04-0.15 mol/protomer. Those in D and P, which were almost the same as each other, were 0.43±0.04 (n=6) and 0.09-0.21 mol/protomer, respectively. Data suggest some enzymological property may change in the presence of C12E8 or/and by solubilization.
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