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ABSTRACT: The Na+,K+-ATPase generates electrochemical gradients for sodium and potassium that are vital to animal cells, exchanging three sodium ions for two potassium ions across the plasma membrane during each cycle of ATP hydrolysis. Here we present the X-ray crystal structure at 3.5 A resolution of the pig renal Na+,K+-ATPase with two rubidium ions bound (as potassium congeners) in an occluded state in the transmembrane part of the alpha-subunit. Several of the residues forming the cavity for rubidium/potassium occlusion in the Na+,K+-ATPase are homologous to those binding calcium in the Ca2+-ATPase of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum. The beta- and gamma-subunits specific to the Na+,K+-ATPase are associated with transmembrane helices alphaM7/alphaM10 and alphaM9, respectively. The gamma-subunit corresponds to a fragment of the V-type ATPase c subunit. The carboxy terminus of the alpha-subunit is contained within a pocket between transmembrane helices and seems to be a novel regulatory element controlling sodium affinity, possibly influenced by the membrane potential.
Nature 01/2008; 450(7172):1043-9. · 36.28 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The recently determined crystal structure of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA1a) with a bound ATP analogue (AMPPCP) reveals a compact state, similar to that found in the presence of ADP and aluminium fluoride. However, although the two Ca2+-binding sites in the membrane are known to be occluded in the latter state, in the AMPPCP-bound state the Ca2+-binding sites are not occluded under conditions with physiological levels of Mg2+ and Ca2+. It has been shown that the high concentration (10 mM) of Ca2+ used for crystallization (in the presence of Mg2+) may be responsible for the discrepancy. To determine whether Ca2+ competes with Mg2+ and affects the nucleotide-binding site, we have subjected the AMPPCP and ADP:AlF4- bound forms to crystallographic analysis by anomalous difference Fourier maps, and we have compared AMPPCP-bound forms crystallized in the absence or in the presence of Mg2+. We found that Ca2+ rather than Mg2+ binds together with AMPPCP at the phosphorylation site, whereas the ADP:AlF4- complex is associated with two magnesium ions. These results address the structure of the phosphorylation site before and during phosphoryl transfer. The bound CaAMPPCP nucleotide may correspond to the activated pre-complex, formed immediately before phosphorylation, whereas the Mg(2)ADP:AlF4- transition state complex reflects the preference for Mg2+ in catalysis. In addition, we have identified a phosphatidylcholine lipid molecule bound at the cytosol-membrane interface.
Journal of Molecular Biology 05/2007; 368(1):1-7. · 4.00 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA1a) belongs to the group of P-type ATPases, which actively transport inorganic cations across membranes at the expense of ATP hydrolysis. Three-dimensional structures of several transport intermediates of SERCA1a, stabilized by structural analogues of ATP and phosphoryl groups, are now available at atomic resolution. This has enabled the transport cycle of the protein to be described, including the coupling of Ca(2+) occlusion and phosphorylation by ATP, and of proton counter-transport and dephosphorylation. From these structures, Ca(2+)-ATPase gradually emerges as a molecular mechanical device in which some of the transmembrane segments perform Ca(2+) transport by piston-like movements and by the transmission of reciprocating movements that affect the chemical reactivity of the cytosolic globular domains.
Current Opinion in Structural Biology 09/2005; 15(4):387-93. · 9.42 Impact Factor