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XB-ART-39473
J Biol Chem 2009 Feb 06;2846:3842-54. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M808101200.
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Functional significance of E2 state stabilization by specific alpha/beta-subunit interactions of Na,K- and H,K-ATPase.

Dürr KL , Tavraz NN , Dempski RE , Bamberg E , Friedrich T .


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The beta-subunits of Na,K-ATPase and H,K-ATPase have important functions in maturation and plasma membrane targeting of the catalytic alpha-subunit but also modulate the transport activity of the holoenzymes. In this study, we show that tryptophan replacement of two highly conserved tyrosines in the transmembrane domain of both Na,K- and gastric H,K-ATPase beta-subunits resulted in considerable shifts of the voltage-dependent E1P/E2P distributions toward the E1P state as inferred from presteady-state current and voltage clamp fluorometric measurements of tetramethylrhodamine-6-maleimide-labeled ATPases. The shifts in conformational equilibria were accompanied by significant decreases in the apparent affinities for extracellular K+ that were moderate for the Na,K-ATPase beta-(Y39W,Y43W) mutation but much more pronounced for the corresponding H,K-ATPase beta-(Y44W,Y48W) variant. Moreover in the Na,K-ATPase beta-(Y39W,Y43W) mutant, the apparent rate constant for reverse binding of extracellular Na+ and the subsequent E2P-E1P conversion, as determined from transient current kinetics, was significantly accelerated, resulting in enhanced Na+ competition for extracellular K+ binding especially at extremely negative potentials. Analogously the reverse binding of extracellular protons and subsequent E2P-E1P conversion was accelerated by the H,K-ATPase beta-(Y44W,Y48W) mutation, and H+ secretion was strongly impaired. Remarkably tryptophan replacements of residues in the M7 segment of Na,K- and H,K-ATPase alpha-subunits, which are at interacting distance to the beta-tyrosines, resulted in similar E1 shifts, indicating their participation in stabilization of E2. Thus, interactions between selected residues within the transmembrane regions of alpha- and beta-subunits of P2C-type ATPases exert an E2-stabilizing effect, which is of particular importance for efficient H+ pumping by H,K-ATPase under in vivo conditions.

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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: atp1a1