A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Membrane Na+-pyrophosphatases Can Transport Protons at Low Sodium Concentrations




AuthorsLuoto HH, Nordbo E, Baykov AA, Lahti R, Malinen AM

Publication year2013

JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry

Journal acronymJ Biol Chem

Number in series49

Volume288

Issue49

First page 35489

Last page35499

Number of pages11

ISSN0021-9258

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.510909


Abstract
Membrane-bound Na(+)-pyrophosphatase (Na(+)-PPase), working in parallel with the corresponding ATP-energized pumps, catalyzes active Na(+) transport in bacteria and archaea. Each ~75-kDa subunit of homodimeric Na(+)-PPase forms an unusual funnel-like structure with a catalytic site in the cytoplasmic part and a hydrophilic gated channel in the membrane. Here, we show that at subphysiological Na(+) concentrations (<5 mm), the Na(+)-PPases of Chlorobium limicola, four other bacteria, and one archaeon additionally exhibit an H(+)-pumping activity in inverted membrane vesicles prepared from recombinant Escherichia coli strains. H(+) accumulation in vesicles was measured with fluorescent pH indicators. At pH 6.2-8.2, H(+) transport activity was high at 0.1 mm Na(+) but decreased progressively with increasing Na(+) concentrations until virtually disappearing at 5 mm Na(+). In contrast, (22)Na(+) transport activity changed little over a Na(+) concentration range of 0.05-10 mm. Conservative substitutions of gate Glu(242) and nearby Ser(243) and Asn(677) residues reduced the catalytic and transport functions of the enzyme but did not affect the Na(+) dependence of H(+) transport, whereas a Lys(681) substitution abolished H(+) (but not Na(+)) transport. All four substitutions markedly decreased PPase affinity for the activating Na(+) ion. These results are interpreted in terms of a model that assumes the presence of two Na(+)-binding sites in the channel: one associated with the gate and controlling all enzyme activities and the other located at a distance and controlling only H(+) transport activity. The inherent H(+) transport activity of Na(+)-PPase provides a rationale for its easy evolution toward specific H(+) transport.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 11:24