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Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition

V H(+)-ATPase has an important role in a variety of key physiological processes. This enzyme is reversibly activated/partly inactivated by the addition/exhaustion of extracellular glucose. The current model of its regulation assumes the reversible disassembly/reassembly of ∼60–70% of the V1 and V0 m...

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Autores principales: Ribeiro, Camila C., Monteiro, Renan M., Freitas, Flavia P., Retamal, Claudio, Teixeira, Layz R. S., Palma, Livia M., Silva, Flavia E., Façanha, Arnoldo R., Okorokova-Façanha, Anna L., Okorokov, Lev A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3506656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23189149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049580
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author Ribeiro, Camila C.
Monteiro, Renan M.
Freitas, Flavia P.
Retamal, Claudio
Teixeira, Layz R. S.
Palma, Livia M.
Silva, Flavia E.
Façanha, Arnoldo R.
Okorokova-Façanha, Anna L.
Okorokov, Lev A.
author_facet Ribeiro, Camila C.
Monteiro, Renan M.
Freitas, Flavia P.
Retamal, Claudio
Teixeira, Layz R. S.
Palma, Livia M.
Silva, Flavia E.
Façanha, Arnoldo R.
Okorokova-Façanha, Anna L.
Okorokov, Lev A.
author_sort Ribeiro, Camila C.
collection PubMed
description V H(+)-ATPase has an important role in a variety of key physiological processes. This enzyme is reversibly activated/partly inactivated by the addition/exhaustion of extracellular glucose. The current model of its regulation assumes the reversible disassembly/reassembly of ∼60–70% of the V1 and V0 membrane complexes, which are responsible for ATP hydrolysis and H(+) conductance, respectively. The number of assembled complexes determines the pump activity because disassembled complexes are inactive. The model predicts the identical catalytic properties for the activated and semi-active enzymes molecules. To verify the model predictions we have isolated total membranes from yeast spheroplasts that were pre-incubated either with or without glucose. Nitrate treatment of membranes revealed the similar ATPase inhibition for two enzyme states, suggesting that they have identical structures that are essential for ATP hydrolysis. However, H(+) transport was inhibited more than the ATPase activities, indicating a nitrate uncoupling action, which was significantly higher for the nonactivated enzyme. This finding suggests that the structure of the non-activated enzyme, which is essential for H(+) transport, is less stable than that of the activated enzyme. Moreover, the glucose activation of the pump increases i) its coupling capacity; ii) its K(M) for ATP hydrolysis and ATP affinity for H(+) transport; iii) the Vmax for H(+) transport in comparison with the Vmax for ATP hydrolysis and iv) the immune reactivity of catalytic subunit A and regulatory subunit B by 9.3 and 2.4 times, respectively. The protein content of subunits A and B was not changed by extracellular glucose. We propose that instead of the dissociation/reassociation of complexes V1 and V0, changes in the extracellular glucose concentration cause reversible and asymmetrical modulations in the immune reactivity of subunits A and B by their putative biochemical modifications. This response asymmetrically modulates H(+)-transport and ATP hydrolysis, exhibiting distinct properties for the activated versus non-activated enzymes.
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spelling pubmed-35066562012-11-27 Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition Ribeiro, Camila C. Monteiro, Renan M. Freitas, Flavia P. Retamal, Claudio Teixeira, Layz R. S. Palma, Livia M. Silva, Flavia E. Façanha, Arnoldo R. Okorokova-Façanha, Anna L. Okorokov, Lev A. PLoS One Research Article V H(+)-ATPase has an important role in a variety of key physiological processes. This enzyme is reversibly activated/partly inactivated by the addition/exhaustion of extracellular glucose. The current model of its regulation assumes the reversible disassembly/reassembly of ∼60–70% of the V1 and V0 membrane complexes, which are responsible for ATP hydrolysis and H(+) conductance, respectively. The number of assembled complexes determines the pump activity because disassembled complexes are inactive. The model predicts the identical catalytic properties for the activated and semi-active enzymes molecules. To verify the model predictions we have isolated total membranes from yeast spheroplasts that were pre-incubated either with or without glucose. Nitrate treatment of membranes revealed the similar ATPase inhibition for two enzyme states, suggesting that they have identical structures that are essential for ATP hydrolysis. However, H(+) transport was inhibited more than the ATPase activities, indicating a nitrate uncoupling action, which was significantly higher for the nonactivated enzyme. This finding suggests that the structure of the non-activated enzyme, which is essential for H(+) transport, is less stable than that of the activated enzyme. Moreover, the glucose activation of the pump increases i) its coupling capacity; ii) its K(M) for ATP hydrolysis and ATP affinity for H(+) transport; iii) the Vmax for H(+) transport in comparison with the Vmax for ATP hydrolysis and iv) the immune reactivity of catalytic subunit A and regulatory subunit B by 9.3 and 2.4 times, respectively. The protein content of subunits A and B was not changed by extracellular glucose. We propose that instead of the dissociation/reassociation of complexes V1 and V0, changes in the extracellular glucose concentration cause reversible and asymmetrical modulations in the immune reactivity of subunits A and B by their putative biochemical modifications. This response asymmetrically modulates H(+)-transport and ATP hydrolysis, exhibiting distinct properties for the activated versus non-activated enzymes. Public Library of Science 2012-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3506656/ /pubmed/23189149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049580 Text en © 2012 Ribeiro et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ribeiro, Camila C.
Monteiro, Renan M.
Freitas, Flavia P.
Retamal, Claudio
Teixeira, Layz R. S.
Palma, Livia M.
Silva, Flavia E.
Façanha, Arnoldo R.
Okorokova-Façanha, Anna L.
Okorokov, Lev A.
Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title_full Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title_fullStr Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title_full_unstemmed Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title_short Extracellular Glucose Increases the Coupling Capacity of the Yeast V H(+)-ATPase and the Resistance of Its H(+) Transport Activity to Nitrate Inhibition
title_sort extracellular glucose increases the coupling capacity of the yeast v h(+)-atpase and the resistance of its h(+) transport activity to nitrate inhibition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3506656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23189149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049580
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