Conformational Changes of the in Situ Red Cell Membrane Calcium Pump Affect Its Proteolysis
Overview
Biophysics
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In inside-out red cell membrane vesicles trypsin digestion reduces the molecular mass of the 32P-labeled acyl-phosphate intermediate of the calcium pump from the original 140 kDa to about 80 kDa with a simultaneous activation of the calcium uptake. This process is slightly stimulated by the presence of calcium, as compared to EGTA, or EGTA + vanadate, but the proteolytic pattern is similar under all these conditions. However, trypsin degradation of the 80 kDa polypeptide, resulting in the loss of calcium transport activity and 32P-phosphoenzyme formation, is rapid in the presence of calcium, inhibited by EGTA and almost fully blocked by EGTA + vanadate. In the presence of these latter ligands, probably locking the calcium pump in an E2 conformation, the 80 kDa protein becomes insensitive even to excessive digestion by the non-specific protease, pronase. The data indicate major changes in the molecular arrangement of the calcium pump protein when transformed from a calcium-liganded (E1) to an E2 conformation.
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PMID: 1656936 PMC: 1151555. DOI: 10.1042/bj2790121.
J Gen Physiol. 1992; 99(1):41-62.
PMID: 1371307 PMC: 2216596. DOI: 10.1085/jgp.99.1.41.