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Direct Evidence of an Extracellular Access Channel in the Na,K-ATPase
2 Department of Veterinary Pharmacology, Kitasato University School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences, Aomori 034-8628, Japan
Address correspondence to Joshua R. Berlin, Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, 185 S. Orange Avenue. P.O. Box 1709, Newark, NJ 07101-1709. Fax: (973) 972-7950; email: berlinjr{at}umdnj.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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K), 39 ± 1%, was similar to
K determined in the presence of TEA (37 ± 2%) and BTEA (35 ± 2%), an indication that the membrane potential (VM) dependence for K+o activation of the Na,K pump current was unaffected by TEA and BTEA. TEA was found to inhibit the Na,K pump current in a VM-independent manner, i.e., inhibition of current dissipated 4 ± 2% of the membrane electric field. In contrast, BTEA dissipated 40 ± 5% of the membrane electric field during inhibition of Na,K pump current. Thus, BTEA inhibition of the Na,K-ATPase is VM-dependent. The competitive nature of inhibition as well as the similar fractions of the membrane electric field dissipated during K+o-dependent activation and BTEA-dependent inhibition of Na,K pump current suggest that BTEA inhibits the Na,K-ATPase at or very near the enzyme's K+o binding site(s) located in the membrane electric field. Given previous findings that organic quaternary amines are not occluded by the Na,K-ATPase, these data clearly demonstrate that an ion channellike structure provides access to K+o binding sites in the enzyme.
Key Words: Na,K-ATPase K+ binding tetraethylammonium chloride benzyltriethylammonium chloride
| INTRODUCTION |
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One VM-dependent reaction of the Na,K-ATPase was identified with Na+-dependent transport steps by demonstrating that the positive slope of the Na,K pump current-voltage relationship, observed at negative VM in Na+o- and K+o-containing solutions, was lost when Na+ was removed from the extracellular medium (Nakao and Gadsby, 1989
; Rakowski et al., 1991
; Sagar and Rakowski, 1994
). The VM-dependent step underlying this behavior was characterized by trapping the Na,K-ATPase in Na+-transporting conformations (under K+o-free conditions that promote Na+-Na+ exchange) and studying presteady-state kinetics of Na+o-dependent charge-moving reaction steps (Nakao and Gadsby, 1986
). Such experiments showed that transport of Na+ to the extracellular medium moves the equivalent of a full charge across two thirds to three quarters of the membrane dielectric (Nakao and Gadsby, 1986
; Bühler et al., 1991
; Fendler et al., 1993
; Rakowski, 1993
; Hilgemann, 1994a
; Holmgren and Rakowski, 1994
; Heyse et al., 1994
). Furthermore, the Na+o concentration dependence of this process provided evidence that the VM-dependent step occurs during extracellular Na+ release and binding (Gadsby et al., 1993
; Wuddel and Apell, 1995
). These results showed that the binding site for at least one Na+ is within the membrane electric field, i.e., the binding site in the E2P enzyme conformation is located in an ion well exposed to the extracellular medium.
In Na+o-free solutions, the Na,K pump current-voltage relationship showed a negative slope in the presence of nonsaturating concentrations of K+o (Bielen et al., 1991
; Rakowski et al., 1991
; Sagar and Rakowski, 1994
; Berlin and Peluffo, 1997
; Peluffo et al., 2000
). Because Na+o-free solutions prevent Na+o-dependent reactions from influencing the VM dependence of Na,K pump current, this negative slope demonstrated that a second VM-dependent reaction was tied to K+-dependent transport steps. Measurement of transient charge movements dependent on K+o or extracellular Tl+ (Tl+o), a K+ congener, under conditions promoting K+-K+ exchange showed that this reaction moved a charge through approximately one third of the membrane dielectric. The Tl+o concentration dependence of these charge movements also demonstrated that extracellular ion binding was the VM-dependent reaction (Peluffo and Berlin, 1997
). Thus, similar to Na+o binding, K+ binds in an extracellularly facing ion well of the Na,K-ATPase.
This extracellularly-facing ion well is most often envisioned conceptually as a narrow access channel in the enzyme, analogous to the pore of an ion channel (De Weer et al., 1988
; Rakowski et al., 1997
). The VM dependence of ion binding reactions in this scenario occurs because the membrane electric field strength affects the probability that ions occupy the access channel. However, as first pointed out by Hilgemann (1994b)
, an equally valid mechanism involves rapid, VM-dependent microscopic occlusion reactions in which weakly VM-dependent ion binding/coordination reactions are accompanied by rapid rearrangements of charge in the ion-bound protein with respect to the membrane electric field. Charge rearrangement during microscopic ion occlusion reactions could involve intrinsic protein moieties and/or the bound ion; however, with this mechanism, VM dependence of ion binding reactions arise because electric field strength affects the probability of charge rearrangements during ion binding and release. The problem is that this alternative mechanism of VM-dependent ion binding reactions is experimentally indistinguishable from the access channel model as long as the proportion of the ion-bound, but not -occluded enzyme state remains very small. In fact, experimental data suggest that the fraction of Rb+ (another K+ congener) -bound, but not -occluded enzyme is indeed very low under conditions that promote K+ occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase (González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). Thus, it could be very difficult to distinguish between the alternate ion binding mechanisms outlined above in the presence of transported cations such as Na+ and K+. However, if ion transport could be blocked in such a manner that a substantial fraction of the enzyme resides in an ion-bound, but not -occluded state, then these alternative scenarios for VM-dependent ion binding should be experimentally distinguishable.
Organic quaternary amines inhibit ion transport by the Na,K-ATPase in a manner that is competitive with K+o activation of the enzyme (Kropp and Sachs, 1977
) and inhibit Rb+ occlusion under conditions that would otherwise promote binding of extracellular ions (Forbush, 1988
). Of particular note in the context of the present study, quaternary amines do not appear to become occluded by the enzyme (Forbush, 1988
). One interpretation of these data is that organic quaternary amines inhibit ion occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase by binding at or near K+o binding sites in the enzyme. Should this interpretation be correct, these organic amines may allow us to separate binding and occlusion reactions by the enzyme and thereby study the mechanism of VM-dependent ion binding.
This study reports the concentration and VM-dependent properties of Na,K pump current inhibition by two such quaternary amines, TEA and its related analogue, benzyltriethylammonium ion (BTEA). The results show that, while these two compounds inhibit K+o activation of Na,K pump current in a competitive manner, the VM-dependent properties of enzyme inhibition are quite different. The implications of these results for defining the mechanism of VM-dependent extracellular ion binding are then discussed.
Preliminary communications for these data have been published previously (Berlin and Peluffo, 1998
; Peluffo et al., 2001
).
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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) as published previously (Ishizuka et al., 1996The time constant for settling of current after a 5-mV depolarization was typically in the 200300 µs range without series resistance compensation and cell capacitances were in the range of 120250 pF.
Solutions
The patch-electrode solution contained (in mM) 85 sodium sulfamate, 20 tetraethylammonium chloride, 10 ATP-Mg2+ salt, 5 pyruvic acid, 5 creatine phosphateTris salt, 10 EGTATris salt, and 10 HEPES (pH 7.35 with NaOH). The total concentration of Na+ in this solution was 115 mM. Na+-free superfusion solutions contained the following (in mM): 145 tetramethylammonium (TMA) chloride, 2.3 MgCl2, 0.2 CdCl2, 5.5 dextrose, 10 HEPES (pH 7.4 with Tris). KCl was added to this solution in various concentrations (0.055 mM). Our initial experiments were performed with a superfusion solution containing 145 N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMG) instead of TMA; however, TMA blocked contaminating ionic currents more completely than NMG. Furthermore, the K+o dependence of Na,K pump current activation was similar in the presence of NMG and TMA-containing solutions (unpublished data). Tetraethylammonium chloride and benzyltriethylammonium chloride were added to the superfusion solution with equimolar substitution for TMA chloride. All experiments were performed at 37°C. Reagents were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich.
Statistics and Curve Fitting
Data are presented as mean ± SEM for the indicated number of cells. Current density was calculated by dividing K+o-activated currents by cell capacitance measured as the integral of current elicited with 5-mV pulses. Indicated functions were fit to the data using a nonlinear least squares Gauss-Newton algorithm (Rossi and Garrahan, 1989
) or with commercial software (SigmaPlot, SPSS).
| RESULTS |
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K) for K+o activation of Na,K pump current. Similar to Imax, the value of
K was found to show no trend with VM (Fig. 2 B), so
K at all 15 VM tested were averaged to yield a value of 0.58 ± 0.07. This value is similar to that measured for K+o activation of Na,K pump current under zero extracellular Na+ conditions by Sagar and Rakowski (1994)
By comparison, the concentration of K+o needed to yield a similar level of current activation increased at more positive VM, as is reflected by an increase in the K+o concentration required for half-maximal activation (K0.5) from 35 ± 4 to 365 ± 53 µM in going from -100 to +40 mV, respectively (Fig. 2 C). Thus, as reported previously (Sagar and Rakowski, 1994
; Peluffo et al., 2000
), the apparent affinity for K+o activation of the Na,K pump is decreased as the cell interior is made more positive, consistent with the idea that K+ binding occurs in an extracellularly facing ion well.
Under the conditions of the present experiments, high intracellular and zero extracellular Na+, Na,K pump current can be described by a pseudo two-state model that includes one lumped reaction step as well as a second VM- and K+o-dependent reaction (Hansen et al., 1981
; Sagar and Rakowski, 1994
; Peluffo et al., 2000
). Using this model, the following equation,
![]() | (1) |
K) dissipated during K+o-dependent reactions. The term "U" is the unitless form of voltage, zFVM/RT, where z is equal to 1, the net charge moved during the ion transport cycle. Fitting Eq. 1 to the data in Fig. 2 C yields values of K00.5 and
K of 204 ± 4 µM and 0.39 ± 0.01 (n = 15), respectively. This value of K00.5 and the fact that K+o-dependent reactions dissipate approximately one third of the membrane dielectric are consistent with our previous data (Berlin and Peluffo, 1997
The two-step fitting procedure described above for the data in Fig. 2 allowed for the determination of four parameters, Imax, K00.5,
K, and
K, that describe the K+o concentration and VM dependence of Na,K pump current under the conditions of these experiments. To determine the utility of this fitting procedure, Eq. 6 in the APPENDIX was solved at each VM and K+o concentration tested using these parameter values. The calculated current densities were then compared with the experimental data. Using the entire set of experimentally measured current densities, the root mean square error of the calculated current densities was found to be 0.0057 pA/pF. Similarly, the sum percent error of the calculated current densities, defined as
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K, and
K. As can be seen in the inset of Fig. 2 C, the calculated curves closely follow the experimentally measured current densities at -100, 0, and +40 mV. Given the outcome of these tests, we used a similar two-step fitting procedure when analyzing subsequent data.
Effect of Extracellular Tetraethylammonium ions on Na,K Pump Current
Extracellular TEA has been shown to inhibit activity (Zemková et al., 1988
), ion transport (Sachs and Conrad, 1968
), and current generation by the Na,K-ATPase (Eckstein-Ludwig et al., 1998
). For this reason, our initial characterization of the effects of organic quaternary amines began with TEA. Experiments were performed in the same manner as outlined in Fig. 1 A except that immediately after establishing a whole-cell voltage-clamp, the cells were superfused in the Na+o- and K+o-free salt solution that also contained TEA at the indicated concentrations. TEA was substituted in equimolar fashion for TMA, which itself does not affect the Na,K pump (unpublished data). Fig. 3 A shows that 25 mM TEA decreased the 0.1 mM K+o-activated outward current at all VM tested. Similar to control conditions (0 TEA), the current-VM relationship displayed a negative slope.
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These data were fit with a Hill equation at each VM to calculate parameter values for Imax,
K, and K0.5. As in Fig. 2, the values for Imax and
K showed no dependence on VM so they were averaged for all 15 VM tested to yield values of 1.99 ± 0.46 pA/pF and 0.61 ± 0.12, respectively. Similar experiments and analyses were performed with 13 cells exposed to 5 mM TEA (not depicted) and the calculated average values for Imax and
K were 2.64 ± 0.31 pA/pF and 0.45 ± 0.08, respectively. These parameter values, along with those determined in the absence of TEA, are summarized in Fig. 3 C.
The calculations above led to two conclusions. First, the values of Imax in the presence of 5 and 25 mM TEA are not significantly different than Imax in the absence of the quaternary amine. In agreement with previous reports, these results suggest that TEA inhibition of Na,K pump current is competitive with K+o activation of ion transport (Sachs and Conrad, 1968
). Second, the values of
K were likewise not significantly different in the presence and absence of TEA. Given this lack of effect, the three mean values of
K were averaged and the result (0.55) was used to fix
K during simultaneous fitting of the data in Fig. 4, as discussed below.
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To determine how TEA affects the VM dependence of Na,K pump activation by K+o, the data in Fig. 4 were fit with an equation derived from a pseudo three-state model for the Na,K pump exposed to an extracellular inhibitor that is competitive with K+o for activation of the enzyme (see APPENDIX):
![]() | (2) |
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Q and
Q are the Hill coefficient and the portion of the membrane dielectric dissipated during Na,K pump current inhibition, respectively. This equation has six parameters that can be varied to optimize the fit to the data. However, information regarding one of these parameters,
K, is not available in the plotted data. Even so, as mentioned above and shown in Fig. 3 C,
K is independent of VM and TEA concentration. This finding allows
K to be fixed, in this case, at its average value of 0.55, while the other five parameters are varied to fit Eq. 2 to the data in Fig. 4 as a function of VM and amine concentration.
Solid curves in Fig. 4 are the best-fit functions produced by simultaneously fitting Eq. 2 to the entire displayed dataset. The calculated values of K0.50 and
K in the presence of TEA were 201 ± 6 µM and 0.37 ± 0.02, respectively. These parameter values were not significantly different than those calculated in the absence of TEA with Eq. 1 (in Fig. 2 C). Furthermore, these calculations showed that KQ0 for TEA was 26.6 ± 0.7 mM. The value of
Q, 0.04 ± 0.02, was not significantly different than zero, so that it is clear that TEA binding does not occur in the membrane electric field, i.e., TEA inhibition is VM independent. These results are consistent with those of Eckstein-Ludwig et al. (1998)
, who also found that TEA block of Na,K pump currents in oocytes is not VM dependent. The results in Fig. 4 are also consistent with the predictions of a pseudo three-state model for the Na,K-ATPase in the presence of a VM-independent blocker that inhibits the enzyme in a competitive manner with K+o (see APPENDIX and Fig. 9).
The value of
Q calculated with Eq. 2 was equal to 0.45 ± 0.02. This value of
Q is significantly less than one, suggesting that negative cooperativity, possibly between multiple TEA molecules, occurs during inhibition of the Na,K-ATPase. This value is also similar to that for
K (0.55).
Effect of Extracellular Benzyltriethylammonium Ions on Na,K Pump Current
In studying the effects of organic amines on Rb+ occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase, Forbush (1988)
noted that quaternary amines containing a benzyl side chain had the highest apparent affinities for slowing release of occluded Rb+ from the enzyme. Therefore, to determine if these benzyl-containing quaternary amines inhibited Na,K pump current in a similar manner to TEA, we examined the effects of a benzylic derivative of TEA, BTEA, on Na,K pump current. At concentrations where TEA had little effect on current, BTEA decreased Na,K pump current amplitude by nearly 50% (Fig. 5 A). Like TEA, current inhibition by BTEA was rapidly reversible at all VM (Fig. 5, A and B). Most interestingly, the VM dependence of current in the presence of BTEA looked quite different than current in the presence of TEA. Inspection of Figs. 3 A and 5 B shows that BTEA appeared to inhibit current more effectively at negative VM, whereas TEA more effectively blocked current at positive VM. Thus, the effect of VM on Na,K pump current in the presence of BTEA appears to be different than that observed with TEA, a VM-independent blocker of the Na,K-ATPase.
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K were VM independent at all BTEA concentrations tested (not depicted). As a result, average values of Imax and
K for the 15 VM tested were calculated and plotted in Fig. 6, B and C, respectively. Over the concentration range tested, BTEA had no significant effect on Imax or
K, an indication that this quaternary amine is a competitive inhibitor of Na,K pump current. These average values of Imax and
K were, therefore, averaged again to yield values of 2.30 pA/pF and 0.56, respectively.
Fitting the Na,K pump current data obtained at each VM with Hill equations also showed the VM and BTEA dependence of K0.5 values (Fig. 7). BTEA produced a concentration-dependent increase in K0.5 at all VM tested. The unusual feature of the data was the apparent parallel shift of K0.5 to higher values with BTEA, irrespective of VM. This type of behavior is actually predicted for a VM-dependent inhibitor of the Na,K-ATPase (see APPENDIX). By simultaneously fitting Eq. 2 to all data in Fig. 7 with
K fixed at 0.56, K00.5 and
K for current activation, 200 ± 10 µM and 0.35 ± 0.02, were found to be unchanged in the presence of BTEA. On the other hand, the K0Q for block of current activation was calculated to be 4.0 ± 0.3 mM, a value almost sevenfold lower than that for TEA. Thus, consistent with the results of Forbush (1988)
, the benzylic side chain increased the potency for block of ion transport. These same calculations showed that
Q for BTEA was 0.40 ± 0.05, a demonstration that a sizable fraction of the membrane dielectric was dissipated during BTEA block. In other words, BTEA inhibited the Na,K-ATPase in a VM-dependent manner. In addition,
Q was not significantly different than
K. The implications of this result are presented in the DISCUSSION.
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Given the average value of
K above, 0.56, Eq. 2 predicts that the value of K0.5 (at any VM) will increase monotonically in a parabolic-like manner with BTEA concentration if
Q equals 1. The inset of Fig. 7 does show that K0.5 (at 0 mV) increases monotonically with BTEA; however, the slope of the relationship between K0.5 and BTEA becomes somewhat less steep at the higher amine concentrations tested. Such a nonlinear relationship between K0.5 and amine concentration is predicted by Eq. 2 if
Q < 1. In fitting Eq. 2 to the data, the value of
Q was found to be 0.56 ± 0.03. By plotting Na,K pump current density versus BTEA concentration at each K+o,
Q was found to be independent of K+o concentration (not depicted). These results indicate that BTEA inhibits the Na,K-ATPase with negative cooperativity.
| DISCUSSION |
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K+o binding is the VM-dependent reaction during ion transport by the Na,K-ATPase: Evidence for the VM dependence of a K+o-dependent reaction step during ion transport by the Na,K-ATPase is shown by experiments, similar to those in Fig. 1, which display a K+o-dependent negative slope in the current-VM relationship of Na,K pump current (Bielen et al., 1991
; Rakowski et al., 1991
; Sagar and Rakowski, 1994
; Berlin and Peluffo, 1997
; Peluffo et al., 2000
). To attribute this VM dependence of Na,K pump current to K+o-dependent reactions, experiments were performed under conditions that prevent other VM-dependent reaction steps from regulating the kinetics of the ion transport cycle. The concentration of cytosolic Na+ in this study, set by the patch-electrode solution containing 115 mM Na+, is high enough to saturate cytosolic-facing Na+ binding sites of the Na,K-ATPase whose apparent Na+ affinity, under turnover conditions similar to our own, is
10 mM (Nakao and Gadsby, 1989
). With saturating concentrations, cytosolic Na+ binding reactions are not rate limiting. Therefore, the VM-dependent properties of these reactions cannot be observed. In addition, experiments were also performed in the absence of extracellular Na+, conditions that render extracellular Na+ release reactions by the Na,K-ATPase irreversible so that enzyme turnover will not depend on the VM dependence of these reactions (Läuger, 1991
). Our observation that Na,K pump current density measured in the presence of saturating K+o concentrations (5 mM) is almost independent of VM (Figs. 1 C and 2 A) also confirms the point that VM-dependent reaction steps do not control enzyme turnover under these conditions, thereby allowing us to conclude that any VM dependence of intracellular K+-dependent reactions (e.g., Hansen et al., 2002
) is not apparent under our experimental conditions. Thus, a K+o-dependent step is the only VM-dependent reaction that can limit enzyme turnover in our experiments.
The mechanism of the K+o- and VM-dependent reaction was identified in our previous work (Peluffo and Berlin, 1997
) by trapping the Na,K-ATPase in K+-transporting conformations, i.e., those that promote K+K+ exchange, and then measuring the Tl+o dependence of presteady-state charge movements during perturbations of VM. The disappearance of these charge movements at saturating Tl+o concentrations demonstrated that the VM-dependent reaction is extracellular Tl+ (or K+) binding.
Quaternary Amines Competitively Block K+ Transport by the Na,K-ATPase
The competitive nature of quaternary amine inhibition of Na,K pump current is demonstrated by our data showing that maximal Na,K pump current density is unchanged (Figs. 3 C and 6 B) while the apparent affinity for K+o activation of current is significantly decreased (Figs. 4 and 7). Previous studies have also shown comparable effects of extracellular TEA (Sachs and Conrad, 1968
) and tetrapropylammonium ion (TPA) on Na+ and K+ transport mediated by the Na,K-ATPase in red blood cells (Kropp and Sachs, 1977
) and TEA on Na,K pump currents in oocytes (Eckstein-Ludwig et al., 1998
). Thus, we conclude that our results are consistent with previous reports that quaternary amines inhibit K+o-dependent activation of ion transport by the Na,K-ATPase in a competitive manner.
Our own data and previous reports, therefore, suggest that the premises of the pseudo three-state model (see APPENDIX) are valid. As a result, we concluded that BTEA inhibits Na,K pump current in a VM-dependent manner. On the other hand, TEA appears to block Na,K pump current in a VM-independent manner. The occurrence of VM-dependent block and the effect of quaternary amines on ion occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase provide evidence to distinguish between the two alternative mechanisms posited in the literature (Hilgemann, 1994b
) to explain VM-dependent ion binding in the Na,K-ATPase. The basis for distinguishing between these alternative mechanisms is discussed below.
The most detailed study of quaternary amine block of ion transport (Kropp and Sachs, 1977
) suggested that TPA is a dead-end inhibitor with highest affinity for the Na,K-ATPase without bound K+, slightly decreased affinity when the enzyme is bound with a single K+ and a very much lower affinity for the doubly K+-bound enzyme. This behavior was characterized in Na+o-free conditions, similar to the present study, and a hyperbolic relationship between K+o concentration and ion transport rate was observed in the presence and absence of amine. A linear Dixon plot of ion transport rate versus TPA concentration was interpreted as showing that binding of a single quaternary amine was sufficient to inhibit the Na,K-ATPase. In the present experiments, the Hill coefficient (
K) for K+o activation of Na,K pump current in the absence of TEA or BTEA was 0.58, an indication of negative cooperativity for K+o activation of enzyme turnover. Interestingly, the Hill coefficient (
Q) for quaternary amine inhibition of current had a similar value, whether the amine was TEA or BTEA. Negative cooperativity suggests that more than one amine may be involved in inhibiting Na,K pump current. Furthermore, since the Hill coefficient for TEA and BTEA inhibition of current is independent of K+o, this negative cooperativity is unlikely to be due to a quaternary amineK+ interaction.
Effect of Amines on K+ Occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase
Binding and occlusion of extracellular K+ by the Na,K-ATPase appears to be an ordered process in which only one of the two K+ binding sites is accessible from the extracellular medium (Forbush, 1987
; González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). This postulate rests principally on data showing that, in the presence of Mg2+ and inorganic phosphate (Pi), K+ and K+ congeners slow the release kinetics of
50% of the Rb+ occluded by the Na,K-ATPase, without affecting the rapid release of the remaining occluded Rb+ (Glynn et al., 1985
; Forbush, 1987
). Similar results were obtained whether Rb+ was occluded without other ligands or in the presence of Na+, Mg2+, and micromolar ATP concentrations (González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). Forbush (1987)
interpreted these data as showing that Rb+ bound to one K+ site, the "fast" site, that could rapidly release Rb+ to the extracellular medium and to a second K+ site, the "slow" site, that could only be occupied by Rb+ that had first bound to the fast site. As a result, when the first K+ binds at the fast site, the second K+ ion cannot bind until the first bound K+ shifts to the second slow site. Ordered binding of Rb+ to the fast and slow K+ sites also led to ordered release from these sites. The conditions of these experiments, i.e., including Mg2+ and Pi during Rb+ release, suggested that release was to the extracellular side of the enzyme.
The accessibility of the fast K+ site to the extracellular medium also appears to be restricted by a flickering or leaky gate (Forbush, 1987
; González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). The strongest data supporting this concept is that the affinity with which extracellular Rb+ blocks release of bound Rb+ is similar to the affinity for Rb+ occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase (Forbush, 1987
). Since the kinetics of extracellular K+ binding reactions are very rapid (Peluffo and Berlin, 1997
), such a similarity in Rb+ blocking and occlusion affinities could only occur if access to K+ binding sites is rate limiting. In other words, the gate is poised strongly toward the closed position. This gating process might be analogous to the rapid opening and closing kinetics observed in ion channels (Hille, 2001
) and with palytoxin-modified Na,K-ATPase (Kim et al., 1995
; Artigas and Gadsby, 2003
).
Organic quaternary amines, and in fact a variety of amine-containing compounds, are interesting because, like extracellular K+ congeners, they can block the release of Rb+ from the slow K+ site without affecting release of Rb+ from the fast K+ binding site (Forbush, 1988
). Quaternary amines, however, differ from K+ in one important respect. The amine concentrations required to block Rb+ occlusion are far higher than those required to block release of occluded Rb+ (Forbush, 1988
). These data have been interpreted as showing that extracellular quaternary amines have access to the fast K+ binding site in the enzyme, but that they do not become occluded like K+. Forbush (1988)
envisioned the action of quaternary amines as getting a "foot in the door", thereby preventing the closing of the occlusion gate. Thus, quaternary amines appear to bind to sites in the Na,K-ATPase without becoming occluded.
Quaternary Amine Binding Sites in the Na,K-ATPase
The experiments of Forbush (1988)
showing that quaternary amines slow the release of 86Rb+ from Na,K-ATPase, do not necessarily demonstrate that the amines bind to the fast K+ binding site in the enzyme. In a similar manner, competitive inhibition of enzyme activation is not sufficient to demonstrate that amines and K+ bind at the same site (Segel, 1975
).
Our data show that inhibition of Na,K pump current by TEA or BTEA displays a Hill coefficient significantly less than 1. One implication of this result is that the quaternary amines are capable of interacting at two binding sites. Certainly, our finding that TEA inhibits Na,K pump in a VM-independent manner while BTEA produces VM-dependent block shows that the amines can act at sites with different locations in the membrane electric field; however, the relationship between electrical and physical distances is unknown. Even so, inhibition of Na,K pump current by BTEA dissipates 40% of the membrane electric field, and activation of Na,K pump current by extracellular K+ dissipates a similar fraction of the membrane electric field (3539%) in our experiments. Given that BTEA is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme (Fig. 6), the simplest explanation for our data is that this amine is blocking at or very near a K+ binding site located within the membrane dielectric.
With the Hill coefficient for current block by BTEA being less than one, we can also speculate that BTEA is capable of interacting with a second site, possibly the same site located outside of the membrane electric field at which TEA inhibits Na,K pump current. However, if BTEA interacts at two sites in the Na,K-ATPase, an interesting problem arises as to why TEA does not also produce VM-dependent block of the enzyme. In fact, we cannot rule out this possibility because TEA may interact with the K+ site located in the electric field with much lower affinity than BTEA. In this regard, we performed a few experiments using 100 mM extracellular TEA (unpublished data), and the data gave some indication that VM-dependent block occurred, specifically, a small decrease in the slope of the K0.5-VM relationship in the presence of 100 mM TEA. We did not investigate this point because any VM-dependent effects of TEA do not change our mechanistic interpretation of VM-dependent inhibition of the Na,K-ATPase, and we were concerned that high TEA concentrations were having additional effects on the cells under study. In any case, if the amines are interacting at two sites in the Na,K-ATPase, one located in the membrane electric field, the other outside of the field, this result does not itself demonstrate that the amines are binding at the slow and fast K+ sites identified by Forbush (1987)
, since we cannot conclude whether an amine binding site located outside of the membrane electric field is a K+ binding site; however, such a possibility is not incompatible with our data.
Implications of VM-dependent Block by BTEA for the Mechanism of VM-dependent K+o Binding by the Na,K-ATPase
As mentioned above, our previous work has demonstrated that a VM-dependent step during K+ transport by the Na,K-ATPase is extracellular K+ binding, and that this reaction is followed by a slower electroneutral reaction (Peluffo and Berlin, 1997
). The Albers-Post reaction model for the Na,K-ATPase (Glynn, 1985
) would suggest this slow electroneutral reaction is probably occlusion and enzyme dephosphorylation. Scheme I
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state of the enzyme. Given Rb+ occlusion data suggesting the existence of a flickering gate, the underlying reason for slow occlusion kinetics is that the gate opens with low probability (Forbush, 1987
; González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). Data showing rapid gating of the palytoxin-modified enzyme (Kim et al., 1995
; Artigas and Gadsby, 2003
), analogous to the opening and closing of the gate in an ion channel, might suggest that Scheme I could be modified so that rapid ion binding is followed by a rapidly reversible gating reaction and then slower ion occlusion (Scheme II)
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The first issue then is whether the concentration of EK in Scheme II is likely to be small during K+ binding and occlusion. In Rb+ occlusion conditions, González-Lebrero et al. (2002)
calculated the equilibrium constants for ion binding and occlusion to show that the reaction equilibrium is displaced almost entirely toward the occluded state (E(K) conformation), a point made quite obvious by the ability to occlude Rb+ in the presence of Na+, Mg2+, and micromolar concentrations of ATP (Glynn and Richards, 1982
). Therefore, at least in the forward direction, fast gating must very much favor the closed gate conformation.
In the reverse direction, there is no direct information about the equilibrium position of the ion binding reaction under the conditions of our experiments. Indirectly, one could infer that the bound conformation would rapidly decay to the unbound state because the K0.5 for equilibrium Rb+ occlusion in the absence of other ligands is much smaller than the Rb+ concentration that produces half-maximal rate of occlusion (González-Lebrero et al., 2002
). In Scheme II, this difference in K0.5 values would suggest that either the formation of the Rb+-bound but not -occluded state and/or the closed gate conformation of the enzyme is disfavored. However, as pointed out above, the gating reaction is strongly poised in the closed direction (González-Lebrero et al., 2002
), so that only the binding reaction can realistically be disfavored. Thus, a reasonable conclusion is that the K+-bound but not -occluded conformation of the enzyme exists only in very small quantities.
Organic quaternary amines make it possible to distinguish whether the ion binding or gating reactions are VM dependent. Forbush (1988)
showed that these amines bind to the Na,K-ATPase but are not occluded, and he interpreted these data as showing that closing of the flickering gate is blocked. If this is the case, the enzyme can accumulate to a significant degree in the amine-bound (but not -occluded) conformation. Under these conditions, it should be possible to distinguish whether binding or gating is the VM-dependent reaction. If gating is VM dependent then amine block of enzyme cycling should be VM independent. Conversely, if binding is VM dependent, one could anticipate that amine block could also be VM dependent. The present data clearly demonstrate that the latter is possible. In addition, we found that the fraction of the membrane dielectric dissipated during BTEA inhibition is similar to that dissipated during K+o activation of enzyme cycling. These data suggest that the binding step is the major VM-dependent reaction while conformational changes associated with ion binding move little charge in the membrane electric field. This VM dependence of ion binding will occur as K+ moves from the extracellular medium to its binding sites in the enzyme, implying that a high-field access channel exists in the Na,K-ATPase. Thus, these data provide strong evidence for an ion channellike structure in the Na,K-ATPase.
Summary
In this study, we have demonstrated that the organic quaternary amine, BTEA, is a competitive, VM-dependent blocker for K+o activation of Na,K pump current under conditions where K+o binding is the only VM-dependent reaction controlling enzyme turnover. Given previous data concerning amine inhibition of ion transport and occlusion by the Na,K-ATPase as well as our understanding of VM-dependent K+o binding by this enzyme, the present results indicate that BTEA is binding at a K+ site located in the membrane electric field. Furthermore, these data demonstrate that this binding site must be located in an access channellike structure in the enzyme. Thus, quaternary amines should provide a valuable tool to probe the structure of K+ binding sites and the access channel of the Na,K-ATPase.
| APPENDIX |
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Voltage dependence is assigned arbitrarily to the binding steps to Eo (k1 for K+o and k3 for Q) rather than dissociation steps (k-1 and k-3, respectively). If the backward running of the enzyme under our conditions is assumed to be negligible, i.e., k-2
0, Scheme III can be solved for the concentration of EK under steady-state conditions to be as in Eq. 3
![]() | (3) |
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![]() | (4) |
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![]() | (4a) |
![]() | (4b) |
![]() | (4c) |
Na,K pump current (I) in Eq. 4 depends on [K+], the amine concentration ([Q]) and VM, all experimentally controllable parameters. Fig. 8 shows the results of a simulation in which the amine is assumed to act in a VM-independent fashion, i.e.,
Q = 0. Simulated current is activated at constant [K+] (0.2 mM) in the absence and presence of the inhibitory quaternary amine. Note the similarity to Fig. 3 A, inhibition of Na pump current by TEA. Like the experimental data, the VM-independent inhibitor appears to block simulated Na,K pump current more effectively at positive VM. However, when the simulation is run with a VM-dependent blocker (
Q = 0.4 and 0.75), the VM dependence of the current progressively changes so that the inhibitor appears to block current more effectively at negative VM, similar to the data shown in Fig. 5 B.
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![]() | (5) |
Q = 0), the K0.5 for K+o will simply be scaled up from the curve obtained in the absence of inhibitor. On the other hand, with VM-dependent inhibition, the curves progressively flatten out and change curvature as the ion-well depth for the inhibitor is increased (
Q = 0.4 and 0.75). Again, the simulations with
Q = 0 and 0.4 are qualitatively similar to the VM dependence of K0.5 values observed in the presence of TEA (Fig. 4) and BTEA (Fig. 7), respectively.
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![]() | (6) |
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (J.R. Berlin) and the American Heart Association (R.D. Peluffo).
Olaf S. Andersen served as editor.
Submitted: 20 May 2003
Accepted: 22 January 2004
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-methylene]triphosphate on substrate kinetics. Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 981:8594.This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. Gatto, J. B. Helms, M. C. Prasse, K. L. Arnett, and M. A. Milanick Kinetic characterization of tetrapropylammonium inhibition reveals how ATP and Pi alter access to the Na+-K+-ATPase transport site Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, August 1, 2005; 289(2): C302 - C311. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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