INVESTIGADORES
FERREIRA GOMES Mariela Soledad
artículos
Título:
Measurements of Na+-occluded intermediates during the catalytic cycle of the Na+/K+-ATPase provide novel insights into the mechanism of Na+ transport
Autor/es:
FARAJ, SANTIAGO E.; VALSECCHI, WANDA M.; FERREIRA-GOMES, MARIELA; CENTENO, MERCEDES; SAINT MARTIN, ELINA MALÉN; FEDOSOVA, NATALYA U.; ROSSI, JUAN PABLO FC.; MONTES, MÓNICA R.; ROSSI, ROLANDO C.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Editorial:
AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
Referencias:
Año: 2023 vol. 299
ISSN:
0021-9258
Resumen:
The Na+/K+-ATPase is an integral plasma membrane glycoprotein of all animal cells that couples the exchange of intracellular Na+ for extracellular K+ to the hydrolysis of ATP. The asymmetric distribution of Na+ and K+ is essential for cellular life and constitutes the physical basis of a series of fundamental biological phenomena. The pumping mechanism is explained by the Albers–Post model. It involves the presence of gates alternatively exposing Na+/K+-ATPase transport sites to the intracellular and extracellular sides and includes occluded states in which both gates are simultaneously closed. Unlike for K+, information is lacking about Na+-occluded intermediates, as occluded Na+ was only detected in states incapable of performing a catalytic cycle, including two Na+-containing crystallographic structures. The current knowledge is that intracellular Na+ must bind to the transport sites and become occluded upon phosphorylation by ATP to be transported to the extracellular medium. Here, taking advantage of epigallocatechin-3-gallate to instantaneously stabilize native Na+-occluded intermediates, we isolated species with tightly bound Na+ in an enzyme able to perform a catalytic cycle, consistent with a genuine occluded state. We found that Na+ becomes spontaneously occluded in the E1 dephosphorylated form of the Na+/K+-ATPase, exhibiting positive interactions between binding sites. In fact, the addition of ATP does not produce an increase in Na+ occlusion as it would have been expected; on the contrary, occluded Na+ transiently decreases, whereas ATP lasts. These results reveal new properties of E1 intermediates of the Albers–Post model for explaining the Na+ transport pathway.