| Literature DB >> 16342953 |
Silvia Lecchi1, Kenneth E Allen, Juan Pablo Pardo, A Brett Mason, Carolyn W Slayman.
Abstract
Yeast Pma1 H(+)-ATPase, which belongs to the P-type family of cation-transporting ATPases, is activated up to 10-fold by growth on glucose, and indirect evidence has linked the activation to Ser/Thr phosphorylation within the C-terminal tail. We have now used limited trypsinolysis to map glucose-induced conformational changes throughout the 100 kDa ATPase. In the wild-type enzyme, trypsin cleaves first at Lys-28 and Arg-73 in the extended N-terminal segment (sites T1 and T2); subsequent cleavages occur at Arg-271 between the A domain and M3 (site T3) and at Lys-749 or Lys-754 in the M6-M7 cytoplasmic loop (site T4). Activation by glucose leads to a striking increase in trypsin sensitivity. At the C-terminal end of the protein, the Arg- and Lys-rich tail is shielded from trypsin in membranes from glucose-starved cells (GS) but becomes accessible in membranes from glucose-metabolizing cells (GM). In the presence of orthovanadate, Lys-174 at the boundary between M2 and the A domain also becomes open to cleavage in GM but not GS samples (site T5). Significantly, this global conformational change can be suppressed by mutations at Thr-912, a consensus phosphorylation site near the C-terminus. Substitution by Ala at position 912 leads to a GS-like (trypsin-resistant) state, while substitution by Asp leads to a GM-like (trypsin-sensitive) state. Thus, the present results help to dissect the intramolecular movements that result in glucose activation.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16342953 DOI: 10.1021/bi051555f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162