The physiological ligands for Na,K-ATPase (the Na,K-pump) are ions, and electrostatic forces, that could be revealed by their ionic strength dependence, are therefore expected to be important for their reaction with the enzyme. We found that the affinities for ADP3−, eosin2−, p-nitrophenylphosphate, and Vmax for Na,K-ATPase and K+-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity, were all decreased by increasing salt concentration and by specific anions. Equilibrium binding of ADP was measured at 0–0.5 M of NaCl, Na2SO4, and NaNO3 and in 0.1 M Na-acetate, NaSCN, and NaClO4. The apparent affinity for ADP decreased up to 30 times. At equal ionic strength, I, the ranking of the salt effect was NaCl ≈ Na2SO4 ≈ Na-acetate < NaNO3 < NaSCN < NaClO4. We treated the influence of NaCl and Na2SO4 on Kdiss for E·ADP as a “pure” ionic strength effect. It is quantitatively simulated by a model where the binding site and ADP are point charges, and where their activity coefficients are related to I by the limiting law of Debye and Hückel. The estimated net charge at the binding site of the enzyme was about +1. Eosin binding followed the same model. The NO3− effect was compatible with competitive binding of NO3− and ADP in addition to the general I-effect. Kdiss for E·NO3 was ∼32 mM. Analysis of Vmax/Km for Na,K-ATPase and K+-p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity shows that electrostatic forces are important for the binding of p-nitrophenylphosphate but not for the catalytic effect of ATP on the low affinity site. The net charge at the p-nitrophenylphosphate-binding site was also about +1. The results reported here indicate that the reversible interactions between ions and Na,K-ATPase can be grouped according to either simple Debye-Hückel behavior or to specific anion or cation interactions with the enzyme.
The Effect of Ionic Strength and Specific Anions on Substrate Binding and Hydrolytic Activities of Na,K-ATPase
Address correspondence to Dr. Jens G. Nørby, Department of Biophysics, Ole Worms Allé 185, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark. Fax: 45-86129599; E-mail: [email protected]
The expert technical assistance of Edith Bjørn Møller, Birthe Bjerring Jensen, and Angielina Damgaard is gratefully acknowledged, and we are thankful to our colleague Dr. Jørgen Jensen for his collaboration in the early phases of this study. We also thank professors emeriti Jacqueline A. Reynolds and Charles Tanford, Easingwold, UK, for helpful suggestions, and Dr. Igor W. Plesner, University of Aarhus, for discussions, on kinetic and thermodynamic aspects of ionic strength effects. We are grateful to Dr. Haruki Nakamura, Biomolecular Engineering Research Institute, Osaka, Japan, for sending us a preprint of his review in advance of its publication.
Abbreviations used in this paper: CDTA, trans-1,2-cyclohexylenedinitrilotetraacetic acid; K+-pNPPase, K+-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase; pNPP, p-nitrophenylphosphate.
In the Debye-Hückel expression, Eq. 5
Jens G. Nørby, Mikael Esmann; The Effect of Ionic Strength and Specific Anions on Substrate Binding and Hydrolytic Activities of Na,K-ATPase . J Gen Physiol 1 May 1997; 109 (5): 555–570. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.109.5.555
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