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CHANNELS, RECEPTORS, AND ELECTRICAL SIGNALING |
1 The University of Sydney F-11 School of Chemistry
2 Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysics
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: r.clarke{at}chem.usyd.edu.au.
Submitted on April 26, 2007
Revised on June 6, 2007
Accepted on 31 July 2007
| Abstract |
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F/F0) increased to 0.98 at 50 µM ATP.
F/F0 then decreased to 0.82 at 500 µM. The decrease was attributed to an ATP-induced allosteric acceleration of the dephosphorylation reaction. The ATP concentration dependence of the time course and the amplitude of the fluorescence change couldn't be explained by either a one-site monomeric enzyme model or by a two-pool model. All of the data could be explained by an (
)2 dimeric model, in which the enzyme cycles at a low rate with ATP hydrolysis by one
-subunit or at a high rate with ATP hydrolysis by both
-subunits. Thus, we propose a two-gear bicyclic model to replace the classical monomeric Albers-Post model for kidney Na+,K+-ATPase.
Key Words: ATP, Na+,K+-ATPase, dimerisation, fluorescence, stopped-flow kinetics, voltage-sensitive styryl dye
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