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ATP-energized Ca2+ pump in isolated transverse tubules of skeletal muscle.
85
Citations
39
References
1980
Year
Muscle FunctionCellular PhysiologyMuscle PhysiologySkeletal MuscleMembrane TransportTransverse TubulesBiophysicsCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryIon ChannelsMembrane BiologyProtein TransportNeuromuscular PhysiologyRabbit Skeletal MusclePhysiologyIsolated Transverse TubulesCellular BiochemistryMedicine
A modified protocol for isolation of transverse tubules incorporated an extra stage of purification. The existence of an ATP-energized Ca2+ pump in transverse tubules isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle has been demonstrated. Isolated transverse tubules had a Ca-ATPase activity of 0.78 mu mol/min . mg; this was 300% in excess of that activity attributable to sarcoplasmic reticulum contamination. The distribution of part of the CaATPase activity and ATP-energized Ca2+ uptake coincided with the distribution of transverse tubules in isopycnic sucrose gradients loaded with mechanically disrupted triad junctions. Transverse tubules accumulated over 70 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein; this uptake was abolished by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Neither digitoxin nor monensin inhibited Ca2+ uptake, indicating that Ca2+ accumulation did not occur through a sodium/calcium exchange. Conditions for half-maximal Ca2+ uptake were 5 micro M free Ca2+ and 10 micro M ATP. The Ca2+ pump of isolated transverse tubules was distinguished from the Ca2+ pump of sarcoplasmic reticulum and sarcolemma in that the transverse tubule Ca2+ pump: 1) was not enhanced by oxalate; 2) was not energized by acetyl phosphate, p-nitrophenyl phosphate, or 3-O-methylfluorescein phosphate; and 3) did not hydrolyze p-nitrophenyl phosphate or 3-O-methyl-fluorescein phosphate. Using Ca2+-dependent 3-O-methylfluorescein phosphatase as a marker for sarcoplasmic reticulum, the contamination of the transverse tubule preparation was calculated to be 6%. This agreed with a contamination level of 5% estimated by freeze-fracture electron microscopy.
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