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Turnover and regulation of Na-K-ATPase in HeLa cells
112
Citations
16
References
1981
Year
GlycobiologyCytoskeletonHela CellsCellular PhysiologyCatalytic SubunitsCell SignalingCell PhysiologyGlycosylationBiochemistryDensity LabelCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionCellular EnzymologyNatural SciencesLog GrowthIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryMedicine
HeLa cells in log growth have 10(6) surface Na-K-ATPase molecules as estimated by the specific binding of [3H]-ouabain. Studies utilizing ouabain as a label show that the ligand is internalized at a rate corresponding to the turnover of three sets of Na-K-ATPase enzymes per generation. The label is taken up exclusively into a particulate cell compartment where it is codistributed with beta-hexosaminidase, identifying the internal compartment as lysosomal. Turnover is an important parameter in the recovery of the cells from glycoside intoxication. The unmetabolized glycoside is subsequently released by exocytosis. 13C-density-labeled Na-K-ATPase has been identified by specific phosphorylation of its catalytic subunit with [32P]ATP or [33P]ATP, and the rate of turnover of the density label is shown to be the same as the internalization of the ouabain-labeled site. There is a transit time of about 4 h from the onset of synthesis of the catalytic subunit to its insertion in the surface membrane; 2,800 catalytic subunits are synthesized per minute per cell, and 2,100 are turned over K+-starved cells respond to the stress in 24-30 h with modulation of the surface density of Na-K-ATPase the synthetic rate remains constant; the number of functional enzymes per cell is controlled by change in the rate constant for turnover.
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