EFFECT OF CHOLATE ON H-ATPASE AND OTHER PROTEINS OF DOG RENAL BRUSH-BORDER MEMBRANE()

Citation
J. Noel et al., EFFECT OF CHOLATE ON H-ATPASE AND OTHER PROTEINS OF DOG RENAL BRUSH-BORDER MEMBRANE(), Biochemistry and cell biology, 71(7-8), 1993, pp. 390-400
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
08298211
Volume
71
Issue
7-8
Year of publication
1993
Pages
390 - 400
Database
ISI
SICI code
0829-8211(1993)71:7-8<390:EOCOHA>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
A short treatment of dog renal brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) w ith sodium cholate, followed by dialysis of the detergent, reorients t he polarity of H+-ATPase in the membrane and exposes its ATP binding s ites to the extravesicular space, as previously shown with pig BBMV. I n cholate-pretreated vesicles, the H+-ATPase remains fully active, but is inserted under the reversed polarity in sealed vesicles. A large s pontaneous N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive ATPase activity is thus observed , as well as a steep intravesicular acidification upon external ATP ad dition, two findings absent in native vesicles. The ability of nitrate plus ATP to dissociate the hydrolytic subunits of the proton pump in cholate-pretreated vesicles, but not in native vesicles, demonstrates that most of the ATP binding subunits are accessible to ATP following cholate treatment. The sensitivity of the cytoplasmic domain of the H-ATP activity to trypsin also confirms the reorientation of the enzyme in cholate-pretreated vesicles. The H+-ATPase and alkaline phosphatas e remain largely associated with the membranes after the treatment wit h cholate, but gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, aminopeptidase N, and neu tral endopeptidase are largely solubilized. Upon dialysis of cholate, all these enzymes are in part reinserted in the membrane according to their original polarity. The reorientation process is however specific for the H+-ATPase. Cholate treatment does not increase the formation of inside-out vesicles. Thus the treatment with cholate really reorien ts the polarity of the H+-ATPase in vesicles and allows for study of t he proton pumping capacity of vacuolar H+-ATPase of proximal tubules.