Plant Physiology 71:507-512 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Plant Biologists
Articles
Plasma Membrane ATPase of Red Beet Forms a Phosphorylated Intermediate 1
Donald P. Briskin and
Ronald J. Poole
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montréal, Québec H3A 1B1 Canada
When a plasma membrane-enriched fraction isolated from red beet (Beta vulgaris L.) was incubated in the presence of 40 micromolar [ -32P] ATP, 40 micromolar MgSO4 at pH 6.5, a rapidly turning over phosphorylated protein was formed. Phosphorylation of the protein was substrate-specific for ATP, sensitive to diethylstilbestrol and vanadate, but insensitive to azide. When the dephosphorylation reaction was specifically studied, KCl was found to increase the turnover of the phosphorylated protein consistent with its stimulatory effect upon plasma membrane ATPase. The protein-bound phosphate was found to be most stable at a pH between 2 and 3 and under cold temperature, suggesting that the protein phosphate bond was an acyl-phosphate. When the phosphorylated protein was analyzed with lithium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, a labeled polypeptide with a molecular weight of about 100,000 daltons was observed. Phosphorylation of this polypeptide was rapidly turning over and Mg-dependent. It is concluded that the phosphorylation observed represents a reaction intermediate of the red beet plasma membrane ATPase.
1 Supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Department of Education of Quebec.
|
|