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Title: Displacement of the Na + /K + pump’s transmembrane domains demonstrates conserved conformational changes in P-type 2 ATPases

Cellular survival requires the ion gradients built by the Na+/K+pump, an ATPase that alternates between two major conformations (E1 and E2). Here we use state-specific engineered-disulfide cross-linking to demonstrate that transmembrane segment 2 (M2) of the pump’s α-subunit moves in directions that are inconsistent with distances observed in existing crystal structures of the Na+/K+pump in E1 and E2. We characterize this movement with voltage-clamp fluorometry in single-cysteine mutants. Most mutants in the M1–M2 loop produced state-dependent fluorescence changes upon labeling with tetramethylrhodamine-6-maleimide (TMRM), which were due to quenching by multiple endogenous tryptophans. To avoid complications arising from multiple potential quenchers, we analyzed quenching of TMRM conjugated to R977C (in the static M9–M10 loop) by tryptophans introduced, one at a time, in M1–M2. This approach showed that tryptophans introduced in M2 quench TMRM only in E2, with D126W and L130W on the same helix producing the largest fluorescence changes. These observations indicate that M2 moves outward as Na+is deoccluded from the E1 conformation, a mechanism consistent with cross-linking results and with proposals for other P-type 2 ATPases.

 
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Award ID(s):
2003251 1515434
NSF-PAR ID:
10214262
Author(s) / Creator(s):
;
Publisher / Repository:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume:
118
Issue:
8
ISSN:
0027-8424
Page Range / eLocation ID:
Article No. e2019317118
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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