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Vol. 290, Issue 1, 227-234, July 1999
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York
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Abstract |
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The inotropic/lusitropic effects of
-adrenergic agonists on
the heart are mediated largely by protein kinase A (PKA)-catalyzed phosphorylation of phospholamban, the natural protein regulator of the
Ca2+ pump present in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes.
Gingerol, a plant derivative, is known to produce similar effects when
tested in isolated cardiac muscle. The purpose of the present study was to compare the effects of gingerol and another plant derivative, ellagic acid, on the kinetics of the SR Ca2+ pump with
those of PKA-catalyzed phospholamban phosphorylation to elucidate their
mechanisms of Ca2+ pump regulation. As previously
demonstrated for PKA, 50 µM gingerol or ellagic acid increased
Vmax(Ca) of Ca2+ uptake and
Ca2+-ATPase activity assayed at millimolar ATP
concentrations in light cardiac SR vesicles. Unlike PKA, which
decreases Km(Ca), neither compound had a
significant effect on Km(Ca) in
unphosphorylated vesicles. However, gingerol increased
Km(Ca) in phosphorylated vesicles, in which
Ca2+ uptake was significantly increased further at
saturating Ca2+ and remained unchanged at subsaturating
Ca2+. An inhibition of Ca2+ uptake by gingerol
at micromolar MgATP concentrations was overcome with increasing MgATP
concentrations. The stimulation of Ca2+ uptake attributable
to gingerol in unphosphorylated microsomes at saturating
Ca2+ was 30% to 40% when assayed at 0.05 to 2 mM MgATP
and only about 12% in phosphorylated microsomes as well as in rabbit
fast skeletal muscle light SR. The present results support the view
that an ATP-dependent increase in Vmax(Ca)
of the SR Ca2+ pump plays an important role in
mediating cardiac contractile responses to gingerol and
phospholamban-dependent
-adrenergic stimulation.
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Introduction |
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Physiological
regulation of the Ca2+ pump of the cardiac
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) occurs through
phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of phospholamban (PLN), which is also
present on the SR membrane. PLN is one of several proteins that are
phosphorylated as a result of a
-adrenergically induced increase in
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) activity upon sympathetic
stimulation of the myocardium (Wolska et al., 1996
). The PLN-mediated
increase in the rate of removal of cytoplasmic
Ca2+ by the SR Ca2+ pump
during muscle relaxation and, hence, greater retention of intracellular
Ca2+ within the SR lumen available for subsequent
release are major components of the inotropic and relaxation-promoting
(lusitropic) effects of
-adrenergic agonists.
The kinetic mechanism of regulation by PLN of the
Ca2+ pump, when studied in vitro, involves
increases in Vmax(Ca) and the apparent affinity of the pump for Ca2+ (Antipenko et al.,
1997b
; Kargacin et al., 1998
). It is unclear, however, how these
kinetic effects, particularly the former, relate to the catalytic
cycle. During this cycle (Inesi, 1985
), an equilibrium that is thought
to exist between two major conformational states of the enzyme,
E2 and E1, is shifted in
favor of E1 in the presence of
Ca2+, which allows binding of 2 Ca2+ (2Ca·E1).
E1 also binds ATP with high affinity
(E1·ATP), and in the presence of
Ca2+ , an acylphosphoprotein intermediate is
formed (2Ca·E1·P). Translocation of 2 Ca2+ across the membrane occurs during the
conversion of 2Ca·E1·P to
2Ca·E2·P, whereupon 2 Ca2+ are released into the SR lumen as a result
of a low affinity of E2 for
Ca2+. Decomposition of E2P
allows release of Pi on the cytoplasmic side of
the membrane. ATP may also bind to the pump at reduced affinity and
accelerate certain steps in the catalytic cycle (Dupont et al., 1985
;
Gould et al., 1986
; Mignaco et al., 1996
). Such ATP is called
regulatory nucleotide in contrast to catalytic nucleotide, which binds
with high affinity (i.e., at submicromolar ATP concentrations). An
increase in the apparent affinity of the pump for
Ca2+ as a result of PLN phosphorylation or
treatment of SR membranes with anti-PLN monoclonal antibodies to remove
the inhibition by PLN is attributable to an increase in the rate of a
conformational change in the enzyme associated with binding of the
first of bound 2 Ca2+ (Cantilina et al., 1993
).
Another explanation, however, is required for the effect of PLN on
Vmax(Ca).
Information regarding the mechanism by which the
Ca2+ pump may be regulated by PLN or other means
may be obtained from the study of certain plant-derived compounds that
are stimulatory in cardiac microsomes under certain conditions
(Kobayashi et al., 1987
, 1988
; Patil et al., 1996
; Berrebi-Bertrand et
al., 1997
). Thus, in a recent study with crude cardiac microsomes
(Berrebi-Bertrand et al., 1997
), ellagic acid, a polyphenol, increased
Vmax(Ca) of microsomal
Ca2+ uptake and produced a slight apparent
decrease in Km(Ca) that failed to
attain statistical significance (p >.05). In the same study, an analog of gingerol, namely
1-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-3-dodecanone, also increased
Vmax(Ca) but markedly increased
Km(Ca). Both compounds decreased the
Hill coefficient. These reported kinetic effects on the
Ca2+ pump resemble effects observed in our
previous study with jasmone in assays of
Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-ATPase
activity (Antipenko et al., 1997a
). However, in the study by
Berrebi-Bertrand et al. (1997)
, although ellagic acid significantly increased Vmax(Ca) of
Ca2+ uptake, it failed to produce the expected
parallel increase in Ca2+-ATPase activity. Also,
the marked decrease in Km(Ca) of
Ca2+ uptake obtained with
1-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-3-dodecanone was much reduced and statistically
insignificant in assays of Ca2+-ATPase activity
in the same study. Hence, the actions of the various compounds tested
are unclear. Part of the uncertainty regarding their actions on the SR
Ca2+ pump stems from the use of heterogeneous
membrane preparations, which have also resulted in discordant results
regarding the kinetic effects of PLN phosphorylation on the cardiac SR
Ca2+ pump (Antipenko et al., 1999
).
In the present study, we investigated the effects of gingerol and
ellagic acid on the Ca2+ pump using purified
(light) cardiac SR vesicles. The effect of gingerol on the kinetic
properties of the pump is of particular interest because gingerol
produces lusitropic and inotropic effects in isolated cardiac muscle
similar to those of the
-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (Shoji et
al., 1982
; Kobayashi et al., 1988
). The contribution of the SR
Ca2+ pump to the physiological actions of
-adrenergic agents is generally attributed to the ability of PLN
phosphorylation to decrease the Km(Ca)
of Ca2+ uptake or
Ca2+-ATPase activity (MacLennan and Toyofuku,
1996
; Kadambi and Kranias, 1997
). Contrary to the expectation on this
basis, we observed no significant effect of gingerol on
Km(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake. We report, however, a significant increase in
Vmax(Ca) and no change in the Hill
coefficient. We compare the kinetic effects of these compounds in
PKA-phosphorylated and unphosphorylated microsomes and relate our
findings to the effects of PLN on the pump.
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Experimental Procedures |
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The investigation conforms to the "Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals" (National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1996).
Materials.
Light SR vesicles were obtained by fractionation
of crude microsomes prepared from canine left ventricle on a sucrose
density gradient (Antipenko et al., 1997a
). Fast skeletal muscle light SR vesicles were similarly prepared from the adductor longus muscle of
New Zealand White rabbits. Microsomal protein was estimated by the
biuret procedure with BSA as the standard. The gingerol used in
the present study was 6-gingerol or
1-(4'-hydroxy-3'-methoxyphenyl)-5-hydroxydecan-3-one (Wako BioProducts,
Richmond, VA). Okadaic acid (sodium salt) was obtained from Calbiochem
(La Jolla, CA). Ellagic acid (see Berrebi-Bertrand et al., 1997
, for
structural formula) was purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis,
MO). All other reagents were obtained as described previously
(Antipenko et al., 1997a
,b
).
Ca2+ Uptake Measurements.
Microsomal
Ca2+ uptake was assayed using
45Ca and a filtration procedure. Briefly, the
standard reaction mixture consisted of 40 mM histidine-HCl, pH 6.8, at
37°C, 0.12 M KCl, 5 mM NaN3, 4 mM
phospho(enol)pyruvate, 0.22 mg/ml pyruvate kinase, 2 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM oxalate-Tris, 1 µM okadaic acid, 1 mM ATP, and a CaCl2-EGTA buffer to yield the
Ca2+ concentrations shown in the text as
determined using the computer program MaxChelator and the file
constants BERS.CCM (Bers et al., 1994
). The specific radioactivity was
approximately 1.3 × 105 Bq/µmol at 9 µM
Ca2+ and was progressively increased to a maximum
of 1.3 × 106 Bq/µmol at 0.02 µM, the
lowest Ca2+ concentration tested. The reaction
mixture also contained either 160 U/ml PKA catalytic subunit or an
equivalent amount of heat-denatured PKA catalytic subunit (Antipenko et
al., 1997b
). Microsomes (2.5-5.0 µg/ml microsomal protein) were
added to the temperature-equilibrated reaction mixture to allow the
phosphorylation or control reaction to proceed, and 2 min later,
gingerol or ellagic acid was added to a final concentration of 50 µM
unless otherwise specified in the text. The identical time course was
used for control incubates containing dimethyl sulfoxide, the solvent
for the two compounds. The final concentration of dimethyl sulfoxide
was 2%, which had no detectable effect in any of the assays used in
this study. After a further 2-min incubation,
Ca2+ was added to start the
Ca2+ uptake reaction. Aliquots were removed for
filtration between 1 and 4 min after the start of the reaction.
Ca2+ uptake rates, obtained as a function of
Ca2+ concentration, were fitted to the Hill
equation, V = Vmax/[1 + (Km
(L)/[L])N],
by a nonlinear least-squares procedure using the SigmaPlot software
package (Jandel Corp., San Rafael, CA), where L represents Ca2+ and N is the Hill coefficient.
The presence of gingerol or ellagic acid had no detectable effect on
the ATP-regenerating system or the enzyme-linked ATPase detection
system used in the standard assay mixtures for measurement of
Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-ATPase
activity. In some experiments, the ATP concentration was varied from
0.3 µM to 2 mM. MgATP concentrations, corresponding to
MgATP2
, were calculated as described previously
(Antipenko et al., 1997a
).
Ca2+-ATPase Assay.
The reaction mixture for the
assay of ATPase activity was the same as in the
Ca2+ uptake assay except for the addition of the
enzymes necessary for following oxidation of NADH and the use of
nonradiolabeled CaCl2 (Antipenko et al., 1997a
).
Microsomes were added to the temperature-equilibrated reaction mixture,
followed by the addition of 50 µM gingerol or vehicle 1 min later and
a CaCl2-EGTA buffer 2 min later. The time program
on a Shimadzu UV160U recording spectrophotometer was started on the
addition of the Ca2+. Reactions were linear with
respect to protein concentration and to time for at least 5 min, the
duration the reaction was followed. Ca2+-ATPase
activity was taken as the difference in ATPase activity measured at 9 µM Ca2+ and at 2 mM EGTA.
E2P Formation from Pi and E2P
Decomposition.
Steady-state E2P formation
from Pi and E2P
decomposition were measured as described previously (Antipenko et al.,
1997a
) with the following procedural modifications. Microsomes (0.25 mg/ml) were added to the temperature-equilibrated reaction mixture,
which included 1 µM okadaic acid, followed by the addition of
gingerol or vehicle 1 min later. After a 5-min incubation,
32Pi (2 mM) was added, and
the reaction was terminated 15 s later by the addition of acid.
E2P decomposition was measured using a Bio-Logic
QFM-5 system using drive sequences written specifically for these
experiments (Antipenko et al., 1997a
). The chase solution contained 50 µM gingerol or vehicle alone, so when one volume of the
phosphorylation mixture including the 32P-labeled
microsomes (0.25 mg/ml) was combined with 16 volumes of chase solution,
the final concentration of gingerol or vehicle was 47 µM or 2%, respectively.
Statistical Evaluation. Unless otherwise indicated, data are expressed as mean ± S.E.M. in three or four independent experiments with different microsome preparations. As a result of the well known microsomal variability, control and test experiments were generally carried out on the same day using the same microsome preparation. The statistical significance of differences between values was tested by Student's t test for paired variates, and p <.05 was taken as significant.
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Results |
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A stimulation of Ca2+ uptake observed on
incubation of light cardiac SR vesicles in the presence of gingerol
attained a maximum of about 35% between 40 and 70 µM concentrations
of the compound and diminished with further increases in concentration;
the half-maximally effective concentration was approximately 9 µM
(Fig. 1A). The stimulatory effect of
gingerol was rapid, occurring within 1 min after addition to the
reaction mixture. The magnitude of the stimulatory effect remained
unchanged with incubation for up to 20 min, the longest period tested
(Fig. 1B). Ellagic acid produced a generally similar pattern of
concentration- (Fig. 1A) and time-dependent (data not shown) effects. A
maximally stimulatory concentration of 50 µM of either compound was
used in subsequent experiments.
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Gingerol clearly increased Ca2+ uptake at
Ca2+ concentrations of 0.5 µM and higher when
tested in unphosphorylated (control) microsomes, whereas at lower
concentrations, an increase, if any, was not readily apparent (Fig.
2A). An almost identical pattern of
effects was observed with ellagic acid (Fig. 2B). In microsomes
phosphorylated with PKA, gingerol significantly increased
Ca2+ uptake only at 9 µM
Ca2+ (p <.05) (Fig. 2C). Differences
between control and PKA-treated microsomes tested in the absence of
gingerol were obscured by the fact that the experiments shown in Fig.
2, A and C, had been carried out in different microsome preparations
and on different days. Thus, in these experiments, neither a 27% mean
increase in Vmax(Ca) (1.38 ± 0.10 versus 1.09 ± 0.10 µmol/mg·min) nor a 10% mean decrease
in Km(Ca) (0.48 ± 0.07 versus
0.43 ± 0.03 µM) attributable to treatment with PKA attained
statistical significance in an unpaired Student's t test.
To demonstrate the effect of PKA in experiments carried out
concurrently with the same microsome preparation, we show data for
paired control and PKA-treated microsomes taken from a previous
publication (Fig. 2D). The optimized kinetic parameters obtained from
nonlinear least-squares fits to the Hill equation (see
Experimental Procedures) of the data presented in Fig. 2,
A-C, are shown in Table 1. Significant
increases in Vmax(Ca) of
Ca2+ uptake attributable to treatment of
microsomes with gingerol and ellagic acid were obtained when assays
were carried out in paired experiments (as described in
Experimental Procedures). Neither gingerol nor ellagic acid
produced a significant change in the
Km(Ca) in unphosphorylated microsomes,
whereas in phosphorylated microsomes, gingerol increased
Km(Ca) by 28% and
Vmax(Ca) by 12% (Table 1). In the
paired experiments shown in Fig. 2D, we had previously obtained a
significant 44% increase in Vmax(Ca)
with PKA and a 14% decrease in
Km(Ca). Under none of the conditions tested was there a significant change in the Hill coefficient (Table
1).
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To determine whether the effect of gingerol was the result of stimulation of the Ca2+ pump or of an inhibition of a parallel efflux pathway, Ca2+-ATPase activity was assayed in the presence and absence of 50 µM gingerol at saturating Ca2+ under conditions similar to those used in the Ca2+ uptake assay (Table 2). Gingerol increased Ca2+-ATPase activity to a comparable extent as Ca2+ uptake in both phosphorylated and control microsomes. An unchanged stoichiometric ratio approaching the theoretical value of 2 mol Ca2+ transported/mol ATP hydrolyzed indicates that gingerol produces no uncoupling of the pump from ATP hydrolysis. Moreover, the increase in Ca2+-ATPase activity attributable to gingerol was considerably reduced in the phosphorylated microsomes, which is in agreement with the Ca2+ uptake measurements. The finding of a significant, albeit reduced, increase in Ca2+-ATPase activity in phosphorylated microsomes compared with control microsomes eliminates any possibility that the increase in Ca2+ uptake seen in Fig. 2C at 9 µM Ca2+ was attributable to random experimental variation.
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The foregoing experiments were carried out at 1 mM MgATP. Additional
experiments were performed to determine the effect of gingerol on
Ca2+ uptake at 0 to 10 µM MgATP to detect
changes in Ca2+ uptake activity associated with
regulatory nucleotide binding (Fig. 3).
Ca2+ uptake accelerated markedly between 1.5 and
3 µM MgATP and to a lesser extent as the nucleotide concentration was
increased further in both control and PKA-phosphorylated microsomes.
This pattern of Ca2+ pump activation can be
explained by nucleotide binding to the catalytic site on the
Ca2+ pump protein between 0 and 1.5 µM MgATP,
followed by regulatory nucleotide binding (Wakabayashi and Shigekawa,
1990
; Lu et al., 1993
) above 1.5 µM MgATP. In unphosphorylated
(control) microsomes, gingerol had no detectable effect on
Ca2+ uptake assayed at 0 to 1.5 µM MgATP, above
which gingerol produced a marked inhibition that was statistically
significant at 3 and 5 µM MgATP but was overcome as the MgATP
concentration reached 10 µM. In phosphorylated microsomes, there was
an apparent inhibition of Ca2+ uptake already
below 1.5 µM MgATP, which became statistically significant at 1.5 µM. This inhibition was greatest between 3 and 5 µM, and, as in the
unphosphorylated microsomes, the inhibition was overcome as the
nucleotide concentration was increased to 10 µM.
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Assays of Ca2+ uptake were also carried out
at MgATP concentrations between 0.05 to 2.0 mM to detect any additional
nucleotide-dependent changes in response to gingerol. The magnitude of
the stimulatory effect of gingerol, although different in control
(about 30-40%) and phosphorylated (about 12%) microsomes, remained
relatively constant over the nucleotide concentration range tested
(Fig. 4), and at 1 mM nucleotide, it was
consistent with the stimulation seen in Figs. 1 and 2 and in Table 1.
When fast skeletal muscle microsomes, which contain no PLN (Jorgensen
and Jones, 1986
), were tested, gingerol was found to stimulate
Ca2+ uptake to the approximately the same extent
as was observed in phosphorylated cardiac microsomes (i.e., about 12%)
(Fig. 4).
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To determine whether an increase in E2P decomposition during the catalytic cycle could contribute to the gingerol-induced increase in Ca2+ uptake observed at high Ca2+ concentration and millimolar ATP concentration, both the rate of E2P decomposition and the steady-state E2P formation from Pi were determined. Steady-state E2P formation was significantly decreased by gingerol when measured at 15°C, but as the temperature was increased, the inhibition was greatly diminished (Table 3). In control microsomes, steady-state E2P formation remained constant over the temperature range examined. The lower level of E2P measured under steady-state conditions at 15°C and 50 µM gingerol is consistent with the significant acceleration in the rate of E2P decomposition measured by the rapid-mixing and quench method (Fig. 5). The rapidity of the reaction relative to the time resolution of the available rapid kinetics instrumentation precluded similar measurements at 25° and 37°C.
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Discussion |
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We have shown that gingerol, like PLN phosphorylation, increases
Vmax(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake yet unlike phosphorylation, which decreases
Km(Ca), gingerol has no significant
effect on Km(Ca) and the Hill
coefficient in unphosphorylated light cardiac SR vesicles (Fig. 3 and
Table 1). An increase in Vmax(Ca) of
Ca2+ uptake by the SR may thus be an important
component of the kinetic mechanism by which gingerol exerts the
inotropic and lusitropic effects previously demonstrated in isolated
myocardial preparations (Shoji et al., 1982
; Kobayashi et al., 1988
).
The effects of gingerol and ellagic acid on the kinetic parameters
obtained in the present study differ significantly from those reported
by Berrebi-Bertrand et al. (1997)
(see introduction). Possible reasons
for discrepancies in such kinetic data, including the use of crude
microsome preparations, were discussed in a previous report (Antipenko
et al., 1997b
).
PKA-phosphorylated cardiac microsomes resemble fast skeletal muscle
microsomes in two respects relevant to the present discussion: 1) the
magnitude of the gingerol-induced increase in
Ca2+ uptake assayed at saturating
Ca2+ and mM ATP was similar (i.e., about 12%) in
phosphorylated cardiac and fast skeletal muscle microsomes (Fig. 4),
and 2) gingerol increased Km(Ca) of
Ca2+ uptake, as shown in Table 1 for
phosphorylated cardiac microsomes and reported by Kobayashi et al.
(1987)
for skeletal muscle microsomes. It is unclear whether a
much-reduced gingerol-induced increase in Ca2+
uptake and Ca2+-ATPase activity in phosphorylated
cardiac microsomes, compared with unphosphorylated microsomes, at
saturating Ca2+ is related to incomplete PLN
phosphorylation by PKA, a lack of PLN phosphorylation by
calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, or additive effects of saturating
levels of PKA phosphorylation and a direct action of gingerol on the
Ca2+-ATPase, as discussed further below. The
aforementioned similarities between phosphorylated cardiac and skeletal
muscle microsomes might also be an indication of an as-yet-unidentified
means of regulation involving homologous regions in the membrane
domains of PLN and sarcoplipin (Odermatt et al., 1998
), a protein that is found in fast skeletal muscle SR but lacks the cytoplasmic domain of
PLN.
In view of the significant gingerol-induced increase in
Km(Ca) in the phosphorylated
microsomes (Table 1), the E2 + 2Ca2+
2Ca·E1
transition in the catalytic cycle of the
Ca2+-ATPase is a likely target of the inhibitory
action of gingerol. An inhibition at this step would produce a decrease
in the apparent affinity of the pump for Ca2+ , as was shown for PLN (Cantilina et al., 1993
), which inhibits a substep
of this transition. This conclusion is further supported by the finding
that gingerol significantly inhibits Ca2+ uptake
in the low micromolar MgATP concentration range (3-5 µM or less)
(Fig. 3), at which the E2 + 2Ca2+
2Ca·E1
transition is likely to be accelerated as a result of regulatory
nucleotide binding to the E2 conformation
(Wakabayashi and Shigekawa, 1990
; Lu et al., 1993
). The latter
inhibition is completely overcome as the nucleotide concentration is
increased to 10 µM at saturating Ca2+. Thus,
gingerol appears to inhibit either nucleotide binding or subsequent
nucleotide-dependent activation of the pump in a competitive manner in
contrast to PLN, whose inhibition of the pump is undiminished at ATP
concentrations up to 2 mM (Lu et al., 1993
).
A significant inhibition by gingerol was evident already at lower
micromolar nucleotide concentrations in the phosphorylated microsomes
(2 µM or less) than in the control microsomes (3 and 5 µM) (Fig.
3), suggesting that unphosphorylated PLN may partially protect against
the inhibition and that removal of the inhibition by PLN, whether by
proteolytic cleavage from the membrane or phosphorylation, renders the
pump more vulnerable to inhibition. Consistent with this hypothesis are
the previously reported greater inhibition of
Ca2+ uptake by jasmone in trypsin-treated
microsomes compared with control microsomes (Antipenko et al., 1997a
)
and the greater sensitivity of PKA-phosphorylated microsomes to the
inhibitory effects of thapsigargin (Kijima et al., 1991
). Moreover,
submicellar concentrations of octaethylene glycol dodecyl
monoether (C12E8), which
affects major nucleotide-accelerated steps in the catalytic cycle and, in particular, inhibits E2P decomposition
(Champeil et al., 1986
), almost completely eliminated the increase in
Vmax(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake associated with the removal of the inhibitory influence of PLN
by trypsin treatment but caused no significant change in Vmax(Ca) of control microsomes at
millimolar ATP concentrations (Lu and Kirchberger, 1994
). The
inhibition of Ca2+ uptake by
C12E8 seen in the presence
of saturating Ca2+ in trypsin-treated microsomes
initially became apparent as the nucleotide concentration was increased
above 3 µM to 1 mM and hence was affecting a nucleotide-accelerated
step in the catalytic cycle. At <3 µM MgATP (and saturating
Ca2+),
C12E8 increased
Vmax(ATP) of
Ca2+ uptake associated with nucleotide binding to
the catalytic site. This action is attributable either to dissociation
of inhibitory PLN from the pump or to the known ability of
C12E8 to accelerate the
E2 + 2 Ca2+
2Ca·E1 transition and other major steps in the
catalytic cycle.
The gingerol- or ellagic acid-induced
Vmax(Ca) at saturating
Ca2+ may be interpreted as a direct action of the
compounds on the pump related to their successful competition against
the inhibition by PLN of two or more ATP-accelerated steps in the
catalytic cycle. At saturating Ca2+ and
millimolar ATP concentrations, although not measured in the present
study, the nucleotide-accelerated transport step (i.e., the
E1P·2Ca
E2P + 2Ca)
may contribute most to rate limitation (Champeil and Guillain, 1986
).
Evidence reported by Hughes et al. (1996)
suggests that this step is
regulated by PLN. An acceleration of both the transport step and
E2P decomposition by jasmone may play a role in
the previously demonstrated jasmone-induced increase in
Vmax(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake in cardiac microsomes at 25°C (Antipenko et al., 1997a
). Like
PLN phosphorylation (Antipenko et al., 1997b
), gingerol also increases E2P decomposition (Fig. 5). The more
pronounced ATP-surmountable inhibition of Ca2+
uptake by gingerol at low micromolar ATP concentrations in
phosphorylated microsomes (Fig. 3), as well as its increase in
Km(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake at mM ATP (Table 1) in such microsomes, suggests a direct action
of gingerol on the pump at a nucleotide-related site.
Thus, gingerol, ellagic acid, and other structurally diverse compounds
such as jasmone (Antipenko et al., 1997b
) and
C12E8 (Lu and Kirchberger,
1994
) produce both stimulatory and inhibitory effects on the cardiac SR
Ca2+-ATPase, all of which involve the interaction
of nucleotide with the pump. The increase in
Vmax(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake produced by gingerol in otherwise untreated microsomes is
similar to that produced by PLN phosphorylation when assayed at
millimolar ATP at which the E2 + 2Ca2+
2Ca·E1
transition is already accelerated by regulatory nucleotide (Table 1).
It is noteworthy that in control microsomes the
Km(Ca) of Ca2+
uptake does not differ significantly in the presence and absence of
gingerol (Table 1) despite the suggested inhibitory effect of gingerol
on the E2 + 2Ca2+
2Ca·E1 transition at either subsaturating
Ca2+ or subsaturating MgATP. Such an inhibitory
effect would be masked if gingerol removes the inhibitory effect of PLN
with respect to Km(Ca) resulting in no
net observable change in this parameter.
The interactions among PLN, the Ca2+ pump
protein, and a variety of structurally diverse hydrophobic compounds
obviously are complex. The kinetic effect of the latter compounds on
the Ca2+ pump may depend on their specific
effects on a particular step in the catalytic cycle and whether this
step is rate limiting or becomes rate limiting under a particular set
of conditions. PLN and the inhibitors thapsigargin and cyclopiazonic
acid (Plenge-Tellechea et al., 1998
) all appear to bind to the
E2 conformation of the Ca2+
pump protein and hence will affect E2 + 2Ca2+
2Ca·E1
transition. Moreover, an effect of cyclopiazonic acid on
Ca2+ pump turnover in fast skeletal muscle SR has
been reported to be a function of the compound's stoichiometric
relationship to the pump and the contribution to the observed kinetic
parameters of two different reaction cycles, which are characterized by
different kinetic parameters: one in the presence and the other in the
absence of cyclopiazonic acid. Similarly, in cardiac SR, the observed Vmax(Ca) may depend on the relative
amounts of inhibitory monomeric PLN available for interaction with
Ca2+ pump units on the membrane. Although studies
using in vitro expression systems to study PLN-Ca2+
pump interaction rely on changes in
Km(Ca) as evidence of
PLN-Ca2+ pump interaction, such studies have demonstrated
marked inhibitory activity of monomeric PLN on the pump (Kimura et al.,
1997
).
Thus, an increasing amount of evidence, as described above, suggests a
functional relationship between nucleotide binding and the stimulatory
or inhibitory actions of various hydrophobic or amphoteric compounds,
including PLN, on the cardiac SR Ca2+ pump.
Definition of their precise relationship may be related to the
long-standing question of whether each SR
Ca2+-ATPase molecule contains one or two
nucleotide binding sites (e.g., Dupont et al., 1985
) that account for
the effects of catalytic and regulatory nucleotide. In fast skeletal
muscle SR, evidence exists for the presence of two simultaneous binding
sites for nucleotide analogs that are capable of increasing the rate of Ca2+ pump turnover (Mignaco et al., 1996
).
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication March 16, 1999.
Received for publication November 19, 1998.
1 This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HL15764 (M.A.K.) and DE10754 (A.I.S.) and a grant from the Procter and Gamble Company (A.I.S.).
2 Basic Science Division, New York University College of Dentistry, New York, NY 10010-4086.
Send reprint requests to: M. Kirchberger, Ph.D., Dept. of Physiol./Biophys., Box l2l8, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029. E-mail: mkirch{at}smtplink.mssm.edu
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Abbreviations |
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PLN, phospholamban; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum; PKA, cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase; C12E8, octaethylene glycol dodecyl monoether.
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References |
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