Plesner I W, Plesner L
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1981 Nov 6;648(2):231-46. doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(81)90039-0.
The expressions for the kinetic constants corresponding to the steady state model for hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase proposed recently are analyzed with the object of determining the rate constants. The theoretical background for the necessary procedures is described. The results of this analysis are: (1) A small class (four) of rate constants are determined directly by the previously published values of the kinetic constants. (2) For a somewhat larger class of rate constants upper and lower bounds may be established. For several rate constants the upper and lower bounds differ by less than a factor 1.6 (for the "(Na+ + K+)-enzyme", i.e. the enzyme activity with K+ and millimolar substrate concentration) and 1.2 (for the "Na+-enzyme",i.e. the activity at micromolar substrate concentrations). (3) Experiments on inhibition by K+ of the Na+-enzyme at various Mg2+ concentrations are reported and analyzed. With the additional assumption that the rate constants governing the addition to ATP of Mg2+ is independent of whether or not ATP is bound to an enzyme molecule, a set of consistent values for all the 23 rate constants in the mechanism may be obtained. (4) The values of some rate constants lend further support to the contention discussed in a previous paper that the enzyme hydrolyzes ATP along two kinetically distinct pathways, depending on the presence of K+ and on the concentration of substrate, without the necessity of having more than one active substrate site per enzyme unit at any time. (5) The results show that while the two enzyme forms, the "Na+-enzyme" E1 and the "K+-enzyme" E2K, add substrate with (second order) rate constants of the same order of magnitude (differing only by a factor of four in favor of the former), the rate constants for the reverse processes differ by a factor of 100, being largest for the K+-enzyme. This is the main reason for the large difference in the Michaelis constants for the two forms reported previously. (6) Compatibility of the model with the well-known rapid dephosphorylation of the phosphorylated enzyme in the presence of K+ requires the presence, at non-zero steady state concentration, of an enzyme-potassium-phosphate intermediate, which is acid labile and is therefore not detected as a phosphorylated enzyme using conventional methods.
对最近提出的由(Na⁺ + K⁺)-ATP酶催化ATP水解的稳态模型所对应的动力学常数表达式进行了分析,目的是确定速率常数。描述了必要步骤的理论背景。该分析结果如下:(1)一小类(四个)速率常数可直接由先前发表的动力学常数数值确定。(2)对于稍大一类的速率常数,可以确定其上限和下限。对于几个速率常数,上限和下限的差异小于1.6倍(对于“(Na⁺ + K⁺)-酶”,即在有K⁺和毫摩尔底物浓度时的酶活性)和1.2倍(对于“Na⁺-酶”,即在微摩尔底物浓度时的活性)。(3)报告并分析了在不同Mg²⁺浓度下K⁺对Na⁺-酶抑制作用的实验。在额外假设控制Mg²⁺添加到ATP的速率常数与ATP是否结合到酶分子无关的情况下,可以获得该机制中所有23个速率常数的一组一致值。(4)一些速率常数的值进一步支持了前一篇论文中讨论的论点,即该酶根据K⁺的存在和底物浓度沿着两条动力学上不同的途径水解ATP,而无需每个酶单位在任何时候都有多个活性底物位点。(5)结果表明,虽然两种酶形式,即“Na⁺-酶”E1和“K⁺-酶”E2K,以(二级)速率常数添加底物,其量级相同(仅相差四倍,前者更有利),但反向过程的速率常数相差100倍,对K⁺-酶来说最大。这是先前报道的两种形式的米氏常数存在巨大差异的主要原因。(6)该模型与在K⁺存在下磷酸化酶的快速去磷酸化这一众所周知的现象的兼容性要求在非零稳态浓度下存在一种酶 - 钾 - 磷酸盐中间体,它对酸不稳定,因此使用传统方法不能作为磷酸化酶被检测到。