4.6 Article

Cholesterol depletion inhibits Na+,K+-ATPase activity in a near-native membrane environment

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 294, Issue 15, Pages 5956-5969

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.006223

Keywords

lipid-protein interaction; molecular dynamics; Na+; K+-ATPase; pre-steady-state kinetics; cholesterol; lipid-protein interactions; methyl--cyclodextrin; molecular dynamics; partial reaction kinetics; steady-state activity

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP121003548, DP150101112, DP170101732]
  2. NHMRC [App1104259]
  3. National Institutes of Health [U01-HL126273-02]
  4. Medical Advances Without Animals Trust
  5. Danish Medical Research Council
  6. Novo Nordisk Foundation

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Cholesterol's effects on Na , K -ATPase reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles have been extensively studied. However, previous studies have reported both cholesterol-mediated stimulation and inhibition of Na , K -ATPase activity. Here, using partial reaction kinetics determined via stopped-flow experiments, we studied cholesterol's effect on Na , K -ATPase in a near-native environment in which purified membrane fragments were depleted of cholesterol with methyl- -cyclodextrin (m CD). Them CD-treated Na , K -ATPase had significantly reduced overall activity and exhibited decreased observed rate constants forATPphosphorylation(ENa 3 3E2P, i. e. phosphorylation by ATP and Na occlusion from the cytoplasm) and K deocclusion with subsequent intracellular Na binding (E2K 2 3E1Na 3 ). However, cholesterol depletion did not affect the observed rate constant for K occlusion by phosphorylated Na , K -ATPase on the extracellular face and subsequent dephosphorylation (E2P3E2K 2 ). Thus, partial reactions involving cation binding and release at the protein's intracellular side were most dependent on cholesterol. Fluorescence measurements with the probe eosin indicated that cholesterol depletion stabilizes the unphosphorylated E2 state relative to E1, and the cholesterol depletion-induced slowing of ATP phosphorylation kinetics was consistent with partial conversion of Na , K ATPase into the E2 state, requiring a slow E2 3 E1 transition before the phosphorylation. Molecular dynamics simulations of Na , K -ATPase in membranes with 40 mol % cholesterol revealed cholesterol interaction sites that differ markedly among protein conformations. They further indicated state-dependent effects on membrane shape, with the E2 state being likely disfavored in cholesterol-rich bilayers relative to the E1P state because of a greater hydrophobic mismatch. In summary, cholesterol extraction from membranes significantly decreases Na , K -ATPase steady-state activity.

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