4.6 Article

Site-directed chemical labeling of extracellular loops in a membrane protein -: The topology of the Na,K-ATPase α-subunit

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 275, Issue 25, Pages 19185-19191

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M000641200

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL30315] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM39500] Funding Source: Medline

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We have mapped the membrane topology of the renal Na,K-ATPase alpha-subunit by using a combination of introduced cysteine mutants and surface labeling with a membrane impermeable Cys-directed reagent, N-biotinylaminoethyl methanethiosulfonate. To bean our investigation, two cysteine residues (Cys(911) and Cys(964)) in the wild-type alpha-subunit were substituted to create a background mutant devoid of exposed cysteines (Lutsenko, S., Daoud, S., and Kaplan, J. H. (1997) J. Biol, Chem. 272, 5249-5255). Into this background construct were then introduced single cysteines in each of the five putative extracellular loops (P118C, T309C, L793C, L876C, and M973C) and the resulting alpha-subunit mutants were co-expressed with the beta-subunit in baculovirus-infected insect cells. All of our expressed Na,K-ATPase mutants were functionally active. Their ATPase, phosphorylation, and ouabain binding activities were measured, and the turnover of the phosphoenzyme intermediate was close to the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that they are folded properly in the infected cells. Incubation of the insect cells with the cysteine-selective reagent revealed essentially no labeling of the alpha-subunit of the background construct and labeling of all five mutants with single cysteine residues in putative extracellular loops. Two additional mutants, V969C and L976C, were created to further define the M9M10 loop. The lack of labeling for these two mutants showed that although Met(973) is apparently exposed, Val(969) and Leu(976) are not, demonstrating that this method may also be utilized to define membrane aqueous boundaries of membrane proteins. Our labeling studies are consistent with a specific 10-transmembrane segment model of the Na,K-ATPase alpha-subunit. This strategy utilized only functional Na,K-ATPase mutants to establish the membrane topology of the entire alpha-subunit, in contrast to most previously applied methods.

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