4.1 Article

Regulation and function of lysine-substituted Na,K pumps in salt adaptation of Artemia franciscana

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE BIOLOGY
Volume 221, Issue 1, Pages 39-49

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00232-007-9083-3

Keywords

Artemia franciscana; Na,K-ATPase; isoform; lysine substitution; salt adaptation; quantitative polymerase chain reaction; occlusion of Tl+ (K+); Na+-dependent phosphorylation; Na+/ATP ratio; site-directed mutagenesis

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The brine shrimp Artemia thrives at extreme conditions of up to 300 g/l salt in hypersaline lakes, but the molecular aspects of this salt adaptation are not clarified. To examine the influence of salt on the expression of two isoforms of Na,K-ATPase, adult Artemia franciscana were cultured for 39 days with the microalga Dunaliella salina as fodder at increasing salt from 30 to 280 g/l. Quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction showed that the abundance of mRNA of the lysine-substituted alpha(2)(KK)-subunit was very low at 30 g/l salt but rose steeply in the range of 70-200 g/l to a level at 200-280 g/l salt, similar to the abundance of the mRNA of the alpha(1)(NN)-subunit, which was insignificantly affected by increasing salt. Site-directed mutagenesis showed that Asn324Lys and Asn776Lys in the alpha(1)-subunit of pig kidney Na,K-ATPase reduced the stoichiometry of Tl-204 binding from 2 to about 1 Tl+(K+) per alpha-subunit and Na+-dependent phosphorylation from ATP to 25-30%. In structure models, the epsilon-amino group of Lys776 is located at cation site 1 in the E1P form and near cation site 2 in the E-2 conformation, while the side chain of Lys324 points away from the cation sites. Salt-induced expression of the alpha(2)(KK)-subunit Na,K-ATPase in A. franciscana may reduce the Na+/ATP ratio and enable the Na,K pump to extrude Na+ against steeper gradients and, thus, contribute to salt adaptation.

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