Abstract
Maintenance of cell calcium homeostasis and transepithelial transport of this cation require its extrusion from the cell against a steep electrochemical gradient. Because it has been proposed that a membrane Ca-ATPase activated by micromolar concentrations of Ca2+ prevailing in the cell participates in these processes, we attempted in this study to determine whether such an enzyme is present in the rabbit nephron. A magnesium-dependent ATPase, maximally activated by Ca2+ (Ca-Mg-ATPase) concentrations between 1.1 and 2.3 microM (apparent Km = 0.3-0.4 microM), was found in all segments of the nephron. Ca-Mg-ATPase (pmol.mm-1.h-1) was highest in the distal convoluted tubule (243) and cortical collecting tubule (208), intermediate in the proximal convoluted tubule (140) and medullary thick ascending limb of Henle's loop (135), and lower in the pars recta (97), cortical thick ascending limb (50), and medullary collecting tubule (51). The enzyme was insensitive to ouabain and vanadate, but was inhibited by ruthenium red in a dose-dependent manner (Ki congruent to 2.10(-6) M). Sodium azide, an inhibitor of mitochondrial ATPase, did not affect Ca-Mg-ATPase, suggesting that the enzyme was located in the plasma membrane. The Ca-Mg-ATPase activity measured in most segments of the rabbit nephron in this study appears sufficient to account in theory for the active component of the unidirectional (lumen-to-bath) calcium flux found in the corresponding region of the nephron with in vitro single tubule microperfusion techniques.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
64 articles.
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