BIOINORGANIC CHEMISTRY A Short Course Second Edition

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particularly informative, and readers should look for more studies like this one
in the future literature.

6.4 PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER: P - TYPE ATPASES


6.4.1 Introduction,


P - type adenosine triphosphatases (ATPases) are proteins that maintain elec-
trochemical gradients and actively transport ions across biomembranes.^95 The
P - type ATPases, also known as cation pumps, use energy from ATP to facilitate
ion transport. During active transport, phosphorylation of an aspartic acid
residue takes place and a covalent aspartyl - phosphoanhydride intermediate
is formed with ATP. A magnesium ion appears to be necessary for the
phosphorylation to take place. P - type ATPases include Na + , K + - ATPases, H + ,
Na+ - ATPases, and Ca 2+ - ATPases. Na + , K + - ATPases were discussed in Section
5.4.1. Ca 2+ - ATPases, to be discussed in Section 6.4.2 , are found in the
sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle and are known as SERCA
ATPases. This large protein facilitates the re - uptake, into the sarcoplasmic
reticulum, of cytosolic Ca 2+ released during muscle contraction. SERCA is also
involved in signal pathways using calcium as a secondary messenger.

6.4.2 Calcium P - Type ATPases
Some sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum (SR) Ca 2+ - ATPases (SERCA) are P - type
ATPases that play a major role in muscle contraction - relaxation cycles and
are responsible for transporting calcium into the lumen of the sarcoplasmic
reticulum. Some defi nitions are useful in the discussion of Ca 2+ - ATPases:


  1. Every eukaryotic cell has three parts: a membrane with channels to let
    materials into and out of the cell, cytoplasm containing organelles and
    the cytosol, and a nucleus, containing the cell ’ s chromosomes, or genetic
    material. The cytoplasm contains everything within the cell, except the
    nucleus.

  2. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is responsible for the production of the
    protein and lipid components of most of the cell ’ s organelles. The ER
    contains a large number of folds, but the membrane forms a single sheet
    enclosing a single closed sac. This internal space is called the ER lumen.
    The smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in muscle cells contains the
    vesicles and tubules that serve as a store of calcium ions. These are
    released as one step in the muscle contraction process. Calcium pumps,
    Ca2+ - ATPases, serve to move the calcium from the cytoplasm to the ER
    or SR lumen.

  3. The sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) functions to uptake calcium from the
    sarcoplasm (the cytoplasm of muscle fi ber). The sarcoplasmic reticulum


PHOSPHORYL TRANSFER: P-TYPE ATPASES 327
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