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1 higher affinity for the cation-free form of phosphoenzyme.
2 suggests that GFP-Spf1 accumulated the E1~P phosphoenzyme.
3 es at a slow rate involving alkali-resistant phosphoenzyme.
4 of phosphorylation and the maximal level of phosphoenzyme.
5 he global structure of this low fluorescence phosphoenzyme.
6 e 6-phosphate, followed by hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme.
7 r polypeptide also formed a Ca(2+)-dependent phosphoenzyme.
8 binding to and release from the Na,K-ATPase phosphoenzyme; a value of 130 s(-1) for k(2), a rate con
9 ith an initial burst involving alkali labile phosphoenzyme (absent in D1027N and C983A/C985A mutants)
10 measured low-affinity ATP binding to stable phosphoenzyme analogues, demonstrating that the E1-P to
11 s so primarily by enhancing the level of the phosphoenzyme and only when ATP is used as the phosphate
12 es the first characterization of a P5 ATPase phosphoenzyme and points to Ca(2+) as a modifier of its
13 gher Na+ concentrations reduced the level of phosphoenzyme and stimulated Na-ATPase activity in the a
23 re on the characteristics of E(1), E(2), and phosphoenzyme conformations were examined by measuring b
24 ) selective inward facing sites, whereas the phosphoenzyme contains K(+) selective outward facing sit
26 -phospholamban had any effect on the rate of phosphoenzyme decay relative to Ca-ATPase expressed alon
33 eady-state accumulation of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P), and a rapid phase of EGTA-induced p
40 bile and driven by Brownian motion to elicit phosphoenzyme formation and calcium transport, respectiv
41 t of Cys(119) by alanine or serine abrogates phosphoenzyme formation and phosphohydrolase activity.
42 f the ATPase mechanism (i.e., Ca2+ dependent phosphoenzyme formation and thapsigargin sensitivity) ar
44 affinity of ATP, (ii) the maximal extent of phosphoenzyme formation by ATP, (iii) the rate of steady
46 orm an intermediate state, which facilitates phosphoenzyme formation from ATP upon occupancy of the s
50 ons of ADP are shown to increase the rate of phosphoenzyme formation of E. coli succinyl-coenzyme A (
51 amics of E, E x ATP, or E-P, indicating that phosphoenzyme formation or nucleotide binding result in
52 amban had any effect on the apparent rate of phosphoenzyme formation relative to that of Ca-ATPase ex
53 Although Gln-446 is not essential for the phosphoenzyme formation step, it plays an important role
54 hosphate (P(i)) release concomitant with the phosphoenzyme formation studies showed that L37A-phospho
56 s are tightly constrained by ATP binding and phosphoenzyme formation, and this constraint must be ove
57 ver, the rates (but not the final levels) of phosphoenzyme formation, as well the rates of its hydrol
58 ot interfere with high-affinity ATP binding, phosphoenzyme formation, or phosphoenzyme hydrolysis.
66 etin increased the steady-state formation of phosphoenzyme from ATP or Pi, but higher quercetin decre
67 and the probability of calcium pump forming phosphoenzyme from bound P(i) (P(c) = 0.04 +/- 0.03) was
69 present crystal structures representing the phosphoenzyme ground state (E2P) and a dephosphorylation
70 that at this resolution the low fluorescence phosphoenzyme had a structure similar to that of the nat
71 e site and strongly stimulates rate-limiting phosphoenzyme hydrolysis, and we named it "substrate-lik
75 of ~0.3-1 mumol of P(i)/mg/min and formed a phosphoenzyme in a simple reaction medium containing no
77 dylserine, ATPase II would be accumulated as phosphoenzyme in the presence of ATP, resulting in the i
78 ke, the formation and decomposition of SERCA phosphoenzyme intermediate (E-P) in mouse cardiac homoge
79 ) ATPases utilize ATP through formation of a phosphoenzyme intermediate (E-P) whereby phosphorylation
81 ng: 1) P5N-1 with bound Mg(II) at 2.25 A, 2) phosphoenzyme intermediate analog at 2.30 A, 3) product-
82 at despite sharing an HCxxxxxR(S/T) motif, a phosphoenzyme intermediate and a core alpha/beta-fold wi
83 ction of the cycle and also to form ATP from phosphoenzyme intermediate and ADP in the reverse direct
84 tion occurs in two steps: the formation of a phosphoenzyme intermediate and release of beta-D-fructos
85 n, activated MKP3 catalyzes formation of the phosphoenzyme intermediate approximately 100-fold faster
86 Our results demonstrate that ATP8A2 forms a phosphoenzyme intermediate at the conserved aspartate (A
88 rein is based on the formation of a covalent phosphoenzyme intermediate during substrate turnover.
89 sual among family members in that the common phosphoenzyme intermediate exists as a stable ground-sta
90 strates that Asp128 plays a role in both the phosphoenzyme intermediate formation (k2) and breakdown
91 s been proposed and herein investigated: (1) phosphoenzyme intermediate formation and (2) phosphoenzy
92 2+)- and Mn(2+)-dependent ATP hydrolysis and phosphoenzyme intermediate formation in forward (ATP) an
93 conclude that in addition to common (P-type) phosphoenzyme intermediate formation, SERCA and ATP7A/B
95 is explains why phosphoryl transfer from the phosphoenzyme intermediate in PTPases can only occur to
97 P hydrolysis indicated that formation of the phosphoenzyme intermediate is approximately 20 times fas
101 ults indicate that the phosphate bond of the phosphoenzyme intermediate of H(+)-ATPases is labile in
103 ities were measured, and the turnover of the phosphoenzyme intermediate was close to the wild-type en
107 of N796 and E309 are both required to form a phosphoenzyme intermediate with ATP in the forward direc
108 ru-6-P + Pi) has been shown to proceed via a phosphoenzyme intermediate with His258 phosphorylated, a
109 Michaelis complex of an inactive mutant, the phosphoenzyme intermediate, and the product complex, a f
110 Mn(2+), and Zn(2+) stimulated formation of a phosphoenzyme intermediate, consistent with the transloc
111 cysteine side chain of the protein to form a phosphoenzyme intermediate, has been studied by combinin
112 cement general base in the hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme intermediate, rescuing some of the activit
113 in proximity to the phosphoryl group of the phosphoenzyme intermediate, thus increasing the rate of
114 r defined by the isolation of a radiolabeled phosphoenzyme intermediate, which identified a conserved
115 he absence of copper, to form a low-turnover phosphoenzyme intermediate, with a conformation similar
116 atalytic site yielding stable analogs of the phosphoenzyme intermediate, with properties similar to E
128 The structure is comparable to that of a phosphoenzyme intermediate: BeF(3)(-) is bound to Asp-11
129 Thereby, Ca(2+) and/or nucleotide-bound phosphoenzyme intermediates accumulate and undergo uncou
131 ther phosphatases that function via covalent phosphoenzyme intermediates, ComB can catalyze a transph
135 trometry demonstrates that the alkali stable phosphoenzyme involves Ser(478) and Ser(481) (NMBD), Ser
136 of three sodium ions, and hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme is associated with an influx of two potass
138 56A mutant enzyme were unsuccessful, but the phosphoenzyme is detected in the wild type, H390A, R255A
139 lity as well as the low fluorescence of this phosphoenzyme is due to a fluorescein-mediated cross-lin
140 37A-phospholamban decreased the steady-state phosphoenzyme level to a greater extent (45%) than did w
143 e corresponded to 10% of total protein, with phosphoenzyme levels, catalytic turnover and Ca(2+) tran
147 other hand, subsequent (forward or reverse) phosphoenzyme processing is sensitive to activation ener
148 Previous work characterized an ultrastable phosphoenzyme produced first by labeling with fluorescei
149 results do not support the intermediacy of a phosphoenzyme-pyruvyl enolate complex in PEP mutase cata
153 an inhibitory effect on the formation of the phosphoenzyme similar to that of Ca(2+) TheKmfor ATP in
158 x but dissociates with lower affinity as the phosphoenzyme undergoes a further conformational change
159 Here we demonstrate the formation of a BVP phosphoenzyme upon reaction with [gamma-(32)P]ATP and id
160 ed that the formation of the Spf1p catalytic phosphoenzyme was fast in a reaction medium containing A
161 tivity, suggesting that the formation of the phosphoenzyme was not the limiting step of the ATP hydro
162 2.7.4.1) of Escherichia coli, an N-P-linked phosphoenzyme was previously identified as the intermedi
163 To study the structural properties of this phosphoenzyme, we used cryoelectron microscopy of two-di
165 metals drive the formation of an acid-stable phosphoenzyme with apparent affinities similar to those
166 ) is expected to mimic properties of the E2P phosphoenzyme, yet with unknown characteristics of ion a