1. Academic Validation
  2. Caloxin: a novel plasma membrane Ca2+ pump inhibitor

Caloxin: a novel plasma membrane Ca2+ pump inhibitor

  • Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2001 Apr;280(4):C1027-30. doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.2001.280.4.C1027.
J Chaudhary 1 M Walia J Matharu E Escher A K Grover
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicine, McMaster University, 1200 Main St., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8N 3Z5.
Abstract

Plasma membrane (PM) Ca2+ pump is a Ca+-Mg2+-ATPase that expels Ca2+ from cells to help them maintain low concentrations of cytosolic Ca2+ . There are no known extracellularly acting PM Ca2+ pump inhibitors, as digoxin and ouabain are for Na+ pump. In analogy with digoxin, we define caloxins as extracellular PM Ca2+ pump inhibitors and describe caloxin 2A1. Caloxin 2A1 is a peptide obtained by screening a random peptide phage display library for binding to the second extracellular domain (residues 401-413) sequence of PM Ca2+ pump isoform 1b. Caloxin 2A1 inhibits Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase in human erythrocyte leaky ghosts, but it does not affect basal Mg2+-ATPase or Na+-K+-ATPase in the ghosts or Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase in the skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. Caloxin 2A1 also inhibits Ca2+-dependent formation of the 140-kDa acid-stable acylphosphate, which is a partial reaction of this Enzyme. Consistent with inhibition of the PM Ca2+ pump in vascular endothelium, caloxin 2A1 produces an endothelium-dependent relaxation that is reversed by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester. Thus caloxin 2A1 is a novel PM Ca2+ pump inhibitor selected for binding to an extracellular domain.

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