Metabolism of added orthovanadate to vanadyl and high-molecular-weight vanadates by Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
1984; Elsevier BV; Volume: 259; Issue: 21 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0021-9258(18)90689-7
ISSN1083-351X
AutoresGail R. Willsky, Daniel A. White, B C McCabe,
Tópico(s)Nitric Oxide and Endothelin Effects
ResumoThe effect of vanadium oxides on living systems may involve the in vivo conversion of vanadate and vanadyl ions. The addition of 5 mM orthovanadate (VO4(3-), V(V)), a known inhibitor of the (Na,K)-ATPase, to yeast cells stopped growth. In contrast, the addition of 5 mM vanadyl (VO2+, V(IV) stimulated growth. Orthovanadate addition to whole cells is known to stimulate various cellular processes. In yeast, both ions inhibited the plasma membrane Mg2+ ATPase and were transported into the cell as demonstrated with [48V]VO4(3-) and VO2+. ESR spectroscopy has been used to measure the cell-associated paramagnetic vandyl ion, while 51V NMR has detected cell-associated diamagnetic vanadium (e.g. V(V)). Cells were exposed to both toxic (5 mM) and nontoxic (1 mM) concentrations of vanadate in the culture medium. ESR showed that under both conditions, vanadate became cell associated and was converted to vanadyl which then accumulated in the cell culture medium. 51V NMR studies showed the accumulation of new cell-associated vanadium resonances identified as dimeric vanadate and decavanadate in cells exposed to toxic amounts of medium vanadate (5 mM). These vanadate compounds did not accumulate in cells exposed to 1 mM vanadate. These studies confirm that the inhibitory form of vanadium usually observed in in vitro experiments is vanadate, in one or more of its hydrated forms. These data also support the hypothesis that the stimulatory form of vanadium usually observed in whole cell experiments is the vanadyl ion or one or more of its liganded derivatives.
Referência(s)