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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 12, 399-408, Copyright © 1976 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
1 Department of Pharmacology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
[12
-3H]Digoxigenin was prepared by the reduction of 12-dehydrodigoxigenin with
NaB3H4. Binding to the sodium- and potassium-dependent adenosine triphosphatase
was studied at room temperature. Digoxigenin bound to the enzyme with high affinity.
This binding was eliminated by prior ouabain treatment and was dependent on the
presence of ligands. As in cardiac glycoside binding, mixtures of Mg2+ and Pi or of Na+,
Mg2+, and ATP were both effective as ligands. Scatchard plots of binding were linear
and showed that the dissociation constant did not change at different concentrations of
each ligand except in the very low concentration range, but that the number of binding
sites on the enzyme was reduced on descreasing the ligand concentration. The present
results show that the binding of digoxigenin to the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase does not follow
the usual equation representing a reversible reaction. At saturating concentrations of
ligands, i.e., 2 mM Mg2+ and 2 mM Pi, or 50 mM Na+, 2 mM Mg2+, and 2 mM ATP, the
number of binding sites was close to the number of ouabain binding sites for each set of
ligands. The dissociation constant was 0.041 µM in the Mg2+-Pi system and 0.078 µM in
the Na+-Mg2+-ATP system. These dissociation constants are lower than the I50 value of
digoxigenin (0.4 µM) under the conditions used for assay.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author thanks Dr. Lowell E. Hokin for his
kind help with the manuscript, Drs. W. W. Cleland
and L. A. Fahien, for their valuable discussions, and
Mrs. Mary Lochner, for preparation of beef microsomes.