In this work, we set out to identify and characterize the calcium occluded intermediate(s) of the plasma membrane Ca 2؉ -ATPase (PMCA) to study the mechanism of calcium transport. To this end, we developed a procedure for measuring the occlusion of Ca 2؉ in microsomes containing PMCA. This involves a system for overexpression of the PMCA and the use of a rapid mixing device combined with a filtration chamber, allowing the isolation of the enzyme and quantification of retained calcium. Measurements of retained calcium as a function of the Ca 2؉ concentration in steady state showed a hyperbolic dependence with an apparent dissociation constant of 12 ؎ 2.2 M, which agrees with the value found through measurements of PMCA activity in the absence of calmodulin. When enzyme phosphorylation and the retained calcium were studied as a function of time in the presence of La III (inducing accumulation of phosphoenzyme in the E 1 P state), we obtained apparent rate constants not significantly different from each other. Quantification of EP and retained calcium in steady state yield a stoichiometry of one mole of occluded calcium per mole of phosphoenzyme. These results demonstrate for the first time that one calcium ion becomes occluded in the E 1 P-phosphorylated intermediate of the PMCA.The plasma membrane calcium ATPase (PMCA) 3 is a calmodulin-modulated P-type ATPase responsible for the maintenance of low intracellular concentrations of Ca 2ϩ in most eukaryotic cells. It couples the transport of Ca 2ϩ out of cells with the hydrolysis of ATP into ADP and inorganic phosphate. PMCAs consist of a single polypeptide chain of 127,000 to 137,000 Da. Mammalian PMCAs are encoded by four separate genes (PMCA1-4), and additional isoforms are generated via alternative RNA splicing, which augments the number of variants to Ͼ20 (1).The current kinetic model for PMCA function proposes that the enzyme exists in two main conformations, E 1 and E 2 . E 1 has a high affinity for Ca 2ϩ and is readily phosphorylated by ATP, whereas E 2 has a low affinity for Ca 2ϩ and can be phosphorylated by P i . After binding of intracellular Ca 2ϩ to high affinity sites, E 1 can be phosphorylated by ATP with formation of the intermediate E 1 P. After a conformational transition to E 2 P, Ca 2ϩ would be released to the extracellular medium from low affinity sites, followed by the hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme to E 2 and a new conformational transition to E 1 (Fig. 1) (2). During some stages of the reaction cycle, Ca 2ϩ becomes occluded, i.e. trapped in the enzyme machinery while it is transported from one side to the other side of the membrane. The principal aim of this study is to identify and kinetically characterize the intermediate(s) of the PMCA containing occluded calcium. Evidence for occlusion in Na,K-ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2ϩ -ATPase (SERCA) has been well established (3), and a good deal of information exists about the occlusion and deocclusion steps of the transported cations in these pumps. Na ϩ and K ϩ are occluded in the E ...