Nucleotides encoding glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, or asparagine residues within the stalk sector of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase were altered by oligonucleotide-directed site-specific mutagenesis. The mutant cDNAs were expressed in COS-1 cells, and mutant Ca2+-ATPases were assayed for Ca2+ transport function and phosphoenzyme formation. Multiple mutations introduced into stalks, 1, 2, and 3 resulted in partial loss of Ca2+ transport function. In most cases, subsequent mutation of individual amino acids in the cluster had no effect on Ca2+ transport activity. In one cluster, however, it was possible to assign the reduction in Ca2+ transport activity to alterations of Asn111 and Asn114. The mutant Asn114 to alanine retained about 50% activity, whereas the change Asn111 to alanine retained only 10% activity. None of the mutations affected phosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP in the presence of Ca2+ or by inorganic phosphate in the absence of Ca2+. The combined experiments suggest that the reduced Ca2+ uptake observed in the Asn111 and Asn114 mutants was not due to a defect in enzyme activation by Ca2+ or in formation of the phosphorylated enzyme intermediate but rather to incompetent handling of the bound Ca2+ following ATP utilization. These results demonstrate that the acidic and amidated residues within the stalk region do not constitute the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites whose occupancy is required for enzyme activation. They may, however, act to sequester cytoplasmic Ca2+ and to channel it to domains that are involved in enzyme activation and cation translocation. Simultaneous mutation of 4 glutamate residues to alanine in the lumenal loop between transmembrane sequences M1 and M2 did not affect Ca2+ transport activity, indicating that acidic residues in this lumenal loop do not play an essential role in Ca2+ transport. Similarly, mutation of Glu192 and Asp196 in the beta-strand domain between stalk helices 2 and 3 did not affect Ca2+ transport activity, although mutation of Asp196 did diminish expression of the protein.