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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The photoaffinity label 8-azido-ATP has been used to study the effect of inhibition of ATP synthase on ATP-driven reverse electron transfer from succinate to NAD+ ('reversal'), succinate- and NADH-driven ATP synthesis and ATP-Pi exchange. In reversal, where ATPase functions as primary proton pump, inactivation by covalently bound nitreno-ATP results in an inhibition that is proportional to the inactivation of ATP hydrolysis, or, consequently, with the concentration of inactivated ATP synthases. Up to 60% inactivation of the reversal rate does not lead to a decrease in delta mu H+. Inhibition of ATP synthase as secondary proton pump results in case of NADH-driven ATP synthesis in a proportional inhibition, but with succinate as substrate ATP synthesis is less than proportionally inhibited, compared with inactivation of ATP hydrolysis. Inhibition of one of the primary pumps of NADH-driven ATP synthesis, the NADH:Q oxidoreductase, with rotenone also resulted in an inhibition of the rate of ATP synthesis proportional to that of the NADH oxidation. ATP-Pi exchange is much more affected than ATP hydrolysis by photoinactivation with 8-azido-ATP. Contrary to reversal and NADH-driven ATP synthesis the rate of ATP-Pi exchange does not depend linearly, but quadratically on the concentration of active ATP synthases. The observed proportional relationships between inhibition of the primary or secondary pump and the inhibition of the overall energy-transfer reactions do not support the existence of a pool intermediate in energy-transduction reactions. However, the results are consistent with a direct transfer of energy from redox enzymes to ATP synthase and vice versa.
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PMID:Inhibition of energy-transducing reactions by 8-nitreno-ATP covalently bound to bovine heart submitochondrial particles: direct interaction between ATPase and redox enzymes. 286 15

Photophosphorylation and ATPase activities were restored to beta-less Rhodospirillum rubrum chromatophores by their reconstitution with purified beta-subunits of either R. rubrum F1-ATPase (Rr beta) or Escherichia coli F1-ATPase (Ec beta). In the homologous reconstituted system both activities were restored to the same extent, whereas in the hybrid system ATP synthesis was restored to about 10% when the hydrolysis was restored to 200%. This difference in rates of synthesis and hydrolysis was not due to any general uncoupling effect of Ec beta leading to an increased membrane permeability to protons, because with both hybrid and homologous systems an identical light-induced quenching of quinacrine fluorescence was observed. They differed, however, in ATP-driven quenching of quinacrine fluorescence, which was much lower in the hybrid system. These results suggest that the hybrid has a decreased capacity for proton-translocation through the membrane-bound Fo channel during ATP hydrolysis, and probably also during ATP synthesis. The very high ATPase activity of the hybrid system indicates that it might enable the released protons to leak to the outside medium rather than to move inside through the Fo channel. The activities restored by Rr beta and Ec beta exhibit a similar sensitivity to dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, but different sensitivities to oligomycin and to an anti-E. coli F1 (EcF1) antibody. Oligomycin inhibited only the homologous R. rubrum system whereas anti-EcF1 was a much more effective inhibitor of the hybrid system. It is therefore concluded that Rr beta plays a role, that the Ec beta cannot fulfill, in conferring oligomycin sensitivity to the RrFo X F1-ATP synthase-ATPase complex.
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PMID:ATP synthesis and hydrolysis by a hybrid system reconstituted from the beta-subunit of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase and beta-less chromatophores of Rhodospirillum rubrum. 286 45

The sensitivity of the catalytic activities of the D. salina chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) to chemical modification by N-ethylmaleimide has been investigated. When D. salina thylakoid membranes are treated with N-ethylmaleimide, both photophosphorylation and the inducible CF1 ATPase activity are partially (approx. 60%) inhibited. The inhibition of both activities does not require the presence of a proton-motive force, and the inhibition of photophosphorylation is directly related to the N-ethylmaleimide-covalent modification of CF1 as shown by the time-course for the inhibition and the maximal extent of inhibition. Treatment of the purified, latent, D. salina CF1 with low concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide also results in the partial (approx. 60%) inhibition of the inducible ATPase activity (I50 approximately 50 microM). The inhibition does not require the presence of the chemical modifier during the activation of the enzyme. N-ethylmaleimide-induced inhibition of the ATPase activity of either membrane-bound or solubilized CF1 is partially reversed by either prolonged incubation at low concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide or short incubation times at high concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide. The results are interpreted as indicating multiple binding sites on the D. salina CF1 that have different rates of reactivity with N-ethylmaleimide. Those sites (or site) that react rapidly with N-ethylmaleimide cause(s) an inhibition of both ATP synthase and ATPase activities, whereas those sites (or site) that react more slowly partially restore(s) the original ATPase activity. The effects of N-ethylmaleimide on the catalytic activity of D. salina CF1 are probably mediated by N-ethylmaleimide-induced conformational changes of the enzyme.
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PMID:N-Ethylmaleimide inhibition of the catalytic activities of the Dunaliella salina coupling factor 1 (CF1) and the restoration of the inhibition of the CF1 ATPase activity by N-ethylmaleimide. 286 70

Purified F0 from Escherichia coli ATP synthase was labelled with N-(7-dimethylamino-4-methyl-coumarinyl)-maleimide (DACM), a hydrophobic reagent which forms a stable, strongly fluorescent adduct with SH groups. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis clearly demonstrated that subunit b was exclusively labelled, most likely at Cys-21, the only cysteine residue in E. coli F0. The amount of two molecules of DACM bound per F0, which was calculated from the absorption spectrum at 380 nm, is in full agreement with the postulated stoichiometry of two copies of subunit b/F0 complex. Thus the label provides a useful tool for simply detecting subunit b in protein chemical studies. DACM-labelled F0 was incorporated into liposomes and assayed for H+ translocating activity and its capacity to bind purified F1. Whereas the initial rate of H+ uptake was inhibited about 40% the reconstitution of a dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-sensitive F1F0 ATPase activity was completely unaffected. In a second set of experiments we reconstituted an F0 complex from DACM-labelled purified subunit b and an ac complex. In contrast to the results obtained with intact, DACM-labelled F0, both H+ translocating activity and F1 binding capacity were greatly reduced. Our data indicate that cysteine-21, probably together with other amino acids, is involved in maintaining a proper interaction of the hydrophobic N-terminal region of subunit b with the ac complex. This interplay seems to be a prerequisite for at least the in vitro assembly of a functional F0 complex.
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PMID:Modification of subunit b of the F0 complex from Escherichia coli ATP synthase by a hydrophobic maleimide and its effects on F0 functions. 286 95

Aurovertin is a fluorescent antibiotic that binds to the catalytic beta subunits of the mitochondrial F1-ATPase and inhibits ATP synthesis and hydrolysis. ATP, ADP, and membrane energization in submitochondrial particles (SMP) alter the fluorescence of F1-bound aurovertin. These fluorescence changes are considered to be in response to the conformation changes of F1-ATPase. This paper shows that the ATP-induced fluorescence change of aurovertin bound to SMP or complex V (purified ATP synthase complex F0-F1) is inhibited when these preparations are pretreated with oligomycin or N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). This inhibition is not seen with isolated F1-ATPase. These and other results have suggested that modifications of the DCCD-binding protein in the membrane sector (F0) of the ATP synthase complex are communicated to F1, thereby altering the binding characteristics of ATP to the beta subunits. By analogy, it is proposed that modifications (e.g., protonation/deprotonation) of the DCCD-binding protein effected by protonic energy alter the conformation of F1 and bring about the substrate/product binding changes that appear to be essential features of the mechanism and regulation of oxidative phosphorylation.
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PMID:Studies on the mechanism of oxidative phosphorylation: effects of specific F0 modifiers on ligand-induced conformation changes of F1. 286 11

Transcriptional fusions between the phage lambda promotor pR and ATP synthase genes, atp, on plasmid pBR322 were constructed in order to study the effects upon growth and physiology of Escherichia coli of induced overproduction of H+-ATPase subunits. Constitutive overproduction of the complete enzyme had earlier been found to result in decreased growth rate and cytological defects. When a 15-fold overproduction of subunit a alone, or together with subunit c, or with all other ATP synthase subunits was suddenly induced, the following effects were observed. Inhibition of growth and protein synthesis within 10 min of induction, which effect was suppressed by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, also when the chromosomal atp genes coding for the Fo subunits a, b and c were deleted. Partial collapse of the membrane potential delta psi at 4-6 min after induction paralleled by inhibition of thiomethylgalactoside and guanosine transport. Respiration and alpha-methylglucoside transport was not affected. The partial collapse of delta psi, and the specific inhibition of proton-driven transport systems is taken to show that the subunit a has--when suddenly overproduced and inserted into the membrane--a protonophoric activity. It is suggested that this protonophoric activity of subunit a is related to the function of this subunit in the Fo sector in H+-ATPases.
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PMID:Proton conduction by subunit a of the membrane-bound ATP synthase of Escherichia coli revealed after induced overproduction. 286 56

A model for the mechanism of ATP synthase was proposed previously (Cox, G.B., Jans, D.A., Fimmel, A.L., Gibson, F. and Hatch, L. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 768, 201-208) in which the b subunit of the Fo of Escherichia coli rotated. The driving force was proposed to be an interaction between two charged residues in the membrane, namely, Lys-23 of the b subunit and Asp-61 of the c subunit. To test this proposal the Lys-23 of the b subunit was replaced by threonine using site-directed mutagenesis. The resulting mutant, although it had an impairment in the assembly of the F1F0-ATPase, was normal with respect to oxidative phosphorylation. The role of the a subunit, which had been previously proposed to be a structural one, was reassessed by examination of the possible secondary and tertiary structure of the analogous proteins from several sources. Not only did these subunits appear to have very similar structures, but in each there was a highly conserved helical arm on one of the transmembrane helices which could form a proton channel if it interacted with the Asp-61 of the c subunit. A revised model is therefore presented in which five transmembrane helices from the a subunit and two from the b subunit are surrounded by a ring of c subunits. The highly conserved nature of the structures of the a, b and c subunits from various organisms suggests that the model may have relevance for ATP synthases from bacterial plasma membranes, mitochondria and chloroplasts.
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PMID:The mechanism of ATP synthase: a reassessment of the functions of the b and a subunits. 286 82

The effect of phosphate on the inhibition by 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan of the ATPase activity of the proton-translocating ATP synthase in heart submitochondrial particles was investigated. Binding of phosphate protected strongly against the inhibition. A dissociation constant of 0.2 mM was determined for the enzyme X Pi complex and shown to be independent of pH in the range 7.0-8.0. The protective effect of phosphate was mimicked by arsenate but not by sulphate or malonate. Similar results were obtained for the enzyme from Paracoccus denitrificans. 2,4-Dinitrophenol enhanced phosphate binding to the mitochondrial enzyme since the protective effect of phosphate was increased. The data are compatible with protection arising from binding of phosphate to a catalytic site.
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PMID:Characterisation of phosphate binding to mitochondrial and bacterial membrane-bound ATP synthase by studies of inhibition with 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan. 286 72

Two proteinaceous factors, 15K and 9K proteins, which acted together to stabilize the inactivated yeast F1F0-ATPase-inhibitor complex [Hashimoto, T., et al. (1984) J. Biochem. 95, 131-136] were hardly distinguishable from the sigma and epsilon subunits, respectively, of yeast F1-ATPase by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. However, they were clearly distinguishable from these subunits by analyses of the sequences at their amino terminals and by immunoblotting combined with SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The two stabilizing factors and an ATPase inhibitor existed in mitochondria in equimolar ratios to F1-ATPase. These three protein factors were not present in purified F1-ATPase or in F1F0-ATPase preparations, but remained in the mitochondrial membranes after extraction of F1F0-ATPase with Triton X-100. These observations strongly suggest that the two stabilizing factors and the ATPase inhibitor form a regulatory substructure of mitochondrial ATP synthase, in addition to the F1 and F0 subunits.
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PMID:Existence of stoichiometric amounts of an intrinsic ATPase inhibitor and two stabilizing factors with mitochondrial ATP synthase in yeast. 287 60

One polypeptide subunit of cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) and two subunits of the ATPase/ATP synthase (EC 3.6.1.34) in mitochondria of Neurospora crassa are covalently modified with a derivative of pantothenic acid. In asexual spores of a pantothenate auxotroph of Neurospora, deprivation of pantothenic acid blocked the increase of the specific activities of cytochrome c oxidase and the ATPase above the basal activities in the dormant spores. Under cellular panthothenate deprivation, all the subunit peptides of these two enzymes apparently were synthesized and accumulated in the mitochondria, but these subunits were not assembled into normal complexes, and 55Fe-labeled heme a was incorporated into immunoprecipitable cytochrome c oxidase to a very low extent. In pantothenate-supplemented cells, the pantothenate derivative apparently is attached to the free unassembled subunits and appears not to be present in the assembled enzymes. It is likely that cellular deprivation of pantothenate, resulting in failure to modify the three subunit peptides, causes an interruption of the assembly pathway of cytochrome c oxidase and the ATPase/ATP synthase.
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PMID:Pantothenate is required in Neurospora crassa for assembly of subunit peptides of cytochrome c oxidase and ATPase/ATP synthase. 287 72


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