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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)

Five- and six-subunit forms of F(1)-ATPase were purified from pea (Pisum sativum L. cv Homesteader) cotyledon submitochondrial particles. Apart from the usual complement of five subunits, the six-subunit enzyme contained an additional 26,500-dalton protein. Both forms of the F(1)-ATPase were used to reconstitute oxidative phosphorylation in F(1)-depleted (ASU) as well as in F(1) and oligomycin-sensitivity conferring protein (OSCP)-depleted (ASUA) bovine mitochondrial membranes. The six-subunit enzyme was considerably more efficient in reconstituting the ATP synthesis than the five-subunit enzyme. Both forms of the enzyme were also able to reconstitute the ATPase activity in ASU- as well as in ASUA-particles. There were substantial differences, however, in the oligomycin sensitivity of the ATPase bound to the ASUA-particles: 20 and 60% inhibition by oligomycin was obtained in the case of the five-subunit and six-subunit enzyme, respectively. We conclude, that the 26,500-dalton protein present in the six-subunit F(1)-ATPase is responsible for the increase in oligomycin sensitivity of the bound enzyme and functions, therefore, as the plant OSCP.
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PMID:Reconstitution of Oxidative Phosphorylation and of Oligomycin-Sensitive ATPase by Five- and Six-Subunit Forms of Pea Mitochondrial F(1)-ATPase. 1666 64

Function of the cyanide-sensitive mitochondrial electron transport system was required for germination of the Zea mays embryo. Respiration of the standard electron transport system (rather than the alternate oxidase) began immediately upon initiation of imbibition. This respiration depended upon cytochrome c oxidase and ATPase that were conserved in an active form in the quiescent embryo rather than upon newly synthesized or assembled enzyme complexes. Immunoprecipitation of radiolabeled subunits of these enzymes showed that the initiation of mitochondrial biogenetic activities, including de novo synthesis of nuclear- and mitochondrial-encoded enzyme subunit peptides, was strongly induced after 6 hours of embryo germination. Undetectable or very low levels of transcripts for subunits 1 and 2 of the F(1)-ATPase and subunit 2 of cytochrome c oxidase were present in the quiescent embryo; these transcripts accumulated rapidly between 6 and 12 hours of germination and their translation products were rapidly synthesized between 6 and 24 hours. An exception was the gene for subunit 9 of the ATPase; transcripts of this mitochondrial gene were abundant in the dry embryo and rapidly accumulated further upon initiation of imbibition; they were translated actively during the first 6 hours. We isolated and sequenced a near full-length cDNA for subunit 2 (beta) of the F(1)-ATPase, and we compared the deduced protein sequence with related sequences of other organisms.
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PMID:Respiration and mitochondrial biogenesis in germinating embryos of maize. 1666 50

F(1)-ATPase mutations in Escherichia coli that changed the strength of hydrogen bonds between the alpha and beta subunits in a location that links the catalytic site to the interface between the beta catch loop and the gamma subunit were examined. Loss of the ability to form the hydrogen bonds involving alphaS337, betaD301, and alphaD335 lowered the k(cat) of ATPase and decreased its susceptibility to Mg(2+)-ADP-AlF(n) inhibition, while mutations that maintain or strengthen these bonds increased the susceptibility to Mg(2+)-ADP-AlF(n) inhibition and lowered the k(cat) of ATPase. These data suggest that hydrogen bonds connecting alphaS337 to betaD301 and betaR323 and connecting alphaD335 to alphaS337 are important to transition state stabilization and catalytic function that may result from the proper alignment of catalytic site residues betaR182 and alphaR376 through the VISIT sequence (alpha344-348). Mutations betaD301E, betaR323K, and alphaR282Q changed the rate-limiting step of the reaction as determined by an isokinetic plot. Hydrophobic mutations of betaR323 decreased the susceptibility to Mg(2+)-ADP-AlF(n)() inhibition and lowered the number of interactions required in the rate-limiting step yet did not affect the k(cat) of ATPase, suggesting that betaR323 is important to transition state formation. The decreased rate of ATP synthase-dependent growth and decreased level of lactate-dependent quenching observed with alphaD335, betaD301, and alphaE283 mutations suggest that these residues may be important to the formation of an alternative set of hydrogen bonds at the interface of the alpha and beta subunits that permits the release of intersubunit bonds upon the binding of ATP, allowing gamma rotation in the escapement mechanism.
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PMID:Hydrogen bonds between the alpha and beta subunits of the F1-ATPase allow communication between the catalytic site and the interface of the beta catch loop and the gamma subunit. 1696 80

The chloroplast-type F(1) ATPase is the key enzyme of energy conversion in chloroplasts, and is regulated by the endogenous inhibitor epsilon, tightly bound ADP, the membrane potential and the redox state of the gamma subunit. In order to understand the molecular mechanism of epsilon inhibition, we constructed an expression system for the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma subcomplex in thermophilic cyanobacteria allowing thorough investigation of epsilon inhibition. epsilon Inhibition was found to be ATP-independent, and different to that observed for bacterial F(1)-ATPase. The role of the additional region on the gamma subunit of chloroplast-type F(1)-ATPase in epsilon inhibition was also determined. By single molecule rotation analysis, we succeeded in assigning the pausing angular position of gamma in epsilon inhibition, which was found to be identical to that observed for ATP hydrolysis, product release and ADP inhibition, but distinctly different from the waiting position for ATP binding. These results suggest that the epsilon subunit of chloroplast-type ATP synthase plays an important regulator for the rotary motor enzyme, thus preventing wasteful ATP hydrolysis.
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PMID:The regulator of the F1 motor: inhibition of rotation of cyanobacterial F1-ATPase by the epsilon subunit. 1697 8

Vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) are responsible for the vesicular storage of l-glutamate and play an essential role in glutamatergic signal transmission in the central nervous system. The molecular mechanism of the transport remains unknown. Here, we established a novel in vitro assay procedure, which includes purification of wild and mutant VGLUT2 and their reconstitution with purified bacterial F(o)F(1)-ATPase (F-ATPase) into liposomes. Upon the addition of ATP, the proteoliposomes facilitated l-glutamate uptake in a membrane potential (DeltaPsi)-dependent fashion. The ATP-dependent l-glutamate uptake exhibited an absolute requirement for approximately 4 mm Cl(-), was sensitive to Evans blue, but was insensitive to d,l-aspartate. VGLUT2s with mutations in the transmembrane-located residues Arg(184), His(128), and Glu(191) showed a dramatic loss in l-glutamate transport activity, whereas Na(+)-dependent inorganic phosphate (P(i)) uptake remained comparable to that of the wild type. Furthermore, P(i) transport did not require Cl(-) and was not inhibited by Evans blue. Thus, VGLUT2 appears to possess two intrinsic transport machineries that are independent of each other: a DeltaPsi-dependent l-glutamate uptake and a Na(+)-dependent P(i) uptake.
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PMID:Vesicular glutamate transporter contains two independent transport machineries. 1704 15

The epsilon subunit of F(1)-ATPase from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 (TF(1)) has been shown to bind ATP. The precise nature of the regulatory role of ATP binding to the epsilon subunit remains to be determined. To address this question, 11 mutants of the epsilon subunit were prepared, in which one of the basic or acidic residues was substituted with alanine. ATP binding to these mutants was tested by gel-filtration chromatography. Among them, four mutants that showed no ATP binding were selected and reconstituted with the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex of TF(1). The ATPase activity of the resulting alpha(3)beta(3)gammaepsilon complexes was measured, and the extent of inhibition by the mutant epsilon subunits was compared in each case. With one exception, weaker binding of ATP correlated with greater inhibition of ATPase activity. These results clearly indicate that ATP binding to the epsilon subunit plays a regulatory role and that ATP binding may stabilize the ATPase-active form of TF(1) by fixing the epsilon subunit into the folded conformation.
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PMID:Role of the epsilon subunit of thermophilic F1-ATPase as a sensor for ATP. 1793 66

The artificial regulation of protein functions is essential for the realization of protein-based soft devices, because of their unique functions conducted within a nano-sized molecular space. We report that self-assembled nanomeshes comprising heat-responsive supramolecular hydrogel fibers can control the rotary motion of an enzyme-based biomotor (F(1)-ATPase) in an on/off manner at the single-molecule level. Direct observation of the interaction of the supramolecular fibers with a microbead unit tethered to the F(1)-ATPase and the clear threshold in the size of the bead required to stop ATPase rotation indicates that the bead was physically blocked so as to stop the rotary motion of ATPase. The temperature-induced formation and collapse of the supramolecular nanomesh can produce or destroy, respectively, the physical obstacle for ATPase so as to control the ATPase motion in an off/on manner. Furthermore, this switching of the F(1)-ATPase motion could be spatially restricted by using a microheating device. The integration of biomolecules and hard materials, interfaced with intelligent soft materials such as supramolecular hydrogels, is promising for the development of novel semi-synthetic nano-biodevices.
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PMID:Thermally responsive supramolecular nanomeshes for on/off switching of the rotary motion of F1-ATPase at the single-molecule level. 1805 83

Glucose oxidase (GOD) microcapsules held together by cross-linker, glutaraldehyde (GA), are fabricated by the layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly technique. The lipid bilayer containing CF(0)F(1)-ATPase was coated on the outer shell of GOD microcapsules. Driven under the proton gradients produced by catalysis of GOD microcapsules for glucose, ATP is synthesized from ADP and inorganic phosphate catalyzed by the ATPase rotary catalysis. The results show here that ATPase reconstituted on the GOD microcapsules retains its catalytic activity.
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PMID:Proton gradients produced by glucose oxidase microcapsules containing motor F0F1-ATPase for continuous ATP biosynthesis. 1909 Jun 67

Four catechins, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, epigallocatechin, epicatechin-3-gallate, and epicatechin, inhibited activity of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase. The two galloyl-type catechins were more potent inhibitors, with IC(50) values of about 1 microM, than were the other two catechins. Inhibition by epigallocatechin-3-gallate was noncompetitive with respect to ATP. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate reduced the affinity of vanadate, shifted the equilibrium of E1P and E2P toward E(1)P, and reduced the rate of the E1P to E2P transition. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate potently inhibited membrane-embedded P-type ATPases (gastric H+, K(+)-ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase) as well as the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, whereas soluble ATPases (bacterial F(1)-ATPase and myosin ATPase) were weakly inhibited. Solubilization of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase with a nonionic detergent reduced sensitivity to epigallocatechin-3-gallate with an elevation of IC50 to 10 microM. These results suggest that epigallocatechin-3-gallate exerts its inhibitory effect through interaction with plasma membrane phospholipid.
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PMID:Epigallocatechin-3-gallate is an inhibitor of Na+, K(+)-ATPase by favoring the E1 conformation. 1953 11

Increases in the power stroke and dwell durations of single molecules of Escherichia coli F(1)-ATPase were measured in response to viscous loads applied to the motor and inhibition of ATP hydrolysis. The load was varied using different sizes of gold nanorods attached to the rotating gamma subunit and/or by increasing the viscosity of the medium using PEG-400, a noncompetitive inhibitor of ATPase activity. Conditions that increase the duration of the power stroke were found to cause 20-fold increases in the length of the dwell. These results suggest that the order of hydrolysis, product release, and substrate binding may change as the result of external load on the motor or inhibition of hydrolysis.
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PMID:Single molecule measurements of F1-ATPase reveal an interdependence between the power stroke and the dwell duration. 1961 Jun 71


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