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Query: EC:3.6.3.14 (
ATP synthase
)
7,042
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, expression of functional
F1-ATPase
requires two proteins encoded by the ATP11 and ATP12 genes. Mutations in either gene block some crucial late step in assembly of F1, causing the alpha and beta subunits to accumulate in mitochondria as inactive aggregates (Ackerman, S. H., and Tzagoloff, A. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 4986-4990). In the present study we have cloned and determined the sequence of ATP11. The encoded product is protein of 37 kDa with no obvious homology to any known protein. In vitro import assays of ATP11 precursor and immunochemical evidence indicate that the protein is located in mitochondria. A fusion was made between ATP11 and a short sequence coding for 78 amino acids with the biotination signal of bacterial transcarboxylase. The protein expressed from this construct complements atp11 mutants, indicating that the addition of the extra 78 amino acids at the carboxyl terminus of the ATP11 protein does not compromise its function. The hybrid protein is detected in mitochondria with antibodies and with
peroxidase
-conjugated avidin. Biotinated ATP11 protein can be partially purified by affinity chromatography on monomeric or tetrameric avidin coupled to Sepharose. A fraction eluted from the avidin column and enriched for the biotinated ATP11 protein also contains the alpha and beta subunits of
F1-ATPase
.
...
PMID:Characterization of ATP11 and detection of the encoded protein in mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 153 96
The ratio between the amount of oligomycin-sensitivity-conferring protein (OSCP) and the amount of the alpha and beta subunits of
F1-ATPase
in the mitochondria has been determined by a method combining electrophoresis, electrotransfer and immunotitration with monoclonal antibodies. The peptides separated in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were blotted to nitrocellulose sheets by electrotransfer. The nitrocellulose sheets were incubated with 125I-labelled purified monoclonal antibodies specific to various peptides. The 125I-labelled immune complexes were located by immunodecoration using
peroxidase
-conjugated second antibodies and the blotted peptides were revealed with H2O2 and alpha-naphthol. The amount of immune complex present on the nitrocellulose was determined by counting the radioactivity present on the spots. The amount of peptide blotted is directly proportional to the amount of protein loaded on the electrophoresis. By comparing standard curves made with the isolated proteins to the values obtained in the presence of various amounts of the membrane-protein complex, one can calculate the content of this peptide in the membrane. It was found that the mitochondrial membrane contains 2 mol of OSCP per mol of F1.
...
PMID:Stoichiometry of the oligomycin-sensitivity-conferring protein (OSCP) in the mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase determined by an immunoelectrotransfer blot technique. 286 72
This communication presents the results obtained in tubular aggregates of 24 enzyme histochemical techniques for demonstrating activity of oxidoreductases, transferases, hydrolases and isomerases. The activity characteristics of the tubular aggregates in m. gluteus medius of 18 patients with diseases of the neuromuscular system were almost identical. A high activity of the mitochondrial enzymes, NADPH: tetrazolium oxidoreductase, NADH:tetrazolium oxidoreductase and cytochrome c oxidase, could be shown in the pathological structures, whereas the activity of the mitochondrial enzymes, glycerol-3-phosphate:menadione oxidoreductase, succinate:PMS oxidoreductase, malate:NAD+ oxidoreductase and isocitrate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, and the partial mitochondrial enzymes, malate:NADP+ oxidoreductase and isocitrate:NADP+ oxidoreductase, was very slight or even absent. There was a moderate to strong activity of the glycolytic enzymes lactate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, phosphofructokinase, phosphoglucomutase and glucose phosphate isomerase. In contrast, the activity of alpha-glucan phosphorylase was slight. The activity of phosphogluconate:NADP+ oxidoreductase, glucose-6-phosphate:NADP+ oxidoreductase and 5'-nucleotidase was slight, whereas there was no activity of myosin ATPase and
mitochondrial ATPase
, acid phosphatase or alkaline phosphatase. The high activity of AMP-deaminase was very striking. The activity of
peroxidase
was moderate. Results obtained with adsorption studies point to adsorption of some of the enzymes studied to the tubular aggregates in vivo and this phenomenon very probably determined the histochemical characteristics of these structures.
...
PMID:Histochemical features of tubular aggregates in diseased human skeletal muscle fibres. 317 98
The combined use of proteolytic digestion and
lactoperoxidase
catalyzed labelling with [125I] applied to membrane-bound or soluble pure
F1-ATPase
from Micrococcus lysodeikticus has allowed us to establish the topography of its alpha, beta, gamma and delta subunits within the protein molecule and with respect to the plane of the membrane. The beta subunit is most externally located to the membrane bilayer looking towards the cytoplasmic face, a position consistent with its proposed catalytic role. The alpha and gamma subunits lie in an intermediate layer between the beta subunits and the membrane, in which the gamma subunit occupies a central position within the
F1-ATPase
molecule in contact with the alpha subunit. The delta subunit appears to be tightly bound to the F0 component of the ATPase complex, probably buried in the membrane bilayer. A molecular arrangement of M. lysodeikticus ATPase is proposed that, taking into account the subunit stoichiometry alpha 3 beta 3 gamma 2 delta 2 (MW 420 000), accommodates the role assigned to each subunit and most, if not all, the known properties of this bacterial energy-transducing protein.
...
PMID:Topography of the subunits of Micrococcus lysodeikticus F1-ATPase. 622 69
Gossypol occurs naturally in the pigment glands in cotton. It has a role in protecting cotton plants from insect pests such as bollworms, yet it was not toxic to the cotton leafworm larvae Spodoptera littoralis up to 2-5% concentration in artificial diet or at 125 micrograms/ larva by topical application. The compound inhibited protease and lipid
peroxidase
activities in larvae with in vitro I50 values of 1.5 X 10(-3)M, and 4.4 X 10(-4)M respectively. When gossypol was fed to Spodoptera larvae, it stimulated the microsomal N-demethylase in vitro. This inductive effect was time-dependent similar to that of phenobarbital. Gossypol stimulates ATPase at lower concentrations and inhibited it at higher concentrations. The I50 for
mitochondrial ATPase
was 1.7 X 10(-4)M, while the corresponding values for DDT and fenvalerate were 1.1 X 10(-4)M and 7.0 X 10(-4)M respectively. Gossypol at 1.5% concentration in the diet reduced the larval weight to 50% of the control within two days, and increased the duration of each larval stage. The number of eggs and their hatchability was seriously decreased in larvae treated for three consecutive generations. Such an effect can be attributed to the ability of gossypol to interfere with protein bio-synthesis.
...
PMID:Gossypol as an inducer or inhibitor in Spodoptera littoralis larvae. 645 17
The arrangement of the proton-translocating formate dehydrogenase of the anaerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli within the cytoplasmic membrane was examined by direct covalent modification with non-membrane-permeant reagents. Three methods were employed,
lactoperoxidase
-catalysed radioiodination, labelling with diazotized [125I] di-iodosulphanilic acid and labelling with diazobenzene [35S] sulphonate. All three procedures yield consistent with the view that the two larger subunits of the enzyme, Mr 110000 and 32000, both occupy transmembranous locations within the membrane. In each case the modification of the Ca2+ or Mg2+-activated
F1-ATPase
was monitored, and all reagents employed correctly located this enzyme at the cytoplasmic face of the membrane. A procedure involving agglutination with specific antibodies is described which appears to fractionate membrane vesicles of mixed orientation into two populations, one with the same membrane orientation as that of spheroplasts and the other opposite orientation.
...
PMID:The organization of formate dehydrogenase in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli. 703 6
The organization of the membrane-bound hydrogenase from Escherichia coli was studied by using two membrane-impermeant probes, diazotized [125I]di-iodosulphanilic acid and
lactoperoxidase
-catalysed radioiodination. The labelling pattern of the enzyme obtained from labelled spheroplasts was compared with that from predominantly inside-out membrane vesicles, after recovery of hydrogenase by immunoprecipitation. The labelling pattern of
F1-ATPase
was used as a control for labelling at the cytoplasmic surface throughout these experiments. Hydrogenase (mol.wt. approx. 63 000) is transmembranous. Crossed immunoelectrophoresis with anti-(membrane vesicle) immunoglobulins, coupled with successive immunoadsorption of the antiserum with spheroplasts, confirmed the location of hydrogenase at the periplasmic surface. Immunoadsorption with sonicated spheroplasts suggests that the enzyme is also exposed at the cytoplasmic surface. Inside-out vesicles were prepared by agglutination of sonicated spheroplasts, and the results of immunoadsorption using these vesicles confirms the location of hydrogenase at the cytoplasmic surface.
...
PMID:The organization of hydrogenase in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli. 703 17
Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies were undertaken to determine whether accumulation of subunit c of mitochondrial
ATP synthase
could be detected microscopically in fibroblasts cultured from patients with late infantile and with juvenile Batten disease. Cells were grown for five weeks with and without colchicine to inhibit cell division, and were studied grown on slides, as cytospin preparations or as centrifuged pellets. The two different immunohistochemical detection methods used (
peroxidase
/DAB and immunogoldsilver) gave different results, but neither method indicated any accumulation of subunit c. There was no ultrastructural or electronhistochemical evidence of storage. The published biochemical results which give apparently conflicting evidence of excess amounts of subunit c in cultured fibroblasts can be explained by quantitative differences and sensitivity of the detection methods.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic studies on subunit c in cultured fibroblasts in late infantile and juvenile Batten disease. 915 24
The effects of Hg(II) on bioenergetic and oxidative status of rat renal cortex mitochondria were evaluated both in vitro, and in vivo 1 and 24 h after treatment of animals with 5 mg HgCl2/kg i.p. The parameters assessed were mitochondrial respiration, ATP synthesis and hydrolysis, glutathione content, lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, and activity of antioxidant enzymes. At low concentration (5 microM) and during a short incubation time, Hg(II) uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation while at slightly higher concentration or longer incubation time the ion impaired the respiratory chain. The rate of ATP synthesis and the phosphorylation potential of mitochondria were depressed, although inhibition of ATP synthesis did not exceed 50%. In vivo, respiration and ATP synthesis were not affected 1 h post-treatment, but were markedly depressed 24 h later. ATP hydrolysis by submitochondrial particle
FoF1-ATPase
was inhibited (also by no more than 50%) both in vitro, and in vivo 1 and 24 h post-treatment. Hg(II) induced maximum ATPase inhibition at about 1 microM concentration but did not have a strong inhibitory effect in the presence of Triton X-100. Oxidative stress was not observed in mitochondria 1 h post-treatment. However, 24 h later Hg(II) reduced the GSH/GSSG ratio and increased mitochondrial lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation, as well as inhibited GSH-
peroxidase
and GSSG-reductase activities. These results suggest that the following sequence of events may be involved in Hg(II) toxicity in the kidney: (1) inhibition of
FoF1-ATPase
, (2) uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation, (3) oxidative stress-associated impairment of the respiratory chain, and (4) inhibition of ATP synthesis.
...
PMID:Hg(II)-induced renal cytotoxicity: in vitro and in vivo implications for the bioenergetic and oxidative status of mitochondria. 945 Jun 45
Treatment of Arabidopsis cell culture for 16 h with H2O2, menadione or antimycin A induced an oxidative stress decreasing growth rate and increasing DCF fluorescence and lipid peroxidation products. Treated cells remained viable and maintained significant respiratory rates. Mitochondrial integrity was maintained, but accumulation of alternative oxidase and decreased abundance of lipoic acid-containing components during several of the treatments indicated oxidative stress. Analysis of the treatments was undertaken by IEF/SDS-PAGE, comparison of protein spot abundances and tandem mass spectrometry. A set of 25 protein spots increased >3-fold in H2O2/menadione treatments, a subset of these increased in antimycin A-treated samples. A set of 10 protein spots decreased significantly during stress treatments. A specific set of mitochondrial proteins were degraded by stress treatments. These damaged components included subunits of
ATP synthase
, complex I, succinyl CoA ligase, aconitase, and pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes. Nine increased proteins represented products of different genes not found in control mitochondria. One is directly involved in antioxidant defense, a mitochondrial thioredoxin-dependent
peroxidase
, while another, a thioredoxin reductase-dependent protein disulphide isomerase, is required for protein disulfide redox homeostasis. Several others are generally considered to be extramitochondrial but are clearly present in a highly purified mitochondrial fraction used in this study and are known to play roles in stress response. Using H2O2 as a model stress, further work revealed that this treatment induced a protease activity in isolated mitochondria, putatively responsible for the degradation of oxidatively damaged mitochondrial proteins and that O2 consumption by mitochondria was significantly decreased by H2O2 treatment.
...
PMID:The impact of oxidative stress on Arabidopsis mitochondria. 1249 32
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