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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)
The single sulfhydryl residue (cysteine-63) of the beta subunit of the chloroplast
ATP synthase
F1 (CF1) was accessible to labeling reagents only after removal of the beta subunit from the enzyme complex. This suggests that cysteine-63 may be located at an interface between the beta and the alpha subunits of CF1, although alternative explanations such as a conformational change in beta brought about by its release from CF1 cannot be ruled out.
Cysteine
-63 was specifically labeled with [(diethylamino)methylcoumarinyl]-maleimide, and the distance between this site and trinitrophenyl-ADP at the nucleotide binding site on beta was mapped using fluorescence resonance energy transfer.
Cysteine
-63 is located in a hydrophobic pocket, 42 A away from the nucleotide binding site on beta.
...
PMID:Structural mapping of cysteine-63 of the chloroplast ATP synthase beta subunit. 153 53
Purified
ATP synthase
(F1F0) from Escherichia coli K12 was labeled with the hydrophobic photoreactive label 1-palmitoyl 2-(2-azido-4-nitro)benzoyl sn-glycero-3-[3H]phosphocholine in reconstituted proteoliposomes. The F0-subunit b was predominantly labeled. A very low amount of label was detected on the other F0-subunits a and c. The label in subunit b could be traced back by proteolytic digestion to the NH2-terminal fragment 1 to 53 which contains the stretch of hydrophobic amino acid residues 1 to 32. By sequencing the intact protein, the distribution of label among the amino acids in this segment was determined.
Cysteine
21 was predominantly labeled. Other labeled amino acids occurred at the NH2-terminal (Asn-2) and at position 26 (tryptophan). Due to the restricted mobility of the label in the lipid bilayer, these residues are suggested to be located in or close to the polar head of the lipid bilayer. These results will be compared with predictions for the arrangement of the polypeptide b derived from the hydrophobicity profile.
...
PMID:Labeling of subunit b of the ATP synthase from Escherichia coli with a photoreactive phospholipid analogue. 629 10
2-
Cysteine
peroxiredoxins (2-CPs) constitute a ubiquitous group of peroxidases that reduce cell-toxic alkyl hydroperoxides to their corresponding alcohols. Recently, we cloned 2-CP cDNAs from plants and characterized them as chloroplast proteins. To elucidate the physiological function of the 2-CP in plant metabolism, we generated antisense mutants in Arabidopsis. In the mutant lines a 2-CP deficiency developed during early leaf and plant development and eventually the protein accumulated to wild-type levels. In young mutants with reduced amounts of 2-CP, photosynthesis was impaired and the levels of D1 protein, the light-harvesting protein complex associated with photosystem II, chloroplast
ATP synthase
, and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase were decreased. Photoinhibition was particularly pronounced after the application of the protein synthesis inhibitor, lincomycin. We concluded that the photosynthetic machinery needs high levels of 2-CP during leaf development to protect it from oxidative damage and that the damage is reduced by the accumulation of 2-CP protein, by the de novo synthesis and replacement of damaged proteins, and by the induction of other antioxidant defenses in 2-CP mutants.
...
PMID:Protective function of chloroplast 2-cysteine peroxiredoxin in photosynthesis. Evidence from transgenic Arabidopsis. 1019
Cysteine
mutagenesis and surface labeling has been used to define more precisely the transmembrane spans of subunit a of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
. Regions of subunit a that are exposed to the periplasmic space have been identified by a new procedure, in which cells are incubated with polymyxin B nonapeptide (PMBN), an antibiotic derivative that partially permeabilizes the outer membrane of E. coli, along with a sulfhydryl reagent, 3-(N-maleimidylpropionyl) biocytin (MPB). This procedure permits reaction of sulfhydryl groups in the periplasmic space with MPB, but residues in the cytoplasm are not labeled. Using this procedure, residues 8, 27, 37, 127, 131, 230, 231, and 232 were labeled and so are thought to be exposed in the periplasm. Using inside-out membrane vesicles, residues near the end of transmembrane spans 1, 64, 67, 68, 69, and 70 and residues near the end of transmembrane spans 5, 260, 263, and 265 were labeled. Residues 62 and 257 were not labeled. None of these residues were labeled in PMBN-permeabilized cells. These results provide a more detailed view of the transmembrane spans of subunit a and also provide a simple and reliable technique for detection of periplasmic regions of inner membrane proteins in E. coli.
...
PMID:A novel labeling approach supports the five-transmembrane model of subunit a of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase. 1035 96
Approximately 37 amino acids at the amino-terminus of subunit a of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
are found localized to the periplasm. Results indicate that a single amino acid substitution, H15D, disrupts assembly of subunit a and causes a loss of
ATP synthase
function. In this study, a conserved region of nine amino acids, 11-19, was initially mutagenized randomly, generating no mutants that could grow on succinate-minimal medium. Subsequent mutagenesis, confined to residues His(14), His(15), and Asn(17), indicated that constructs containing H15D were the most deleterious. Four single mutants were constructed and analyzed: H15A, H14D, H15A, and H15D. Only H15D was significantly impaired, with respect to ATP-driven proton translocation, passive proton permeability through F(o), and sensitivity of membrane-bound ATPase to DCCD. Immunoblot analysis indicated very low levels of subunit a from H15D.
Cysteine
mutations were constructed at positions 14, 15, 17, and 18. Residues 14, 15, and 17 were shown to be accessible in the periplasmic space, while residue 18 was not, indicating that this region was stably folded. While both His(14) and His(15) are conserved among a group of bacteria, results presented here indicate that they are not equivalent, and that a specific role for His(15) in the assembly or structure of the
ATP synthase
is supported.
...
PMID:His(15) of subunit a of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase is important for the structure or assembly of the membrane sector F(o). 1041 27
The
ATP synthase
of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is composed of 20 different subunits whose primary structure is known. The organization of proteins that constitute the membranous domain is now under investigation.
Cysteine
insertions combined with the use of nonpermeant maleimide reagents and cross-linking reagents showing different lengths and specificity contribute to the knowledge of the location of the N- and C-termini of the subunits involved in the stator of the enzyme and their organization. This review summarizes data on yeast
ATP synthase
obtained in our laboratory since 1980.
...
PMID:The Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATP synthase. 1176
Coupling of proton flow and rotation in the F(0) motor of
ATP synthase
was investigated using the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 enzyme expressed functionally in Escherichia coli cells.
Cysteine
residues introduced into the N-terminal regions of subunits b and c of
ATP synthase
(bL2C/cS2C) were readily oxidized by treating the expressing cells with CuCl(2) to form predominantly a b-c cross-link with b-b and c-c cross-links being minor products. The oxidized ATP synthases, either in the inverted membrane vesicles or in the reconstituted proteoliposomes, showed drastically decreased proton pumping and ATPase activities compared with the reduced ones. Also, the oxidized F(0), either in the F(1)-stripped inverted vesicles or in the reconstituted F(0)-proteoliposomes, hardly mediated passive proton translocation through F(0). Careful analysis using single mutants (bL2C or cS2C) as controls indicated that the b-c cross-link was responsible for these defects. Thus, rotation of the c-oligomer ring relative to subunit b is obligatory for proton translocation; if there is no rotation of the c-ring there is no proton flow through F(0).
...
PMID:F(0) of ATP synthase is a rotary proton channel. Obligatory coupling of proton translocation with rotation of c-subunit ring. 1181 16
The arrangement of the b-subunits in the holo-enzyme F(0)F(1)-
ATP synthase
from E. coli is investigated by site-directed mutagenesis spin-label EPR. F(0)F(1)-ATP synthases couple proton translocation with the synthesis of ATP from ADP and phosphate. The hydrophilic F(1)-part and the hydrophobic membrane-integrated F(0)-part are connected by a central and a peripheral stalk. The peripheral stalk consists of two b-subunits.
Cysteine
mutations are introduced in the tether domain of the b-subunit at b-40, b-51, b-53, b-62 or b-64 and labeled with a nitroxide spin label. Conventional (9 GHz), high-field (95 GHz) and pulsed EPR spectroscopy reveal: All residues are in a relatively polar environment, with mobilities consistent with helix sites. The distance between the spin labels at each b-subunit is 2.9 nm in each mutant, revealing a parallel arrangement of the two helices. They can be in-register but separated by a large distance (1.9 nm), or at close contact and displaced along the helix axes by maximally 2.7 nm, which excludes an in-register coiled-coil model suggested previously for the b-subunit. Binding of the non-hydrolysable nucleotide AMPPNP to the spin-labeled enzyme had no significant influence on the distances compared to that in the absence of nucleotides.
...
PMID:Distances between the b-subunits in the tether domain of F(0)F(1)-ATP synthase from E. coli. 1590 87