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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
cysteine
in the b subunit of the membranous F0 sector and the 19 cysteines in extramembranous F1 sector of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
were replaced by alanine. When cells were grown under anaerobic conditions on glucose, the kcat for ATP hydrolysis of membrane vesicles containing the bCys21Ala mutant enzyme, but not enzymes with other
cysteine
replacements, was lower, while ATP-driven H+ pumping was unchanged. However, the ATP-dependent increase in the number of accessible thiol groups in membrane vesicles was negated. Furthermore, K+ uptake and molecular hydrogen production by whole cells and protoplasts was greatly decreased. These results indicate a role for the F0 subunit bCys21 in the functionality of F0F1 and coupling to other membranous activities under fermentative conditions.
...
PMID:F0 cysteine, bCys21, in the Escherichia coli ATP synthase is involved in regulation of potassium uptake and molecular hydrogen production in anaerobic conditions. 1251 83
Subunit a of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
is thought to control access of protons to the ring of c subunits during proton-driven ATP synthesis. In this study, the surface exposure of subunit a in the periplasm has been examined using 3-N-maleimidyl-propionyl biocytin labeling in cells permeabilized by polymyxin B nonapeptide, and the helix packing at the periplasmic surface has been probed by metal-chelate mediated proteolysis. Eighteen residues between 119 and 146 were changed individually to
cysteine
and tested for accessibility. Positions labeled included D124 and D146, indicating a periplasmic loop of at least 23 amino acids. Residues near the ends of the transmembrane spans were tested with 5-(alpha-bromoacetamido)-1,10-phenanthroline-copper for chemical proteolysis. Only residues W241C and D44C, and to a lesser extent I43C, led to proteolytic fragments after oxidation. The fragments were sized by comparison with molecular weight standards generated by Factor Xa sites engineered into subunit a. Fragments were detected by immunoblotting using an engineered HA epitope at the carboxyl-terminal end of subunit a. The results indicated that both transmembrane span 5 (W241) and transmembrane span 1 (D44) are close to transmembrane span 2.
...
PMID:Helix packing in subunit a of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase as determined by chemical labeling and proteolysis of the cysteine-substituted protein. 1252 60
Interactions between subunit a and the c subunits of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
are thought to control proton translocation through the F(o) sector. In this study
cysteine
substitution mutagenesis was used to define the cytoplasmic ends of the first three transmembrane spans of subunit a, as judged by accessibility to 3-N-maleimidyl-propionyl biocytin. The cytoplasmic end of the fourth transmembrane span could not be defined in this way because of the limited extent of labeling of all residues between 186 and 206. In contrast, most of the preceding residues in that region, closer to transmembrane span 3, were labeled readily. The proximity of this region to other subunits in F(o) was tested by reacting mono-
cysteine
mutants with a photoactivated cross-linker. Residues 165, 169, 173, 174, 177, 178, and 182-184 could all be cross-linked to subunit c, but no sites were cross-linked to b subunits. Attempts using double mutants of subunit a to generate simultaneous cross-links to two different c subunits were unsuccessful. These results indicate that the cytoplasmic loop between transmembrane spans 3 and 4 of subunit a is in close proximity to at least one c subunit. It is likely that the more highly conserved, carboxyl-terminal region of this loop has limited surface accessibility due to protein-protein interactions. A model is presented for the interaction of subunit a with subunit c, and its implications for the mechanism of proton translocation are discussed.
...
PMID:Close proximity of a cytoplasmic loop of subunit a with c subunits of the ATP synthase from Escherichia coli. 1252 80
The detailed membrane topography and neighboring polypeptides of subunit 8 in yeast mitochondrial
ATP synthase
have been determined using a combination of
cysteine
scanning mutagenesis and chemical modification. 46 single
cysteine
substitution mutants encompassing the length of the subunit 8 protein were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. Expression of each
cysteine
variant in yeast lacking endogenous subunit 8 restored respiratory phenotype to cells and had little measurable effect on ATP hydrolase function. The exposure of each introduced
cysteine
residue to the aqueous environment was assessed in isolated mitochondria using the fluorescent thiol-modifying probe fluorescein 5-maleimide. The first 14 and last 13 amino acids of subunit 8 were accessible to fluorescein 5-maleimide in osmotically lysed mitochondria and are thus extrinsic to the lipid bilayer, indicating a 21-amino acid transmembrane span. The C-terminal region of subunit 8 was partially occluded by other
ATP synthase
subunits, especially in a small region surrounding Val-40 that was demonstrated to play an important role in maintaining the stability of the F(1)-F(0) interaction. Cross-linking using heterobifunctional reagents revealed the proximity of subunit 8 to subunits b, d, and f in the matrix and to subunits b, f, and 6 in the intermembrane space. A disulfide bridge was also formed between subunit 8(F7C) or (M10C) and residue Cys-23 of subunit 6, demonstrating a close interaction between these two hydrophobic membrane subunits and confirming the location of the N termini of each in the intermembrane space. We conclude that subunit 8 is an integral component of the stator stalk of yeast mitochondrial F(1)F(0)-
ATP synthase
.
...
PMID:The molecular neighborhood of subunit 8 of yeast mitochondrial F1F0-ATP synthase probed by cysteine scanning mutagenesis and chemical modification. 1262 1
The location of the endogenous inhibitor protein (IF1) in the rotor/stator architecture of the bovine mitochondrial
ATP synthase
was studied by reversible cross-linking with dithiobis(succinimidylpropionate) in soluble F1I and intact F1F0I complexes of submitochondrial particles. Reducing two-dimensional electrophoresis, Western blotting, and fluorescent
cysteine
labeling showed formation of alpha-IF1, IF1-IF1, gamma-IF1, and epsilon-IF1 cross-linkages in soluble F1I and in native F1F0I complexes. Cross-linking blocked the release of IF1 from its inhibitory site and therefore the activation of F1I and F1F0I complexes in a dithiothreitol-sensitive process. These results show that the endogenous IF1 is at a distance < or = 12 angstroms to gamma and epsilon subunits of the central rotor of the native mitochondrial
ATP synthase
. This finding strongly suggests that, without excluding the classical assumption that IF1 inhibits conformational changes of the catalytic beta subunits, the inhibitory mechanism of IF1 may involve the interference with rotation of the central stalk.
...
PMID:Cross-linking of the endogenous inhibitor protein (IF1) with rotor (gamma, epsilon) and stator (alpha) subunits of the mitochondrial ATP synthase. 1267 35
It was shown before (Wooten, D. C., and Dilley, R. A. (1993) J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 25, 557-567; Zakharov, S. D., Li, X., Red'ko, T. P., and Dilley, R. A. (1996) J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 28, 483-493) that pH dependent reversible Ca2+ binding near the N- and C-terminal end of the 8 kDa subunit c modulates ATP synthesis driven by an applied pH jump in chloroplast and E. coli
ATP synthase
due to closing a "proton gate" proposed to exist in the F0 H+ channel of the F0F1
ATP synthase
. This mechanism has further been investigated with the use of membrane vesicles from mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. Vesicles from a mutant with serine at position 37 in the hydrophilic loop of the c-subunit replaced by the charged glutamic acid (strain plc 37) has a higher H+/ATP ratio than the wild type and therefore shows ATP synthesis at low values of deltamuH+. The presence of 1 mM CaCl2 during the preparation and storage of these vesicles blocked acid-base jump ATP formation when the pH of the acid side (inside) was between pH 5.6 and 7.1, even though the deltapH of the acid-base jump was thermodynamically in excess of the necessary energy to drive ATP formation at an external pH above 8.28. That is, in the absence of added CaCl2, ATP formation did occur under those conditions. However, when the base stage pH was 7.16 and the acid stage below pH 5.2, ATP was formed when Ca2+ was present. This is consistent with Ca2+ being displaced by H+ ions from the F0 on the inside of the thylakoid membrane at pH values below about 5.5. Vesicles from a mutant with the serine of position 3 replaced by a
cysteine
apparently already contain some bound Ca2+ to F0. Addition of 1 mM EGTA during preparation and storage of those vesicles shifted the otherwise already low internal pH needed for onset of ATP synthesis to higher values when the external pH was above 8. With both strains it was shown that the Ca2+ binding effect on acid-base induced ATP synthesis occurs above an internal pH of about 5.5. These results were corroborated by 45Ca2+-ligand blot assays on organic solvent soluble preparations containing the 8 kDa F0 subunit c from the S-3-C mutant
ATP synthase
, which showed 5Ca2+ binding as occurs with the pea chloroplast subunit III. The phosphorylation efficiency (P/2e), at strong light intensity, of Ca2+ and EGTA treated vesicles from both strains were almost equal showing that Ca2+ or EGTA have no other effect on the
ATP synthase
such as a change in the proton to ATP ratio. The results indicate that the Ca2+ binding to the F0 H+ channel can block H+ flux through the channel at pH values above about 5.5, but below that pH protons apparently displace the bound Ca2+, opening the CF0 H+ channel between the thylakoid lumen and H+ conductive channel.
...
PMID:pH-dependent Ca2+ binding to the F0 c-subunit affects proton translocation of the ATP synthase from Synechocystis 6803. 1267 37
A conserved putative dimerization GxxxG motif located in the unique membrane-spanning segment of the ATP synthase subunit e was altered in yeast both by insertion of an alanine residue and by replacement of glycine by leucine residues. These alterations led to the loss of subunit g and the loss of dimeric and oligomeric forms of the yeast
ATP synthase
. Furthermore, as in null mutants devoid of either subunit e or subunit g, mitochondria displayed anomalous morphologies with onion-like structures. By taking advantage of the presence of the endogenous
cysteine
28 residue in the wild-type subunit e, disulfide bond formation between subunits e in intact mitochondria was found to increase the stability of an oligomeric structure of the
ATP synthase
in digitonin extracts. The data show the involvement of the dimerization motif of subunit e in the formation of supramolecular structures of mitochondrial ATP synthases and are in favour of the existence in the inner mitochondrial membrane of associations of ATP synthases whose masses are higher than those of
ATP synthase
dimers.
...
PMID:The GxxxG motif of the transmembrane domain of subunit e is involved in the dimerization/oligomerization of the yeast ATP synthase complex in the mitochondrial membrane. 1269 1
Biotin-
cysteine
was used to study protein S-thiolation in isolated rat kidneys subjected to ischemia and reperfusion. After 40 min of ischemia, total protein S-thiolation increased significantly (P < 0.05), by 311%, and remained significantly elevated (P < 0.05), 221% above control, after 5 min of postischemic reperfusion. Treatment of protein samples with 2-mercaptoethanol abolished the S-thiolation signals detected, consistent with the dependence of the signal on the presence of a disulfide bond. With the use of gel filtration chromatography followed by affinity purification with streptavidin-agarose, S-thiolated proteins were purified from CHAPS-soluble kidney homogenate. The proteins were then separated by SDS-PAGE and stained with Coomassie blue. With a combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry and LC/MS/MS analysis of protein bands digested with trypsin, a number of S-thiolation substrates were identified. These included the LDL receptor-related protein 2,
ATP synthase
alpha chain, heat shock protein 90 beta, hydroxyacid oxidase 3, serum albumin precursor, triose phosphate isomerase, and lamin. These represent proteins that may be functionally regulated by S-thiolation and thus could undergo a change in activity or function after renal ischemia and reperfusion.
...
PMID:Reversible cysteine-targeted oxidation of proteins during renal oxidative stress. 1287 48
Scabrosin esters (SEs), which have been recently isolated from the lichen Xanthoparmelia scabrosa, belong to the epipolythiodioxopiperazine (ETP) class of secondary metabolites characterized by possession of a reactive disulfide bond. Colony forming assays show that these toxins are active against human tumor cell lines at nanomolar concentrations. Other members of the ETP class of toxins such as gliotoxin have been shown to induce apoptosis in cells, although the cellular target(s) of the ETP toxins is currently unknown. ETP toxins have been shown to inhibit a variety of enzymes via interaction with sensitive
cysteine
residues. Here we show that the typical scabrosin ester acetate butyrate induces early mitochondrial membrane hyperpolarization assessed by JC-1 staining accompanied by apoptotic cell death. The toxin lowers ATP in intact cells and inhibits the rate of ATP synthesis in permeabilzed cells. Comparison with the effects of the known
ATP synthase
inhibitor oligomycin B is consistent with
ATP synthase
as an early target in scabrosin ester-induced cell death.
...
PMID:Evidence that the lichen-derived scabrosin esters target mitochondrial ATP synthase in P388D1 cells. 1290 94
The number of accessible SH-groups was determined in membrane vesicles prepared from Escherichia coli growing in fermentation conditions at slightly alkaline pH on glucose with or without added formate. Addition of ATP or formate to the vesicles caused a approximately 1.4-fold increase in the number of accessible SH-groups. The increase was inhibited by treatment with N-ethylmaleimide or the presence of the F(0)F(1)-ATPase inhibitors N,N(')-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide or sodium azide. The increase in accessible SH-groups was also absent in strains with the
ATP synthase
operon deleted or with the single F(0) domain
cysteine
Cysb21 changed to Ala. Using hyc and hyf mutants, it was shown that the increase was also largely dependent on hydrogenase 4 or hydrogenase 3, main components of formate hydrogen lyase, when bacteria were grown in the absence or presence of added formate. These results suggest a relationship between the F(0)F(1)-
ATP synthase
and hydrogenase 4 or hydrogenase 3 under fermentation conditions.
...
PMID:The number of accessible SH-groups in Escherichia coli membrane vesicles is increased by ATP or by formate. 1291
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