Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 mitochondrial F1-ATPase is irreversibly inactivated by the adenine nucleotide analogue, p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-5'-adenosine. This inactivation is partly prevented by the presence of bound adenine nucleotides. Inactivations of the ATPase with p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]benzoyl-5'-adenosine were most efficiently accomplished with the nucleotide-free enzyme at pH 7.0, in a buffer containing 20% glycerol. Under these conditions, 4.2 g atoms of 14C are incorporated per 350,000 g of enzyme when the ATPase is inactivated by 90% by its reaction with 2 mM p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]benzoyl-5'-adenosine. Isolation of the component polypeptide chains of the labeled ATPase showed that all of the radioactivity was associated with the two largest subunits. The isolated alpha subunit contained 0.45 g atom of 14C/mol and the isolated beta subunit contained 0.88 g atom of 14C/mol. Hence, the inactivation can be correlated with the incorporation of 14C into the beta subunit. This suggests that the hydrolytic site of the enzyme resides on this subunit. The majority of the radioactivity in a tryptic digest of labeled beta subunit is contained ina tryptic peptide that has the following amino acid sequence: Ile-Met-Asp-Pro-Asn-Ile-Val-Gly-Ser-Glu-His-Tyr-Asp-Val-Ala-Arg, where Tyr is the radioactive derivative of the tyrosine residue that was sulfonylated during the inactivation.
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PMID:Identification of a tyrosine residue at a nucleotide binding site in the beta subunit of the mitochondrial ATPase with p-fluorosulfonyl[14C]-benzoyl-5'-adenosine. 15 Apr 16

The Fo complex of the ATP synthase (F1Fo) of Escherichia coli contains only two cysteinyl residues, Cys21, of the two copies of subunit b. Modification of Cys21 with the hydrophobic maleimide N-(7-dimethylamino-4-methyl-coumarinyl)maleimide resulted in impairment of Fo functions [Schneider, E. & Altendorf, K. (1985) Eur. J. Biochim. 153, 105-109]. We replaced this residue (via cassette mutagenesis) by Ser, Gly, Ala, Thr, Asp and Pro. None of the replacements resulted in detectable alterations of the function of the ATP synthase, making a functional role for these sulfhydryl residues unlikely. Due to its high tolerance towards amino acid substitutions, the region around Cys21 seems not to be a protein-protein contact area.
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PMID:Substitution of the cysteinyl residue (Cys21) of subunit b of the ATP synthase from Escherichia coli. 183 69

The ATP synthases of eubacteria and eukaryotes possess a conserved tyrosine (beta 331) that is labeled by ATP analogs and is believed to be at the catalytic site. In this report, this tyrosine was replaced by Phe, Ser, Cys, Gly, and Ala in an attempt to determine its role in catalysis. Each of the beta 331 mutant strains assembled an ATP synthase. Membranes from the beta 331-Ser, -Cys, -Ala, or -Gly strains showed strongly attenuated ATP hydrolysis and ATP-driven proton-pumping activities. The beta 331-Phe membranes showed nearly normal ATPase and functional proton pumping. A new purification procedure yielding highly active unc+ F1 (ATPase rates greater than 1000 s-1) allowed rapid isolation of soluble F1-ATPases. Kinetic analyses of purified enzymes confirmed that the structural and functional properties of beta 331-Tyr can be substituted by Phe but not effectively by Ser, Cys, Ala, or Gly. Since all of the beta 331 mutant enzymes catalyzed measurable ATP hydrolysis, it is clear that beta 331-Tyr is not directly involved in the bond making-breaking steps of catalysis. The ability of the beta 331-Phe enzyme to rapidly bind and hydrolyze ATP, and the results with other beta 331 mutant enzymes, suggests that a residue with an aromatic character is required at this position.
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the conserved beta subunit tyrosine 331 of Escherichia coli ATP synthase yields catalytically active enzymes. 214 32

Antibodies were raised against a peptide of subunit c of the ATP synthase from Escherichia coli obtained by cleavage with cyanogen bromide. This peptide comprises the amino acid residues Gly-18 to Met-57 and contains the highly conserved, hydrophilic stretch of subunit c. Several conformation-specific populations of antibodies recognized this region both in isolated subunit c and in the intact F0 complex. In antibody binding studies with membrane vesicles of different orientations, recognition occurred only after incubation with everted membrane vesicles, independent of the presence or absence of F1, although a higher membrane protein concentration was necessary to observe the same antibody binding in the presence of the F1 part. From these results we conclude that the hydrophilic region of subunit c is exposed to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane.
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PMID:Orientation of subunit c of the ATP synthase of Escherichia coli--a study with peptide-specific antibodies. 217 84

ATP synthesis by oxidative phosphorylation in Escherichia coli occurs in catalytic sites on the beta-subunits of F1-ATPase. Random mutagenesis of the beta-subunit combined with phenotypic screening is potentially important for studies of the catalytic mechanism. However, when applied to haploid strains, this approach is hampered by a preponderance of mutants in which assembly of F1-ATPase in vivo is defective, precluding enzyme purification. Here we mutagenized plasmids carrying the uncD (beta-subunit) gene with hydroxylamine or N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and isolated, by phenotypic screening and complementation tests, six plasmids carrying mutant uncD alleles. When the mutant plasmids were used to transform a suitable uncD- strain, assembly of F1-ATPase in vivo occurred in each case. Moreover, in one case (beta Gly-223----Asp) F1-ATPase assembly proceeded although it had previously been reported that this mutation, when present on the chromosome of a haploid strain, prevented assembly of the enzyme in vivo. Therefore, this work demonstrates an improved approach for random mutagenesis of the F1-beta-subunit. Six new mutant uncD alleles were identified: beta Cys-137----Tyr; beta Gly-142----Asp; beta Gly-146----Ser; beta Gly-207----Asp; beta-Gly-223----Asp; and a double mutant beta Pro-403----Ser,Gly-415----Asp which we could not separate. The first five of these lie within or very close to the predicted catalytic nucleotide-binding domain of the beta-subunit. The double mutant lies outside this domain; we speculate that the region around residues beta 403-415 is part of an alpha-beta intersubunit contact surface. Membrane ATPase and ATP-driven proton pumping activities were impaired by all six mutations. Purified F1-ATPase was obtained from each mutant and shown to have impaired specific ATPase activity.
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PMID:Random mutagenesis of the gene for the beta-subunit of F1-ATPase from Escherichia coli. 252 89

[32P]Azidonitrophenyl phosphate [( 32P]ANPP) is a photoactivatable analogue of Pi. It competes efficiently with Pi for binding to the F1 sector of beef heart mitochondrial ATPase and photolabels the Pi binding site located in the beta subunit of F1 [Lauquin, G. J. M., Pougeois, R., & Vignais, P. V. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 4620-4626]. By cleavage of the photolabeled beta subunit of F1 with cyanogen bromide, trypsin, and chymotrypsin, bound [32P]ANPP was localized in a fragment spanning Thr 299-Phe 326. By Edman degradation of the radiolabeled tryptic peptide spanning Ile 296-Arg 337, [32P]ANPP was found to be attached covalently by its photoreactive group to Ile 304, Gln 308, and Tyr 311. These results are discussed in terms of a model in which the phosphate group of [32P]ANPP interacts with a glycine-rich sequence of the beta subunit, spanning Gly 156-Lys 162, which is spatially close to the photolabeled Ile 304-Tyr 311 segment of the same subunit.
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PMID:Photolabeling of the phosphate binding site of mitochondrial F1-ATPase by [32P]azidonitrophenyl phosphate. Identification of the photolabeled amino acid residues. 252 9

Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to construct two mutations within the uncE gene, coding for the c-subunit of the F1F0-ATPase, resulting in the substitution of Gly-29 by Val and Gly-18 by Leu. The strain carrying the Gly-29----Val substitution is unable to grow on succinate as sole carbon source and possesses an uncoupled growth yield, while the strain carrying the Gly-18----Leu substitution possesses a wild-type phenotype. Membranes prepared from the strain carrying the Gly-29----Val substitution possess low levels of ATPase activity and are proton-impermeable. The F1-ATPase activity of this strain was found to be inhibited by approx. 75% when bound to the membrane. These results are discussed in relation to a previously proposed model for the F0 (Cox, G.B., Fimmel, A.L., Gibson, F. and Hatch, L. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 849, 62-69).
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PMID:The F1F0-ATPase of Escherichia coli. The substitution of glycine by valine at position 29 in the c-subunit affects function but not assembly. 255 83

A series of mitochondrially inherited mutants of yeast has been analysed, which were previously identified as showing resistance to the antibiotics venturicidin or ossamycin and whose mutations showed tight linkage to oligomycin-resistance alleles affecting subunit 9 of the mitochondrial ATP synthase. DNA sequence analysis of the oli1 gene of these mutants has been used to define the nature of amino acid substitution in the subunit 9 protein. In the case of the two venturicidin-resistant mutants, mutations affect amino acids on the N-terminal stem of the protein, namely Gly25----Ser (venR ossS oliR) and Ala 27----Gly (venR ossS oliS). The mutations found in the two ossamycin-resistant mutants affect amino acids on the C-terminal stem of the protein; namely Leu53----Phe (vanS ossR oliR) and Leu57----Phe (venS ossR oliS). These results allow us to further develop a fine structure map of domains within the subunit 9 protein involved in antibiotic interaction.
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PMID:Amino acid substitutions in mitochondrial ATP synthase subunit 9 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae leading to venturicidin or ossamycin resistance. 266 Dec 66

A mutant strain of Escherichia coli was isolated in which Gly-48 of the mature epsilon-subunit of the energy-transducing adenosine triphosphatase was replaced by Asp. This amino acid substitution caused inhibition of ATPase activity (about 70%), loss of ATP-dependent proton translocation and lowered oxidative phosphorylation, but did not affect proton translocation through the F0. Purified F1-ATPase from the mutant strain bound to stripped membranes with the same affinity as the normal F1-ATPase. Partial revertant strains were isolated in which Pro-47 of the epsilon-subunit was replaced by Ser or Thr. Pro-47 and Gly-48 are predicted to be residues 2 and 3 in a Type II beta-turn and the Gly-48 to Asp substitution is predicted to cause a change from a Type II to a Type I or III beta-turn. Space-filling models of the beta-turn (residues 46-49) in the normal, mutant and partial revertant epsilon-subunits indicate that the peptide oxygen between Pro-47 and Gly-48 is in a different position to the peptide oxygen between Pro-47 and Asp-48 and that the substitution of Pro-47 by either Ser or Thr restores an oxygen close to the original position. It is suggested that the peptide oxygen between Pro-47 and Gly-48 of the epsilon-subunit is involved either structurally in inter-subunit H-bonding or directly in proton movements through the F1-ATPase.
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PMID:Amino acid substitutions in the epsilon-subunit of the F1F0-ATPase of Escherichia coli. 287 66

F1-ATPase is the major enzyme for ATP synthesis in mitochondria, chloroplasts, and bacterial plasma membranes. F1-ATPase obtained from thermophilic bacterium PS3 (TF1) is the only ATPase which can be reconstituted from its primary structure. Its beta subunit constitutes the catalytic site, and is capable of forming hybrid F1's with E. coli alpha and gamma subunits. Since the stability of TF1 resides in its primary structure, we cloned a gene coding for TF1, and the primary structure of the beta subunit was deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the gene to compare the sequence with those of beta's of three major categories of F1's; prokaryotic membranes, chloroplasts, and mitochondria. The following results were obtained. Homology: The primary structure of the TF1 beta subunit (473 residues, Mr = 51,995.6) showed 89.3% homology with 270 residues which are identical in the beta subunits from human mitochondria, spinach chloroplasts, and E. coli. It contained regions homologous to several nucleotide-binding proteins. Secondary structure: The deduced alpha-helical (30.1%) and beta-sheet (22.3%) contents were consistent with those determined from the circular dichroism spectra. Residues forming reverse turns (Gly and Pro) were highly conserved among the F1 beta subunits. Substituted residues and stability of TF1: We compared the amino acid sequence of the TF1 beta subunit with those of the other F1 beta subunits mentioned above. The observed substitutions in the thermophilic subunit increased its propensities to form secondary structures, and its external polarity to form tertiary structure. Codon usage: The codon usage of the TF1 beta gene was found to be unique. The changes in codons that achieved these amino acid substitutions were much larger than those caused by minimal mutations, and the third letters of the optimal codons were either guanine or cytosine, except in codons for Gln, Lys, and Glu.
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PMID:Stable structure of thermophilic proton ATPase beta subunit. 288 Aug 41


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